Martin Scorsese, original name Martin Marcantonio Luciano Scorsese (bornNovember 17, 1942, Queens, New York, U.S.), American filmmaker known for his harsh, often violent depictions of American culture. From the 1970s Scorsese created a body of work that was ambitious, bold, and brilliant. But even his most acclaimed films are demanding, sometimes unpleasantly intense dramas that have enjoyed relatively little commercial success. Thus, Scorsese bears the not totally undeserved reputation as a cult director who works with big budgets and Hollywood’s most desirable stars. In terms of artistry, he was perhaps the most significant American director of the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Early life and work
Scorsese was a frail, asthmatic child who grew up in the Italian American neighbourhood of Little Italy on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. His early interest in film returned after he tried unsuccessfully to enter the Roman Catholic priesthood, and he went on to earn undergraduate (1964) and graduate (1966) degrees in film from New York University, where he subsequently taught. His student films showed a wide range of influences, from foreign classics to Hollywood musicals. Among them were shorts such as What’s a Nice Girl like You Doing in a Place like This? (1963) and It’s Not Just You, Murray! (1964).
Scorsese’s first theatrical film, Who’s That Knocking at My Door (1967), was an intimate portrayal of life in the streets of Little Italy. Harvey Keitel (who went on to do five more films with Scorsese in the 1970s and ’80s) starred as Scorsese’s alter ego, a streetwise but sensitive Italian American Catholic plagued by the knowledge that his girlfriend (Zina Bethune) had been raped. The film earned Scorsese encouraging reviews, and he was offered the position of assistant director and supervising editor on Woodstock(1970), which translated into converting the more than 100 hours of raw footage of the 1969 rock concert into a 3-hour movie that won an Academy Award for best documentary.
Films of the 1970s: Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, and New York, New York
Scorsese directed a less widely seen documentary about protests against the Vietnam War, Street Scenes (1970), and he then worked as an editor on the concert films Medicine Ball Caravan (1971) andElvis on Tour (1972). Producer Roger Corman invited him to direct Boxcar Bertha (1972). Scorsese made the most of the opportunity with an exciting if ultimately empty yarn about train robbers (Barbara Hershey, David Carradine, and Bernie Casey) wreaking havoc in the Depression-era South.
Far more significant was the boundary-breaking Mean Streets (1973), Scorsese’s reworking of the themes introduced in Who’s That Knocking at My Door. Filled with violent sequences, rapid-fire dialogue, and blaring rock music, the film was typical of his early work in its realistic detail and its naturalistic performances. Keitel starred as a small-time collector for the mob in Little Italy, stricken with guilt over his affair with his epileptic girlfriend Teresa (Amy Robinson) and frustrated by his inability to control his dangerously unhinged friend (and Teresa’s brother) Johnny Boy (Robert De Niro, who did eight films with Scorsese between 1973 and 1995). The moving, often hilarious performances of Keitel and De Niro were as much responsible for igniting this low-budget masterpiece as Scorsese’s atmospheric locations, shockingly frank language, explosive violence, and showy camera technique.
After making the documentary Italianamerican (1974) about his parents, Scorsese went to work on his first mainstream studio picture, the tamer Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (1974), which had little of the pyrotechnic invention of Mean Streets. But in its own subdued way, Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore was an effective drama about a widow, Alice (Ellen Burstyn), who strikes out from New Mexico to California after the death of her abusive husband to make a new life for herself and her adolescent son (Alfred Lutter). Burstyn’s Oscar for best actress helped convince the Hollywood establishment that Scorsese could discipline his maverick talent.
Scorsese’s artistic risk taking had been vindicated, but his status as Hollywood’s newest enfant terrible lasted only until the release of New York, New York (1977), a rethinking of the 1950s Hollywood musical, marked by nonnaturalistic lighting and elaborate sets. Deliberately stylized to evoke past screen triumphs by Vincente Minnelli and George Cukor, it featured De Niro as the cocky Jimmy Doyle, a novice saxophone player who works in a big band behind talented singer Francine Evans (Liza Minnelli). Their torrid love affair proves impossible to sustain, and the vain, self-destructive Jimmy drifts away from domestic bliss with the pregnant Francine. De Niro was compelling in an unsympathetic part, and Minnelli evoked her mother (Judy Garland) with frightening authority. While critical opinion was mixed, it was a commercial flop. However, the film later developed a cult following largely because of its obvious affection for old Hollywood.
Stung by this rejection, Scorsese edited his footage of The Band’s November 1976 farewell concert into the well-received rockumentary The Last Waltz (1978), with unparalleled performance footage of Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Muddy Waters, Eric Clapton, and other musical luminaries. Next came American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince (1978), in which Prince, a friend of Scorsese, recounted stories from his life as a road manager for singer Neil Diamond and as a heroin addict.
Films of the 1980s: Raging Bull, The King of Comedy, and The Color of Money
In The King of Comedy (1982), De Niro gave yet another wholly original performance—this time, as Rupert Pupkin, a self-styled stand-up TV comedian. Blissfully unaware of his profound lack of talent, Rupert practices his pathetic comedy routines to no avail. Finally he kidnaps reigning late-night TV star Jerry Langford (Jerry Lewis) in exchange for a 10-minute stint on his program. The film failed at the box office but later climbed in critical regard. After Hours (1985) was a minor but amusing diversion, with Griffin Dunne as a mild-mannered office worker who finds himself imperiled by a colourful variety of lunatics on one long, strange night. Shot on location by cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, this is an exhilarating, unusual illustration of what a Scorsese movie can be like when his only mission is fun.
The Color of Money (1986) was an adaptation of Walter Tevis’s sequel to his earlier novel The Hustler (1959, film 1961). “Fast Eddie” Felson (Paul Newman, reprising his Oscar-nominated role) is now retired from competition. He smells raw talent in callow pool shark Vincent Lauria (Tom Cruise) and takes him under his wing, sharing all his hard-earned knowledge about the game. But they part ways and end up facing each other at an Atlantic City tournament. This was Scorsese’s most commercial and conventional film. However, it reminded Hollywood that Scorsese could deliver a hit of at least modest proportions.
The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) was, but for some protests from conservative Christians prior to its release, a well-received version of Nikos Kazantzákis’s epic novel (adapted by Schrader) about the self-doubts of Jesus as he carries out his mission. Willem Dafoe was well cast as Jesus, but some critics had problems with the more unusual casting of Keitel as Judas, Hershey as Mary Magdalene, and Harry Dean Stanton as Paul. The evocative cinematography by Ballhaus and the neotraditional score by Peter Gabriel enlivened this variation on the Gospels, which earned Scorsese his second Oscar nomination.
Scorsese’s vivid “Life Lessons,” loosely based on Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Igrok (The Gambler), was a segment of the New York Stories (1989) triptych (which also contained segments by Woody Allen and Francis Ford Coppola). Nick Nolte played a middle-aged bearish slob of a painter desperate to keep his restless paramour-disciple (Rosanna Arquette) from moving out.
Films of the 1990s: GoodFellas, Cape Fear, and Casino
The commercially successful Cape Fear (1991) was an ultraviolent remake of a suspenseful 1962 film. Nolte starred as Sam Bowden, a Southern lawyer whose family is terrorized by ex-con Max Cady (De Niro), who blames the lawyer for his prison conviction and seeks revenge. Screenwriter Wesley Strick’s script complicated the premise of the original by making Bowden culpable on several levels, from his framing of Cady 14 years earlier to his current infidelity to his wife (Jessica Lange).
Cape Fear’s success enabled Scorsese to attract the big budget he desired for his 1993 version of Edith Wharton’s novel The Age of Innocence. A lovingly rendered, subtly acerbic portrait of New York City’s upper crust in the late 19th century, the film revolves around the unconsummated love affair between sensitive lawyer Newland Archer (Daniel Day-Lewis) and Countess Ellen Olenska (Michelle Pfeiffer), whose separation from her brutish husband and general flouting of convention are a scandal proper society cannot tolerate. In a more subtle role, Winona Ryder excelled as Archer’s deceptively vapid fiancée, May, who understands far more than she lets on. With his most fluid camera work yet, Scorsese demonstrated that his sensibility—thought by some to be too coarse for such refined period themes and nuances—had an extremely wide range. Scorsese and screenwriter Jay Cocks were Oscar nominated for best adapted screenplay.
The 1970s Las Vegas morality tale Casino (1995) marked the return of the GoodFellas talent pool, reuniting Scorsese with screenwriter Pileggi and actors De Niro and Pesci, but it did not receive the critical acclaim or commercial success of the earlier film. Casino had an epic running time of just short of three hours, and the De Niro-Pesci pairing had little of the chemistry seen in GoodFellas. However, the film had excellent supporting performances (especially by Sharon Stone, Alan King, James Woods,Don Rickles, and Dickie Smothers). Kundun (1997) followed; it was a respectful, handsomely mounted biography of the 14th Dalai Lama that proceeded at a stately pace, unspooling through the remarkable events of his life, commencing with the Dalai Lama’s discovery as a two-year-old who had become the vessel for the previous Dalai Lama’s spirit and ending with his escape from Tibet in 1959.
Bringing Out the Dead (1999) starred Nicolas Cage as a New York paramedic who is beginning to crack under the stress of his job and offered some of the same surreal nighttime ambience as Taxi Driver. The film had one of Cage’s more effective performances and costarred Patricia Arquette, John Goodman, and Ving Rhames.
Films of the 2000s: Gangs of New York, The Aviator, and The Departed
Gangs of New York (2002) was a project Scorsese had sought to film since the late 1970s. It had an epic canvas: the chaotic peril of 1860s New York City, culminating in the Draft Riot of 1863. Leonardo DiCaprio (in the first of a number of films he did with Scorsese) starred as Amsterdam Vallon, a young man seeking to avenge the death of his father at the hands of Bill the Butcher (Day-Lewis at his most mordant), a kind of godfather to the unruly Five Points mobs. Gangs of New York was nominated for 10 Oscars, including nods for best picture and director.
Films of the 2010s: Shutter Island, Hugo, and The Wolf of Wall Street
Shutter Island (2010) starred DiCaprio as a U.S. marshal who in 1954 travels to a psychiatric facility isolated in Boston Harbor to search for a missing patient. However, it soon becomes clear that what began as a noirish detective story has become something much closer to a horror movie. DiCaprio’s hard-boiled mien played well against Ben Kingsley’s Dr. Cawley, the crafty, evasive director of the gothic facility. Michelle Williams, Max von Sydow, and Jackie Earle Haley also provided top-notch support. The film was as much a box-office smash as The Departed, but reviews were not as universally enthusiastic.
Scorsese won an Emmy Award for another of his musical documentaries, George Harrison: Living in the Material World (2011), which examined the life of the former Beatle. Scorsese branched out further into television as the executive producer of Boardwalk Empire (2010– ), an HBO drama series about gangsters in Atlantic City during Prohibition. He also directed the show’s first episode, for which he received an Emmy in 2011.
Assessment
Despite the diversity in his chosen subject matter, Scorsese’s work contains common elements. His simultaneous fondness for and rebellion against old Hollywood is demonstrated by his exploring anew clichéd plot devices that often culminate in bleak irony and moral ambiguity. He has been praised for his use of the subjective camera to portray the protagonist’s point of view, an approach characterized by such subtle touches as right-to-left camera pans that move contrary to normal eye movement and thereby create a slightly disconcerting effect and suggest a subjectively distorted world. Scorsese’s films tend to be concerned with people rather than plots, and he is fond of placing his characters in volatile situations and allowing events to unfold naturally, as determined by the characters’ instincts, lusts, and obsessions. One of the most important filmmakers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Scorsese reflects in his work both a cynicism toward modern culture and an obvious love of the cinema.
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