Film review

  • Killers of the Flower Moon

    Martin Scorsese (2023)

    Martin Scorsese’s introduction to Powell and Pressburger’s I Know Where I’m Going! (1945) at BFI the other day served as a reminder of his deserved reputation as a grand old man of cinema.  As well as directing his own movies, Scorsese, who turned eighty last year, has championed, often as a producer, the work of plenty of more film-makers.  The foundation that he set up and leads has managed the preservation and restoration of numerous pictures; it was easy to tell from his intro that restoring I Know Where I’m Going! was for Scorsese a labour of love – as it no doubt is in other cases, too.  Watching Killers of the Flower Moon brings you back to earth.  It leaves you wondering, not for the first time, if he’s ever going to make a decent film again.

    The screenplay, which Scorsese wrote with Eric Roth, is inspired by David Grann’s non-fiction book of the same name, about a series of murders, in the early 1920s, of wealthy Native Americans in Osage County, Oklahoma.  In a prologue to the main action, members of the Osage tribe discover oil gushing from the ground of their reservation (a kind of double spring since the landscape is in bloom – it’s the time of the annual ‘flower moon’).  Striking oil turns the Osage community into the wealthiest people on earth per capita.  Scorsese inserts some black-and-white film illustrations of their affluence:  we see Native American women dressed up to the nines, not in traditional tribal costume but in fur coats.  Although they retain mineral rights and share oil-lease revenues, the tribe is legally required to have its finances managed by court-appointed white ‘guardians’ (the law deems the Osage ‘incompetent’ to look after their wealth independently).  One such guardian is local cattle rancher William Hale (Robert De Niro):  ‘King’ Hale, as he’s known on the reservation, is reputed to be a friend to the tribe and even speaks their language.  His nephew, Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio), returns from soldiering in the Great War to live on his uncle’s ranch, where Ernest’s younger brother, Byron (Scott Shepherd), also resides.  Hale encourages Ernest to woo Mollie Kyle (Lily Gladstone), an Osage woman from a particularly wealthy family, and the couple duly marries.  (Hale, the Burkhart brothers and Kyle were all real people.)

    Despite his reputation, Hale has his nephews carry out armed robberies from wealthy Osage.  He then graduates to supervising their murders, advising Ernest that the more members of Mollie’s family that die, the larger Ernest’s headrights inheritance will be.  Some killings exploit the Osage’s proneness to diabetes:  Mollie and her sister Minnie (Jillian Dion) are both diabetic; Minnie’s condition deteriorates fatally.  Another sister, the more rebellious Anna (Cara Jade Myers), is shot dead.  With the corrupt local law authorities making no investigations, let alone arrests, Mollie hires a private detective (Gary Basaraba); he’s beaten up by the Burkharts and soon leaves the reservation.  Undaunted, and despite her own illness, Mollie is part of an Osage delegation that travels to Washington DC to make representations about the murders to President Calvin Coolidge.  At Hale’s behest, acquiescent Ernest puts something in Mollie’s insulin to ‘slow her down’ and she sinks into a near-coma.  The cavalry arrives in the form of Bureau of Investigation (BoI) agent Tom White (Jesse Plemons) and his team, who work out what’s going on.  Ernest and Hale, although he murders some of his own henchmen in a bid to deflect suspicion, are arrested.  Mollie’s life is saved.  White persuades Ernest to testify against Hale.  Ernest agrees then changes his mind.  When one of his and Mollie’s daughters dies (of whooping cough), Ernest changes his mind again.

    That is cutting a long story short.  At 206 minutes, Killers of the Flower Moon is actually three minutes shorter than The Irishman (2019) but feels longer thanks to its greater dramatic inertia.  Scorsese seems to have lost any idea of narrative subtlety or concision – two examples of this, one from each end of the film.  In the supposed climax, the will-he-won’t-he ‘suspense’ around Ernest’s testifying against Hale is tediously protracted.  One of Killers’ strongest images arrives quite early on:  an owl that seems to be outside then inside a window in the room where Mollie’s mother, Lizzie Q (Tantoo Cardinal), lies ill in bed.  The bird is seen from Lizzie’s point of view:  we might guess – from the look on her face or the merest smattering of ethnographic knowledge or both – that she recognises the bird as a harbinger of death.  When Mollie comes to her bedside, Lizzie tells her she has seen an owl – then tells her what an owl’s appearance to a sick person portends in the Osage culture that her daughter has grown up in.  As well as diluting the power of the image, the explanation insults Scorsese’s Native American characters and audience alike.  (I don’t buy it that Lizzie’s explanation is meant to be necessary, reflecting how far her children’s generation has assimilated into white society.  That theme is introduced in the film’s prologue but little further explored.)

    This is Scorsese’s twenty-sixth feature and the first time he has used his two favourite leading men together, although Robert De Niro and Leonard DiCaprio have starred in fifteen of the previous twenty-five films.  Watching them share the screen gives renewed urgency to a long-standing question:  what does Scorsese see in DiCaprio, and does he not see the gulf in acting quality between him and De Niro?  Not that the latter’s work in Killers of the Flower Moon is what it was in 1970s collaborations with Scorsese.  De Niro plays William Hale expertly but without the depth or range that he brought to Taxi Driver (1976) or New York, New York (1977) or Raging Bull (1980).  As a senior citizen, Hale mostly gets others to carry out violence on his behalf but he has a gangster’s soul:  De Niro has often played this character type before – it comes too easily to him.  So does outshining Leonardo DiCaprio.  Before Mollie marries Ernest, she and one of her sisters, conversing in their own language, agree that he’s good-looking though a bit dim.  DiCaprio, who often gives the impression he doesn’t quite get what’s going on, might seem well cast in the role; since Ernest is supposed to look baffled much of the time, you could say this is one of DiCaprio’s most persuasive characterisations.  Up to a point – but the giveaway comes soon enough.  When, to signal determination, DiCaprio clamps his mouth shut, sticks out his chin and frowns, you recognise his usual weedy acting.  After drugging his wife, Ernest smells a rat and self-reproachfully tries some of the soporific himself.  This is the last thing that DiCaprio’s sluggish performance needs.

    Scorsese has made clear in interviews that his original conception of the film shifted in the course of its development – changing ‘the point of view of the picture from the Bureau of Investigation coming in from the outside to a point of view that worked from the inside out’.  (DiCaprio was at first expected to play not Ernest but Agent White.)  Killers of the Flower Moon is being hyped as a project that has turned its director into a politically enlightened and historically aware film-maker as never before.  It’s probably part of this strategy that Lily Gladstone is to be campaigned as Best Actress rather than Best Supporting Actress in the upcoming awards season.  As Mollie, Gladstone has a gravid, melancholy dignity:  the solemn tempo of her acting might work even better if she were playing against a more dynamic male lead.  Still, she does register strongly in the film; in their much smaller roles, the actresses playing Mollie’s mother and sisters register, too.  Like Gladstone, they do so for somewhat negative reasons:  the Osage characters, Mollie included, are underwritten compared with the white men in the story – suffering victims, not much else.  But these women are at least unusual in a movie by Scorsese.  Too many of the men on screen here seem part of the Scorsese furniture – and, in some cases, almost interchangeable.  The exceptions include Brendan Fraser, in a histrionic turn as Hale’s attorney, and, especially, Jesse Plemons – who, as Tom White (a role presumably much smaller than the one DiCaprio would have played), is exact, expressive and brings some badly needed focus to the narrative.

    Those black-and-white images at the start are, if not actual newsreel, ingeniously simulated.  There’s a striking mix of music – blues, ragtime, the twangy guitar theme in the late Robbie Robertson’s score – on the soundtrack throughout.  It’s the last five of the 206 minutes, though, that look all set to be the best five.  The scene switches to a radio show before a live studio audience:  it’s a recreation of a Lucky Strikes Hour episode, one of several that, at J Edgar Hoover’s bequest, dramatised FBI (ex-BoI) investigations – in this case, the 1920s Osage killings.  The sequence illustrates an important means of bringing contemporary true-crime stories, and the FBI itself, into America’s cultural mainstream.  An epilogue to the dramatisation, summarising what eventually happened to each of the principals, is a refreshing alternative to on-screen text conveying that information.  Ernest and Hale were both sentenced to life imprisonment but eventually paroled.  Mollie, who divorced Ernest, died of diabetes in 1937, at the age of fifty, and was buried with other members of her family.  Then the widely recognisable figure of Martin Scorsese appears on the studio stage – supposedly as a radio producer, essentially as himself – to announce that Mollie’s newspaper obituary made no mention of the Osage murders.  Scorsese expresses in his cameo, as well as white guilt, pride in how much he has learned making this film.  His vain intervention, affirming that we’re being educated too, kills an otherwise effective postscript.

    At Cannes this year, where it premiered out of competition, Killers of the Flower Moon received a nine-minute standing ovation – just the latest instance of an audience applauding its own stamina.  As with The Irishman, this film’s sheer length is one of the main reasons why it’s likely to be admired.  Another reason is the important subject matter and unarguable point of view – a condemnation of racist murder and the cover-up of racist murder.  A third reason is that the man who made the picture is a hero of modern-day cinema, which is where we came in … So what was the last decent film that Martin Scorsese made?  The last one this viewer found largely satisfying was, to be honest, Bringing Out the Dead, which arrived in cinemas late in 1999 (and was relatively poorly received!)  The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) contained some brilliant things but its themes and message seemed unworthy of Scorsese.  The ending of his latest marathon is unworthy in a different way.   At the start of the closing credits, the film’s title appears in Osage characters before it appears in English – as if to reflect Scorsese’s order of priorities from start to finish.  (It really doesn’t bear thinking about how attenuated the Osage perspective might have been if Scorsese hadn’t seen the light in the process of bringing the material to the screen.)  The next credits are accompanied by an overhead shot of the Osage commemorating their culture in a tribal dance.  This makes for a very attractive visual composition, like the overhead shots in Busby Berkeley musicals.

    26 October 2023

  • I Know Where I’m Going!

    Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger (1945)

    I’d seen it before but that must have been pre-2008 (otherwise there would already be an Old Yorker note on it) – probably in a Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger season at BFI.   They’re now running a new Archers retrospective, through to the end of 2023:  it was good to kick off by renewing acquaintance with I Know Where I’m Going!  The film sits between A Canterbury Tale (1944) and A Matter of Life and Death (1946) in the Powell-Pressburger filmography; it might be considered formally and thematically conventional beside both those pictures.  Yet this must be one of the most imaginative and satisfying romantic comedies ever made in Britain.  Unusually in the genre, I Know Where I’m Going! is visually exciting as well as emotionally engaging.

    The title expresses the confident (self-)belief of the film’s protagonist, Joan Webster.  A prologue, complete with arch commentary by a male voiceover, summarises Joan’s strong-willed progress from infancy (she even crawls with a purpose) through schooldays (she gets a lift home while other girls wait for the bus) to young womanhood (she calls the tune with boys dating her).  In her mid-twenties, Joan (Wendy Hiller) is a middle-class working girl but not for much longer.  In a restaurant-bar, where she and her preferred drink (gin and Dubonnet) are well known to the staff, she meets her anxiously staid bank-manager father (George Carney) to inform him she’s about to be married.  When he asks to whom, Joan hands him her works pass from ‘CCI’ (Consolidated Chemical Industries):  the pass shows just her name and that of Sir Robert Bellinger, head of CCI and, as the baffled Mr Webster reminds her, ‘one of the wealthiest men in England’.  He is nevertheless Joan’s intended; the wedding will take place on the island that Bellinger owns, Kiloran (based on Colonsay) in the Hebrides.  Her astounded but attentive father sees Joan off on an overnight train.  As soon as she’s in her sleeper cabin, she carefully removes from her luggage a wedding dress that she hangs beside her bed.

    From the start, Wendy Hiller achieves a miraculous balance:  she vividly conveys her character’s often infuriating egocentrism but makes you root for her.  The screenplay by Powell and Pressburger achieves a fine balance, too.  It’s very clear from the opening scenes that Joan Webster needs to be taken down a peg or two:  she is and she isn’t in the course of what follows.  Soon after Joan’s train sets off north, the Scottish folk ballad ‘I Know Where I’m Going’ plays on the soundtrack.  The song is sparingly used, not returning until the film’s closing credits, but its lines ‘I know who I love/The dear knows who I’ll marry[1]’ are significant throughout.  Joan is in quite the reverse position:  she knows who she’ll marry, for huge financial advantage, but not who she loves – the story consists essentially of her finding that out.  Bad weather postpones the last leg of Joan’s journey, a boat crossing to Kiloran from the Isle of Mull.  She has no option but to wait on Mull for the high winds to subside.  She stays at ‘the big house’, in the company of its owner, Catriona Potts (Pamela Brown), and two of Catriona’s friends – Colonel Barnstaple (Captain C W R Knight), a fanatical falconer, and naval officer Torquil MacNeil (Roger Livesey), back in Scotland on a few days’ shore leave and also Kiloran-bound.

    Soon after arriving on Mull, Joan is told by a local about nearby Moy Castle (ancestral home of ‘the MacLaines of Erraig’, from whom Catriona is descended) and the ‘terrible strong curse’ attached to it, which forbids the lairds of Kiloran ever to cross the castle’s threshold.  Next day, Joan, escorted by Torquil, sets out for Tobermory in search of a telephone.  En route they come upon the ruins of Moy Castle; she’s keen to go inside but he refuses to do so.  When she points out that the curse applies only to the laird of Kiloran, Joan discovers that’s just who Torquil is – and that Robert Bellinger doesn’t own the island but has leased it from him.  In Tobermory, Joan is able to phone her fiancé from the post office.  With a gale imminent and a sea crossing still out of the question, Bellinger advises Joan to stay with a business associate called Robinson and his wife – ‘the only people worth knowing’ in the area – but Joan opts instead for a night in the Western Isles Hotel, where Torquil also stays.  The weather’s no better the following day so, without telling Torquil, she checks out of the hotel and moves on to the Robinsons (Valentine Dyall and Catherine Lacey).  She accompanies them on a visit to Achnacroish, the home of Mrs Crozier (Nancy Price); to Joan’s surprise, the house guests include Torquil.  At the hotel, he and Joan not only stayed in separate rooms but lunched at separate tables – at her request:  when Mrs Crozier introduces them, Torquil tactfully affects never to have met Joan.  Whereas Sir Robert Bellinger is never anything more than a braying, bumptious voice (supplied by Norman Shelley) at the end of a phone connection, it seems everywhere that Joan goes on Mull, she sees Torquil.  That night, Achnacroish hosts a ceilidh to celebrate the diamond wedding of Mrs Crozier’s head gardener and his wife.  Torquil and Joan spend much of the evening together.

    As a set piece and an emotional centrepiece, the ceilidh in I Know Where I’m Going! may well have inspired the ceilidh in Bill Forsyth’s Local Hero (1983).  It’s worth comparing the two films in other ways.  Like Joan Webster, Peter Riegert’s ‘Mac’ MacIntyre in Local Hero comes to Scotland on a money-making mission; the place and the people encountered by these cultural outsiders cause them to think again.  While the locals both in Forsyth’s Ferness and on Mull include some wily characters, Powell and Pressburger’s Hebrideans represent a different set of values from Forsyth’s villagers – most of whom are as keen to get a piece of the action as the energy conglomerate that sends Mac to Scotland.  Although money and privilege are frequently discussed in I Know Where I’m Going!, the local consensus seems to be that the first doesn’t matter and the second encourages foolish behaviour.  On the bus ride to Tobermory with Joan, Torquil is recognised and warmly greeted by other passengers, to whom he’s known as ‘Kiloran’.  Unaware who Joan is, they disparage what Robert Bellinger is up to:  getting a swimming ‘pond’ installed even though he’s living near the sea; ordering supplies of salmon that he could catch himself.  Telephone calls at the post office cost ninepence each; when Joan tries to pay with a note, the postmistress (Jean Cadell) can’t change it; Torquil hands over in coins the shilling and sixpence owing.  As they leave, he explains to Joan that the postmistress ‘wouldn’t see a pound note from one pensions day to another’:

    Joan:      People around here are very poor, I suppose.

    Torquil:  Not poor.  They just haven’t got money.

    Joan:      It’s the same thing.

    Torquil:  Oh, no, something quite different.

    These islanders aren’t immune to financial temptation, though.  Joan continues to try and fail to persuade the local boatman Ruairidh Mhór (Finlay Currie) to take her to Kiloran, despite the appalling weather; she has better luck in bribing Kenny (Murdo Morrison), his young assistant and sweetheart of Ruairidh’s daughter, Bridie (Margot Fitzsimons), to do the job:  Joan’s offer of twenty pounds is enough, Kenny reckons, for him to marry Bridie and buy a half-share in her father’s boat.

    The two films’ visual schemes are also very different and, as you’d expect in an Archers picture, more daring here, wonderful as Chris Menges’s cinematography for Local Hero is.  The beauty of Highland landscapes and the Ferness seascape, not to mention the night sky, cast their spell on Mac.  Erwin Hillier’s black-and-white images in I Know Where I’m Going! create something no less mysterious but increasingly threatening, too.  The climax is the sea voyage to Kiloran that Joan insists on making without further delay.  As she already knows from Torquil, this means negotiating the perilous Corryvreckan whirlpool, north-east of Kiloran.  There’s a legend attached to this also: it’s more involved than the Moy Castle curse so I’ll forego the details here.  But I will quote generously from Wikipedia’s astonishing description of how this episode, a combination of location shooting and studio footage, was filmed:

    ‘There are some long-distance shots looking down over the area, shot from one of the [Hebridean] islands. … There are some middle-distance and close-up shots that were made from a small boat with a hand-held camera. … There were some model shots, done in the tank at [Denham Studios].  These had gelatin added to the water, so that it would hold its shape better and would look better when scaled up. … The close-up shots of the people in the boat were all done in the studio, with a boat on gimbals being rocked in all directions by some hefty studio hands while others threw buckets of water at them. These were filmed with the shots made from the boat with the hand-held camera projected behind them.  … Further trickery joined some of the long- and middle-distance shots together with those made in the tank into a single frame. …’

    Torquil angrily tries to dissuade Joan from embarking on the sea trip but she’s adamant so he joins her and Kenny in the boat – and yet:

    ‘[Roger] Livesey was not able to travel to Scotland because he was performing in a West End play …at the time of filming.  Thus all his scenes were shot in the studio at Denham, and a double (coached by Livesey in London) was used in all of his scenes shot in Scotland. These were then mixed so that the same scene would often have a middle-distance shot of the double and then a close-up of Livesey, or a shot of the double’s back followed by a shot showing Livesey’s face.’

    Quite some ‘trickery’ (and ‘coaching’) …

    Joan’s reckless determination to reach Kiloran, risking others’ lives as well as her own, is enraging and would be intolerable if we didn’t realise that, by this stage, her resolve isn’t simply a matter of sticking to her original plan of action:  as Catriona perceives, Joan now needs not only to get to her destination but to get away from Torquil, with whom she’s falling in love.  The boat’s engine is flooded but, as they enter the whirlpool, Torquil manages in the nick of time to restart the boat’s engine, and gets them safely back to Mull.  In the crisis at Corryvreckan, Torquil yells at Joan to keep bailing and to pray.  We know from earlier scenes that she prays regularly, and selfishly.  ‘Your credit must be good in heaven,’ Torquil tells her as the boat’s motor starts.  Her exultant, pleased-with-herself reply is ‘They know a good prayer when they hear one!’  It’s one of the most satisfying aspects of I Know Where I’m Going! that the heroine isn’t in the end thoroughly transformed – but she does want for herself someone and something different from before.  Because Torquil and his values are so much more likeable than Bellinger’s, they make Joan more likeable, too.

    Next morning – in fine, benign weather – Joan and Torquil say goodbye and go their separate ways.  He ventures into Moy Castle, where the origins and full implications of the curse are revealed.  Any laird of Kiloran who enters the castle ‘never shall he leave it a free man:  he shall be chained to a woman till the end of his days’.  Torquil/Kiloran hears the sounds of pipes:  in the road below the castle, the bagpipers due to perform at Joan’s wedding to Bellinger and whom we’ve already seen in action at the ceilidh, are proceeding towards Moy, with Joan marching behind them.  She runs to meet Torquil, they embrace and express their true feelings, and walk off down the road together, Torquil duly and contentedly enchained.

    Roger Livesey’s gentleness and witty restraint are beautifully complementary to Wendy Hiller’s assertive, insistent charm.  Hiller is splendid in Joan’s final, loving outburst; Livesey emanates authentic goodness.  These are marvellous performances.  The leads are well supported by Pamela Brown as the intuitive, melancholy Catriona.  The comedy business around Colonel Barnstaple’s golden eagle – also called Torquil because the bird reminds Barnstaple of the man – is pretty broad; ditto the acting of C W R Knight, a real-life falconry expert.  Still, the Colonel’s obliviousness to the perilous boat trip via Corryvreckan is funny: when the exhausted Torquil returns to Catriona’s house, Barnstaple wants only to tell him about the exploits of his avian namesake (played by Captain Knight’s own golden eagle, Mr Ramshaw).  Petula Clark, twelve years old at the time, is excellent in the small role of the Robinsons’ daughter, Cheril, who doesn’t miss a trick.  There are a few dodgy and/or effortful Scottish accents in evidence but John Laurie, as the son of the diamond wedding couple, is the real thing.  Laurie has lovely animation in the ceilidh sequence, which he also choreographed.

    I Know Where I’m Going! was released in Britain in November 1945; within the film, the war is still very much ongoing.  Torquil’s first appearance is in his naval uniform.  When Joan meets her father at the start, there’s a crowd of soldiers at the bar; she enthuses about the remoteness of Kiloran, from which the war is ‘a million miles away’.  A correspondent with this website last year drew my attention to an imminent  online showing of a recently restored version of the film by Martin Scorsese’s foundation; Scorsese gave a recorded introduction to this BFI screening, in which he talked about the restoration and his love of the work.  As a rule, exclamation marks in movie titles are a bad sign (Boom!, Tora! Tora! Tora!, Mother!, to name a few), though not invariably so (Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!, Dear Comrades!).  In the roll-call of distinguished exceptions to the rule, I Know Where I’m Going! ranks as one of the very best.   

    24 October 2023

    [1]  The word ‘dear’ seems to be a kind of abbreviated euphemism here – replacing ‘devil’, short for ‘dear Lord’.

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