Scorsese and DiCaprio to reunite on Killers of… | Little White Lies

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Scors­ese and DiCaprio to reunite on Killers of the Flower Moon

19 Jun 2019

Words by Charles Bramesco

Two men in a bar, one with glasses and an older appearance, the other a younger man, sitting at a table and looking intently.
Two men in a bar, one with glasses and an older appearance, the other a younger man, sitting at a table and looking intently.
The pair are team­ing up for a mur­der mys­tery set in 1920s Oklahoma.

The announce­ment of a new film from Mar­tin Scors­ese is a stop-what-you’re-doing-and-prick-up-your-ears moment for the cin­e­ma world, and the announce­ment that it will be anoth­er col­lab­o­ra­tion with favored muse Leonar­do DiCaprio dou­bly so.

Dead­lines big exclu­sive today hap­pens to be both. Scors­ese will direct his Shut­ter Island, Wolf of Wall Street and The Depart­ed lead­ing man once again, this time in an adap­ta­tion of the non­fic­tion crime nov­el Killers of the Flower Moon’.

The mur­der mys­tery plays out in 1920s Okla­homa, where ten­sions con­tin­ue to rise between the Osage tribe liv­ing on their native land and the fat­cat oil com­pa­nies eager to extract the black gold under their soil. A series of mur­ders has befall­en the Osage com­mu­ni­ty, and those sent to inves­ti­gate haven’t come out alive either.

With the FBI in its infan­cy, the bureau sends in their best guy (and here’s where DiCaprio comes in) to clean up the increas­ing­ly bloody mess and restore order, in effect prov­ing the valid­i­ty of the new­ly cre­at­ed gov­ern­men­tal arm. The script will be drawn up by Eric Roth, the pen­man behind Ali, The Curi­ous Case of Ben­jamin But­ton, and – decid­ed­ly less promis­ing – Extreme­ly Loud and Incred­i­bly Close.

No fur­ther details have been spec­i­fied at this time, but Marty’s got a lot of irons in the fire, so it might be a minute until the gen­er­al pub­lic sees frame on of this new project. First, he’ll have to get his hot­ly antic­i­pat­ed gang­ster epic The Irish­man in the can in time for the fall fes­ti­vals, presumably.

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