Nominated for Nothing: The good, the bad, and the ugly truth of The Harder They Fall
Westerns have always had a rocky road at the Oscars, not to mention movies with predominately Black casts — this one including Jonathan Majors, Idris Elba, and Regina King.
By
Lester Fabian BrathwaiteMarch 18, 2022 at 03:59 PM EDT
They're destined to score zero Academy Awards, but they won our attention throughout a year (and awards season) like no other. Ahead of the 94th Oscars ceremony on March 27, EW is breaking down the year's best movies, performances, and directorial achievements that were nominated for nothing
The film: Imagine a Sergio Leone Western but Black as hell and you've got singer-songwriter Jeymes Samuel's directorial debut,
The Harder They Fall. A bloody tale of vengeance and redemption writ large against the American frontier,
The Harder They Fall is typical Western fare, elevated by a stellar, predominately Black cast including
Jonathan Majors,
Idris Elba,
Zazie Beetz,
LaKeith Stanfield, Oscar-winner
Regina King, and the great
Delroy Lindo.
Of course, the predominate Blackness of the cast sets the film apart from other Westerns, which all but erase African Americans from that part of history. Before
The Harder They Fall came out, I got into the podcast
Black Cowboys and its profiles of forgotten heroes and villains, of the Wild West. And before that, HBO's
Watchmen had a subplot involving the lawman Bass Reeves, the West's first Black deputy U.S. Marshall.
The Harder They Fall brings to life Reeves (Lindo) and other real-life Black cowboys and girls — Nat Love (Majors), Rufus Buck (Elba), Stagecoach Mary (Beetz), Cherokee Bill (Stanfield) — while taking some creative liberties with dates and facts. It's an amazing cast, doing fantastic work, and yet nary a nomination, not even for King, by now an awards-show staple.
Immediately drawing comparisons to — but also unlike —
Quentin Tarantino's Oscar-winning
Django Unchained,
The Harder They Fall is largely devoid of the white gaze. The characters are allowed to exist in relation to one another and not to a hierarchical structure; I kept waiting for the moment everyone would band together to stop the KKK or some other force of impending white supremacy, but that never happens. It's just the bad guys versus the not-so-bad guys. Or maybe the bad guys versus the worse guys. And I thrilled at it. There's the presence of moral ambiguity, borne of the West's very wildness, that defines the best Westerns, from
High Noon to
Johnny Guitar.
Why it wasn't nominated: The Academy has a fraught history with Westerns. Only four films in that genre have won Best Picture: 1931's
Cimarron, 1990's
Dances with Wolves, 1992's
Unforgiven, and 2007's
No Country for Old Men, though that last one's not truly a straightforward Western. Even 1956's
The Searchers, arguably the greatest Western of all time, didn't get nominated for a single Oscar. If its
awards track record is any indication,
Jane Campion's
The Power of the Dog is poised to become the fifth Western to take the top prize at this year's Academy Awards.
If the Oscars don't necessarily take kindly to Westerns around these parts, they
certainly don't to predominantly Black movies. And
The Harder They Fall is just "too Black" for the Oscars. That is to say, it depicts complex, even villainous Black characters that don't fit the traditional mold for Oscar-worthy films about Black people — they aren't slaves or historical figures contending with or (briefly) triumphing over racism. If it's a surprise no one from the cast was nominated (
Jennifer Jason Leigh snagged a nomination for Tarantino's last Western
The Hateful Eight and
Christoph Waltz won his second trophy for
Django), it's disappointing that Samuel's direction wasn't recognized either. And the Academy
loves a first-time director. Just ask
Martin Scorsese, who lost to two of them (
Robert Redford for
Ordinary People and
Kevin Costner for
Dances with Wolves).
Why history will remember it better than the Academy did: One may not peg me as a lover of Westerns: I'm Black, gay, and can rattle off five Bette Davis quotes at the drop of a hat.
Any hat. But Westerns have always intrigued me — they contain some of the finest cinematography in film, often have something interesting to say about the American experiment, and are just plain fun. But save for
Blazing Saddles and
Django, I rarely got to see Black cowboys on screen.
The Harder They Fall offers up a dozen or so to cheer for or against. What a gift that is for future generations. Most Westerns are also based on real people who lived at a time when the U.S. was still defining itself — and they managed to play a role, no matter how small, in it. That alone makes
The Harder They Fall a touchstone in the history of Black cinema, regardless of the Oscars.