Sunday, April 07, 2024

Review of Killers of the Flower Moon

A gruelling, long but worthwhile film, based on the true story of murders of Osage native Americans in Oklahoma in the 1920 - who became wealthy when oil was discovered on their tribal land. The film is very hard to understand at the beginning - maybe some audiences understand the way that the mineral rights were allocated and valued for the Osage, but I didn't and couldn't follow what was going on for a while. 

The film makes a good job of depicting racist white Americans, who are sometimes engaged with the Osage to various degrees; the chief villain, brilliantly played by Robert De Niro, speaks their language and seems to have some genuine personal relationships alongside deeply racist attitudes about how the Osage must die out and yield their mineral rights to whites. There's a newsreel depiction of the Tulsa race riots of 1921, which will be new to many Americans and others, and there's an affable chapter of the KKK taking part in what looks like the 4th of July parade in the town of Fairfax, where the story is mainly set.

The pace and tone of the film changes throughout, but especially in the final third, with the arrival of FBI agents in the town. The acting, especially by Leonardo DiCaprio, is really good.

We watched this in the Middle Floor at Springhill having obtained it via informal distribution.

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