Many critics and film historians throughout the world praise Martin Scorsese as the greatest living American director. In this collection of interviews covering a period of two decades, Scorsese's own words, sometimes emotionally direct and always revealing, trace his astonishing career. Like a Scorsese film, a Scorsese interview is daring and impassioned and is charged with his trademark wit and brilliance.
From the moment he captured
the film world's attention with Mean Streets (1973), a portrait
of life at the fringes of the Mob, it was clear that a dazzling cinematic
talent had arrived on the scene. With Robert DeNiro, one of the most talented
young actors from this film, Scorsese went on to make some of the greatest
American films of the postwar period, including Taxi Driver (1976),
Raging
Bull (1980), and Goodfellas (1990).
A Scorsese film seldom fails to stir controversy, for his devotion to realism
has led him to forthrightly depict violence and its frightening randomness
in the modern world. His biblical film also created quite a stir. This
adaptation of Kazantzakis's The Last Temptation of Christ generated
outrage among conservative religious leaders.
Scorsese, however, has not
limited himself to contemporary, violent urban dramas or new interpretations
of biblical subjects. Other widely heralded Scorsese films include Alice
Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974),
New York, New York (1977),
The Last Waltz (1978), The King of Comedy (1983), After
Hours (1985), The Color of Money (1986), Cape Fear (1991),
The Age of Innocence (1993), Casino (1995), and
Kundun
(1998).
These interviews begin with
conversations about the highly autobiographical Mean Streets (1973),
which first brought Scorsese serious attention, and end with conversations
about Kundun, an overtly political biography of the Dalai Lama of
Tibet, released in early 1998.
"I look for a thematic idea
running through my movies, he says, and I see that it's the outsider struggling
for recognition. I realize that all my life I've been an outsider, and
above all, being lonely but never realizing it."
Peter Brunette , a professor
of English and film studies at George Mason University, is the author of
Roberto Rossellini and (forthcoming) The Films of Michelangelo
Antonioni. With David Wills he co-authored Screen/Play: Derrida
and Film Theory.
256 pp.