🐱 Sam Elliott rants against ‘The Power of the Dog,’ prompting backlash

CatParty


Netflix’s The Power of the Dog might have the most Oscar nominations of any movie this year, but that doesn’t mean it’s universally beloved. But actor Sam Elliott is raising eyebrows and drawing ire for his comments justifying his dislike of the film that includes homophobic and sexist language.

Elliott, who stars in the Yellowstone prequel 1883, was asked if he’d seen the film by Marc Maron on the WTF Podcast since both 1883 and TPOTD are westerns. But Elliott wasn’t exactly a fan, and as soon as Maron posed the question, Elliott replied, “Do you wanna talk about that piece of shit?”

Marc Maron: Did you see Power of the Dog, did you see that movie?
Sam Elliott: Yeah do you wanna talk about that piece of shit?
Marc: [ohh noo] You didn’t like that one?
Sam: Fuck no. pic.twitter.com/BGdOd6scwe
— Jonathan (@jonathanmb32) February 28, 2022
Elliott mentions seeing a full-page ad for TPOTDin the Los Angeles Times that mentioned the “evisceration of the American myth,” a phrase that made him repeatedly say “What the fuck” in response and compares the cowboys in the movie to Chippendale dancers because of their attire.

“That’s what all these fucking cowboys in that movie look like,” Elliott said. “They’re all running around in chaps and no shirts. There’s all these allusions to homosexuality throughout the fucking movie.”

Maron attempted to counter Elliott’s complaint about the “allusions to homosexuality” by pointing out that homosexuality was a large part of what the film was about. And then he turned his criticism toward director Jane Campion and the fact that she used New Zealand to stand in for TPOTD’s 1920s Montana, something she and her collaborators have been open about.

“What the fuck does this woman—she’s a brilliant director, by the way, I love her work, previous work—but what the fuck does this woman from down there, New Zealand, know about the American West?” Elliott continued. “And why in the fuck does she shoot this movie in New Zealand and call it Montana and say, ‘This is the way it was.’ That fucking rubbed me the wrong way, pal.”

TPOTD is based on the 1967 novel by Thomas Savage, a closeted gay author who became known for his books about the American West. It’s centered on Phil Burbank (Benedict Cumberbatch), a man who puts on a front of being a cowboy who rarely bathes and acts tough among his colleagues and members of his own family as a way to cover up insecurities about his Ivy League education in front of other ranchers and repress his homosexuality.

Elliott’s issues with the film stem beyond its homosexuality and Campion helming the story. He also complains about Cumberbatch’s character being in chaps all the time, barely riding a horse, and just storming upstairs to play his banjo. “Where’s the western in this western?” Elliott asks, later adding that as someone who’s part of the American myth, “It’s personal, I taking it fucking personal, pal.” Maron tried to interject, eventually noting that TPOTD isn’t trying to be an all-encompassing story—it’s one specific story.

The first part of Elliott and Maron’s conversation about TPOTD went viral as many took to calling Elliott out for sexist and homophobic rhetoric when talking about the themes of the film and Campion’s involvement.

I hope no one asks Sam Elliott — a brilliant actor, by the way, I love his work — about all those Westerns the Italians made
— Phil Nobile Jr. (@PhilNobileJr) March 1, 2022
If there's one thing about older white male Academy members, it's that the worst thing you do in their eyes, apart from setting them on fire, is tell the story of a queer cowboy. https://t.co/u3ZWvU1ZTq
— itsonlyzach (@itsonlyzach) March 1, 2022
A 2006 Box Office Mojo interview, in which Elliott talked about watching Brokeback Mountain, also resurfaced. He praised the film, but he didn’t consider it to be a Western and noted that “The whole homosexual thing was interesting—they stepped over the line—but Katharine [Ross, his wife] and I both looked at it and thought, ‘what’s the big deal?’”

And naturally, people started making memes about Elliott’s comments and even incorporated his character from A Star Is Born to illustrate some of them.

actual image of sam elliott leaving the theater after seeing the power of the dog and being sad because it was a lil gay and directed by a woman pic.twitter.com/LDLvPmNiIY
— baja blasted 24/7 (@asmilingbag) March 1, 2022
Wondering what part of Power of the Dog first made Sam Elliott stop and shout “wait is this shit gay?!”
— Mitchell Beaupre (@itismitchell) March 1, 2022
You can listen to Maron’s full interview with Elliott on WTF Podcast’s website.
 
“What the fuck does this woman—she’s a brilliant director, by the way, I love her work, previous work—but what the fuck does this woman from down there, New Zealand, know about the American West?” Elliott continued. “And why in the fuck does she shoot this movie in New Zealand and call it Montana and say, ‘This is the way it was.’ That fucking rubbed me the wrong way, pal.”
These seem like perfectly reasonable questions that in no way will ever be answered except for "stop being a bigot!"

I hope no one asks Sam Elliott — a brilliant actor, by the way, I love his work — about all those Westerns the Italians made
The Man with No Name trilogy are considered some of the greatest westerns of all time, but they are called "Spaghetti Westerns" for a reason.

 
Isn't the gay Cabbagepatch cowboy the bad guy in the movie? Like...he tries to seduce his nephew or stepson something, at the same time he's messing with the boy's mother, and his nephew orchestrates his painful and deserved demise?
 
No-one plays a better cowboy/lawman than Sam Elliott, and Benedict Cumberbatch is laughably cast in that role. - No-one would ever believe he was a cowboy, not even a fake and gay one.

Also, Marc Maron is a typical liberal Jew asshole. His tv series was fucking HILARIOUS, though.

I would suggest Barry Corbin comes damn close to Sam Elliot's gravitas. But I really enjoy both of them. Cumberbatch was good as Dr. Strange and that's about it. Everything else, I don't know why people go bananas over the guy. Oh, a British dude so pale you can see his internal organs? What, is Hugh Grant still persona non grata?

I can't stand Marc Maron. The closest he's ever come to self-awareness was in an episode of King of the Hill where they wrote Hank as basically calling his character (a uni. professor) out on his foolishness.
 
he's just upset cause his Bigfoot Hitler movie was awful
Lol, that's not even the worst film he's done. Early on in his career, he did this amazingly crappy movie called 'Frogs' and I'm pretty sure he's tried to forget it.

I suspect he did that Bigfoot movie just for the lulz.
 
No-one plays a better cowboy/lawman than Sam Elliott, and Benedict Cumberbatch is laughably cast in that role. - No-one would ever believe he was a cowboy, not even a fake and gay one.

Also, Marc Maron is a typical liberal Jew asshole. His tv series was fucking HILARIOUS, though.

I would say that Clint Eastwood, Kurt Russell, and Tom Selleck are all on equal standing as Sam Elliot as cowboy actors. But I agree, Elliot is one of the greats. Which is funny, since he started out as your typical hippy-dippy Californian actor before really connecting with the Old West and making it part of his life and who he is.
 
I would say that Clint Eastwood, Kurt Russell, and Tom Selleck are all on equal standing as Sam Elliot as cowboy actors. But I agree, Elliot is one of the greats. Which is funny, since he started out as your typical hippy-dippy Californian actor before really connecting with the Old West and making it part of his life and who he is.


The only true cowboy in Hollywood was Wilford Brimley. Probably the only one not totally engrossed in perverse Hollywood culture either.
 
I would say that Clint Eastwood, Kurt Russell, and Tom Selleck are all on equal standing as Sam Elliot as cowboy actors. But I agree, Elliot is one of the greats. Which is funny, since he started out as your typical hippy-dippy Californian actor before really connecting with the Old West and making it part of his life and who he is.
That sounds really interesting. I had no idea Sam went through that kind of personal change.
 
I can't stand Marc Maron. The closest he's ever come to self-awareness was in an episode of King of the Hill where they wrote Hank as basically calling his character (a uni. professor) out on his foolishness.
Incorrect. Watch the Netflix "GLOW" sometime. It's Marc Maron acting like Marc Maron and as a bonus, Tyrus and Awesome Kong are in it.
 
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