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Sam Elliott hated ‘Power of the Dog’: Cowboys don’t look like Chippendales dancers

Sam Elliott poses for cameras in a black suit and tie and a white shirt
Actor Sam Elliott thinks “The Power of the Dog” stinks. “Where’s the Western in this western?” he said.
(Richard Shotwell / Invision / Associated Press)
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Sam Elliott took “The Power of the Dog” personally. And not in a good way.

Calling the Jane Campion movie “a piece of s—” on comic Marc Maron’s podcast Monday, the 77-year-old “A Star Is Born” actor — who has been doing westerns for the bulk of his career — pulled no punches as he discussed the most-nominated film at this year’s Oscars.

Elliott said he hadn’t liked the film anyway, but then saw a full-page ad in the Los Angeles Times with a review blurb that said “The Power of the Dog” was — in the actor’s words — “an evisceration of the American myth.” That comment really fried him.

“I thought, what the f—?” Elliott said. “This is a guy who’s done westerns his entire life. ‘The evisceration of the American myth.’ It looked like — what are all those dancers, those guys in New York that wear bow ties and not much else? Remember them from back in the day?”

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Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons and Kodi Smit-McPhee co-star in this superlative Netflix adaptation of Thomas Savage’s novel.

“Oh, the Chippendales?” Maron said.

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

“Yeah. I think that’s what the movie’s about,” Maron replied.

The ad that blew the mustachioed actor’s mind actually quoted Manohla Dargis of the New York Times (and an L.A. Times alumna). She wrote in her review that “The Power of the Dog” was “a great American story and a dazzling evisceration of one of the country’s foundational myths.”

“It’s easy to sum up the movie: It is at once a revisionist Western, a mystery ..., an exploration of masculinity and femininity, a lament for the limits the world puts on us and those we shoulder until we can no longer bear them,” Dargis added. “And while it is a tragedy, it is also a liberation story, including for a genre again renewed by a brilliant, unfettered director.”

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Maybe ease up on your hatred of Phil Burbank just a little, the actor asks. There are things about the man that should be celebrated.

Elliott also called Campion a brilliant director and noted that he loved her previous work.

“But what the f— does this woman from [New Zealand] know about the American West?” he asked. “And why in the f— did she shoot this movie in New Zealand and call it Montana? And say, ‘This is the way it was’? ... That f— rubbed me the wrong way.”

(L.A. Times film critic Justin Chang noted in his review that filming the Montana wilds in New Zealand felt “curiously fitting in a movie about the deceptive nature of appearances.”)

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Elliott said the “myth” was that there were these “macho men” who were there with the cattle. But, he said, he’d just come from filming in Texas where he was hanging out with big, multigenerational families — not just men — whose lives were all about being cowboys. In other words, the myth was no myth; it was reality.

Benedict Cumberbatch wears a cowboy hat and holds flowers
Benedict Cumberbatch plays Phil Burbank in “The Power of the Dog.
(Netflix)

When he saw all that, he said, “I thought, what the f—? Where are we in this world today?” Maron pointed out that it probably wasn’t the biggest issue at hand, and Elliott agreed, but added, “For me, it was the only issue.”

“I mean, [Benedict] Cumberbatch never got out of his f— chaps,” the actor continued. “He had two pair of chaps: a woolly pair and a leather pair. And every f— time he’d walk in from somewhere ... he never was on a horse, maybe once. He’d walk into the f— house, storm up the f— stairs, go lay on his bed in his chaps and play his banjo. And it’s like ... where’s the Western? Where’s the Western in this western?

Cinematographer Ari Wegner kept her camerawork simple and nonjudgmental for the taut psychological meditation on secrets, repression and misdirected rage.

Maron, who was chuckling throughout the hour-plus interview — though sometimes uncomfortably during this part — quizzed the actor as to whether there was a part of him that understood that this was an art film that told a specific story, and whether he understood that the blurb was a critic’s thought, not part of the movie itself.

Elliott held firm to his opinion that “The Power of the Dog,” which was adapted from a 1967 novel by Thomas Savage, basically stunk.

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“Well, you’re part of it,” Maron said, referring to the western genre. “So I guess it’s personal and social.”

Awards columnist Glenn Whipp weighs in on early Oscars happenings in his weekly newsletter.

Twitter folk took Elliott’s opinions personally as well. Though some said he spoke the truth, and that Oscar favorite “The Power of the Dog” was lousy, others were critical.

“I’m very sad to take Sam Elliott out of my crush rotation for being a wizened, rusted, toolbag, but also very amused that he doesn’t realize ROAD HOUSE was extremely homosexual. See also: TOMBSTONE,” Suleikha Snyder tweeted Tuesday.

“Sam Elliott being a homophobe is bumming me out, but him thinking Kodi Smit-McPhee looks like a chippendale is definitely pretty funny,” Paul McCallion wrote.

Star Kodi Smit-McPhee took a personal approach to Jane Campion’s engrossing western “The Power of the Dog.”

“Is it possible that the nation of origin is not Sam Elliott’s main issue with highly acclaimed female filmmaker Jane Campion?,” writer Ben Stephens tweeted, capping a long thread that called out how many classic westerns have been written and directed by people not affiliated with the West and shot in other locations.

Social-justice activist Tami Sawyer, a county commissioner and chair of education in Memphis, Tenn., chimed in as well.

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“I mean most movies about the American West don’t know anything about the American West including the ones Sam Elliott has been a part of,” she tweeted. “They erase the presence of anyone who isn’t white or male when the west was mostly built by Indigenous, Black, Mexican & Chinese people.”

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