Just in case the violent events portrayed in Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” weren’t enough to convince you that Oklahoma was a perilous place for people of color with claims to oil-rich land in the early 20th century, we now have “Sarah’s Oil,” a more family-friendly movie that nonetheless offers a similarly cautionary history lesson. Propelled by newcomer Naya Desir-Johnson ’s perfect-pitch performance as Sarah Rector, an 11-year-old Black girl who firmly believes there is an abundance of black gold beneath property she has been bequeathed, director Cyrus Nowrasteh ’s fact- and faith-based drama is as thoroughly predictable as it is irresistibly uplifting.
It begins in 1913, when young Sarah, thanks to her status as a descendant of the Muscogee Creek Nation, is grante

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