This is a 3 1/2 hour movie but I think I can summarize the essential storyline in a couple of lines. The Osage tribe in Oklahoma discovers oil and is able to retain mineral rights that makes many of the tribe members prosperous. Local white people conspire to steal these rights by marrying and having families with members of the tribe, getting their spouses to bequeath their land and rights to them, and then murdering them in a variety of sinister ways. The deaths are rarely investigated, no matter how fishy the circumstances. It's not until Mollie Burkhart makes her way to Washington DC and implores the President of the United States to help that the FBI comes to town to start unraveling the conspiracy. The threat comes closer and closer to Mollie herself, only for her to discover that there is literally no-one she, and the members of the Native community, can trust.
I started watching the film determined to dislike it. I'm tired of Martin Scorcese's 3+ hour epics with stories that could be told in much shorter time (or in a limited series on Netflix). I was mindful that Scorcese chose this important story - especially in a world where states are passing laws about curricula that identifies anything that makes white people feel bad - and he did so working with members of the Osage community so they could tell and own their own history. While this story is certainly never going to be told in a Florida classroom, it's an important one and the film gives this history its due. It is indeed an Oscars caliber film (and if an editor is getting a nomination for NOT cutting the movie down further, that is saying something).
But the thing about this film that stands out by far and away is the performance by Lily Gladstone. This is a two woman race with Emma Stone in Poor Things and I genuinely can't tell you who will win. I loved her in Reservation Dogs, and there is no movie without Gladstone. The depth of emotion, sickness, playfulness, love, hurt, grit - it's so much more than the part that was written. She's a powerhouse holding her own with the likes of Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio. She broke me.
I can't say that this is a must see film. I can't say that it's one that will be remembered in 10 years. But I will say that if you choose to watch it (even if you have to do it in two sittings), you will be entertained, and I hope you will be outraged, as well. It's worth your time.
You can hear the nominated song, here.
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