The Guardian (USA)

Hollywood ending: could Leonardo DiCaprio’s activism prove his role of a lifetime?

- Andrew Pulver

It is a film industry truism that the movie star is dead, but Leonardo DiCaprio’s career may be evidence that there is still life in the concept. Since he became a bona fide lead actor in the late 1990s, DiCaprio’s films have earned over $7bn, with the actor himself regularly receiving over $20m per movie; he works almost exclusivel­y with the industry’s most heavyweigh­t directors; and he has used his celebrity clout to become a high-profile activist, notably in the fields of climate change and indigenous rights.

DiCaprio’s new film, Martin Scorsese’s gargantuan Killers of the Flower Moon, would appear to be in perfect alignment with all these. DiCaprio, now 48, reportedly received $30m to appear, one of the heftiest fees of his career, putting him near the top of the Hollywood fees ladder (only the $100mplus Tom Cruise earned for Top Gun:

Maverick and the $35m a pre-slap Will Smith received for Emancipati­on are higher). Scorsese, of course, is arguably America’s most high-status film director, with whom DiCaprio has made five previous feature films. But most pertinentl­y perhaps, Killers of the Flower Moon fully intersects with DiCaprio’s campaignin­g priorities: it is about the real-life murders of scores of Osage tribal members in the 1920s and 30s, part of a brutal land grab over oil rights.

DiCaprio’s commitment to advocacy has been a long term endeavour: he set up the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation in 1998, shortly after the stellar success of Titanic, and, according to DiCaprio himself, it has disbursed over $100m to a wide variety of environmen­tal projects, including tiger protection in Nepal, restoring coastlines in Somalia and Brazil, and funding reporting organisati­ons including Inside Climate News and Global Fishing Watch, before the foundation’s merger in 2019 into Earth Alliance, a conservati­on “platform” DiCaprio co-founded with billionair­es Brian Sheth and Laurene Powell Jobs. (DiCaprio did receive some criticism for his foundation’s transparen­cy levels: as a “donor-advised fund” it had no obligation to publicly reveal financial informatio­n.)

More recently DiCaprio has focused on “rewilding”, pledging large sums to restore natural ecosystems in the Galápagos islands, and co-authoring an article in the Guardian with Galápagos national park director Danny Rueda Córdova, in which rewilding was described as “the revolution­ary act of bringing together people and the planet for people and the planet”.

DiCaprio’s interventi­ons in environmen­tal campaignin­g – which date back to a meeting with then-vice-president Al Gore in 1998 – have been broadly welcomed. UN climate adviser Janos Pasztor told the Guardian in 2016: “When people hear him talk so forcefully and clearly about a particular issue then people listen,” while climate scientist Michael E Mann said: “I was truly impressed by Leo. He follows the issue closely, reads up about it quite a bit … and he understand­s the nuances of the issues involved.” In a rare interview

in 2016, DiCaprio explained his motivation­s to Rolling Stone magazine: “I am consumed by this … There isn’t a couple of hours a day where I’m not thinking about it. It’s this slow burn. It’s not ‘aliens invading our planet next week and we have to get up and fight to defend our country,’ but it’s this inevitable thing, and it’s so terrifying.” DiCaprio’s seriousnes­s on the issue has gone a considerab­le way to combatting his image as a party animal and serial dater of younger women. The latter, however, is a contradict­ion in his character that is likely to dog him for a while yet.

In Killers of the Flower Moon, DiCaprio plays Ernest Burkhart, who marries an Osage woman (played by Lily Gladstone) as part of a plan to acquire her oil rights. Though essentiall­y unsympathe­tic, the role plays directly into DiCaprio’s campaignin­g concerns; he has consistent­ly shown support for Indigenous protests against fuel pipelines, including the Dakota Access pipeline and the Coastal GasLink in Canada, and in 2016 joined attempts to curb the oil industry in telling assembled world leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos that “our planet cannot be saved unless we leave fossil fuels in the ground where they belong”. In a recent interview DiCaprio even suggested that these same ideas were behind a major rewrite of Killers of the Flower Moon, telling Vogue that “[the original script] just didn’t feel like it got to the heart of it” and the focus was subsequent­ly moved away from the FBI investigat­ion into the Osage murders and on to the experience­s of the Osage themselves. Scorsese himself corroborat­ed the idea behind the film’s change of focus, which included changing DiCaprio’s role from an FBI detective to Burkhart, saying to Time magazine that “after a certain point, I realised I was making a movie about all the white guys … which concerned me”.

In fact DiCaprio’s recent acting career has been largely guided by this kind of oblique message-bearing: he accepts juicy – and occasional­ly highly repugnant – characters in films that can advance a progressiv­e agenda. In Django Unchained, for example, he played racist plantation owner Calvin J Candie in a revenge thriller directed by Quentin Tarantino that channelled anger over the US’s inability to acknowledg­e the legacy of slavery. In The Revenant,

for which DiCaprio won the best actor Oscar, his role as left-for-dead frontiersm­an Hugh Glass drew attention to the despoliati­on of the American landscape. More recently, DiCaprio played an astronomy professor in ecological-disaster satire Don’t Look Up. But DiCaprio’s advocacy doesn’t always govern his choice of roles: environmen­tal politics aren’t a considerat­ion in the washed-up TV actor he portrayed in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood or crooked broker Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street.

However, DiCaprio’s Hollywood muscle has allowed him to make a series of hardhittin­g documentar­ies that bluntly address these concerns. The 11th Hour, in 2007, warned of impending catastroph­e; Before the Flood, in 2016, examined the effects of climate change; and Ice on Fire, in 2019, looked at ways to head off the consequenc­es of methane gas release from the Arctic ice pack. In 2021, he produced two films about threatened marine life: The Loneliest Whale, about the mystery of an isolated cetacean, and Fin, about the menace of shark extinction. And there’s no sign yet that he is going to slow down. “I had a friend say, ‘Well, if you’re really this passionate about environmen­talism, quit acting,’” he says. “But you soon realise that one hand shakes the other, and being an artist gives you a platform.”

• Killers of the Flower Moon screens at the London film festival and goes on release on 20 October in cinemas and on Apple TV+.

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? Visiting Aceh province in Indonesia in 2016 to help protect the area from deforestat­ion.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Visiting Aceh province in Indonesia in 2016 to help protect the area from deforestat­ion.
 ?? ?? Leonardo DiCaprio in Killers of the Flower Moon. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy
Leonardo DiCaprio in Killers of the Flower Moon. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy

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