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Scorsese talks about Violence not always
cup of tea, but crucial to director's work
By Howard
Ho DAILY BRUIN SENIOR
STAFF hho@media.ucla.edu
In "Gangs of New York," Bill the
Butcher (Daniel Day-Lewis) gives a monologue about how the spectacle
of violence maintains the social order, an idea which informs much
of Scorsese's film work. Films such as "Goodfellas," "Taxi Driver,"
"Casino" and "Mean Streets" are not exactly a civil cup of tea.
So when Scorsese appeared at his own tribute at the
Director's Guild of America Thursday night as part of a UCLA
retrospective of his work, it was a bit surprising to hear him say
that the teacups in his Victorian-era film "The Age of Innocence"
were among the most violent images he's made.
"Why I say the
teacups are more frightening is because the way everything is held
in," Scorsese said. "At least, if you blow your top, you yell,
scream, throw your cell phone, something, you get to a point finally
where you get past it."
Even in "Raging Bull," a film about
a troubled boxer who turns all his relationships into fights,
Scorsese likes to talk about the violence of camera bulbs flashing
to the sound of camera shutters closing after the boxer is forced to
lose a fight. To him, they are like bullets recording a humiliation.
While Scorsese's shooting of those boxing scenes seems so
facile, Scorsese only came up with his visual pyrotechnics when
Robert De Niro was rehearsing the boxing choreography. Not to
mention that Scorsese was not a sports fan.
Scorsese was
diagnosed with asthma at the age of 4, limiting his physical
activities.
"I was told by doctors and parents that they
can't take me anywhere, can't run, can't laugh, can't do anything,"
Scorsese said. "So we went to the movie theater all the time."
Scorsese has a legendary grasp of film history, and that can
be a bit intimidating for other filmmakers.
"He's just seen
every film that's been made," said director Charles Burnett, who
attended the tribute. "I thought I was a filmmaker before I met him,
and after I met him, I wasn't too sure."
All that filmgoing
knowledge would pay off handsomely when Scorsese decided to use that
film language to bring his own experience to the big screen. "Mean
Streets," released in 1973, was a look at Scorsese's neighborhood
and the type of characters he grew up around. While those wise-guy
characters are now common in shows such as "The Sopranos,"
Scorsese's film was the first to show America that social
underbelly.
"At the time it was never shown," Scorsese said.
"'The Godfather' (came out earlier), but they're like noblemen. We
were just basically in the streets on the corner."
Scorsese
loves talking about those real-life mean streets where he grew up.
These settings, especially neighborhood sounds, still affect his
filmmaking sensibility.
"Basically, music was scoring my
life," Scorsese said. "Outrageous things would happen to an
extraordinary piece of music playing to score it, particularly
looking out the window with things going on outside and in your own
house with arguments or jokes."
The commitment to such
personal filmmaking led UCLA Dean Robert Rosen to call Scorsese "the
ultimate auteur," an artist with complete control over his craft,
from the storyboards to the script, the editing and the camera work.
"Whenever I tried working for someone else, I always got
fired," Scorsese said. "Even if I tried it their way, it ended up my
way, and it was not good."
It's an attitude that lives on in
new filmmakers such as director and UCLA alumnus Alexander Payne,
who attended the event. He claims his film "Election" was influenced
by the voiceovers in "Goodfellas" and double take shots in "Casino."
"I would talk to him about film history and film technique,"
said Payne, who says he will renew an invitation to give Scorsese a
call.
"There are even certain shots that are called Scorsese
shots," said UCLA graduate film student Ham Tran, who also attended.
Short clips of Scorsese's films were shown during the
tribute, including the famous Copacabana shot in "Goodfellas," one
long five-minute take that follows a couple through the back-door
entrance and finally to the front row of the most exclusive
nightclub in town. Another was the bloody shootout in "Taxi Driver,"
a scene so violent the film was originally given an X-rating before
Scorsese re-edited it.
Yet, Scorsese is genial, not mean,
and he's not afraid to say that he got emotional watching "Bambi" as
a kid. His violence is not so much malicious as it is an attempt to
show history and life as it is, not as we think it should be. The
last shot of "Gangs of New York" says it all, the twin towers
standing tall as a testament to the violent beginnings of a
metropolitan city.
"The people in the film love, hate,
fight, suffer, suffer, and suffer, and then die and get buried, and
are forgotten," Scorsese said. "They helped create that city, those
towers, not tear it down. I felt that it didn't seem right to start
revising history, start erasing towers from all these
movies."
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