Home Entertainment Killers Of The Flower Moon FIRST TRAILER: Leonardo DiCaprio returns, reunites with Martin Scorsese

Killers Of The Flower Moon FIRST TRAILER: Leonardo DiCaprio returns, reunites with Martin Scorsese

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The highly-anticipated first trailer for Killers Of The Flower Moon was released on Thursday as it features Leonardo DiCaprio’s return to the big screen.

The film explores the harrowing true story of the ‘reign of terror’ that left two dozen Native Americans dead.

The new trailer showed Ernest Burkhart (played by DiCaprio) arriving in Oklahoma where members indigenous Osage Nation tribe reside, becoming romantically involved with Mollie Kyle (Lily Gladstone), and being interrogated by officer Tom White (Jesse Plemons).

It also features Robert De Niro as cattleman William Hale who is the uncle of Dicaprio’s character Burkhart.

The film marks 48-year-old DiCaprio’s first film on the big screen since 2019 Quentin Tarantino Flick Once Upon A Time In Hollywood. He also starred in 2021 film Don’t Look Up which streamed on Netflix.

He's back: The highly-anticipated first trailer for Killers Of The Flower Moon was released on Thursday as it features Leonardo DiCaprio 's return to the big screen

He’s back: The highly-anticipated first trailer for Killers Of The Flower Moon was released on Thursday as it features Leonardo DiCaprio ‘s return to the big screen

Icon: It also features Robert De Niro as cattleman William Hale who is the uncle of Dicaprio's character Burkhart

Icon: It also features Robert De Niro as cattleman William Hale who is the uncle of Dicaprio’s character Burkhart

The epic clip is narrated by Burkhart as DiCaprio puts on his best midwestern accent as he says: ‘

The film is set to premiere at the 76th Cannes Film Festival on Saturday with a limited release in select cinemas on October 6.

There will later be a wider release in the US on October 20 by Paramount Pictures and will eventually have a streaming release on Apple TV+ but remains unclear when that will happen.

The blockbuster is based on the 2017 non-fiction book of the same name written by David Grann. It is set to debut in limited theatres on October 6, with a wide release scheduled for October 20. 

Set in the 1920s, it centers on the FBI’s investigation into a string of murders after several members of the Osage tribe in Oklahoma were slaughtered. 

Killers of the Flower Moon focuses on a little-publicized chapter of American history involving the Osage Nation.

In the 1920s, the Osage tribe became wealthy almost overnight after oil was discovered beneath their land, earning them more than $30 million in annual revenue at the peak of the boom, according to the Oklahoma Historical Society.

Subsurface minerals within the Osage Nation Reservation were tribally owned and held in trust by the government. 

Mineral leases earned royalties that were paid to the tribe as a whole – with each allottee receiving one equal share also known as a headright.

But these headrights could only legally be attained by outsiders if they married into the tribe.

It was during this time that rancher William K. Hale, a native of Greenville, Texas, encouraged his subservient nephew Ernest Burkhart to wed Osage member Mollie Kyle (later Mollie Burkhart).

Burkhart, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, and wife Mollie, played by Lily Gladstone, lived in Fairfax with Mollie’s mother Lizzie Q.

Lizzie was a mother-of-four and in May 1921, the decomposed body of one of other daughters, Anna Brown, was discovered in a remote ravine in northern Oklahoma.

She was found with a bullet hole to the back of the head but, because Brown had no known enemies, the case went unsolved.

Just two months later Lizzie herself died under suspicious circumstances from suspected poisoning, although no proof was ever found.

Then another member of the family, Lizzie’s nephew Henry Roan, met a similar fate in January 1923 with Hale, played by Robert De Niro, fraudulently naming himself as the beneficiary of his $25,000 life insurance policy.

But deaths within the family did not end there.

In March 1923, another of Lizzie’s daughters Rita Smith, along with Rita’s husband William Smith, and their housekeeper Nettie Brookshire were all killed when their home was destroyed by an explosion.

And, following their deaths, Burkhart and Mollie inherited a fortune from her mother’s and sisters’ estates.

But the murders extended beyond the one family with estimates approximating that 24 Osage Indians died in violent or suspicious deaths throughout the early 1920s with newspapers at the time branding it as a ‘reign of terror.’

By this time, authorities had begun to grow suspicious and an alarmed Osage Tribal Council sought the help of the US Government.

Hale’s name came up early in the investigation as the mastermind behind the killings.

The so-called ‘King of the Osage Hills’ was accused of bribing and intimidating others to do much of his dirty work as he sought to achieve money and power.

The killings subsided after Hale, along with accomplices including his nephew, were arrested in 1926.

Hale was formally convicted for his involvement three years later. He was paroled in 1947 after serving two decades of his sentence.

At the time, investigators also discovered that the killers had already started poisoning Mollie in what would have been the last piece of the crook’s masterplan.

Fortunately, she recovered and divorced her murderous husband following the trial.

 

Actors involved in the production have acknowledged the gravitas of the film’s true story.

Lily Gladstone previously shared a picture of Mollie Burkhart to Instagram alongside a caption that read: ‘I consider it a true gift and great responsibility to be trusted with Mollie Burkhart, and will hold her preciously with both arms, close to my heart. 

‘My most profound thanks to Osage Nation, it is a remarkable gift to be welcomed by you, and to be able to tell this story.’

Janae Collins too, who plays Rita Smith, wrote: ‘I’m so grateful to the Osage Nation for allowing us to tell their story. This is one of the most painful and heartbreaking time periods in the history of the Wazhazhe people as well as U.S. Native history and 

‘I take that very, very serious as an actor and as a Lakota/Dakota and Apsáalooke woman. I’m very thankful to Marty Scorsese for the truthfulness, diligence, and care he has taken in this project. He and Leonardo have truly went to bat for us (as Natives) over the years getting it to the point where we are ready to film.

‘I’m so thankful/grateful for the love and support we’ve gotten.’

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