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Martin Scorsese: Interviews PDF

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Martin Scorsese: Interviews Revised and Updated Conversations with Filmmakers Series Gerald Peary, General Editor This page intentionally left blank Martin Scorsese I N T E R V I E W S Revised and Updated Edited by Robert Ribera University Press of Mississippi / Jackson www.upress.state.ms.us The University Press of Mississippi is a member of the Association of American University Presses. Copyright © 2017 by University Press of Mississippi All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing 2017 ∞ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Scorsese, Martin author. | Ribera, Robert editor. Title: Martin Scorsese : interviews / edited by Robert Ribera. Description: Revised and updated [edition]. | Jackson : University Press of Mississippi, 2017. | Series: Conversations with filmmakers series | Includes filmography and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2016039514 (print) | LCCN 2016051720 (ebook) | ISBN 9781496809230 (hardcover : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781496809476 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781496809247 (epub single) | ISBN 9781496809254 (epub institutional) | ISBN 9781496809261 ( pdf single) | ISBN 9781496809278 (pdf institutional) Subjects: LCSH: Scorsese, Martin—Interviews. | Motion picture producers and directors—United States—Interviews. Classification: LCC n-us— (print) | LCC PN1998.3.S39 (ebook) | DDC 791.4302/33092 [B] —dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016039514 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available Contents Introduction vii Chronology xii Filmography xv Martin Scorsese and the American Underground 3 Doris Freedman / 1970 Dialogue on Film: Martin Scorsese 11 The American Film Institute / 1975 Taxi Dancer: Martin Scorsese Interviewed 45 Jonathan Kaplan / 1977 Raging Bull 52 Michael Henry / 1981 Taxi Driver 66 Paul Schrader / 1982 Chalk Talk 79 Peter Biskind and Susan Linfield / 1986 Martin Scorsese: In the Streets 85 Peter Occhiogrosso / 1987 . . . And Blood 98 Richard Corliss / 1988 Scorsese: A Bicoastal Story 107 Amy Taubin / 1988 vi CONTENTS What the Streets Mean 110 Anthony DeCurtis / 1990 Martin Scorsese Interviewed 134 Gavin Smith / 1993 Martin Scorsese’s Testament 152 Ian Christie / 1996 Everything Is Form 166 Amy Taubin / 1998 Fresh Air: Director Martin Scorsese 174 Terry Gross / 2003 2006 Charles Guggenheim Symposium Honoring Martin Scorsese 186 Jim Jarmusch / 2006 Martin Scorsese on The Departed 199 Michael Goldman / 2006 Docufictions: An Interview with Martin Scorsese on Documentary Film 205 Raffaele Donato / 2007 InHugo, Scorsese Salutes a Movie Magician 217 Melissa Block / 2011 The Art of Martin Scorsese 222 Jim Leach / 2013 DP/30: Scorsese on TheWolf of Wall Street 234 David Poland / 2014 Index 246 Introduction In the opening pages of his novel The Last Temptation of Christ, the basis of Martin Scorsese’s 1988 film, Nikos Kazantzakis writes that the “principal anguish and the source of all my joys and sorrows from my youth onward has been the incessant, merciless battle between the spirit and the flesh.” It is a heartfelt description by a man who sought a closer relationship to God while acknowledging the struggle between faith, art, and the temptations of living in the modern world. Kazant- zakis’s description of his conflicted life can shine a light on Martin Scorsese and his brilliant, intense films, which, for five decades, have courageously explored the passions that bind us together but, more often, destroy us. In Mean Streets, GoodFellas, and The Departed, it is the lure of violence and crime. In the recent The Wolf of Wall Street, the lure of greed. Scorsese has frequently returned to his native New York—so vibrant, ebul- lient, yet so depraved—as a metaphor for the world at large. The darkness is al- ready embedded in the strictures of nineteenth century Manhattan high society inThe Age of Innocence. In the crime-ridden landscape of New York of the 1970s, Scorsese might relate to Travis Bickle’s wish in Taxi Driver that “some day a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets.” But living in the corrosive urban jungle only partly explains Bickle’s pathology, and Scorsese does not always need the streets of New York to explore his themes. Much of Bickle’s depravity is internal, and many of Scorsese’s movies delve into the darkness of the souls of his protagonists and antagonists, reaching rock bottom with the stalker insanities of Rupert Pupkin in The King of Comedy, the obsessions of Howard Hughes in The Aviator, or the sadistic violence of Max Cady in Cape Fear. Fortunately, Scorsese also provides us (occasionally) with characters to root for. Countess Ellen Olenska in The Age of Innocence and Alice Hyatt in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore struggling for their liberation. Charlie in Mean Streets strug- gling with his faith and his ambition. In Kundun, the Dalai Lama fighting Chinese oppression. Scorsese is most positive in his documentaries, with his affectionate portraits of, among others, Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Elia Kazan, and his own Italian American parents. vii viii INTRODUCTION Scorsese’s love of, and reliance on, cinema began early, in New York’s Little Italy. With asthma restricting his ability to be a very active child, Marty spent a fair amount of time in the 1950s at the movie theater or in front of a television set. In front of those flickering screens, he fell in love with worlds that separated him from the streets. Outside, he was confronted with the violence and crime of his New York City neighborhood. In a telling exchange with Paul Schrader, Scorsese talks about his impressions of cinema as a little boy. “The first image I remember seeing in a movie theatre,” he recalls, “was a trailer in Trucolor of Roy Rogers and his horse jumping over a log. My father said, ‘Do you know what Trigger is?’ I said, ‘That’s trigger.’ (Scorsese pulls the trigger of an imaginary gun.) I was about three or four years old. My father said, ‘No, that’s the name of the horse.’ And there was this beautiful horse and this guy with fringe jumping and flying in the air like an angel. Ever since I always wanted to be a cowboy and never was.” Scorsese was never a priest either, though he wanted to be that as well. In line with the concerns of many characters in his films, he attributes his call to the priesthood with a deep desire to belong. “I needed to be accepted somewhere,” he tells Peter Occhiogrosso in a lengthy discussion of his beliefs, acknowledging that being a good Catholic boy and living a Christian life proved difficult. “How do you do that in this world?” he wondered, and imagined answers behind the vestments. “I figured that maybe wearing the cloth you might be able to find a better way to do that.” While the priesthood did not work out, he was able to translate those passions, those questions, into a career in filmmaking. In line with other Catholic directors such as Robert Bresson and Alfred Hitchcock, Scorsese has entered a lifelong conversation about religion on the screen. Catholicism, if not always or- thodox, runs deep in his life and films. The passion of filmmaking was another form of identity for Scorsese, who at- tended NYU as a film student in the 1960s and, while working on his first feature, Who’s That Knocking at MyDoor, stayed on to teach. It was a time that young film- makers were anxious to translate their experiences to film, to be political and personal. In one of his earliest interviews, with Doris Freedman on WNYC radio in 1967, he called filmmaking a “kind of therapy.” After working as an editor on Woodstock and making his feature, Boxcar Bertha with Roger Corman, who taught him “how to make a movie in twenty-one days,” Scorsese had his breakout success. It was Mean Streets, which arrived in 1973. The opening lines, “You don’t make up for your sins in church. You do it in the streets,” reflect Scorsese’s attempts to bridge the gap between the lives he led growing up. “If there’s any religious theme or concept in my films,” he says later, “I guess the main one would be the concept in Mean Streets of how to live one’s life.” It is in many ways still his most personal work. He would worry forever after about the INTRODUCTION ix compromises of working within the Hollywood system, the too-expensive pro- duction costs, and his ability to keep making personal films. This balancing act continues today, as he continues to work within the system, making personal films on a grand Hollywood scale. As he tells Amy Taubin, “I use myself as a measuring rod, try to stay as honest as I can.” It would be reductive to claim that Scorsese concerned himself exclusively with one theme during his long career. However, he embraces the idea that there are threads that run throughout his films. “There is an evolution. I’ve seen it,” he tells Schrader. “However, you also have patterns—and you have to deal with them.” With Scorsese what is ubiquitous are lives tinged with crime and violence. His morally complicated characters—including many criminals and murderers—form the bedrock of Scorsese’s work, and he argues that they help us understand the “frailty of being human.” At the heart of these characters is a quest for identity; that the journey takes them to the temptations of violence, lust, and greed, is not an act of condoning on Scorsese’s part. Jordan Belfort’s greed in The Wolf of Wall Street is not to be celebrated, nor is Henry Hill’s involvement in the Lufthansa heist in GoodFellas. But these deeds are worthy, Scorsese insists, to be explored and dramatized. Speaking with Ian Christie about Casino, he says, “Very often the people I portray can’t help but be in that way of life. . . . Yes, they’re bad, they’re doing bad things, and we condemn those aspects of them—but they’re also human beings.” And further: “I want to push audiences’ emotional empathy.” Whether you agree with the films’ perspectives on violence and morality, what cannot be said is that Scorsese takes these issues lightly. In his conversation with longtime associate Raffaele Donato, Scorsese speaks about the cinema’s dual impulses toward recording and interpreting the world around us. Over the last twenty years, nonfiction filmmaking has increasingly occupied Scorsese’s time. Many of his best feature documentaries, in a line with The Last Waltz in 1978, focus on music and musicians, such as No Direction Home, The Blues, and Living in the Material World. Scorsese also mines the lives of non- musicians: Elia Kazan, Fran Lebowitz, even the New York Review of Books; and non-celebrities such as his parents in Italianamerican, and a charismatic young drug addict in American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince. Yet to him, “there was never any difference between fiction and nonfiction.” He has sought authenticity and “documentary power” in the faces, words, and actions of the characters in his narrative features. Mean Streets, Scorsese claims, was made with actors docu- menting a specific time and place in New York City. He told Anthony DeCurtis, “I just wanted to make, like, an anthropological study; it was about myself and my friends. And I figured even if it was on a shelf, some years later people would take it and say that’s what Italian Americans on the everyday scale—not the Godfather,

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Martin Scorsese (b. 1942) has long been considered one of America's greatest cinematic storytellers. Over the last fifty years he has created some of the most iconic moments in American film, never afraid to confront controversial issues with passion. While few of his films are directly autobiograph
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