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The following biography
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Free Encyclopedia.”
Martin Luciano Scorsese
(born November 17, 1942) is an iconic American film director.
Scorsese's body of work
addresses such themes as Italian-American identity, Roman Catholic concepts of
guilt and redemption,[1] machismo, and the violence endemic in American society.
Although he has received much critical acclaim he has never won an Academy Award
despite numerous nominations.[2] Scorsese is widely considered one of the most
significant and influential of post-war American film makers. [3]
****
Born: November 17, 1942
(age 64)
Flushing, New York
Occupation: Film
director, writer, and producer
Spouse: Helen Morris
****
Childhood
Martin Scorsese was born
in Flushing, Queens, New York City, USA and came from a working class
Italian-American family; his father, Luciano Charles Scorsese (1912–1993), and
mother, Catherine Scorsese (1912–1997), both worked in New York's Garment
District. A sickly child, he spent much of his time recovering from asthma at
home. It was at this stage in his life that he developed his passion for
cinema.[4] Scorsese developed an admiration for neo-realist cinema. He recounted
its influence in a documentary on Italian neorealism, and commented on how the
Bicycle Thieves inspired director Satyajit Ray, and how this influenced his view
or portrayal of his Sicilian heritage.[5] His initial desire to become a priest
was forsaken for cinema; the seminary traded for New York University, where he
received his M.A. in film in 1966.[6]
Early
career
Scorsese attended New
York University's film school (B.A., English, 1964; M.A., film, 1966) making the
short films What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? (1963) and
It's Not Just You, Murray! (1964). His most famous short of the period is the
blackly comic The Big Shave (1967), which featured an unnamed man who shaves
himself until profusely bleeding, ultimately slitting his own throat with his
razor. The film is an indictment of America's involvement in Vietnam, suggested
by its alternative title Viet '67.[7] Whatever its thematic concerns, its
visceral quality foreshadowed the director's later works.
Also in 1967 Scorsese
made his first feature-length film, the black and white Who's That Knocking at
My Door with fellow student, actor Harvey Keitel, and editor Thelma Schoonmaker
both of whom were to become long term collaborators. This film was a precursor
to his later Mean Streets. Even in embryonic form, the "Scorsese style" was
already evident: a feel for New York Italian American street-life, rapid
editing, an eclectic rock soundtrack and a troubled male protagonist.
1970s
From there he became a
friend and acquaintance of the so-called "movie brats" of the 1970s: Francis
Ford Coppola, Brian De Palma, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg. It was De
Palma who introduced actor Robert De Niro to Scorsese, and the two figures
became close friends, working together on many projects. During this period the
director worked as one of the editors on the movie Woodstock and met
actor-director John Cassavetes, who would also go onto become a close friend and
mentor.[8]
Mean
Streets
In 1972 Scorsese made the
Depression-era gangster film Boxcar Bertha for B-movie producer Roger Corman,
who had also helped directors such as Francis Ford Coppola, James Cameron and
John Sayles launch their careers. While it is widely considered a minor work,
Boxcar Bertha nonetheless taught Scorsese how to make films cheaply and quickly,
preparing him for his first film with De Niro, Mean Streets.
Championed by influential
movie critic Pauline Kael, Mean Streets was a breakthrough for Scorsese, De Niro
and Keitel.[9] By now the signature Scorsese style was in place: macho
posturing, bloody violence, Catholic guilt and redemption, gritty New York
locale, rapid-fire editing, and a rock soundtrack. Although the film was
innovative, its wired atmosphere, edgy documentary style and gritty street-level
direction owed a debt to directors Cassavetes and early Jean-Luc Godard.[10]
(Indeed the film was completed with much encouragement from Cassavetes, who felt
Boxcar Bertha was undeserving of the young director’s prodigious talent.)[8]
Taxi
Driver
Two years later, in 1976,
Scorsese sent shockwaves through the cinema world when he directed the iconic
Taxi Driver, an unrelentingly grim and violent portrayal of one man's slow
descent into insanity in a hellishly conceived Manhattan.
Scorsese's direction by
now was highly accomplished, using jump cuts, expressionist lighting,[11] point
of view shots and slow motion to reflect the protagonist's heightened
psychological awareness. However Taxi Driver's immense power was due in part to
Robert De Niro's intense lead performance. The film co-starred Jodie Foster in a
highly controversial role as a child prostitute, and Harvey Keitel as her pimp,
"Sport" Matthew.
Taxi Driver also marked
the start of a series of collaborations with writer Paul Schrader. The film
bears strong thematic links to (and makes several allusions to) the work of
French director Robert Bresson, most explicitly Pickpocket (in essence the
"diary" of a loner/obsessive who finds redemption). Writer/director Schrader
often returns to Bresson's work in films such as American Gigolo, Light Sleeper
and Scorsese’s later Bringing Out the Dead.[12]
Already controversial
upon its release, Taxi Driver hit the headlines again five years later, when
John Hinckley, Jr. made an assassination attempt on then-President Ronald
Reagan. He subsequently blamed his act on his obsession with Jodie Foster's Taxi
Driver character (in the film, De Niro’s character, Travis Bickle, makes an
assassination attempt on a senator).[13]
Taxi Driver won the Palme
d'Or at the 1976 Cannes film festival,[14] also receiving four Oscar
nominations, including Best Picture, although all were unsuccessful.
Scorsese was subsequently
offered the role of Charles Manson in the movie Helter Skelter and a part in Sam
Fuller's war movie The Big Red One, but he turned both down. However he did
accept the role of a gangster in exploitation movie Cannonball directed by Paul
Bartel. In this period there were also several directorial projects which never
got off the ground including Haunted Summer, about Mary Shelley and a film with
Marlon Brando about the Indian massacre at Wounded Knee.
New
York, New York and The Last Waltz
The critical success of
Taxi Driver encouraged Scorsese to move ahead with his first big-budget project:
the highly stylized musical New York, New York. This tribute to Scorsese's home
town and the classic Hollywood musical was a box-office and critical failure.
New York, New York was
the director's third collaboration with Robert De Niro, co-starring with Liza
Minnelli (a tribute and allusion to her father, legendary musical director
Vincente Minelli). Although possessing Scorsese's usual visual panache and
stylistic bravura, many critics felt its enclosed studio-bound atmosphere left
it leaden in comparison to his earlier work. Often overlooked, it remains one of
the director’s early key studies in male paranoia and insecurity (and hence is
in direct thematic lineage with Mean Streets, Taxi Driver and the later Raging
Bull).
The disappointing
reception New York, New York received drove Scorsese into depression. By this
stage the director had also developed a serious cocaine addiction.[15] However,
he did find the creative drive to make the highly regarded The Last Waltz,
documenting the final concert by The Band. It was held at the Winterland
Ballroom in San Francisco, and featured one of the most extensive lineups of
prominent guest performers at a single concert. However, Scorsese's commitments
to other projects delayed the release of the film until 1978. Another
Scorsese-directed documentary entitled American Boy also appeared in 1978
focusing on Steve Prince, the cocky gun salesman who appeared in Taxi Driver. A
period of wild partying followed, damaging the director’s already fragile
health.
1980s
Raging
Bull
By many accounts,
Scorsese's included, Robert DeNiro practically saved his life when he persuaded
him to kick his cocaine addiction to make what many consider his greatest film,
Raging Bull (1980). Convinced that he would never make another movie, he poured
his energies into making this violent biopic of middleweight boxing champion
Jake La Motta calling it a Kamikaze method of film-making.[16] The film is
widely viewed as a masterpiece and was voted the greatest film of the 1980s by
Britain's prestigious Sight and Sound magazine.[17][18] It received eight Oscar
nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor for Robert De Niro, and
Scorsese's first for Best Director. De Niro won, as did Thelma Schoonmaker for
editing, but best director went to Robert Redford for Ordinary People.
Raging Bull, filmed in
high contrast black and white, was where the director's style reached its
zenith. Taxi Driver and New York, New York had used elements of expressionism to
replicate psychological point of view, but here the style was taken to new
extremes: employing extensive slow-motion, complex tracking shots, and
extravagant distortion of perspective (for example, the size of boxing rings
would change from fight to fight).[19] Thematically too, the concerns carried on
from Mean Streets and Taxi Driver: insecure males, violence, guilt, and
redemption.
Although the screenplay
to Raging Bull was credited to Paul Schrader and Mardik Martin (who earlier
co-wrote Mean Streets), the finished script differed extensively from Schrader’s
original draft. It was re-written several times by various writers including Jay
Cocks (who went on to co-script later Scorsese films The Age of Innocence and
Gangs of New York). The final draft was largely written by Scorsese and Robert
De Niro.[20]
The
King of Comedy
Scorsese’s next project
was his fifth collaboration with Robert De Niro, The King of Comedy (1983). An
absurdist satire on the world of media and celebrity, it was an obvious
departure from the more emotionally committed films he had become associated
with. Visually too it was far less kinetic than the style the director had
developed up until this point, often using a static camera and long takes.[21]
The expressionism of his recent work here gave way to moments of almost total
surrealism. However it was still an obvious Scorsese work, and apart from the
New York locale, it bore many similarities to Taxi Driver, not least of which
was its focus on an obsessed troubled loner who ironically achieves iconic
status through a criminal act (murder and kidnapping, respectively).[22]
The King of Comedy failed
at the box office but has become increasingly well regarded by critics in the
years since its release. It is arguable that its themes of vacuous showbusiness
and celebrity obsession are more pertinent today than when the film was
originally released.
Next Scorsese made a
brief cameo appearance in the movie Pavlova: A Woman for All Time, originally
intended to be directed by one his heroes, Michael Powell. This lead to a more
signicant role in Bertrand Tavernier's jazz movie Round Midnight.
In 1983 Scorsese began
work on a long-cherished personal project, The Last Temptation of Christ, based
on the 1951 book written by Nikos Kazantzakis (which he was introduced to the
director by actress Barbara Hershey when they were both attending New York
University in the late 1960s). The movie was slated to shoot under the Paramount
Studios banner, but shortly before principal photography was to commence,
Paramount pulled the plug on the project, citing pressure from religious groups.
In this aborted 1983 version, Aidan Quinn was cast as Jesus, and Sting was cast
as Pontius Pilate. (In the 1988 version, these roles were played by Willem Dafoe
and David Bowie.)
After
Hours and The Color Of Money
After the collapse of
this project Scorsese again saw his career at a critical point, as he described
in the recent documentary Filming for Your Life: Making 'After Hours' (2004). He
saw that in the increasingly commercial world of 1980s Hollywood the highly
stylized and personal 1970s films he and others had built their careers on would
not continue to enjoy the same status, and decided on an almost totally new
approach to his work. With After Hours (1985) he made an aesthetic shift back to
a pared-down, almost "underground" film-making style — his way of staying
viable. Filmed on an extremely low budget, on location, and at night in the SoHo
neighborhood of Manhattan, the film is a black comedy about one increasingly
misfortunate night for a mild New York word processor (Griffin Dunne) and
featured cameos by such disparate actors as Teri Garr and Cheech and Chong. A
bit of a stylistic anomaly for Scorsese, After Hours fits in well with popular
low-budget "cult" films of the 1980s, e.g. Jonathan Demme's Something Wild and
Alex Cox's Repo Man.
Along with the iconic
1987 Michael Jackson music video Bad, in 1986 Scorsese made The Color of Money,
a sequel to the much admired Paul Newman film The Hustler (1960). (The original
was directed by Robert Rossen, whose 1940s boxing film Body and Soul, was a
major influence on Raging Bull.) Although typically visually assured, The Color
of Money was the director's first foray into mainstream commercial film-making.
It won actor Paul Newman a belated Oscar and gave Scorsese the clout to finally
secure backing for a project that had been a long time goal for him: The Last
Temptation of Christ.
The
Last Temptation of Christ
After his mid-80s
flirtation with commercial Hollywood, Scorsese made a major return to personal
film-making with the Paul Schrader scripted, The Last Temptation of Christ in
1988. Based on Nikos Kazantzakis's controversial 1951 book, it retold the life
of Christ in human rather than divine terms. Even prior to its release the film
caused a massive furor, worldwide protests against its supposed blasphemy
effectively turning a low budget independent movie in to a media sensation [1].
Most controversy centered on the final passages of the film which depicted
Christ marrying and raising a family with Mary Magdalene in a Satan-induced
hallucination while on the cross.
Looking past the
controversy, The Last Temptation of Christ gained critical acclaim and remains
an important work in Scorsese's canon: an explicit attempt to wrestle with the
spirituality which had under-pinned his films up until that point. The director
went on to receive his second nomination for a Best Director Academy Award
(again unsuccessful).
Along with directors
Woody Allen and Francis Coppola, in 1989 Scorsese provided one of three segments
in the portmanteau film New York Stories, called "Life Lessons".
1990s
Goodfellas
After a decade of mixed
results, gangster epic Goodfellas (1990) was a return to form for Scorsese and
his most confident and fully realized film since Raging Bull. A return to Little
Italy, De Niro, and Joe Pesci, Goodfellas offered a virtuoso display of the
director's bravura cinematic technique and re-established, enhanced, and
consolidated his reputation. The film is widely considered one of the director's
greatest achievements.[23] [24] [25]
However, Goodfellas also
signified an important shift in tone in the director's work, inaugurating an era
in his career which was technically accomplished but some have argued
emotionally detached.[26] Despite this, many view Goodfellas as a Scorsese
archetype — the apogee of his cinematic technique.
Scorsese earned his third
Best Director nomination for Goodfellas but again lost to a first-time director,
Kevin Costner.
In 1990, he acted in a
cameo role as Vincent Van Gogh in the film Dreams by legendary Japanese director
Akira Kurosawa.
Cape
Fear
Next came Cape Fear
(1991), a remake of a cult 1962 movie of the same name, and the director's
seventh collaboration with De Niro. Another foray in to the mainstream, the film
was a stylized Grand Guignol thriller taking its cues heavily from Alfred
Hitchcock and Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter (1955). Cape Fear
received a mixed critical reception and was lambasted in many quarters for its
scenes depicting misogynystic violence. However, the lurid subject matter did
give Scorsese a chance to experiment with a dazzling array of visual tricks and
effects. The film garnered two Oscar nominations. Earning eighty million dollars
domestically, it would stand as Scorsese's most commercially successful release
until The Aviator, thirteen years later.
The
Age of Innocence
The opulent and
handsomely mounted The Age of Innocence (1993) was on the surface a huge
departure for Scorsese, a period adaptation of Edith Wharton's novel about the
constrictive high society of late-19th Century New York. However, its complex
psychological undercurrents, immense attention to detail and visual flourishes
clearly betray the hand of the director.
Casino
1995's expansive Casino,
like The Age of Innocence before it, focused on a tightly wound male whose
well-ordered life is disrupted by the arrival of unpredictable forces. The fact
that it was a violent gangster film made it more palatable to fans of the
director who perhaps were baffled by the apparent departure of the earlier film.
Critically, however, Casino received mixed notices. In large part this was due
to its huge stylistic similarities to his earlier Goodfellas. Indeed many of the
tropes and tricks of the earlier film resurfaced more or less intact, most
obviously the casting of Joe Pesci as an unbridled psychopath. Casino was by
some considerable distance perhaps Scorsese’s most violent and detached film,
its early establishing scenes verging on documentary. Any critical misgivings
were tempered by the fact the movie remains an extraordinary technical
achievement, running to three hours in length.
A Personal Journey with
Martin Scorsese Through American Movies
Scorsese still found time
for a four hour documentary in 1995 offering a thorough trek through American
cinema, from the silent era to 1969. A year after which Scorsese began his
feature career, stating "I wouldn't feel right commenting on myself or my
contemporaries."
Kundun
If The Age of Innocence
alienated and confused some fans, then Kundun (1997) went several steps further,
offering an account of the early life of the 14th Dalai Lama, the invasion of
Tibet by China, and the Dalai Lama's subsequent exile to India. Not least a
departure in subject matter, Kundun also saw Scorsese employing a fresh
narrative and visual approach. Traditional dramatic devices were substituted for
a trance-like meditation achieved through an elaborate tableau of colourful
visual images.[27]
The film was a source of
turmoil for its distributor, Disney, who were planning significant expansion
into the Chinese market at the time. Initially defiant in the face of pressure
from Chinese officials, Disney has since distanced itself from the project,
hurting Kundun's commercial profile.
In the short term, the
sheer eclecticism in evidence enhanced the director’s reputation. In the long
term however, it generally appears Kundun has been sidelined in most critical
appraisals of the director, mostly noted as a stylistic and thematic detour. (It
must be noted that Kundun was the director's second attempt to profile the life
of a great religious leader, following The Last Temptation of Christ.)
Bringing Out the Dead
Bringing Out the Dead
(1999) was a return to familiar territory, with the director and writer Paul
Schrader constructing a pitch-black comic take on their own earlier Taxi
Driver.[28] Like previous Scorsese-Schrader collaborations, its final scenes of
spiritual redemption explicitly recalled the films of Robert Bresson.[29] (It's
also worth noting that the film's incident-filled nocturnal setting is
reminiscent of After Hours.)
In 1999 Scorsese also
produced a documentary on Italian filmakers entitled Il Mio Viaggio in Italia,
also known as My Voyage to Italy. The documentary foreshadowed the director's
next project, the epic Gangs of New York (2002), influenced by (amongst many
others) major Italian directors such as Luchino Visconti and filmed in its
entirety at Rome's famous Cinecittà film studios.
2000
to present
Gangs
of New York
With a production budget
said to be in excess of $100 million, Gangs of New York was Scorsese's biggest
and arguably most mainstream venture to date. Like The Age of Innocence, it was
a 19th century-set New York movie, although focusing on the other end of the
social scale (and like that film, also starring Daniel Day-Lewis). The
production was highly troubled with many rumors referring to the director’s
conflict with Miramax boss Harvey Weinstein.[30] Despite denials of artistic
compromise, Gangs of New York revealed itself to be the director's most
conventional film: standard film tropes which the director had traditionally
avoided, such as characters existing purely for exposition purposes and
explanatory flashbacks, here surfaced in abundance.[31] [32] [33] The original
score composed by regular Scorsese collaborator Elmer Bernstein was rejected at
a late stage for a more conventional score by Howard Shore and mainstream rock
artists U2 and Peter Gabriel (making commercial, if little historic or
contextual sense).[34] The final cut of the movie ran to 168 minutes, while the
director's original cut was over three hours in length.[31]
None the less, the themes
central to the film were consistent with the director's established concerns:
New York, violence as culturally endemic, and sub-cultural divisions down ethnic
lines.
Originally filmed for a
release in the winter of 2001 (to qualify for Academy Award nominations),
Scorsese delayed the final production of the film until after the beginning of
2002; the studio consequently delayed the film for nearly a year until its
release in the Oscar season of late 2002.[35]
In February of 2003,
Gangs of New York received ten Academy Award nominations, including Best
Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis. This was Scorsese's
fourth Best Director nomination, and many thought it was finally his year to win
(the award went instead to Roman Polański). Ultimately, though, "Gangs of New
York" took home not a single Academy Award.
2003 also saw the release
of "The Blues", an expansive seven part documentary tracing the history blues
music from its African roots to the Mississippi Delta and beyond. Seven
film-makers including Wim Wenders, Clint Eastwood, Mike Figgis, and Scorsese
himself each contributed a 90 minute film (Scorsese's entry was entitled "Feel
Like Going Home").
The
Aviator
Scorsese's film The
Aviator (2004), was a lavish, large-scale biopic of director, producer,
legendary eccentric, multi-millionaire, and aviation pioneer Howard Hughes. Like
Gangs of New York and, more so, New York, New York before it, the film was
another attempt by the director to weld auteur sensibilities with the
conventions of golden-era Hollywood. In this respect the film was only partly
successful: although generally well received, some critics suggested The Aviator
lacked Scorsese's distinct directorial signature.[36] [37] However the film met
with widespread box office success and gained Academy recognition.
The Aviator was nominated
for six Golden Globe awards, including Best Picture - Drama, Best Director, Best
Screenplay, and Best Actor - Drama for Leonardo DiCaprio. It won three,
including Best Picture & Actor - Drama. In January of 2005, The Aviator became
the most-nominated film of the 77th Academy Award nominations, nominated in 11
categories including Best Picture. The film has also garnered nominations in
nearly all of the other major categories, including Best Picture, a fifth Best
Director nomination for Scorsese, Best Actor (Leonardo DiCaprio), Best
Supporting Actress (Cate Blanchett), and Alan Alda for Best Supporting Actor.
Despite having a leading tally, the film ended up with only five Oscars: Best
Supporting Actress, Art Direction, Costume Design, Film Editing and
Cinematography. Scorsese lost out (again), this time to director Clint Eastwood
for Million Dollar Baby (which also won Best Picture).
The
Departed
Scorsese made a much
anticipated return to the crime genre with his latest film, the Boston set
thriller The Departed, based on the Hong Kong policier drama Infernal Affairs.
The film once again united the director with Leonardo DiCaprio, an actor he has
now been working with for three consecutive projects. The Departed also brought
Scorsese together with fellow New Hollywood icon Jack Nicholson.
The Departed saw a return
to Scorsese’s trademark kinetic style after the relative anonymity of Gangs of
New York and The Aviator and the movie opened to widespread critical acclaim
with some proclaiming it as one of the best efforts Scorsese had brought to the
screen since 1990's Goodfellas,[38] [39] and still others putting it at the same
level as Scorsese's most celebrated classics Taxi Driver, and Raging Bull.[40]
[41]
Future
projects
Scorsese has expressed
plans to make his next film project Silence, the story of Portuguese Jesuit
missionaries in feudal Japan. Based on the novel by Japanese author Shusaku Endo
it is projected for a 2008 release. Early in 2006 Scorsese spoke of directing
the movie, and a recent interview with his long-time editor Thelma Schoonmaker
in Time Out confirmed that this is his next film project.[42] She is quoted
saying "It's something very close to Scorsese's heart – he's wanted to make it
for many years but he's never really had the time to write the script and get it
funded. But we're all hoping that this time it's going to happen, and it looks
like we're going to shoot it in New Zealand as well." Silence is a novel by
Shusaku Endo about two Portuguese Jesuit priests, Sebastião Rodrigues and
Francis Garrpe, who travel to seventeenth century Imperial Japan (which has
isolated itself from all foreign contact) to see how the evangelical mission is
going. There they witness the persecution of the Japanese Christians at the
hands of their own government which wishes to purge Japan of all Western
influence. Eventually they separate and Rodrigues travels the countryside,
wondering why God remains silent while His children suffer. Daniel Day Lewis,
Harvey Keitel and Javier Bardem are rumoured to star as Sebastião Rodrigues,
Cristovan Ferierra and Francis Garrpe respectivly.[43]
It has been announced
that Scorsese and new leading man DiCaprio will be working on The Rise of
Theodore Roosevelt. The screenplay will be written by Nicholas Meyer. It is
being speculated for a 2010 release date.[44]
He also developing a
movie about the last legal duel in French history, based on author Eric Jager's
The Last Duel: A True Story of Crime, Scandal and Trial by Combat in Medieval
France. The story of a 1386 duel between two knights, sanctioned by King Charles
IV and the last such bout sanctioned by the French government, it's part of the
director's new four-year deal with Paramount Pictures. It's unknown whether Rise
of Theodore Roosevelt or The Last Duel will come first, but Silence is
definitely next.[45]
Scorsese is president of
the Film Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to film preservation
and decaying motion picture film stock.
At a ceremony in Paris,
France on January 5, 2005, Martin Scorsese was awarded the French Legion of
Honor in recognition of his contribution to cinema.
In an interview, Martin
Scorsese and Robert De Niro said that they are working on a script about their
childhood; both grew up in the same neighborhood in New York.[46]
Director trademarks
Frequently casts Robert
De Niro, Harvey Keitel, Joe Pesci, his own mother Catherine Scorsese, Daniel
Day-Lewis, and in recent years, Leonardo DiCaprio.
Frequently works with
editor Thelma Schoonmaker.
Frequently works with
cinematographers Michael Ballhaus and Robert Richardson.
Begins his films with
segments taken from the middle or end of the story. Examples include Raging Bull
(1980), Goodfellas (1990) and Casino (1995).
Frequent use of slow
motion, e.g. Mean Streets (1973), Taxi Driver (1976), Raging Bull.
His lead characters are
often sociopathic and/or want to be accepted in society.
Regularly collaborates
with musician Robbie Robertson who acted as music producer/consultant on Raging
Bull, The King of Comedy, The Color of Money, Casino and Gangs of New York.
Often uses diegetic music
(i.e., source of music is visible on-screen).
His blonde leading ladies
are usually seen through the eyes of the protagonist as angelic and ethereal;
they always wear white in their first scene and are photographed in slow-motion
(Cybill Shepherd in Taxi Driver; Cathy Moriarty's white bikini in Raging Bull;
Sharon Stone's white minidress in Casino.
Often uses long tracking
shots.
Use of montage sequences
involving aggressive camera movement and rapid editing, set to popular music.
Frequently worked with
composer Elmer Bernstein and, more recently, Howard Shore.
Opening credits for
Goodfellas, The Age of Innocence, Casino and Cape Fear (1991) have been designed
by Elaine and Saul Bass, the latter being Hitchcock's title designer of choice.
Before their deaths,
would frequently cast his parents, Charles and Catherine, in bit parts,
walk-ons, or supporting roles.
Often has a quick cameo
in his films (Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, The King of Comedy, After Hours, The
Last Temptation of Christ (albeit hidden under a hood), The Age of Innocence,
Gangs of New York). Also, often contributes his voice to a film without showing
his face on screen. E.g., provides the opening voice-over narration in Mean
Streets and The Color of Money; plays the off-screen dressing room attendant in
the final scene of Raging Bull; provides the voice of the unseen ambulance
dispatcher in Bringing out the Dead.
Frequently uses The
Rolling Stones' music.
Movies use frequent
colourful language, especially the word "f***". Several of his movies such as
"Casino", "Goodfellas", "The Departed", and "Raging Bull" use the word over 100
times and rank highly in the Wikipedia list (accessed 12 November 2006) of the
films that most frequently use the word. [2]
References
In an episode of American
Dad titled The Best Christmas Story Never, Stan convinces Scorsese to stop
taking drugs in the 70s, causing Scorsese not to make the film Taxi Driver,
leading to other events that mess up the present year.
Themes
The main themes of
Scorsese's work are intimately wrapped up in his Roman Catholic upbringing and
his early attraction to the priesthood. Scorsese has once remarked that when he
was growing up the most powerful people in his neighborhood were the gangsters
and the priests. He claims that as a filmmaker he is in some ways a combination
of the two. Scorsese is now an agnostic and no longer practices in the Roman
Catholic religion.
Redemption and sin are
the primary themes of Scorsese's films. His heroes tend to be fallen souls
seeking redemption in a world of corruption. They often achieve this redemption
only through a "passion", a crucifixion of sorts, in which a blood penance is
extracted for their former sins. Charlie's final scene in Mean Streets, Travis
Bickle's psychotic rampage in Taxi Driver, and Jake LaMotta's pounding his fists
into the walls of his prison cell in Raging Bull would all seem to be
expressions of this obsession with sin and redemption.
Scorsese's films have,
oddly enough, become more bleak in this regard as his career goes on.
Goodfellas, Casino, and The Aviator all end with their protagonists trapped in a
metaphorical purgatory from which it is uncertain they will be redeemed.
Loneliness and drive also
permeate Scorsese's films. His characters tend to be individualist or
misunderstood outcasts who are compelled by emotional forces. In these his
films, these forces tend to gather strength until they burst out into a frenzy.
It has been said that this is one of the factors which attracts actors to his
films. This is because it gives them the opportunity to play emotionally
aggressive characters.
The corruption of the
material world and the fall from paradise are also persistent themes in
Scorsese's films, particularly in his gangster films. His characters are often
torn between the temptations of the material world and the self-betrayal of
their own spirits that the material world demands of them. This conflict often
erupts into a cataclysmic fall from grace that sometimes leads to a quiet
redemption. This theme is most explicit in Raging Bull, which ends with a New
Testament verse spoken by a blind man who has been given sight by Jesus.
(However, this quote can be read as part of the film's dedication to Haig P.
Manoogian, his NYU film school mentor.)
Oscar-less director
Scorsese has been
nominated five times for an Oscar for Best Director, but has never won. This
places him in the company of such directors as Alfred Hitchcock (5 nominations),
Robert Altman (5), Stanley Kubrick (4), Federico Fellini (4), Ingmar Bergman
(3), David Lynch (3) and Orson Welles (1) none of whom have won a competitive
Oscar for directing, though Altman, Hitchcock, Fellini, Bergman and Welles were
all awarded honorary Oscars.
Jon Stewart noted this at
the 2006 Oscars, joking moments after the Best Song Oscar was given to a hip hop
group: "For those of you keeping score: Three 6 Mafia, one; Martin Scorsese,
zero." According to Scorsese's editor Thelma Schoonmaker, Scorsese is
philosophical about his lack of Academy recognition. "We should feel lucky we
even get to make movies anymore," he reportedly said.
Scorsese has however won
the prestigious Palme d'Or for Taxi Driver. Furthermore, that film, as well as
Goodfellas and Raging Bull, was part of Time Magazine's All-Time Top 100 Movies
making him the director with the most number of entries on that list above such
respected directors (and admitted influences) as Ingmar Bergman, Federico
Fellini, Akira Kurosawa, Orson Welles, John Ford, Jean Renoir and Alfred
Hitchcock.
Filmography (as director)
1967: The Big Shave
(short)
1967: Who's That Knocking
at My Door
1970: Street Scenes
1972: Boxcar Bertha
1973: Mean Streets
1974: Italianamerican
1974: Alice Doesn't Live
Here Anymore
1976: Taxi Driver
1977: New York, New York
1978: American Boy: A
Profile of Steven Prince
1978: The Last Waltz
1980: Raging Bull
1983: The King of Comedy
1985: After Hours
1986: The Color of Money
1988: The Last Temptation
of Christ
1989: New York Stories
("Life Lessons" segment)
1990: Goodfellas
1991: Cape Fear
1993: The Age of
Innocence
1995: Casino
1995: A Personal Journey
with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies
1997: Kundun
1999: My Voyage to Italy
1999: Bringing Out the
Dead
2002: Gangs of New York
2004: The Aviator
2005: No Direction Home:
Bob Dylan - A Martin Scorsese Picture
2006: The Departed
2007: Untitled Rolling
Stones Documentary
2008: Silence
2010/12: The Rise of
Theodore Roosevelt
2010/12: The Last Duel
Selected filmography (as actor)
1973: Mean Streets
(cameo)
1976: Taxi Driver
1986: Round Midnight
1990: Dreams
1994: Quiz Show
2004: Shark Tale
References
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^ http://www.adherents.com/people/ps/Martin_Scorsese.html
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^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/2591273.stm
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^ Chris Ingui. Martin Scorsese
hits DC, hangs with the Hachet. Hatchet. Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
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^
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0412/is_n1_v24/ai_18533918
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^
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http://www.filmfreakcentral.net/dvdreviews/scorseseondvd70s.htm
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^
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^ http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/news/2005-02-07-dvd-raging-bull_x.htm
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^ http://film.guardian.co.uk/Feature_Story/feature_story/0,,98151,00.html
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^ http://www.theage.com.au/news/Film/Right-guy-wrong-film/2005/02/25/1109180100911.html
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^ http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=61::6:F
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^ http://movies.go.com/tipster?id=863422
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^ http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/film/article-23367585-details/Scorsese's+mob+rule/article.do
****
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