Why Killers of The Flower Moon Has That Cameo

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Thomas Flight

Thomas Flight

Ай бұрын

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A look at what makes Killers of The Flower Moon one of the most provocative film's from Martin Scorsese. A sprawling, haunting, epic that explores Manifest Destiny, the corrupting power of money, and how we must examine our own capacity for evil.
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Пікірлер: 283
@ThomasFlight
@ThomasFlight Ай бұрын
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@jessrl8025
@jessrl8025 Ай бұрын
The moment Scorsese walked on and read the last moments of Molly's life, I choked up. It was beautifully done. A way of him mourning this real-life person and her attempts to help her people, but it is like you said, a self-examination of how we've treated violence and crime in media.
@gurratell7326
@gurratell7326 Ай бұрын
What? That whole last scene was both awkward and cringeworthy, I have no idea what Scorsese was thinking with that one.
@chrisbeaudoin9818
@chrisbeaudoin9818 Ай бұрын
@@gurratell7326best scene in the movie
@lorrrdy
@lorrrdy 24 күн бұрын
I teared up seeing him. That scene was brilliant!
@K.C-2049
@K.C-2049 17 күн бұрын
I loved the ending. it really spoke of Marty's tension with the idea of being a white man telling the story of the Osage people. most out of pocket thing he's ever done and I thought it was brilliant. normally I'm not really one for Scorsese's films, but this one was really something.
@gaylord_focker
@gaylord_focker 7 күн бұрын
​@@gurratell7326I have to agree on this. I totally get what Scorsese was trying to achieve with the scene and his cameo but for me it just failed for being so abruptly and unexpectedly cut into the film that the whole bit took me out of the immersion and distanced me from the events instead of feeling compassion.
@trinaq
@trinaq Ай бұрын
It's sad that "Flower Moon" went home empty handed at the Oscars, it deserved to win some awards, especially Best Actress. Hopefully, Lily Gladstone will receive another nomination in the future.
@nickludwig5
@nickludwig5 Ай бұрын
I was sure it would win best picture. I was really disappointed it didn't win anything. It deserved a lot more
@CarlHH777
@CarlHH777 Ай бұрын
Ultimately, it doesn't matter. We remember great movies, not Oscar winners. Many of the greatest movies didn't win awards. CODA won BP and it's already forgotten.
@a-yam943
@a-yam943 Ай бұрын
@@nickludwig5It definitely deserved best picture in my opinion, but it wasn’t going to win. Not over Oppenheimer. If released in a different year or maybe even earlier in the year, that might have been different. That being said, Scorsese’s last 4 films have all come back from the Oscars with nothing, unfortunately.
@aussieseal9979
@aussieseal9979 Ай бұрын
​@@CarlHH777you saying CODA wasn't good?
@CarlHH777
@CarlHH777 Ай бұрын
@@aussieseal9979 No, I'm saying it wasn't a special movie. A perfectly good and forgettable feelgood movie. On top of that, it's just a remake of a recent French film.
@lovesickmovie
@lovesickmovie 29 күн бұрын
As an indigenous man, this is a great analysis of the movie. I commend you for your diligent research, patience and empathy for the actual history of what happened on turtle Island
@matthewmcshane399
@matthewmcshane399 Ай бұрын
i like how this movie demystifies criminals in movies with the Hales by showing how pathetic, slimy and frankly stupid they are, which adds to the disgust over their violent actions being done for stupid reasons, as well as showing how inept they with the fact that their conspiracy fell apart pretty quickly when someone actually started investigating them.
@blokey8
@blokey8 Ай бұрын
On the other side of the coin, even before you know about the angle Scorcese considered and rejected, it's a really effective choice to portray the Bureau men so unsentimentally. It's good that they shut the murders down, but really they just turn up and get to work. They don't grandstand (and the movie doesn't confer grandeur on them), they don't mete out moral judgements (except for sardonic references to the "epidemic" which the community is shrugging off). They're just men doing their jobs. Which makes you consider how much complicity it required from the other authorities in the area itself.
@Kolibri32searchparty
@Kolibri32searchparty 29 күн бұрын
I didn't take in the bit with the oil execs in the film, didn't hit home the scale of this sort of moral corruption though probably knew it was happening subconsciously. That sort of stuff was definitely happening nationwide in the states at the time
@BatAmerica
@BatAmerica Ай бұрын
I am so glad that this movie gave Mollie more screen time and didn't shy away from the disturbing nature of these murders. We can hear over and over that murder is evil and be told that Native American people suffered. Still, by showing it, especially when it contextualizes this terrifying history through a more human lens, we can get a small inkling of how these people felt during the atrocities. This choice, paired with Lilly's heartbreaking performance, really made the viewing experience and message impactful.
@stellviahohenheim
@stellviahohenheim 5 күн бұрын
It's pointless to show it, nothing have really changed
@sean6721
@sean6721 Ай бұрын
Love the meta commentary. Him possibly accusing himself as a wolf, or us being wolves for indulging in the entertainment that is based on the suffering of a culture and subsequent commoditization of their culture, tragedy, and story by the ones who created the suffering. I appreciate his self reflection in this work more than his other movies. His 'shame' in participating in the glorification, our general misunderstanding of his obsession with 'wolves' and the darker side of the United States and American culture by us not seeing or not caring about how bad his characters can be.
@daniellee2343
@daniellee2343 25 күн бұрын
Scorsese got paid a huge amount of money to profit of this tragedy. He's a pig.
@krustoff24
@krustoff24 Ай бұрын
My favorite film of last year. I have talked to people who have said the length and the pace made them feel like they'd never watch it again and I couldn't understand that criticism because I found the dichotomy between the banal evil from DeNiro and DiCaprio's characters (and their cohorts) contrasted against the Osage people so gripping. The way it subverts the typical thriller trope and tells you right up front that Ernest and co. love money more than they love the people in their community is so fascinating. And as you said, the 2nd to last scene with the radio show is so jarring and profound that I found myself super glued to the screen seeing it in theaters.
@jespersichlau4343
@jespersichlau4343 Ай бұрын
Personally I thought it was too long. And it took away the fun for me. It's not a reason for me never to watch it again, but then again watching a 3½ hour film doesn't happen every day for me. And there are a lot of other movies waiting in line before this one. The problem for me is it feels too predictable along the way. You know you need to go through all these murders and killings and it doesn't come with enough emotional thrills and scene stealers for me to be very invested. Either I don't feel the impact of these tragedies or I get numbed by the sheer amount. Where can the story take me when I already got the point 1½ hour in? Not even the characters are that interesting for me to care despite them being portrayed by some of the best actors the silver screen has ever seen. On a technical level everything is so perfectly executed (of course), and as a moviegoer you know you're being taken good care of. That is apart from the script. I think the problem lies in the script. It's too long, it's got too many characters, and lacks some extra magical moments for the long runtime. I would imagine some of it has to do with the turnaround of the adaptation that happened late in the production (of the script). Also I think it's no coincidence that the two longest Scorsese movies has been produced with streaming services that are longing for quality content. These big directors seems to be able to do whatever they like without studio executives interfering. And I don't think that's a good thing. Not even when it's Martin Scorsese. Compromises are not a bad thing for creativity and without them you often end up "going full retard." That's not to suggest this movie is retarded, but just that too much of anything isn't good. At the end of the day I'm having a hard time seeing what the film would ultimately lose from being 3 hours instead of 3½ hours.
@AppleIndianFTW
@AppleIndianFTW Ай бұрын
@@jespersichlau4343you lost nothing either. If you actually “got” the point, then you *would have* been okay with feeling the idea for another hour or two. There is no “too long”.
@jespersichlau4343
@jespersichlau4343 Ай бұрын
@@AppleIndianFTW Well either I got the point early or I didn't get the point at all. Either way the longer running time didn't help. But please do enlighten me with the point if I happended to miss it. And yes there is such a thing as "too long" and you can bet your sweet juicy ass that's part of why it didn't win a single Oscar.
@MM-jc7uv
@MM-jc7uv Ай бұрын
@@AppleIndianFTWstop being pretentious, there was nothing to “get,” it was a straightforward film based on true events. I liked it but didn’t love it and I also thought the movie was too long just not entertaining enough to warrant its runtime. Lots of repetitive scenes all displaying the same idea that didn’t drive the narrative forward which got tiring. Good movie but to me it’s one of Scorsese’s weaker films
@anujpartihar
@anujpartihar 26 күн бұрын
​@@MM-jc7uvYeah definitely, there's absolutely nothing to get, it all seems to be going somewhere and they were building it up but then you realize, they've got nothing to show for all this buildup and patience they've demanded of us. It's all just a smoke show with no satisfying conclusion to the whole tragedy. You just end up questioning why it was told like this in the first place and why did it have to be soo damn long??
@antoinepetrov
@antoinepetrov Ай бұрын
I was recently thinking about how Scorsese now is for cinema what Hitchcock was in the 70s. The genius director, acclaimed by everyone and the source of cinematic wisdom for all. This said, Scorsese has done much more for cinema than Hitchock ever did - his contribution to film history and preservation is astounding. Add to that the fact that he's still making masterpieces (unlike Hitchcock in his later years) and I don't know how weird a person should be to dislike Marty.
@LuisSierra42
@LuisSierra42 Ай бұрын
That's debatable. It's possible that without Hitchcock we wouldn't have Spielberg or Scorsese
@timsopinion
@timsopinion Ай бұрын
Not knocking your entire point here - but I think saying that Scorsese "has done much more for cinema than Hitchcock ever did" is a stretch. Hitchcock started making films in the silent era, and basically wrote the book on a certain type of cinematic language. I don't think we could even imagine what the film landscape would look like as a whole without Hitchcock's influence. Again, Scorsese has been massively influential in his own right, I just don't think the impact is as wide-reaching.
@antoinepetrov
@antoinepetrov Ай бұрын
@@timsopinion Well, I totally agree, and my point is that Scorsese has influenced not only filmmaking, but film criticism, film preservation, restoration, curation, and so on, areas in which Hitchcock didn't work.
@JJJameson.
@JJJameson. 28 күн бұрын
Good comparison, I think Alfred and Marty are toe to toe though
@kdot.0
@kdot.0 26 күн бұрын
idk how people are even debating this. scorsese has been one of the most important, if not the most important, leaders in film preservation and restoration. his mark on cinema is far beyond just his work.
@SidPhoenix2211
@SidPhoenix2211 Ай бұрын
One of the best bit of praise I can give to this 3.5-hour movie is that right after finished it, I wanted to rewatch it immediately. Easily one of my favourite movies of all time. That line, "can you find the wolves in this picture" REALLY is a sort of skeleton key to understanding a lot of what the movie is trying to say. The guy in charge of overlooking the guardian system for the rich, Native American folks is also the leader of the KKK chapter in town. This is revealed in a pretty non-chalant manner. And then later on, he is seen serving on the jury in the big court case. No one is hiding. It is all quite blatant and out in the open. In the illustration of the wolves in that book, the wolves are in the foreground, after all. Clear for us to see. The illustration is pretty much from the perspective of the wolves! I kept wondering how Scorsese would end the film. What I got was VERY unexpected and powerful. It was powerful, self-aware, and reflective. And the final shot just hits like a truck. As I sat and listened to the ambiance that played over the credits, I just felt a DEEP sadness and ANGER.
@glyphsandclutter
@glyphsandclutter Ай бұрын
sincerely have not stopped thinking about that epilogue since I saw the film months and months ago
@Brian_Boru
@Brian_Boru 28 күн бұрын
Thanks for continuing to discuss Killers of the Flower Moon. It deserves to be remembered. I still think about it often. Such a haunting film.
@Advent3546
@Advent3546 Ай бұрын
The ending still shakes me to my core. Scorsese personally reading out the eulogy for Molly followed immediately by the Osage celebration was powerful.
@mentorassassin0282
@mentorassassin0282 Ай бұрын
I do love them video analysis essays sir
@pleasecallmesensei
@pleasecallmesensei Ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@sethpfeiffer47
@sethpfeiffer47 Ай бұрын
I’m surprised there was no mention of the storm in the credits. That’s what really got me after the epilogue, was sitting with the storm like Molly asked Earnest to earlier in the film. That was such a good way to finish everything off.
@lucasarif4387
@lucasarif4387 Ай бұрын
that intro with the osage dancing in the oil has stuck with me ever since i first watched the film. i was high but i was smiling through the whole thing. genius filmmaking.
@dinodinosaur2930
@dinodinosaur2930 Ай бұрын
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 The ending radio scene did feel out of place ... But you explained its meaning beautifully ... Thank you for your brilliant work you produce
@iangeorge7913
@iangeorge7913 Ай бұрын
I don't know if you saw VFX breakdowns for this film @thomasflight but the storybook image was actually added digitally to the book after it was filmed. The original page just looked like a normal page of a book. Loved your video though, I especially loved the radio dramatization at the end and agree with everything you said about it. It's probably the best use of a director cameo I can think of.
@hqelias
@hqelias 29 күн бұрын
This essay has made me appreciate the film much more. Thank you!
@maharanieh
@maharanieh 25 күн бұрын
i love the mindset you start with for this analysis. i immediately subscribed, im hoping i could enjoy more of these insightful videos. great job!
@brockeldon444
@brockeldon444 Ай бұрын
This is terrific work. You are my favourite new film video essayist. I became partial to your channel with your Oscar preference for this one. I'm really enjoying your work. Thank you for this.
@grausn
@grausn 28 күн бұрын
Thomas you are so brilliant, thank you for this.
@catarmy9496
@catarmy9496 Ай бұрын
If Marty saw this video he would have been very flattered that someone found so many layers in his film and expressed them so eloquently. Hopes are low, but why not dream...
@LuisSierra42
@LuisSierra42 Ай бұрын
hahaha, I'm pretty sure Thomas is not the first person to see the layers in this movie
@OldBluesChapterandVerse
@OldBluesChapterandVerse 29 күн бұрын
Great video, Thomas. Helped me understand elements of the film in ways I hadn’t. Which is the point.
@solreategui418
@solreategui418 27 күн бұрын
We need a video on The Zone of Interest
@beincheekym8
@beincheekym8 23 күн бұрын
Excellent analysis as always. Love your work. Cheers!
@magzdilluh
@magzdilluh Ай бұрын
At that line about the wolves I never felt more helpless
@jamesgray9950
@jamesgray9950 Ай бұрын
Very thoughtful analysis, I'm glad I watched it and thank you explaining Manifest Destiny's influence in this film.
@krystalscott2880
@krystalscott2880 21 күн бұрын
This was so well written and thoughtfully analyzed. Thank you-for your craft, and for sharing it!
@alyssashannon1218
@alyssashannon1218 19 күн бұрын
Wow amazing analysis. Thank you for discussing everything with such respect and awarness
@hoodedmexican
@hoodedmexican Ай бұрын
I'm so early to a new Thomas video what a time to be alive thank you for this. I've been thinking about that line since I saw it opening day.
@MrOtistetrax
@MrOtistetrax 29 күн бұрын
Thomas contiually knocking it out of the park with his insightful analysis.
@matthewrikihana6818
@matthewrikihana6818 Ай бұрын
❤ the video Thomas, you hit the nail square on.
@A15cinema
@A15cinema 25 күн бұрын
Wonderful dissection. You nailed it, especially the true depths of the epilogues.
@alyssa01825
@alyssa01825 Ай бұрын
amazing video as always!!
@MikeGeyer
@MikeGeyer 24 күн бұрын
Fantastic piece, Thomas. Thank you!
@natepoch2416
@natepoch2416 29 күн бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed “Oppenheimer,” but “Killers of the Flower Moon” shot my jaw through the floor. Absolute masterpiece.
@lightandtheweight
@lightandtheweight Ай бұрын
Another great video thank you sir. Manifest Destiny is just a fancy word for “because we could.” Not coincidentally it’s the bully’s rallying cry. What a great, sinister cover-word for our collective diffusion of responsibility in any context. In a world where most everyone plays at least some part of “the wolf” archetype, you don’t need to find them whole to discern our evil.
@esock2001
@esock2001 Ай бұрын
Crying tears of joy. LETS GOOOO! ANOTHER BANGER FROM THE GOAT!!
@TheRenzinoable
@TheRenzinoable 24 күн бұрын
Fire video essay Thomas! Keep it up!
@Brolo214
@Brolo214 Ай бұрын
There’s a moment in The Wolf of Wall Street during a chaotic office scene when the Devo song Uncontrollable Urge starts playing. Devo’s mission, especially in that first album, was to reveal the de-evolution of humanity. I read this as Scorsese saying that the naked pursuit of money is de-evolving us. At the beginning of The Irishman, we see Frank killing German soldiers in cold blood as he was more or less ordered to do. I see this as Scorsese saying war traumatizes us and desensitizes us to human suffering. Here, I I think the two meet. Ernest loves money, of course, but in two separate scenes he also tells both his brother and his uncle about the horrors he saw in World War I which neither family member pays much attention to. Ernest has been shaped by these twin gods of money and violence to the point that he can refuse the understanding that what he is doing is wrong, just as the society that shaped him continues to refuse that same understanding.
@siopaosoysauce
@siopaosoysauce 9 сағат бұрын
this video is incredible, thank you for making it. this film is a masterpiece
@SH-ix6mc
@SH-ix6mc Ай бұрын
This was a wonderful analysis that weaved in history and society. Thank you, it's giving me much to think about and process.
@user-qs1dc7qy4e
@user-qs1dc7qy4e Ай бұрын
Fantastic analysis
@wabi_sabi52
@wabi_sabi52 27 күн бұрын
I love your analysis
@warmweathr
@warmweathr Ай бұрын
Awesome video dude. Made me think a lot
@amanjaiswal9389
@amanjaiswal9389 Ай бұрын
Make a video on some of PTA's films. I loved your video on PTA about the shift in his style but I'd love a video taking in depth about one of his films maybe The Master, Phantom Thread, Inherent Vice or even Licorice Pizza.
@whatisitg
@whatisitg 24 күн бұрын
Very astute review. It's videos like these from you that made me start my own KZfaq channel and try to write down my thoughts and criticism about film and media. You have such a great way of bringing out my own feelings towards something in your description. That 'The Wire' video really spoke to me. And can I also say: you have also really strongly improved during these years. To many more.
@JAN014
@JAN014 29 күн бұрын
I have not had the time to watch it yet but i am excited to eventually! This story interested me a lot
@BlackReaper0
@BlackReaper0 26 күн бұрын
Excellent analysis!
@SigmaQuotesForRealSigmas
@SigmaQuotesForRealSigmas Ай бұрын
I love your videos, man
@____smith
@____smith Ай бұрын
one of the greatest movies I've ever seen. Scorsese's run from Wolf to KotFM is extremely impressive, some of the best work of his career. Schoonmacher continues to be one of the greatest editors to ever do it, the pacing is perfect.
@mr.bondnews4505
@mr.bondnews4505 25 күн бұрын
Great analysis!
@tdbourneproductions8220
@tdbourneproductions8220 3 күн бұрын
I found the last few moments of Killers of Flower Moon very intense. It was definitely a mirror flipped to the audience.
@invancouver691
@invancouver691 28 күн бұрын
I only heard one complaint: "The movie is long!" But I need to understand why that is a problem when the movie is so good! Don't you guys think that if the Oscars were honest, Best Picture would've gone to Killers of The Flower Moon, Best Director would've gone to Martin Scorsese, and Best Score would've gone to Robertson!? Probably the greatest American Director alive won only one Oscar!!!
@username.exenotfound2943
@username.exenotfound2943 Күн бұрын
its too long because you can cut probably 30 mins out of it and the film will be the same
@howiespancakeshack
@howiespancakeshack 2 күн бұрын
incredible essay.
@charlie5310
@charlie5310 Ай бұрын
Very interesting analisis!
@JamieCant
@JamieCant Ай бұрын
Fantastic essay, clarified many thoughts I couldn’t have put into words and reminded me of why I loved this film so much.
@cristinasponk
@cristinasponk 23 күн бұрын
Scorsese’s own monologue on the stage at the end has become my favorite scene in a long time
@mikejennette8478
@mikejennette8478 Ай бұрын
Scorsese also made Silence which is essentially a dissection of Catholicism as well
@lisannebaumholz5028
@lisannebaumholz5028 Ай бұрын
I agree, and as a Japanese lit major from many, many years ago, I recommend the excellent novel by Shusaku Endo upon which Scorcese based his film.
@tom.8306
@tom.8306 15 күн бұрын
I just gotta say that I watched the movie when it was in theaters and, admittedly, didn’t get much out of it. I wasn’t sure what to expect and kinda felt like it didn’t tell the story the best it could have because the pacing was off and I was hoping to get more time spent of characters that never got as fleshed out. It just didn’t sit right with me and I wrote it off. But your take on this has really helped bring a different perspective to this film and I have a lot more respect now. I ought to give it another watch.
@odeio_milho
@odeio_milho Ай бұрын
This might just become one of my favorite movies of all time. Every time i rewatch or merely think about it i find something new to be struck by. Harrowing stuff.
@luke.hoffman
@luke.hoffman Ай бұрын
Great video, Thomas. A lovely illustration of how Scorsese handles the Manifest Destiny theme. I enjoyed the film; it's undoubtedly great from a technical and theatrical perspective. However, I think Scorsese made some very strange decisions in his approach to telling this story that keep it from being his best work. His narrow focus on Molly and Ernest meant that so many important details about the broader effect of the evil inflicted upon the Osage were entirely glossed over (e.g. how many other murders took place that were never looked into and how the Osage went about protecting themselves as a community). I much preferred David Grann's take in the novel, where there was significantly more mystery and, consequently, shock factor when it is eventually revealed who the wolves responsible for the sinister murder plot really are. I also think Grann did FAR more with Jesse Plemons' character, Tom White. He's very uninteresting in the film (a farcry from his fascinating depiction in the book). Lastly, I think Molly deserved far more screen time and focus in the third act than Ernest--his turmoil really seemed to dominate the story here when it arguably shouldn't have. If you've read the book, I'd be keen to hear your thoughts (and the thoughts of anyone else who's read it) :D Edit: Your point about one of the film's goals being to push us to examine, recognise and resist the type of evil on display here is fantastic-I couldn't agree more. And I think it would still have been achievable if Scorsese hadn't focused so much on Molly and Ernest and had instead taken an approach similar to that of the book. I would have loved to see at least half the story told from Molly's subjective perspective so, like the book, we could get a clearer idea of how well these wolves were hiding in and manipulating the community so effectively.
@CapitalFProductions
@CapitalFProductions Ай бұрын
I’ve read the book and get your complaints though disagree. They were initially going to make Tom the protagonist but worried that it would come off like a white savior story and that as a person, he really didn’t have any flaws. He was a straight shooter and works if you wanna tell the story of the origin of the FBI but would distract even more from the native POV. The Molly/Ernest focus is meant to be a microcosm of the community trauma and while I think it works, it can definitely vary. I feel like they narrowed the focus because it’s such a big story in scope that broadening out the character focus would get us lost
@realtalk13
@realtalk13 Ай бұрын
I do wish Scorcese filmed more from Molly's narrowed perspective, similar to Rosemary's Baby or Get Out, not just because the lack of information would add to the tension, but because it further forces the audience in the mindset of Molly and the Osage, living through a nightmare caused by those who are physically and sometimes intimately closest to them. That said, I do get the point of Ernest's perspective in showing the casualness and mundanity of it all to the white people of Osage. What is shocking and unthinkable to the Osage people and modern audiences was considered so normal and justified via a matter of fact belief in white supremacy that they barely thought of masking their actions and intentions. And Ernest being boring is also part of the narrative from my perspective: he wasn't some interesting guy with a particularly warped view. He's dumb and mediocre. Average at best. That shows how accessible and attractive white supremacy was and can be, even for those who don't consider themselves true believers. A part of me wishes that the film was split to more clearly evoke that dissonance: part 1 from Molly's perspective, part 2 going over the same events from Ernest's perspective as the reveal, and part 3 the trial/aftermath once the feds get involved.
@luke.hoffman
@luke.hoffman 29 күн бұрын
@@CapitalFProductions yes, I saw that their first draft of the script more closely resembled Grann’s approach to the book. And while this would have been interesting, I actually agree with your point that focusing solely on Tom and his team would have been a mistake. But that doesn’t mean they couldn’t have built his character out a bit more and given us a bit more time with him and his team (particularly during their investigation and the trials later on - this all goes way too fast, in my opinion). I wish they’d found a way to blend the two versions of the script into something that still felt original and achieved their goal of keeping the story so personal, but also helped us appreciate some of the others involved in the story (both the oppressors and the oppressed). I actually did my own video and article on this, so if you get a chance, I’d love to hear your thoughts on them 👍🏽
@luke.hoffman
@luke.hoffman 29 күн бұрын
@@realtalk13 I really like your points here, dude. Particularly the part about splitting the film into different perspectives - this is how I was hoping they’d done it. Maybe starting at the end during the trial and showing the various events through each of the characters subjective viewpoints, gradually revealing the atrocities as each account was dissected. Something like this would have been a riveting and original way to tell the story whilst capturing all the nuance and conflict (in my opinion, anyway 😂)
@CapitalFProductions
@CapitalFProductions 29 күн бұрын
@@realtalk13 If the scope of the story was much more narrow, an approach like Get Out or RB could work but the goal was to encapsulate a really wide story set over many years. The examples mentioned are much briefer in time but at the end of the day, it's really about who's telling the story. I think a lot of the people commenting on the movie (mainly twitter) tended to get obsessed with what THEY would've done and because Scorsese didn't do it, shade was thrown. Which is a big reason I love the ending as much as I do, that it does acknowledge how limiting cinema can be when telling a story as raw as this
@isabellasantiago6473
@isabellasantiago6473 26 күн бұрын
I think the wolf motif can also tie in with the joke that Ernest tells Molly when they talk alone for the first time, he asks if what she said meant that she called him a coyote-a coyote is similar to a wolf but not quite; they’re both dangerous predators. Ernest was one of the main perpetrators but he was much dumber in contrast and cowardly, a wolf but not quite.
@SP-ny1fk
@SP-ny1fk 2 күн бұрын
It's why film is such an essential artform.
@lt3880
@lt3880 29 күн бұрын
I really liked this film but I could not get past Leo doing the dang grumpy cat face the entire film. I presume its to make him look unsympathetic and simple-minded, but its just so funny.
@nemtudom5074
@nemtudom5074 29 күн бұрын
6:20 "the middle two and a half hours of the motive" Excuse me WHAT. How long is this thing? Three and a half hours?! Geeez
@user-ql2ce5tx5c
@user-ql2ce5tx5c 28 күн бұрын
And not a minute wasted!
@MrWilmsy
@MrWilmsy 3 күн бұрын
@@user-ql2ce5tx5c such hyperbole
@WhytheBookWins
@WhytheBookWins Ай бұрын
Such an incredible movie!
@nachosniewolnosci3147
@nachosniewolnosci3147 Ай бұрын
I really would love to see some essay on Hugo.
@joshnoritake3167
@joshnoritake3167 Ай бұрын
I think what’s the saddest part about this movie is that while it might be Scorsese’s most mature work, made at the tail end of his career and definitely the most self-reflective and self-critical of his films, it’s also doesn’t have what makes his most notable films so enjoyable: that masculine, visceral thrill of violence and greed which justifies itself to the viewer through the perspective of its charismatic and sympathetic criminals.
@sewerentropy5217
@sewerentropy5217 24 күн бұрын
i feel that would be antithetical to the movie as whole. to have the maturity this movie contains, it would be misguided to show violence in the way Scorsese previously has. the self-critical elements wouldn't hit nearly as hard if Scorsese decided to portray exactly what he is being self-critical about.
@K.C-2049
@K.C-2049 17 күн бұрын
I think that's why I liked this film where I usually don't like his work. I think he finally managed to see outside of the perspective of "white guys doing bad things is fun", and realized "white guys doing bad things is not fun for everyone". better late than never.
@Conflictful
@Conflictful 29 күн бұрын
Your review and analysis of movies is unmatched in this space, thank you and keep pushing your originality
@santiagorojaspiaggio
@santiagorojaspiaggio 29 күн бұрын
Great film. Great video.
@chrysanthesky
@chrysanthesky 29 күн бұрын
You have such a gift for analysing stories and presenting your own takes on this.
@tommyjds1
@tommyjds1 29 күн бұрын
Great video! Been watching your channel for a couple of years now and just wanted to give an early congratulations for reaching 1 million subscribers! Honestly, well deserved.
@prestely
@prestely Ай бұрын
Very interesting video. i shall be thinking about the wolves in the picture for quite some Time, thanks to you. To me the pacing in the movie goes with the representation of an evil or violence more systemic and cultural than Scorsese's mafia movies and i really appreciated his showing the slow, Insidious percolating of such violence, inversely proportional to how it IS looked down on by the "wolves". I couldn't help but regard the film as the other side to"Silence", with religious violence repeating itself over and over, dragging on to a luminous ending (killers would be the dark side). The ending reminded me both of the audience AT the end of the Wolf of Wall Street and also of Spike Lee's "wake UP" montage AT the end of BlacKkKlansman.
@QuantumHistorian
@QuantumHistorian Ай бұрын
11:20 _" It's not saying that money or technology is always bad or the root of all evil, it's valuing these things above human life that leads to horrific violence"_ is the kind of subtlety (both in films and in analysis) that is very welcome. It's tiring how much media is an overly simplific Capitalism /Socialism / Religion / Insert_Ideology_Here is bad with no attempt at looking at things from a different angle than the point of view being pushed.
@confused_lefty
@confused_lefty Ай бұрын
Technology is generally neutral, who wields it and what it is wielded for makes it good or bad. I say generally because things like oil extraction is objectively making our planet worse
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 18 күн бұрын
That's actually the true meaning of "money is the root of all evil." It's not money that's evil, but valuing it above human life. Humanity should come above all.
@servinwow
@servinwow 27 күн бұрын
Honey! Get in here! Thomas Flight dropped a new video!
@KevinMakins
@KevinMakins 4 күн бұрын
15:00 Confession is yet another theme with its root in Catholicism. Love your videos. Thanks for sharing your perspective on such beautiful films.
@HorseJoint
@HorseJoint 9 күн бұрын
My BOI is literally on the CUSP, of 1MIL subscribers. LETS GOOO!
@ead630
@ead630 Ай бұрын
I saw this movie a second time in theaters and now I thin it is truly a great film
@santiagogarza8121
@santiagogarza8121 7 сағат бұрын
I read the story a while before watching the movie and when I heard Di Caprio was on it, I was sure that he'd lay the Sheriff and be the protagonist. It was to me a shock to see that we'd be following the bad guys instead
@DadJokeCinema
@DadJokeCinema 3 күн бұрын
I like your sweater, dude.
@Brunanaoexiste
@Brunanaoexiste 28 күн бұрын
Brillant !!!!
@flyingaviator8158
@flyingaviator8158 Ай бұрын
An excellent review of a significant film made by a true master of craftsmanship. Personally I think KILLERS OF THE FLOWERMOON together with SILENCE and AVIATOR are Scorsese's most underrated films.
@CC3GROUNDZERO
@CC3GROUNDZERO Ай бұрын
That Garfield avatar though. I just rewatched "What the internet did to Garfield" :/
@Keenonhang
@Keenonhang 26 күн бұрын
Loved this film. A classic Scorsese film. Very powerful, dark and harrowing and expertly crafted and told by one of the greatest filmmaker of modern times. Adore his films.
@isaiahwilliams2642
@isaiahwilliams2642 Ай бұрын
Lily Gladstones Oscar is probably the biggest snub since Judy Garland for "A Star is Born."
@majinweabuu6679
@majinweabuu6679 Ай бұрын
Nah, Emma deserved it. Honestly this years best actress category was incredibly stacked in general.
@majinweabuu6679
@majinweabuu6679 Ай бұрын
Nah, Emma deserved it. Honestly this years best actress category was incredibly stacked in general.
@K.C-2049
@K.C-2049 17 күн бұрын
@@majinweabuu6679 absolutely not. Sandra Huller spanked everyone. what an absolute BEAST.
@majinweabuu6679
@majinweabuu6679 17 күн бұрын
@@K.C-2049 she was fantastic
@sandramorey2529
@sandramorey2529 25 күн бұрын
I haven't yet seen this film and I too was flabergasted that it got nothing at the oscars. I am so glad this story is finally being told. I saw an old movie with James Stewart about the Osage murders but that's the first I had ever heard of it. Where does Doctrine of Discovery stand in relation to Manifest Destiny?
@dukeee19844
@dukeee19844 Ай бұрын
king drop the link to that sweater you're wearing 👀
@mariaphillips2664
@mariaphillips2664 16 күн бұрын
Nice Analysis..can you als do one for May December
@RoxanneJ81
@RoxanneJ81 Ай бұрын
Brilliant analysis. I think everything you mention after 12:23 is why this film DIDN'T win Best Picture but "Oppenheimer" did. When it comes to stories about history, Oscar voters don't want to be made to reckon with anything. They don't want a film that prompts introspection or meditation on truly difficult subjects like racism and greed. Oscar voters want to walk out of the theater feeling good, and they want to reward movies that do that for them. That's why "Oppenheimer" had the edge. When you get down to it, it's a movie about people complicit in mass murder. But the movie doesn't dwell on that. It doesn't ask, "Isn't it ****ed up that you just spent three hours rooting for these people to create a weapon of mass destruction that slaughtered thousands?" What examination "Oppenheimer" performs of the man and his actions stays vigilantly surface level. On top of that, it spends a big part of the film making you feel sorry for him being the subject of a personal vendetta. It never asks you to extend that same sympathy to the Japanese people Oppenheimer and his colleagues helped kill. It just doesn't ask viewers to dig deep and ask unsettling questions about our government, our military, our culture, ourselves. If it did, it wouldn't have won Best Picture because Oscar voters wouldn't have left the theater feeling good. I'm not saying that "Oppenheimer" is bad in any sense; it was a good piece of entertainment. And it was just that: entertainment. KOTM aims to be more than that, and, as you mention, challenges us to see what happened to the Osage Nation as more than a just true crime story. When you consider this, it's obvious why Oscar voters sent KOTM away empty-handed.
@user-ql2ce5tx5c
@user-ql2ce5tx5c 28 күн бұрын
Very well said.
@Sirrajj
@Sirrajj Ай бұрын
Change happens when we self- reflect & confess our wrongdoings with outmost honesty & objectivity but many times we are too much blinded by power, perceived honour/respect that we don't really deeply reflect, instead try to justify so much so rhat we no longer see that as crime but "a necessary thing" even though it's far from truth, in the end its upon us whether to just brush it off as a sad misfortune of far away past or to actually find the wolves in the current picture (often we ourselves) & bring a meaningful change
@electrikalstorm
@electrikalstorm Ай бұрын
Brilliant film.
@anujpartihar
@anujpartihar 26 күн бұрын
I think Silence still remains one of the greatest movies ever made and there's so much thought provoking themes discussed in that project that I salute sir martin for making it possible and actually tell the story. I was sooo hyped to watch this only to realize it's really just an excessively long telling of a great tragedy with no satisfying conclusion at the end, the audience is made to leave speechless as they're left wondering why it had to be soo long in the first place! It's just criminals doing crimes and innocent people watching their family be destroyed in front of their eyes. I don't care how revered you are as a filmmaker, but that is not good storytelling. There's no depth to be found here folks, it's just depressing to watch and no payoff whatsoever for sticking around.
@connorcolucci
@connorcolucci 6 күн бұрын
Bros so close to 1M
@jiga6832
@jiga6832 Ай бұрын
Martin Scorsese is the living embodiment of "I CAN DO THIS ALL DAY" 😂 The guy is going to be making films to his last breath and I'm here for it 😅😅
@charlesmovesonly
@charlesmovesonly 28 күн бұрын
Thomas stop playing with me and drop your Dune 2 content. I need it.
@danielejaksetich520
@danielejaksetich520 26 күн бұрын
And even at the Oscar's night, there was no mention of the murders.
@meta7gear
@meta7gear 25 күн бұрын
I enjoyed this video essay more than the movie it has to be said
@aze4308
@aze4308 Ай бұрын
bro changed the thumbnail to something so similar
@subroy7123
@subroy7123 29 күн бұрын
Ernest is the most Scrosese-like thing in the entire movie for me. David Ehrlich of Indiewire said that Scorsese has always tried to show how blurred the line is between love and exploitation. Ernest is a perfect vessel for that. As to the ending, it's clarifies Scorsese's intent with this movie so well that it shocked me. Usually Scorsese avoids this step.
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