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    Wednesday, October 12, 2011

    Martin Scorsese Life's Journey

    (born Nov. 17, 1942, Flushing, Long Island, N.Y., U.S.) American filmmaker known for his harsh, often violent depictions of American culture.
    Scorsese was a frail, asthmatic child who grew up in an Italian American neighbourhood on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City. 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 filmmaking from New York University. His student films showed a wide range of influences, from foreign classics to Hollywood musicals.
    Scorsese's first theatrical film, Who's That Knocking at My Door?(1968), is an intimate portrayal of life in the streets of New York's Little Italy, where he grew up. After editing some sequences forWoodstock (1969) and directing Boxcar Bertha (1972) for Roger Corman, Scorsese in 1973 won critical attention with Mean Streets, which examines the conflict between church and street life in Little Italy. 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, partially improvised performances—particularly that of Robert De Niro, the actor most associated with Scorsese's films. In 1974, in response to the accusation that he couldn't make a “woman's picture,” Scorsese directed Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, which follows a recently widowed woman (Ellen Burstyn in an Oscar-winning performance) and her son across the West in their loose, episodic journey of self-discovery.
    Scorsese's Taxi Driver (1976), a brutal, uncompromising film that starred De Niro as a lonely, psychopathic New York cabbie, was filled with some of the most violent sequences committed to film to that time; many rank it as Scorsese's best work. De Niro costarred with Liza Minnelli in Scorsese's next film, New York, New York(1977), which explores the troubled romantic relationship between a young jazz saxophonist and a female vocalist in the decade after World War II. Although flawed and overlong, the film developed a cult following largely because of Scorsese's affection for old Hollywood, evident in his use of studio sets and nonnaturalistic lighting. In a change of pace, Scorsese next made The Last Waltz(1978), a documentary film of the breakup and final concert of the rock group the Band.
    Raging Bull (1980), one of Scorsese's finest films, recounts the violent public and private life of a boxer, based on the real-life prizefighter Jake La Motta and portrayed by De Niro, who won an Oscar for the film. The King of Comedy (1983) depicts an aspiring stand-up comedian (De Niro) who kidnaps a television star (Jerry Lewis) in order to achieve the fame that obsesses him. Scorsese's darkly comic After Hours (1985) attracted a large cult following, while The Color of Money (1986), a sequel to The Hustler (1961), proved a box-office bonanza and an Oscar winner for its star, Paul Newman. The Last Temptation of Christ (1988), based on a novel by Níkos Kazantzákis, scandalized many Christians with its depiction of Christ as tormented and unsure of his role as the Messiah.
    Scorsese returned to more familiar subject matter in GoodFellas(1990), a realistic depiction of the amoral and violent lives of three New York mobsters. In the 1990s Scorsese's choice of subject matter was both eclectic and expected, ranging from the crime thriller Cape Fear (1991) to an adaptation of Edith Wharton's romantic classic The Age of Innocence (1993) and from characteristic fare such as Casino (1995) and Bringing Out the Dead (1999) to Kundun (1997), a lavish period piece that chronicles the life of the 14th Dalai Lama. Beginning withGangs of New York (2002), a historical epic of the New York underworld in the mid-19th century, Scorsese made a number of films with American actor Leonardo DiCaprio. Among their subsequent collaborations were the Howard Hughes biopic The Aviator(2004), the Boston mob drama The Departed (2006), and the gothic thriller Shutter Island (2010). For The Departed Scorsese won his first Academy Award for best director; the film was also named best picture.
    In the early 21st century Scorsese directed two musical documentaries: No Direction Home: Bob Dylan (2005), a wide-ranging exploration of the iconic singer-songwriter that was produced for public television, and Shine a Light (2008), a concert film starring the Rolling Stones, whose music was frequently featured in Scorsese's narrative films. In 2010 he branched out further into television as the executive producer of Boardwalk Empire, an HBO drama series about gangsters in Atlantic City, N.J., during Prohibition.
    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 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, thereby creating a slightly disconcerting effect and suggesting a subjectively distorted world. In all, 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.
    The recipient of numerous awards, Scorsese received a Kennedy Center Honor in 2007 and a Cecil B. DeMille Award (a Golden Globe for lifetime achievement) in 2010.

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