Martin Scorsese unveiled the first footage from his film “Killers of the Flower Moon” Thursday at CinemaCon, where his lead actor Leonardo DiCaprio and pop superstar Rihanna were among the surprise guests. Dark Western “Killers” is Scorsese’s sixth movie with DiCaprio, and his tenth with Robert De Niro — but the first time the legendary director has ever brought his go-to A-listers together.
A true story of greed, love and murder set in the 1920s, when members of the newly oil-rich Osage Nation in Oklahoma began dying and disappearing in mysterious circumstances, the twisty crime drama hits theaters in October.
Footage played at the movie industry summit in Las Vegas showed DiCaprio’s Ernest Burkhart in a romantic relationship with a Native American woman (Lily Gladstone) while seemingly caught in the middle of brutal conflict between the Osage and encircling oil-hungry white capitalists.
De Niro plays William Hale, who is seen conspiring with Burkhart, while Jesse Plemons appears as lawman Tom White, sent from the newly formed Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to investigate the murders.
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Originally, DiCaprio was set to play White, but after spending time with the Osage, he and Scorsese decided to make a “big change” to the script, and center the movie less on the FBI and instead on Burkhart. Scorsese said they were interested in exploring how “some of these people could have done what they did” to the Osage, and how they could rationalise violence — even against those they loved — by simply claiming: “It’s civilisation. One group comes in, and another goes out.”
The film was shot at the true, real-life locations where grisly events took place, and Scorsese said the script was reworked until the last day of shooting, as he spent time with the Osage people and was anxious to “do right by them.”
“It was about immersing ourselves in that world,” said the New Yorker, despite the “110-degree heat” and the unsettling presence on the surrounding prairies of coyotes and wild horses.
The film is adapted from David Grann’s acclaimed 2017 non-fiction book of the same name, and will premiere at next month’s Cannes film festival. “Killers” will be Apple’s highest profile big-screen release yet, as the tech giant launches the film in theaters — a splashy launch that it hopes can consequently drum up interest in its Apple TV+ streaming platform. “I’m really thrilled to have a wide theatrical release before it becomes available at home,” said Scorsese, joking that small-screen viewing is only “ok” by comparison. Apple bought the film from Hollywood studio Paramount after the cost of the lavish, nearly three-and-a-half-hour production began to spiral to a reported $200 million, and the two companies struck a deal to distribute the film to theaters.
Scorsese, director of “Taxi Driver,” “Raging Bull” and “Goodfellas,” was awarded CinemaCon’s inaugural “Legend of Cinema” award.
DiCaprio said Scorsese’s work “will be revered for centuries and generations to come,” and that the 80-year-old director continues to “create vital cinematic experiences that are at the very pinnacle of artistic ambition and achievement.”
Scorsese used the occasion to call on owners of multiplexes to play “truly independent films” alongside more mainstream fare. Earlier Thursday, Paramount presented footage from other upcoming films, including “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One” and “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts.” Star Dominique Fishback told AFP the presence of more “Black and brown people” and voices in “Transformers” would open up the seven-movie, billions-grossing franchise to “more and more hearts and households.”
“It almost feels like we’re starting the franchise over,” said co-star Anthony Ramos. The presentation featured a surprise appearance from pop superstar Rihanna, who joked that her newly announced role in “The Smurf Movie” would earn her “cool points” with her children.
Agence France-Presse