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  • ‘Reservation Dogs’ Star Devery Jacobs Says Watching ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Was “F***ing Hellfire”

    ‘Reservation Dogs’ Star Devery Jacobs Says Watching ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Was “F***ing Hellfire”

    Reservation Dogs star Devery Jacobs has a pretty scathing review for Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon. And the movie’s long runtime isn’t the issue.

    “Being Native, watching this movie was fucking hellfire,” Jacobs said on her X and Instagram social media accounts as she slammed Scorsese and his revisionist Western true crime epic for depicting the Osage people as tragic victims.

    “Imagine the worst atrocities committed against yr ancestors, then having to sit thru a movie explicitly filled w/ them, w/ the only respite being 30min long scenes of murderous white guys talking about/planning the killings,” Jacobs argued in a long social media thread.

    Scorsese and his creative team worked closely with many members of the Osage Nation tribe on the production of Killers of the Flower Moon, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Lily Gladstone and follows the real-life 1920s murders of Osage members after oil was found on their Oklahoma land.

    But Jacobs says that collaboration only produced a stereotypical representation of the Osage murders created by a White director. “I don’t feel that these very real people were shown honor or dignity in the horrific portrayal of their deaths. Contrarily, I believe that by showing more murdered Native women on screen, it normalizes the violence committed against us and further dehumanizes our people,” she stated.

    Killers of the Flower Moon, co-written by Scorsese and Eric Roth, is based on a 2017 book by David Grann and explores the FBI’s investigation into the Osage murders. DiCaprio and Gladstone star as a married couple in the real-life story, after the promise of oil wealth brings DiCaprio’s character to the Osage land.

    Jacobs insisted the Osage Nation and other Indigenous peoples deserve a far more nuanced and multi-dimensional portrayal by Hollywood than the worst horrors of their past.

    “I can’t believe it needs to be said, but Indig ppl exist beyond our grief, trauma & atrocities. Our pride for being Native, our languages, cultures, joy & love are way more interesting & humanizing than showing the horrors white men inflicted on us,” she argued.

    The Reservation Dogs star does give a shout-out to Gladstone, who plays Mollie Burkhart, an Indigenous woman at the center of a nefarious plot, and fellow Indigenous performers in the Apple TV+ movie. “Give Lily her goddam Oscar,” Jacobs said as Gladstone during the current awards season is in the running to possibly become the first Native American nominee.  

    Scorsese’s Western adult drama posted $23.3 million in box office during its debut weekend.  

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  • ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Has 1 Key Difference From The Book

    ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Has 1 Key Difference From The Book

    In describing the development of his new film “Killers of the Flower Moon,” Martin Scorsese has said the long-gestating project went through a significant rewrite when he made a crucial choice: reframing the story to not make a white man the hero.

    Based on New Yorker reporter David Grann’s 2017 book of the same name, the movie was originally about how a federal investigation into a string of murders involving members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma became a foundation for the FBI. The lead investigator was Tom White, an agent for the Bureau of Investigation, the FBI’s precursor.

    Frequent Scorsese collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio initially signed on to play White. But as Scorsese has recounted in recent interviews, such as one with Time magazine: “After a certain point, I realized I was making a movie about all the white guys,” he said. “Meaning I was taking the approach from the outside in, which concerned me.”

    The legendary director realized it should really be about the complex marriage of Ernest (now played by DiCaprio) and Mollie Burkhart (Lily Gladstone), and the crimes Ernest committed at the behest of his powerful uncle, Bill Hale (Robert De Niro). As the film depicts, Bill — a Godfather-like figure in town whom everyone calls “King” — orchestrates a yearslong scheme to extort Mollie’s family and other Osage community members in order to seize their wealth and the rights to their oil-rich land. (The character of White, played by Jesse Plemons in the final version, is now much more scaled back and appears only late in the film.)

    Scorsese is getting a lot of praise for focusing on the story’s brutality rather than centering a white man as the hero. It’s a better movie for it: an epic and unflinching story of racism, greed, exploitation and plunder.

    Bill Hale (Robert De Niro) and Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) in Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Apple TV+

    There’s a bone-chilling brazenness to Bill’s evil. He views everything as a transaction. As part of his long game, he encourages Ernest to marry Mollie, explaining to his nephew in no uncertain terms what marrying her will mean financially. Bill then gradually plots the murders of members of her family, and takes advantage of Mollie and her mother’s ailing health. And the cowardly Ernest is too easily persuaded into becoming his uncle’s accomplice in gradually defrauding his wife’s family, even though he seems to genuinely love her.

    The film’s 3-hour-and-26-minute run time is a lot. But it’s hard to imagine a shorter version. You need to see the full scope: the way the film methodically lays out Bill’s sliminess, such as how he positions himself as an ally of and benefactor to the Osage community while plotting to destroy them. Ernest carries out his uncle’s orders even though he knows he’s actively participating in the exploitation of his wife’s family. And throughout the film, many of these crimes happen in plain sight.

    By framing the film this way, it also spotlights Gladstone, who has deserved a major role like this ever since her breakout role in Kelly Reichardt’s “Certain Women” in 2016. Gladstone delivers the film’s most layered performance and serves as its emotional anchor. Through her resolute gaze, we can sense Mollie knows something is up. But what, if anything, can she do to stop it? If it wasn’t Ernest, it would be some other white man trying to exploit her family and community.

    Mollie (Lily Gladstone) with her sisters Reta (JaNae Collins), Anna (Cara Jade Myers) and and Minnie (Jillian Dion) in "Killers of the Flower Moon."
    Mollie (Lily Gladstone) with her sisters Reta (JaNae Collins), Anna (Cara Jade Myers) and and Minnie (Jillian Dion) in “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Apple TV+

    But something has kept gnawing at me. While Scorsese warrants praise for the choices he has made here, why must it be exceedingly rare for a white filmmaker — and especially a cinema legend — to do some reflection and realize the story he’s trying to tell shouldn’t solely be about the white men? And to do the work of reframing that story, such as how Scorsese worked extensively with Osage consultants to portray their community’s history with accuracy and dignity? It would be nice if this was just a normal occurrence and not such an unusual one. And in retrospect, framing the story this way should have been more obvious from the outset.

    It brought to mind the conversation this summer around Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer.” That included criticisms that the movie, which depicts the development of the atomic bomb during World War II, doesn’t include the perspectives of the Native communities in New Mexico that were displaced by the Los Alamos facility and harmed by radiation, or the Japanese civilians who experienced the bomb’s devastating impact — and whose descendants continue to grapple with the effects of that history today.

    These questions aren’t on “Oppenheimer” or any one movie to solve. These are historic problems with framing and who gets to tell stories and decide how to tell them. For decades, Hollywood has loved to make World War II movies, and the vast majority of them are about heroic white men. That’s not to say they aren’t good movies, and some of them do complicate the conventional narrative and decline to glorify war. But it’s unusual when they deviate from the form, and there are so many more stories left to tell.

    One compelling variation on the World War II genre is Steven Spielberg’s 1987 epic “Empire of the Sun,” about a British boy (played by Christian Bale and based loosely on author J.G. Ballard) living in Japanese-occupied Shanghai. He becomes separated from his diplomat parents and spends several years as a prisoner of war in a Japanese concentration camp. I think it’s one of Spielberg’s more underrated movies, and in some ways, a more complex one than some of his better-known war films. But still, whenever I rewatch it, I wonder about the Chinese civilians who appear in background shots of the movie. What about their stories of death and destruction? In this story, they are both figuratively and literally relegated to the background of a far more privileged white male protagonist’s story.

    There’s the old adage that history is written by the victors. Perhaps a better way of looking at it: History is written by those who have power. It’s certainly a common pattern, whether in classroom textbooks or on screen. It’s especially present in stories about war and conquest, which routinely gloss over acts of evil. Just look at the ways those of us in Western societies have historically been fed stories about colonialism as tales of adventure and discovery — not of genocide and plunder.

    At many points, “Killers of the Flower Moon” plays around with familiar tropes and genres, like true-crime sagas and Westerns. By doing so, Scorsese reminds us of how stories like this are typically framed. It’s easy to imagine those versions of this movie: a suspenseful true-crime caper and a swashbuckling Western. It’s also easy to imagine the original iteration of this movie with a white law enforcement official as the hero, played by a giant movie star. We’ve seen that movie before so, so many times. All of these versions would be doing audiences a disservice, simply entertaining us and sugar-coating the truth.

    The film’s ending is both a clever framing device and an absolutely haunting coda, underscoring the ways history all too often erases the kinds of evils Mollie’s family and the Osage people faced — and pretends they never happened. Still, the film could have widened its lens even further. As I watched, I couldn’t stop thinking about the story’s parallels to the current epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women. Gladstone herself also stars in Erica Tremblay’s “Fancy Dance,” a film about a Native woman trying to investigate the disappearance of her sister while taking care of her niece, set in present-day Oklahoma.

    And while in “Killers of the Flower Moon,” the federal government does belatedly intervene and prosecute the crimes by Bill and Ernest, that certainly hasn’t been the norm. If anything, the federal government has been responsible for centuries of Native exploitation — and today continues to neglect and marginalize Native communities. Maybe Scorsese doesn’t need to draw the line between past and present, given the film’s already vast scale and scope. But what’s past is prologue.

    Mollie, Bill and Ernest at Mollie and Ernest's wedding, in a scene from "Killers of the Flower Moon."
    Mollie, Bill and Ernest at Mollie and Ernest’s wedding, in a scene from “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Apple TV+

    There’s also a version of this movie that could have centered Mollie herself, rather than opposite her white husband and his uncle. That’s an important point that one of the film’s Osage language consultants, Christopher Cote, raised when asked about his reaction to the final product.

    “As an Osage, I really wanted this to be from the perspective of Mollie and what her family experienced, but I think it would take an Osage to do that,” Cote told the Hollywood Reporter at the film’s Los Angeles premiere last week. “Martin Scorsese, not being Osage, I think he did a great job representing our people, but this history is being told almost from the perspective of Ernest Burkhart, and they kind of give him this conscience and kind of depict that there’s love. But when somebody conspires to murder your entire family, that’s not love. That’s not love, that’s just beyond abuse.”

    Once again, this is about who gets to tell stories and decide how to tell them. The cold, hard reality is that it takes the clout of a legendary filmmaker like Scorsese and mega stars like DiCaprio and De Niro to get a movie of this scale made.

    Cote went on to point out that it’s also about who the story is for. “I think that’s because this film isn’t made for an Osage audience, it was made for everybody, not Osage,” he said. “For those that have been disenfranchised, they can relate, but for other countries that have their acts and their history of oppression, this is an opportunity for them to ask themselves this question of morality, and that’s how I feel about this film.”

    Scorsese’s choice to reframe this story goes a long way toward making us consider these moral questions and sit with that dark history. But it’s going to take plenty more filmmakers at his level interrogating their choices and challenging engrained ways of telling stories in order to rewrite our existing narratives about history into something more honest.

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  • Martin Scorsese Still Curious At 80 As Latest Epic Hits Theaters

    Martin Scorsese Still Curious At 80 As Latest Epic Hits Theaters

    NEW YORK (AP) — A moment from years ago keeps replaying in Martin Scorsese’s mind.

    When Akira Kurosawa was given an honorary Academy Award in 1990, the then 80-year-old Japanese filmmaker of “Seven Samurai” and “Ikiru,” in his brief, humble speech, said he hadn’t yet grasped the full essence of cinema.

    It struck Scorsese, then in post-production on “Goodfellas,” as a curious thing for such a master filmmaker to say. It wasn’t until Scorsese also turned 80 that he began to comprehend Kurosawa’s words. Even now, Scorsese says he’s just realizing the possibilities of cinema.

    “I’ve lived long enough to be his age and I think I understand now,” Scorsese said in a recent interview. “Because there is no limit. The limit is in yourself. These are just tools, the lights and the camera and that stuff. How much further can you explore who you are?”

    Scorsese’s lifelong exploration has seemingly only grown deeper and more self-examining with time. In recent years, his films have swelled in scale and ambition as he’s plumbed the nature of faith ( “Silence” ) and loss ( “The Irishman” ).

    His latest, “Killers of the Flower Moon,” about the systematic killing of Osage Nation members for their oil-rich land in the 1920s, is in many ways far outside Scorsese’s own experience. But as a story of trust and betrayal — the film is centered on the loving yet treacherous relationship between Mollie Kyle (Lily Gladstone), a member of a larger Osage family, and Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio), a WWI veteran who comes to work for his corrupt uncle (Robert De Niro) — it’s a profoundly personal film that maps some of the themes of Scorsese’s gangster films onto American history.

    More than the back-room dealings of “Casino,” the bloody rampages of “Gangs of New York” or the financial swindling of “The Wolf of Wall Street,” “Killers of the Flower Moon” is the story of a crime wave. It’s a disturbingly insidious one, where greed and violence infiltrate the most intimate relationships — a genocide in the home. All of which, to Scorsese, harkens back to the tough guys and the weak-willed go-alongs he witnessed in his childhood growing up on Elizabeth Street in New York.

    “That’s been my whole life, dealing with who we are,” says Scorsese. “I found that this story lent itself to that exploration further.”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon,” a $200-million, 206-minute epic produced by Apple that’s in theaters Friday, is an audacious big swing by Scorsese to continue his kind of ambitious, personal filmmaking on the largest scale at a time when such grand, big-screen statements are a rarity.

    Scorsese considers “Killers of the Flower Moon” “an internal spectacle.” The Oklahoma-set film, adapted from David Grann’s 2017 bestseller, might be called his first Western. But while developing Grann’s book, which chronicles the Osage murders and the birth of the FBI, Scorsese came to the realization that centering the film on federal investigator Tom White was a familiar a type of Western.

    “I realized: ’You don’t do that. Your Westerns are the Westerns you saw in the late ’40s and early ’50s, that’s it. Peckinpah finished that. ‘Wild Bunch,’ that’s the end. Now they’re different,” he says. “It represented a certain time in who we were as a nation and a certain time in the world – and the end of the studio system. It was a genre. That folklore is gone.

    Director-producer Martin Scorsese, center, signs autographs upon arrival for the premiere of the film Killers of the Flower Moon, in Mexico City, Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

    Scorsese, after conversations with Leonardo DiCaprio, pivoted to the story of Ernest and Mollie and a perspective closer to Osage Nation. Consultations with the tribe continued and expanded to include accurately capturing language, traditional clothing and customs.

    “It’s historical that Indigenous Peoples can tell their story at this level. That’s never happened before as far as I know,” says Geoffrey Standing Bear, Principal Chief of Osage Nation. “It took somebody who could know that we’ve been betrayed for hundreds of years. He wrote a story about betrayal of trust.”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon” for Scorsese grew out of a period of reflection and reevaluation during the pandemic. COVID-19, he says, was “a gamechanger.” For a filmmaker whose time is so intensely scheduled, the break was in some ways a relief, and it allowed him a chance to reconsider what he wants to dedicate himself to. For him, preparing a film is a meditative process.

    “I don’t use a computer because I tried a couple times and I got very distracted. I get distracted as it is,” Scorsese says. “I’ve got films, I’ve got books, I’ve got people. I’ve only begun this year to read emails. Emails, they scare me. It says ‘CC’ and there are a thousand names. Who are these people?”

    Scorsese is laughing when he says this, surely aware that he’s playing up his image as a member of the old guard. (A moment later he adds that voicemail “is interesting to do at times.”) Yet he’s also keen enough with technology to digitally de-age De Niro and make cameos in his daughter Francesca’s TikTok videos.

    Scorsese has for years been the preeminent conscience of cinema, passionately arguing for the place of personal filmmaking in an era of moviegoing where films can be devalued as “content,” theater screens are monopolized by Marvel and big-screen vision can be shrunk down on streaming platforms.

    “I’m trying to keep alive the sense that cinema is an artform,” Scorsese says. “The next generation may not see it that way because as children and younger people, they’re exposed to films that are wonderful entertainment, beautifully made, but are purely diversionary. I think cinema can enrich your life.”

    “As I’m leaving, I’m trying to say: Remember, this can really be something beautiful in your life.”

    That mission includes spearheading extensive restoration work with the Film Foundation along with a regular output of documentaries in between features. Scorsese and his longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker are currently producing a documentary on Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.

    Cinema, he says, may be the preeminent 20th century artform, but something else will belong to the 21st century. Now, Scorsese says, “the visual image could be done by anything by anybody anytime anywhere.”

    “The possibilities are infinite on all levels. And that’s exciting,” Scorsese says. “But at the same time, the more choices, the more difficult it is.”

    The pressure of time is weighing more heavily on Scorsese, too. He has, he’s said, maybe two more feature films left in him. Currently in the mix are an adaptation of Grann’s latest book, the 18th century shipwreck tale “The Wager, ” and an adaptation of Marilynne Robinson’s “Home.”

    “He’s uncompromising. He just does what he feels he really wants to look into,” says Rodrigo Prieto, Scorsese’s cinematographer on “Flower Moon,” as well as his last three feature films.

    “You can feel that it’s a personal exploration of his own psyche,” adds Prieto. “In doing that, he allows growth for everybody, in a way, to really look into these characters who might be doing things we might find very objectionable. I can’t think of many other filmmakers who attempt at such a level of empathy and understanding.”

    Yet Scorsese says he often feels like he’s in a race to accomplish what he can with the time he has left. Increasingly, he’s prioritizing what’s worth it. Some things are easier for him to give up.

    “Would I like to do more? Yeah. Would I like to go to everybody’s parties and dinner parties and things? Yeah, but you know what? I think I know enough people,” Scorsese says with a laugh. “Would I like to go see the ancient Greek ruins? Yes. Go back to Sicily? Yes. Go back to Naples again? Yes. North Africa? Yes. But I don’t have to.”

    Time for Scorsese may be waning but curiosity is as abundant as ever. Recent reading for him includes a new translation of Alessandro Manzoni’s “The Betrothed.” Some old favorites he can’t help but keep revisiting. “Out of the Past” — a movie he first saw as 6-year-old — he watched again a few weeks ago. (“Whenever it’s on, I have to stop and watch it.”) Vittorio De Sica’s “Golden Naples” was another recent rewatch.

    “If I’m curious about something, I think I’ll find a way – if I hold out, if I hold up – to try to make something about it on film,” he says. “My curiosity is still there.”

    So too is his continued astonishment at cinema and its capacity to transfix. Sometimes, Scorsese can hardly believe it. The other day he watched the Val Lewton-produced 1945 horror film “The Isle of the Dead,” with Boris Karloff.

    “Really? How many more times am I going to see that?” Scorsese says, laughing at himself. “It’s their looks and their faces and the way (Karloff) moves. When I first saw it as a child, a young teenager, I was terrified by the film and the silences of it. The sense of contamination. I still get stuck on it.”

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  • Author David Grann talks book

    Author David Grann talks book

    Author David Grann talks book “Killers of The Flower Moon” – CBS News


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    Martin Scorsese’s latest film “Killers of the Flower Moon” is based on David Grann’s non-fiction book. Grann investigated the century-old crimes and suspicious deaths of Indigenous people in Osage County, Oklahoma. The book and subsequent adaptation have led to an increase in interest around the case. Michelle Miller has more.

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  • Box Office: Taylor Swift’s ‘Eras Tour’ Nabs $10.4M Friday, ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Rides to $9.4M

    Box Office: Taylor Swift’s ‘Eras Tour’ Nabs $10.4M Friday, ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Rides to $9.4M

    Taylor Swift and AMC Theatres’ Eras Tour earned $10.4 million on its second Friday, enough to beat the $9.4 million grossed by Martin Scorsese‘s Western true-crime drama Killers of the Flower Moon on its opening day at the domestic box office.

    While Taylor Swift: Eras Tour is virtually assured of winning the weekend with a gross of $30 million to $33 million after crossing the $100 million mark domestically, that doesn’t mean Killers of the Flower Moon can’t carry a tune. (AMC is being more conservative in projecting a $26 million to $27 million weekend for Eras in case there is, once again, little walk-up business.)

    Flower Moon — starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Lily Gladstone and Robert De Niro — is expected to score $23 million for the weekend, the third-best nationwide opening of Scorsese’s career behind 2010’s Shutter Island ($41 million) and 2006’s The Departed ($26.9 million), not adjusted for inflation. It also ties with The Departed and Goodfellas in receiving the best CinemaScores of his career, an A-.

    Apple Original Films is giving the $200 million to $250 million film a traditional theatrical run via Paramount. Its performance so far is impressive for an adult drama that runs three hours and 26 minutes.

    And while Flower Moon is skewing older, 46 percent of Friday ticket buyers were under the age of 35, including 27 percent between the ages of 25 and 34. Among older adults, 38 percent of the audience was 45 and older. Since this latter demo is notorious for not rushing out on opening weekend, Apple and Paramount are counting on Flower Moon to enjoy a strong run in the ensuing weeks as awards season unfolds, thanks to strong reviews and audience exit polls.

    The movie skewed notably male on Friday (61 percent), but the gender breakdown could even out as the weekend unfolds.

    Flower Moon is based on David Grann’s book about the murders of Osage Nation tribe members in the 1920s after oil was found on their Oklahoma land.

    DiCaprio — one of the world’s biggest movie stars — and the rest of the cast haven’t been able to do any publicity since the SAG-AFTRA strike commenced July 14. Apple was able to bank some interviews previous to the strike and generated headlines around the world when it took Killers of the Flower Moon to the Cannes Film Festival in late May but didn’t reap the benefits of a final publicity blitz by the actors. (Scorsese, who has a strong fan base, instead did the heavy lifting solo.)

    This weekend marks a turning point for Apple’s film ambitions. Killers of the Flower Moon, costing $200 million, is arguably the biggest event film to date from a tech giant to be given a conventional theatrical release versus going relatively quickly to streaming. Earlier this year, Apple Original Films revealed it intends to spend $1 billion a year to produce movies intended for theatrical, both to boost its streaming service and strengthen its profile in theaters.

    Apple’s next major theatrical test after Killers of the Flowers Moon is director Ridley Scott’s historic epic Napoleon, starring Joaquin Pheonix in the titular role. Apple and Sony open the film Nov. 22 on the eve of Thanksgiving.

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  • Marvel Fans React To Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’

    Marvel Fans React To Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’

    In a controversial opinion piece penned for The New York Times, acclaimed film director Martin Scorcese argued that Marvel movies cannot be classified as cinema. The Onion asked fans of the action movie franchise what they thought of Scorcese’s latest film, Killers Of The Flower Moon, and this is what they said.

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  • Leonardo DiCaprio Cements a Thrilling New Era in ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

    Leonardo DiCaprio Cements a Thrilling New Era in ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

    The Revenant.From Everett Collection.

    When you get to be as famous as DiCaprio, at a certain point, you can do what you want. His collaborations with Scorsese neatly chart that evolution. During DiCaprio’s early-2000s period of creative drought, he and the director met on Gangs of New York, a fraught production overseen by Harvey Weinstein, before thriving on the studio-backed dramas The Aviator (Miramax), The Departed (Warner Bros.), and Shutter Island (Paramount). However corporate the machines were—something Scorsese has expressed regret about on his latest press run, from Weinstein’s Gangs meddling to the artistic limitations of Shutter Island—this was still Scorsese, and so DiCaprio operated in fresh shades of gray, tough morality dramas that challenged his sparkly persona. It’s no coincidence that his first Oscar nod since being recognized for the 1993 breakout What’s Eating Gilbert Grape came over a decade later, for his intense portrayal of Howard Hughes in The Aviator.

    In that era, DiCaprio also dabbled in transformative villainy, whether with the heavy prosthetics of Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar or the nasty twang of Tarantino’s Django Unchained. But Scorsese’s first independently financed production starring DiCaprio officially turned the actor’s appeal inside out. His very presence in The Wolf of Wall Street, as the sleazy stockbroker Jordan Belfort, presented a brilliant challenge. For three full hours, viewers were stuck in his manically depraved world, which DiCaprio embodies fearlessly and, at times, grotesquely—trading his limitless audience goodwill for a discomfiting repulsion. It’s why critics at the time often considered the film to be in conflict with itself, on the brink of valorizing its despicable protagonist. Of course, Scorsese’s intention was exactly the opposite. DiCaprio was almost too good. Perhaps some weren’t ready.

    Don't Look Up Killers of the Flower Moon Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

    Don’t Look Up, Killers of the Flower Moon, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.From Everett Collection.

    A decade later, Scorsese and DiCaprio meet again in Killers of the Flower Moon, with the latter in a fresh career phase—one less burdened by the peak of fame, perhaps, and thus less in need of subversion. How quickly things can change: The pathetic, weaselly skin of Ernest Burkhart, a dopey war veteran unwittingly entangled in a horrific conspiracy to extort and murder the Osage community in 1920s Oklahoma, fits him like a glove. The film begins as a kind of sweeping love story between Ernest and an Osage woman named Mollie (Lily Gladstone), then develops into a searing horror movie about his involvement in the deadly poisoning of her and her family. His mob-boss-esque uncle, William Hale (Robert De Niro), pulls the strings, but it’s Ernest’s utter indifference toward stopping him, and protecting those he’s destroying, that marks the film’s most insidious and tragic form of evil.

    Gangs of New York Shutter Island The Departed.

    Gangs of New York, Shutter Island, The Departed.From Everett Collection.

    David Canfield

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  • Martin Scorsese Shoots Down ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ Criticism: “It’s Beyond Boring”

    Martin Scorsese Shoots Down ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ Criticism: “It’s Beyond Boring”

    The Wolf of Wall Street is Martin Scorsese‘s highest-grossing film — despite a three-hour run time. Yet it’s a film that has detractors who consider it an excessive, overly vulgar, frat boy fantasy that seems to downright celebrate its amoral Wall Street stockbroker protagonist, Jordan Belfort (played by Leonardo DiCaprio).

    In a new GQ feature that partnered Scorsese with Dune actor Timothée Chalamet, the director was asked about his penchant for refusing to tell the audience how to feel about characters, and he brought up the 2014 film.

    “In the case of The Wolf of Wall Street, for example, I only learned the other day from an interviewer who said, ‘You’re not aware of the war [over] Wolf of Wall Street?,” Scorsese said. “So I said, ‘What are you talking about.’ They said, ‘Well, there was a big screening at Paramount of the picture, for the critics in New York.’ Apparently, I was told this, there were two camps: One camp that loved the picture and the other camp that was furious, saying I didn’t take a moral stand on Jordan Belfort. And one of the critics from the other group that liked the picture said, ‘Do you really need Martin Scorsese to tell you that that’s wrong?’ You really need him to tell you that’s wrong? He knows it’s wrong.”

    Chalamet asked: “Does that moralistic attitude bore you a bit now?”

    “It’s beyond boring, I think,” Scorsese replied.

    Indeed, such takes sound like a holdover from the Hays Code restrictions of the 1930s and ’40s, which mandated (among many other things) that all criminal action in movies must be punished, they must not appear sympathetic, and the audience must be clearly shown that immoral behavior is wrong.

    Yet many critics as the time chastised the film for that very reason. Some samples from the film’s negative reviews among “Top Critics” on Rotten Tomatoes: “Movies shouldn’t provide moral instruction but the best incorporate competing philosophies,” and “Without a moral center, Wolf seems to revel in this cornucopia of bad behavior,” and “A veritable orgy of immorality, each scene making the same point only more and more outrageously, the action edited with Scorsese’s usual manic exuberance but to oh-so-monotonous effect.”

    For the record, The Hollywood Reporter‘s original review was quite positive and The Wolf of Wall Street made our 10 Best Martin Scorsese Movies ranked story — which includes Killers of the Flower Moon, which opens this weekend.

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  • How “Killers of the Flower Moon”‘s Ending Ties the Past and Present Together – POPSUGAR Australia

    How “Killers of the Flower Moon”‘s Ending Ties the Past and Present Together – POPSUGAR Australia

    Watch out! This post contains spoilers.

    Martin Scorsese‘s “Killers of the Flower Moon” takes a true-crime narrative and flips it on its head. The movie, based on author David Grann’s nonfiction book of the same name, debuted in theaters on Oct. 20 and tells the true story of the murders of Osage Indians and the FBI investigation that finally identified some of the culprits. The involvement of the FBI – which was then just called the Bureau of Investigation – is a major part of the book; Grann’s tome is subtitled “The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI.” The book is a well-crafted true-crime story, and finding out who committed the murders is a shocking twist, but Scorsese takes a different perspective on the same material.

    The identity of the killers is immediately apparent in the film. The FBI doesn’t come into the picture until the movie’s last act. And then there’s the ending: Scorsese wraps up “Killers of the Flower Moon” with a visit to an old-timey radio show that tells the same story the movie is focused on. Then, he returns his lens to the Osage one last time before the credits roll.

    I personally loved this ending. The radio show is smart, caustic, and shocking, linking our present-day true-crime obsession with that of the past. The moment made me dig deeper into the history Scorsese was invoking, and the Osage’s dance acts as the perfect balance to its cynicism. Ahead, I break down what the radio show ending is, its historical precedents, the Osage’s dance, and why it all works so well to wrap up “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”‘s Radio-Show Ending

    At the end of “Killers of the Flower Moon,” Mollie Burkhart (Lily Gladstone) confronts her husband, Ernest (Leonardo DiCaprio), about how he was secretly poisoning her. After admitting to helping kill all her sisters and many other Osage, this is the one thing Ernest cannot confess to. Mollie then leaves him.

    The movie then makes a jarring cut to a live radio show that’s also telling the story of what happened to the Osage. The show uses different voice actors, inventive (and often ridiculous) sound effects, and witty narration to finish the tale, noting what happened to Mollie, Ernest, William Hale (Robert De Niro), and some of the other characters. Hale, the mastermind behind the murders, was eventually let out on parole; Ernest received a life sentence but was ultimately pardoned; and Mollie died before either of them in 1937.

    But these sad facts are undercut by the absurd way in which they’re told via the radio show. A white actor imitating a Native American man speaks at a stereotypical and offensive slow pace. The sound effects are jarring. The tale gets none of the dignity and gravitas it deserves. And then, the narrator of the radio show turns out to be Scorsese himself, who steps onto the stage to wrap up this story for audiences listening at home.

    Scorsese’s radio show is clearly inspired by real radio shows that were ubiquitous in the early days of the FBI. The Bureau’s head J. Edgar Hoover was aware that reputation was everything, so he was intent on spreading propaganda about the FBI and the supposed glorious mission of its detectives in as many ways as possible. One way they did that was with the radio show “G-Men” (the slang word for government agents), which was eventually renamed “Gang Busters.” The show ran from 1935 to 1957. Every episode of the program, which told stories of FBI detectives as well as other police forces, boasted that they featured true, authorized accounts of crimes – and how the criminals were ultimately caught – directly from law enforcement. The third episode of this series, titled “The Osage Indian Murders,” focused on the murders of Mollie’s family and aired in August 1935, per pop culture historian Martin Grams. While the audio of that episode is hard to locate, other episodes of “Gang Busters” are available to listen to online, and they have the same characteristics.

    Heartbreaking, complicated cases are whittled down into about 30 minutes, sandwiched between ads and sound effects. The ultimate hero is the FBI agent or cop who catches the bad guys. Thanks to the “G-Men” radio show, just 10 years after the FBI first (finally) began investigating the Osage murders, they had already turned those same crimes into FBI propaganda meant to entertain audiences nationwide and bolster the reputation of the Bureau. And the FBI would do it again.

    The 1959 film “The FBI Story,” starring Jimmy Stewart, partially adapted the story of the Osage Reign of Terror, moving the action to Wade County, OK. But that movie – which Hoover was very much involved in – focused on a fictional FBI agent, Chip Hardesty, and his wife’s struggles as he dedicates himself to the work the FBI does. What happened to the Osage doesn’t matter in the end.

    So when Scorsese takes us to this fictional radio show in “Killers of the Flower Moon,” he invokes the history of how the Osage’s tragedy has been treated. But he also indicts Grann and himself; did they just make another true-crime tale that takes advantage of their grief? The filmmaker doesn’t answer the question.

    Digging into the history of these radio shows, I couldn’t help but think of modern shows like “Law & Order: SVU,” “Criminal Minds,” the “FBI” series, and other cop shows that often brag about how their cases are “ripped from the headlines.” Real, complicated tragedies are flattened to simple morality plays where the police and prosecutors always come out on top. True-crime podcasts, which churn out a case of the week and often feature witty banter between hosts, often similarly make entertainment out of real pain.

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”‘s Dance Ending

    Scorsese doesn’t leave us with just the radio show at the end of the movie. He includes one more scene of the Osage in the present day, dancing in circles. The round dance is a common step among Native Americans, and it’s evolved into a community celebration and time of togetherness, per Powwows.com. The Osage have a special ceremonial round dance they performed called I’n-Lon-Schka.

    By including this dance as the last shot, Scorsese emphasizes that despite all the pain, murder, and anguish, the Osage have continued on. But the legacy of the murders lives on, too. Speaking to Forbes in an interview published on Oct. 18, the director explained that it was only when he started to meet Osage people that he understood the Reign of Terror as an “ongoing situation.” “In other words, these are things that weren’t discussed in the generation I was talking to,” he explained. “This happened to the generation before them or before them, and the descendants are still there.”

    Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” conclusion brings the story to today and ties the legacy together. The film may be a tragic tale, but the story of the Osage Nation is more complicated and vibrant than that. They’re not a relic of the past but still alive and vital.

    “Killers of the Flower Moon” is in theaters now.

    Victoria edel

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  • The Audacious Ending of Killers of the Flower Moon, Explained

    The Audacious Ending of Killers of the Flower Moon, Explained

    Martin Scorsese is well aware that he’s not the first person to dramatize the story of the Osage Reign of Terror—and that his forebears were not exactly the best example. David Grann’s nonfiction book Killers of the Flower Moon ends by describing how the FBI, which arrived in Oklahoma years after the killings began, used the case to promote itself with an episode of the 1930s radio drama The Lucky Strike Hour. Two decades later, J. Edgar Hoover himself participated in the Jimmy Stewart–led film The FBI Story, which contains a brief recreation of the Osage case.

    But it’s the radio drama, produced a decade after the murders, that clearly stuck with Scorsese, and which provides the astonishing coda to his new film adapted from Grann’s book. Over the course of nearly three and a half hours, Scorsese meticulously unfolds the story of Mollie Burkhart (Lily Gladstone), an Osage woman, and Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio), a white man who moves to Oklahoma. Ernest goes to work for his powerful uncle William Hale (Robert De Niro), and falls in love with Mollie. The fact that Mollie is entitled to vast wealth thanks to the oil deposits found on Osage land is, of course, not lost on Ernest. But even as it becomes clear that Ernest is conspiring with his uncle to not only seize the Osage’s wealth, but using incredible violence to do so, Mollie and Ernest’s love holds fairly strong.

    As Scorsese pointed out in a recent New Yorker interview, even FBI agents at the time asked themselves why Mollie stayed with Ernest. Scorsese’s film attempts an answer, showing Ernest—a classic gutless weasel of a Scorsese character—torn between his fear of his uncle, his greed, and his genuine love for his wife. But none of course, made it into the historical record, much less a self-serving radio drama backed by the FBI.

    As the film draws to a close, we see Ernest being convicted for his crimes against Mollie’s family and other Osage people, and watch Mollie finally walk away from him, allowing herself to see for the first time just how deeply he’s betrayed her. It’s a personal, devastating scene focused on Mollie and her agency—precisely the kind of thing left out of so many stories about Native Americans.

    And then Scorsese leaps boldly into the future. In the next scene, we see a cast of entirely white actors recreating the Osage story for a stage-produced radio drama, with the full benefit of Foley sound effects, a sonorous narrator, and a cheering crowd. In this version of the story, the FBI lawman Tom White (Jesse Plemons), a minor supporting character in the film, is the conquering hero, and the villains have been firmly dispatched. It is a cozy narrative conclusion to one of the last great dramas of the Wild West—and bears no resemblance to the story we’ve just seen unfold. As David Grann told Vanity Fair’s Joe Pompeo recently, “One of the things I tried to underscore in the book was how this history was distorted. And one of the things the bureau did was, they tried to turn this into this big success, and Hoover tried to turn this into a big success, after they had apprehended a few of the killers. But there was a much deeper and darker conspiracy that the bureau never exposed.”

    Then Scorsese himself arrives, stepping onstage and into a spotlight that takes the film out of the realm of reality. Taking the place of the radio drama narrator, he reads the part of the story that never made it into The Lucky Strike Hour: what happened to Mollie, the heroine of Scorsese’s version of the story. He reads the basic details of the rest of her life and her death in 1937. Scorsese’s words, describing Mollie’s obituary, are the final ones we hear in the film: “There was no mention of the murders.”

    Like Alfred Hitchcock before him, Scorsese has become famous for appearing in his own films; unlike Hitchcock, Scorsese’s presence almost always comments on the action of the film itself. In Mean Streets, his third feature, he appears as a nameless henchman who fires the gun that upends the lives of our protagonists. In Taxi Driver, he’s a customer even more agitated than Travis Bickle, directing his driver’s attention—and therefore, the camera’s—toward an apartment window where he believes his wife is carrying out an affair. Scorsese is often eager to make us aware not just of his power as the one holding the camera, but of the limit that creates; he is, after all, but one man.

    An even more frequently recurring feature in Scorsese’s work, however, is an obsession with storytelling: how the vital, all-consuming drama of real life can be transformed or forgotten entirely by the passage of time. In Gangs of New York, newspaper headlines show us how the bloody action of the film was translated by the press of the time, followed by the film’s final shot—gravestones obscured by weeds—emphasizing how little of it was remembered. In Hugo, Scorsese’s gentlest film by far, the most violent image is the films of Georges Méliès being melted down and turned into shoes. And most vividly and recently, in The Irishman, De Niro’s mob enforcer Frank Sheeran molders in a retirement home, talking to a nurse who doesn’t even recognize a photo of the man he killed, Jimmy Hoffa.

    When stories do get remembered in Scorsese movies, they usually get remembered wrong. Both Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy end with De Niro’s violent, delusional characters celebrated as heroes in the media, given exactly what they want by a world that will never know who they really are. His puckish Bob Dylan documentary Rolling Thunder Revue combines fictional events with real ones, an acknowledgment—when it comes to Dylan, at least—that there’s no point in trying to nail down the truth. Even in Raging Bull, one of history’s most famous warts-and-all biopics, the main character himself grasps for a clean Hollywood ending. In the final scene (and moments after a brief cameo from Scorsese himself), Jake LaMotta recites Marlon Brando’s famous “I could have been a contender” monologue as he prepares for the hokey one-man show that’s sustaining him now that his boxing career is finished. The monologue is how LaMotta wants to see himself, and is how Scorsese absolutely does not—but the striving toward a flatter but more heroic story is the note the film ends on anyway.

    Katey Rich

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  • ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Is the Hat Movie of the Year

    ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Is the Hat Movie of the Year

    Killers of the Flower Moon is an indisputable Martin Scorsese masterpiece. As the legendary director grapples with his own mortality, he’s put out one of the finest films of his career, one that characteristically muses on similarly heavy themes: greed, corruption, betrayal, colonialism, violence. Based on the 2017 David Grann book of the same name, Killers of the Flower Moon tells the little-known story of the Osage murders in 1920s Oklahoma and the formation of the FBI. See, the Osage Nation had the foresight to maintain mineral rights on their land so, when oil was discovered, it made them fabulously wealthy. It also made them the target of a vast murder plot by their white neighbors.

    I had eagerly been anticipating this movie since it was announced, an anticipation that only grew stronger when presented with the one single still that was available and then, each subsequent trailer. Something else I instantly clocked in the trailer? A cavalcade of hats, each bigger and more beautiful than the last. This was not false advertising, but merely a small sampling of the reality: I can confirm that all three hours and 26 minutes of Killers of the Flower Moon are absolutely teeming with hats.

    This film was costume designer Jacqueline West’s first time working with Scorcese (who, it must be noted, is no stranger to wild hats). “Few directors are as conversant about clothes,” she told me. “He really has incredible taste in clothing, and a wonderful Italian eye. It’s in his blood.”

    She floated two Westerns to the director when explaining what her influences would be: 1926’s The Winning of Barbara Worth and 1948’s Blood On The Moon.

    Of course, hats were a practical necessity in 1920s Oklahoma, to protect from the sun—these guys didn’t have any Supergoop SPF—and rain when working outdoors. But, more than that, West said, “the hats were meant to be there to tell a story.”

    More than 300 hats were created for the movie. The principal actors’ hats—Leonardo DiCaprio as Ernest Burkhart and Robert DeNiro as his uncle, William Hale, for instance—were made by Jack Scholl at Weather Hats in Belle Fourche, South Dakota. (West had a connection to them through her husband, who is a Bullock, as featured in HBO’s Deadwood.)

    Gabriella Paiella

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  • David Grann on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Getting Swept Up in the Culture Wars: “You Can’t Obliterate History”

    David Grann on ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ Getting Swept Up in the Culture Wars: “You Can’t Obliterate History”

    One Thursday earlier this month, David Grann schlepped into Manhattan from Westchester, and I from New Jersey, to catch up before the October 20 theatrical release of Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, based on Grann’s acclaimed 2017 book of the same name. That evening, Grann was scheduled to moderate a conversation with Lawrence Wright, his Austin-based New Yorker colleague and the author of a new novel called Mr. Texas. Their event was at the Rizzoli Bookstore on 26th and Broadway, so we met in Madison Square Park beforehand and grabbed a table near Shake Shack. Grann declined my offer of french fries and cracked open a grapefruit Spindrift, elbow-bumping in lieu of a handshake because he felt like he was coming down with a cold.

    For a writer who plies his trade on the Mount Olympus of literary nonfiction, Grann is one of the most approachable people you’ll ever meet. (Disclosures all around as I sing his praises: I’m a fan, we’re friendly, and my wife also works at The New Yorker, which shares a parent company with Vanity Fair.) So you can’t begrudge the guy for hogging the New York Times best-seller list practically all year long.

    Week after week, not just one but two of Grann’s books have made the list, and usually pretty high up—Killers because it’s been getting a second wind thanks to the Scorsese factor; and The Wager, an 18th-century shipwreck thriller, because it came out in April and, well, at this point, when a David Grann book comes out, it’s going to be a bestseller that’s picked up for an ambitious Hollywood production. (Scorsese is adapting The Wager too.) “I spent most of my reporting life struggling to make a living, really the majority of it,” Grann said. “In the last few years, because the films and the books have done better, I don’t have that struggle anymore. It’s a luxury.”

    Killers of the Flower Moon, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, cinematically restructures the narrative of the book, which exposed the systematic killings of dozens of members of the Osage tribe who had become wealthy from the oil discovered beneath their land. I’d recently learned about a controversy related to the teaching of the book, which is what prompted me to get in touch with Grann.

    There’s a measure in Oklahoma called HB 1775. The broad language in the law, adopted in 2021 and similar to other CRT-type bills around the country, decrees that it is illegal in Oklahoma—the site of the 1920s Osage Indian murders chronicled in Killers—to “make part of any Course offered in a public school…discriminatory principles” such as, for instance, the notion that “an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously”; or the idea that “any individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish or any other form of psychological distress on account of his or her race or sex.”

    HB 1775, now facing fresh scrutiny thanks to the arrival of the movie, has raised concerns among Oklahoma educators about whether they might run afoul of the law for assigning Grann’s book. In at least one Oklahoma high school, copies of Killers were purchased for an 11th-grade English class, only to sit unread after HB 1775 became law. An English teacher at the school, Debra Thoreson, felt it would be a professional risk to introduce discussions about race that are central to the story. “As soon as that passed,” she told The Oklahoman, “I realized I would be setting myself up for House Bill 1775 to take away my license.”

    That’s what I wanted to talk with Grann about—Killers of the Flower Moon being swept up in America’s culture wars. “The idea that you can’t have free discussions that deal with history,” he said, “and create conversations that can sometimes cause discomfort in the sense that you’re dealing with hard truths—I mean, I don’t think you can be in our profession if you don’t believe in truth, history, and knowledge.”

    Grann first heard about HB 1775 from some of his Osage Nation friends, whom he has remained in touch with ever since working on Killers. (He visits Oklahoma every year.) The news understandably disturbed him, and not just because of his proximity to it. “The point is not about my book,” he said. “The point is about history. These conversations are about Native American history, about the past experience of tribal nations in Oklahoma.”

    Joe Pompeo

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  • Leonardo DiCaprio’s ‘Endless’ Improv Annoyed Robert De Niro, Martin Scorsese Says

    Leonardo DiCaprio’s ‘Endless’ Improv Annoyed Robert De Niro, Martin Scorsese Says

    Even Oscar winner Leonardo DiCaprio needs to be told to tone it down sometimes.

    The 48-year-old actor was hilariously outed this week by none other than Martin Scorsese for his purportedly excessive improvisation while filming “Killers of the Flower Moon.” This ultimately left DiCaprio’s costar — Robert De Niro himself — visibly vexed.

    Scorsese’s anticipated crime drama regards the real-life Osage Nation murders in 1920s Oklahoma after oceans of oil were found on the land. While it’s the first Scorsese film to star both longtime collaborators of the acclaimed director, their acting approaches sometimes didn’t mesh.

    Scorsese told The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday that DiCaprio’s method was rather tedious.

    “Oh, endless, endless, endless!” Scorsese told the outlet about DiCaprio’s incessant urge to discuss things and improvise in his scenes with De Niro. “Then Bob didn’t want to talk. Every now and then, Bob and I would look at each other and roll our eyes a little bit.”

    He continued: “And we’d tell him, ‘You don’t need that dialogue.’”

    Scorsese made some of the most iconic films in history with De Niro, including “Taxi Driver” (1976), “Raging Bull” (1980) and “Goodfellas” (1990). They reunited on “The Irishman” (2019), after DiCaprio had formed his own prolific working relationship with Scorsese.

    DiCaprio, Scorsese and De Niro brought “Killers” to the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year.

    Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty Images

    “Killers of the Flower Moon” marks DiCaprio’s sixth feature with Scorsese, who cast him at 27 years old in “Gangs of New York” (2002). The pair later made “The Aviator” (2004), “The Departed” (2006), “Shutter Island” (2010) and “The Wolf Of Wall Street” (2013) together.

    “Killers” marks De Niro’s 10th feature film collaboration with Scorsese.

    It was ironically De Niro himself who first told the director about DiCaprio, as he was so impressed by the actor’s performance in “This Boy’s Life” (1993) that he called Scorsese to gush about him. DiCaprio also inspired Scorsese to reassess his approach to “Killers.”

    “After two years of working on the script, Leo came to me and asked, ‘Where is the heart of this story?’” Scorsese told The Irish Times. “I had had meetings and dinners with the Osage, and I thought, ‘Well, there’s the story.’”

    Scorsese and screenwriter Eric Roth had already adapted David Grann’s 2017 book into a script, but ultimately rewrote it to shift the focus from a procedural about white FBI agents to a more truthful drama about the plight of the indigenous Osage.

    “Killers of the Flower Moon” hits theaters Oct. 20.

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  • The Strange but True Story of the Pioneer Woman’s Link to ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

    The Strange but True Story of the Pioneer Woman’s Link to ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’

    Sometimes guardians made crooked deals with merchants; sometimes, Synder says, they “were the merchants themselves.” Osage headright holders, who were only paid out periodically, could be driven into debt by the high prices of stores like the Hominy Trading Company. Guardians would then offer a bailout: sell us your land, or offer it in trade, and we’ll make sure the debt is erased. Transferring a headright was hard, with a slew of federal documents that had to be filed and approval by various bureaucrats. By comparison, selling your allotment to the person appointed to approve all your business transactions was easy.

    “It was corruption,” says Everett Waller of the guardianship program and the schemes around it. Waller lives in Pawhuska, not too far from Ladd and Ree Drummond’s ranch. He’s the chairman of the Osage Nation’s mineral council, which oversees all the oil and gas rights in the county; he also appears in Killers of the Flower Moon as Paul Red Eagle, an Osage chief whose 1926 Tulsa speech to a group of wealthy oil men spoke mockingly of the efforts of white men to woo wealthy Osage women.

    According to In Trust, modern-day members of the Drummond family characterize their forebears as honorable men and savvy business people who purchased their land fairly, and who had good relationships with their Osage neighbors. Waller isn’t so sure about that. “It’s easy. Just look at the ownership,” he says of the Drummonds’ many land purchases during the Reign of Terror. “Anything over a quarter million acres is far beyond just a lucrative business.” (Vanity Fair reached out to several members of the Drummond family for this story, as well as to Ree Drummond, who married into the clan in 1996. None of them responded as of publication time.)

    Osage oil fields.Courtesy of Oklahoma Historical Society.

    An ancestor of one of Waller’s colleagues on the mineral council, Myron Red Eagle, might agree. In 1934, tribe member Myron Bangs Jr. hired an independent auditor to examine his finances, which were being managed by his guardian, the Drummond brothers. “The auditors filled five pages with discrepancies or issues they found,” Adams-Heard says on her podcast. Bangs sent the federal government the report, and the US filed suit against the brothers in 1941, alleging they “conspired and devised a scheme to defraud” Bangs. A federal judge, however, dismissed the case.

    Adams-Heard also discovered that the Drummonds—seemingly without Bangs’s permission—borrowed $15,000 from Bangs’s funds. They used the money to purchase William Hale’s ranch, which he’d put on the market as he was headed to prison. “To see that he might not have known that his money was used to purchase this land from a man who was convicted of aiding and abetting a murder of another Osage man—I mean, that was really striking,” Adams-Heard told Slate this month. (Vanity Fair reached out to Adams-Heard for this story, but Bloomberg declined to make her available for an interview.)

    The Drummonds made that purchase with another local ranching family, the Mullendores, who ended up buying out a lot of the Drummonds’ interest in the land. Another portion of the Hale ranch was owned by Charles Drummond, Ladd’s father and Ree’s father-in-law; he sold it to broadcast magnate Ted Turner in the early 2000s. In 2016, the Osage Nation bought it, and the rest of Turner’s 43,000-acre Bluestem Ranch, back.

    Eve Batey

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  • Martin Scorsese Shuts Down Criticism Over The 3.5-Hour Runtime For ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’

    Martin Scorsese Shuts Down Criticism Over The 3.5-Hour Runtime For ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’

    They say good things come to those who wait, and in Martin Scorsese’s case, he knows that the prolonged running time of his Western drama “Killers of the Flower Moon,” is more than worth it.

    In a new interview with The Hindustan Times, Scorsese, 80, shut down criticism about his upcoming film’s lengthy runtime of 3 hours and 26 minutes by comparing it to how long the average person binge watches TV.

    With hit films like “Casino,” “The Wolf of Wall Street” and “The Irishman” under his belt, Scorsese is no stranger to keeping moviegoers locked in with visually stunning films that come close to or exceed three hours.

    “People say it’s three hours, but come on,” the director said. “You can sit in front of the TV and watch something for five hours. Also, there are many people who watch theatre for 3.5 hours. There are real actors on stage, you can’t get up and walk around. You give it that respect, give cinema some respect.”

    Scorsese might have caught wind of bellyachers that griped over the length of “Killers of the Flower Moon,” but many fans of the filmmaker gushed over their excitement on X, formerly Twitter, to see the flick that lasts 206 minutes.

    Amid the era of many theatrical releases swapping over to streaming services, Scorsese admitted that fans will be doing a disservice to themselves if they don’t check out “Killers of the Flower Moon” on the big screen.

    “Are we intending to make a blockbuster? No, we’re making a movie, which should [be] watched on the big screen,” Scorsese told the outlet.

    He added: “Other pictures I made? Maybe not. Sometimes, it’s the strength of the picture too, if it plays well on a smaller screen, that’s interesting. Killers could play on a small screen, but in order to truly immerse yourself, you should take out the time.”

    Set in Oklahoma during the 1920s, “Killers of the Flower Moon” follows the true story of the tragic series of massacres of the Osage nation known as the “Reign of Terror.” The film is based on journalist David Grann’s popular book of the same name.

    Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro and Lily Gladstone, “Killers of the Flower Moon” hits theaters Oct. 20. Watch the trailer below.

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  • Martin Scorsese May Be Unfamiliar With a “Sneaky Link,” But Knows ‘The King of Comedy’ “Was Slept On”

    Martin Scorsese May Be Unfamiliar With a “Sneaky Link,” But Knows ‘The King of Comedy’ “Was Slept On”

    There’s little that Martin Scorsese can be taught about the art of filmmaking, but there’s plenty he doesn’t know when it comes to the internet—as evidenced in a viral TikTok shared by his 23-year-old daughter, Francesca.

    The five-minute video, titled “Dad Guesses Slang” and sporting a high-pitched audio effect, shows the 80-year-old auteur trying to decipher various terms. He seems to have a firm grasp on some—“spilling the tea,” the elder Scorsese surmises, “that means you’re gonna tell all you know.” Someone giving you the “ick” in relationships implies that “you were thoroughly repulsed by it.” But other phrases elude the filmmaker, including the definition of a “sneaky link.” It’s a “booty call,” Francesca explains. “Oh, really?” Scorsese replies. “We never saw specific people in my day.”

    TikTok content

    This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

    At multiple points, Francesca deploys films from her father’s career as hints. For instance: “Watching a movie in 70 [millimeter film] hits different.” That, of course, Scorsese understands. “It’s an easy one. You perceive it in a totally different way. Not a totally different way, but you see it…it’s another perspective on the image, so to speak, and the effect the film has on the audience.” When she tells her father that Lily Gladstone “ate” in Killers of the Flower Moon, Scorsese can infer that means “she did very well.” 

    Perhaps the most telling moment comes when Francesca refers to her father’s 1983 film The King of Comedy as “slept on,” which sets Scorsese on a very entertaining tangent. “People hated it when it came out,” he recalls. “It was the flop of the year. That’s what it was called on Entertainment Tonight, New Year’s Eve, ’83 to ’84. It’s okay; it’s alright.”

    This isn’t the first time the Oscar winner has graced his daughter’s TikTok. In July, the recent NYU graduate posted a fan cam video of her father, referring to him as a “certified silly goose.” Last November, the duo did the “I have a flea in my hand” trend to more than 2 million views. Francesca has appeared in a few of her father’s films as well, including The Aviator, The Departed, and Hugo, and will be featured in an upcoming commercial he directed starring Timothée Chalamet. She also costarred in Luca Guadagnino’s HBO miniseries We Are Who We Are and had a cameo in the Italian director’s 2022 film Bones and All, which was eventually cut from the film.

    At the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, both father and daughter debuted projects—Scorsese’s was the highly anticipated Killers of the Flower Moon, while Francesca’s was her directorial debut short, titled Fish Out of Water. “The best part of going into the same profession is that I have him. I mean, he is the best teacher, guide, just overall mentor—and also, he’s literally my best friend,” Francesca told The Hollywood Reporter in May. “I tell him everything. He tells me pretty much everything. And it comes so naturally—he’s like just my one person that I go to.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Martin Scorsese Issues Call ‘Save Cinema’ From Franchises

    Martin Scorsese Issues Call ‘Save Cinema’ From Franchises

    Martin Scorsese is an extremely well-respected director in almost all circles. If anyone gets to issue audiences an ultimatum, it’s probably him. Scorsese has called out superhero movie culture before, deriding it as not being an official example of “cinema.” With the way superhero movie releases have been going lately, he might have a solid point here.

    He recently spoke with GQ to talk more about how franchises and comic book movies are rotting the art form from the inside out. Scorsese said…

    The danger there is what it’s doing to our culture. Because there are going to be generations now that think movies are only those — that’s what movies are. They already think that. Which means that we have to then fight back stronger. And it’s got to come from the grassroots level. It’s gotta come from the filmmakers themselves. And you’ll have, you know, the Safdie brothers, and you’ll have Chris Nolan, you know what I mean? And hit ’em from all sides. Hit ’em from all sides, and don’t give up. Let’s see what you got. Go out there and do it. Go reinvent. Don’t complain about it. But it’s true because we’ve got to save cinema.

    Taxi Driver
    Columbia Pictures

    READ MORE: Every Scorsese Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    “I do think that the manufactured content isn’t really cinema, It’s almost like AI making a film,” he added. “And that doesn’t mean that you don’t have incredible directors and special effects people doing beautiful artwork. But what does it mean? What do these films, what will it give you?”

    Whether or not you think Scorsese is pretentious, or you truly value his opinion on the hallowed medium, it’s impossible not to realize that he has a point worthy of discussion here. Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon opens in theaters on October 20.

    Every Martin Scorsese Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Goes From Limited To Full Release

    ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Goes From Limited To Full Release

    Killers of the Flower Moon is an upcoming film from Martin Scorsese, starring the usual suspects. Luckily, although it is an Apple film and will be streaming on Apple TV+, you will also get a chance to catch it in theaters.

    Initially, the plan was to have the movie released at a limited number of theaters across the country. Instead, they’ve decided to put more of the marketing budget into a wide release. The plot of the movie centers around a number of murders committed against the Osage Nation during the 1920s. A large oil field was found on their land, and whites wanted the wealth the oil would generate for themselves. The movie is based on a book by David Grann, which is in turn based on a true story.

    READ MORE: Every Martin Scorsese Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    So far, the film has only really been shown at the Cannes Film Festival back in May of this year. While there, it received a standing ovation.

    Here is the most recent trailer for Killers of the Flower Moon:

    The film has received nothing but critical acclaim so far. Killers of the Flower Moon will debut in theaters on October 20, and from there, it’ll appear on Apple TV+ streaming at an as-yet unannounced date in the future. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Lily Gladstone, Jesse Plemons, Tantoo Cardinal, John Lithgow, and Brendan Fraser.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Spielberg, Scorcese, and P.T. Anderson ‘Encouraged’ About Future of TCM

    Spielberg, Scorcese, and P.T. Anderson ‘Encouraged’ About Future of TCM

    Fans are worried about the future of the cable channel after a slew of layoffs. Continue reading…

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Martin Scorsese Announces New ‘Film About Jesus’ While Meeting Pope Francis 

    Martin Scorsese Announces New ‘Film About Jesus’ While Meeting Pope Francis 

    By Melissa Romualdi.

    Martin Scorsese is making another film inspired by religion.

    The famed director, fresh off his “Killers of the Flower Moon” standing ovation at Cannes Film Festival, met with Pope Frances at the Vatican in Italy, where he announced his plans to create a film about Jesus.

    “I have responded to the Pope’s appeal to artists in the only way I know how: by imagining and writing a screenplay for a film about Jesus,” Scorsese reportedly announced during a conference in Rome on Saturday, as per Variety.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Trailer: Leonardo DiCaprio And Robert De Niro Star In Martin Scorsese’s New Epic

    “And I’m about to start making it,” the Oscar winner added.

    Prior to the conference, Scorsese and his wife, Helen Morris, were introduced to Pope Francis during a private audience.

    Variety also reports that Antonio Spadaro – the editor of the religious periodical whom organized the conference, titled “The Global Aesthetics of the Catholic Imagination” – shared some details from the event on the publication’s website, noting that Scorsese and the Pope’s conversation included references to the director’s films and personal anecdotes. Scorsese also explained “how the Holy Father’s appeal ‘to let us see Jesus’ moved him,” Spadaro said.


    READ MORE:
    Ray Romano Recalls Getting Cast By Martin Scorsese Who Had ‘No Clue’ Who He Was: ‘He Liked What He Saw’

    The upcoming film won’t be Scorsese’s first project inspired by religion. In 1988 he released “The Last Temptation of Christ”; 1997’s “Kundun” told the story of the Dalai Lama’s life and in 2016 he debuted “Silence” about Jesuit Christians.

    Melissa Romualdi

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