Generational warfare on the big screen: Raising millennials and fighting with Mom in “Osage County”
"August: Osage County" is one of the best depictions yet of the broken relationship between old and young in the US
Topics:
August: Osage County,
generations,
Film,
Oscars,
Julia Roberts,
Meryl Streep, Entertainment News
The
action of “August: Osage County” occurs on the Oklahoma plains,
described in the screenplay as “miles of unforgiving, summer-scorched
prairie,” a “flat hot nothing” that produces “spiritual affliction,” a
place where you can run and run but where, as one Oklahoma woman says to
another, “there’s nowhere to go.” This arid space has exerted a
persistent and quite specifically idealized hold over Americans’
cultural imagination. When we see the plains we think of Depression-era
photos by Walker Evans or Dorothea Lange: the black-and-whites of the
determined women with set faces, faded gingham aprons and straggling
hair, surviving the locusts and the dust storms in sod homes. We look at
these photographs and feel awe at what these people faced. When we hear
about an entitlement nation in moral decline, whether embedded in
harangues on Fox News or through the nostalgic lens of “Greatest
Generation” retrospectives, this is the standard we think we’ve fallen
from.
What’s striking about Tracy Letts’ play and screenplay is that it takes on the subject of the latter-day pioneers both as a lived experience and as a cultural legacy. Letts, an Oklahoma native, has crafted a story about the people who survived the frontier as well as the effect of those experiences on their descendants. To anyone raised on John Wayne or Louis L’Amour or even Willa Cather, Letts’ will be a subversive approach. His characters are not so much empowered by their frontier heritage as trapped by it: the older generation confined by hardship to narrow opportunities and the younger one hampered by guilt. “August: Osage County” is in this sense a cautionary tale, about how the past can be used as a weapon against the present, and, in a public culture in which nostalgia for a past America has reached a saturation point, the film is more immediately relevant than it’s been given credit for.
***
Letts’ specific focus is the Weston family: Beverly, an award-winning poet and “world-class alcoholic”; Violet, his drug-addicted wife (Meryl Streep, in an Academy Award nominated performance); their three troubled daughters; their sullen 14-year-old granddaughter; and a few more relations. When Beverly commits suicide, the family collects at their Oklahoma home, and the funeral proceedings quickly become a generational showdown between Violet and her oldest and strongest-willed daughter Barb (Julia Roberts, also an Oscar nominee for her role). The stakes are set in an early exchange:
What’s striking about Tracy Letts’ play and screenplay is that it takes on the subject of the latter-day pioneers both as a lived experience and as a cultural legacy. Letts, an Oklahoma native, has crafted a story about the people who survived the frontier as well as the effect of those experiences on their descendants. To anyone raised on John Wayne or Louis L’Amour or even Willa Cather, Letts’ will be a subversive approach. His characters are not so much empowered by their frontier heritage as trapped by it: the older generation confined by hardship to narrow opportunities and the younger one hampered by guilt. “August: Osage County” is in this sense a cautionary tale, about how the past can be used as a weapon against the present, and, in a public culture in which nostalgia for a past America has reached a saturation point, the film is more immediately relevant than it’s been given credit for.
***
Letts’ specific focus is the Weston family: Beverly, an award-winning poet and “world-class alcoholic”; Violet, his drug-addicted wife (Meryl Streep, in an Academy Award nominated performance); their three troubled daughters; their sullen 14-year-old granddaughter; and a few more relations. When Beverly commits suicide, the family collects at their Oklahoma home, and the funeral proceedings quickly become a generational showdown between Violet and her oldest and strongest-willed daughter Barb (Julia Roberts, also an Oscar nominee for her role). The stakes are set in an early exchange:
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More Matthew Brandon Wolfson.
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