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Martin Scorsese
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The first reviews of Martin Scorsese's Bringing
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Out the Dead are the latest evidence of the director's status as a critical
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favorite. This is not because the notices have been uniformly glowing--it's
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been some time since a Scorsese picture won unanimous praise from
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reviewers--but because Scorsese remains, almost uniquely among American
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directors, an embodiment of the beleaguered idea that filmmaking, and therefore
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film criticism, can be a serious, important, life-and-death matter. Here, for
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instance, is Roger Ebert, all thumbs:
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To look at Bringing Out the Dead --to look, indeed, at almost
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any Scorsese film--is to be reminded that film can touch us urgently and
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deeply. Scorsese is never on autopilot, never panders, never sells out, always
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goes for broke; to watch his films is to see a man risking his talent, not
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simply exercising it. He makes movies as well as they can be made.
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Never? Always? This is pure ideology--which is not
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to say that it isn't, to some extent, true. Even Scorsese's weaker films
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bristle with energy and intelligence. But look closely at what Ebert says: To
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be reminded of the power of film as a medium is not quite the same as being
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moved by a particular film, and Bringing Out the Dead is, for all its
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hectic pacing and breakneck intensity, an oddly unmoving experience. Yes, you
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think, movies can touch us urgently and deeply. Why doesn't this one? If
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Scorsese makes movies as well as they can be made, why does one so often feel
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that his movies--especially over the last decade or so--could have been
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better?
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Above all, to look at
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Bringing Out the Dead is to be reminded of a lot of other Scorsese
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films. Critics have noted its similarities with Taxi Driver , Scorsese's
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first collaboration with screenwriter Paul Schrader (who also wrote The Last
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Temptation of Christ and the later drafts of Raging Bull ). Both
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movies feature a disturbed outsider cruising the nightmarish,
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as-yet-ungentrified streets of Manhattan in search of redemption. In place of
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Sport, Harvey Keitel's suave, vicious pimp in the earlier film, Bringing Out
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the Dead features Cy, a suave, vicious drug dealer played by Cliff Curtis.
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The mood here is a good deal softer: The scabrous nihilism of Taxi
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Driver is no longer as palatable--or, perhaps, as accurate in its response
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to the flavor of the times or the mood of its creators--as it was in 1976.
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Nicolas Cage's Frank Pierce saves Cy from a death as gruesome as the one De
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Niro's Travis Bickle visited on Sport, and when Frank does take a life (in the
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movie's best, most understated scene), it's an act of mercy.
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Aside from these parallels and variations, there's plenty
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in Bringing Out the Dead to remind you that you're watching a Scorsese
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picture. There's voice-over narration. There's an eclectic, relentless rock 'n'
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roll score and a directorial cameo--this time Scorsese provides the disembodied
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voice of an ambulance dispatcher. There are jarring, anti-realist effects
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embedded in an overall mise en scène of harsh verisimilitude. And, of
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course, there is the obligatory religious imagery--the final frames present a
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classic Pietà, with Patricia Arquette (whose character is named Mary) cradling
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Cage, the man of sorrows, in her arms. To survey Scorsese's oeuvre is to
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find such echoings and prefigurations in abundance. Look at Boxcar
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Bertha , a throwaway piece of apprentice-work he made for schlock impresario
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Roger Corman in the early '70s (if you've never seen it, imagine Bonnie and
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Clyde remade as an episode of Kung Fu ), and then look at The Last
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Temptation of Christ , the controversial, deeply personal rendering of Nikos
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Kazantzakis' novel which infuriated some Christians a decade and a half later.
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Different as they are, both films prominently feature 1) a crucifixion and 2)
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Barbara Hershey naked.
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Well, that may be a coincidence. But it's hard to
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think of an active director who has produced such an emphatically
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cross-referenced body of work who seems not so much to repeat himself (though
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he does some of that) as to make movies by recombining a recognizable and
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fairly stable set of narrative, thematic, and stylistic elements. In other
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words, Scorsese is the last living incarnation of la politique des
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auteurs.
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That old
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politique --the auteur theory, in plain English--was first articulated in
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the 1950s by a group of French critics, many of whom went on to become, as
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directors, fixtures of the Nouvelle Vague . In a nutshell, the
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theory--brought to these shores in 1962 by Village Voice film critic
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Andrew Sarris--held that, like any work of art, a film represents the vision of
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an individual artist, almost always the director. The artists who populated the
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auterist canon--Howard Hawks and John Ford, pre-eminently--had labored within
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the constraints of the studio system. But even their lesser films, according to
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auterist critics, could be distinguished from mere studio hackwork by the
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reiteration of a unique cinematic vocabulary and by an implicit but
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unmistakable sense of solitary genius in conflict with bureaucratic
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philistinism.
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The auteur theory was quickly challenged, most notably by
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Pauline Kael, who shredded Sarris in the pages of Film Quarterly . But
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the "new Hollywood" of the '70s--with Kael as its champion, scold, and
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Cassandra--was dominated by young directors who attained, thanks to the
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collapse of the old studios, an unprecedented degree of creative autonomy, and
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who thought of themselves as artists. What resulted, as Peter Biskind shows in
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his New Hollywood dish bible Easy Riders, Raging Bulls , was an epidemic
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of megalomania, sexual libertinism, money-wasting, and drug abuse--as well as a
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few dozen classics of American cinema.
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The avatars of the New
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Hollywood were mostly "movie brats"--socially maladroit, nerdy young men (and
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they were, to a man, men) who shared a fervid, almost religious devotion to
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cinema. Scorsese, a runty, asthmatic altar boy from New York City's Little
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Italy who traded Catholic seminary for New York University film school, was
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arguably the purest in his faith. Unlike Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, or
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Steven Spielberg, "St. Martin" (as Biskind calls him) did not see directing as
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a route to world domination but as a priestly avocation, a set of spiritual
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exercises embedded in technical problems. Scorsese's technical proficiency won
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him some early breaks. While making Who's That Knocking at My Door , his
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earnest, autobiographical first feature, independently, Scorsese was hired to
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edit Woodstock into a coherent film. His success (more or less) led to
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more rock 'n' roll editing assignments--a traveling sub-Woodstock "festival"
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called Medicine Ball Caravan ; Elvis on Tour --and then to
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Boxcar Bertha , which allowed him to join the Directors Guild and gave
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him the chance to make Mean Streets . That movie helped launch the
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careers of Harvey Keitel and Robert De Niro, and taught generations of would-be
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tough guys the meaning of the word "mook."
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Kael called Mean Streets "a triumph of personal
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film-making," and even though it may be the single most imitated movie of the
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past 30 years--cf The Pope of Greenwich Village, State of Grace, Federal
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Hill, Boyz N the Hood , etc.--it has lost remarkably little of its freshness
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and power. Watching it, you feel that you are seeing real life on the screen,
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but real life heightened and shaped by absolute artistic self-assurance. Or, to
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quote Kael again, "Mean Streets never loses touch with the ordinary look
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of things or with common experience. Rather, it puts us in closer touch with
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the ordinary, the common, by turning a different light on them."
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This kind of realism
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marks Scorsese's next two films, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore --his
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best piece of directing-for-hire, and one of the half-forgotten gems of the
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period--and Taxi Driver , both of which were critically and commercially
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successful. But the medium-budget, artisanal, personal filmmaking of the early
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'70s soon gave way to grander visions. To be a New Hollywood director was to
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flirt with hubris. Biskind's book, accordingly, concludes with a litany of
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spectacular flameouts: Coppola's Apocalypse Now and One From the
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Heart, Spielberg's 1941 , William Friedkin's Sorcerer, and, of
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course, Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate . According to Mardik Martin,
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Scorsese's erstwhile writing partner (as quoted by Biskind): "The auteur theory
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killed all these people. One or two films, the magazines told them they were
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geniuses, that they could do anything. They went completely bananas. They
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thought they were God." Scorsese's own Götterdämmerung came with New
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York, New York , a hugely ambitious jazz epic starring De Niro and Liza
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Minelli (Scorsese's mistress at the time), and the first of a series of flops
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that continued with Raging Bull and The King of Comedy .
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Of these three, Raging Bull has been singled out for
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vindication. It's the highest-ranking of the three Scorsese films on the
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American Film Institute's Top 100 list, and it's widely considered to be his
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masterpiece. But it remains exceedingly hard to watch, not so much because of
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the repulsiveness of De Niro's Jake La Motta as because of its overall sense of
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aesthetic claustrophobia. It's a movie lacquered by its own self-importance, so
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bloated with the ambition to achieve greatness that it can barely move. If it
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convinces you it's a masterpiece, it does so by sheer brute force.
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Raging Bull is
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undone by its own perfectionism. New York, New York and The King of
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Comedy stand up rather better, in my opinion, in spite of their obvious
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flaws. (So does The Last Waltz , a documentary of the Band's last concert
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done simultaneously with New York, New York , thanks to the magic of
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cocaine.) For one thing, New York, New York is virtually the only
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Scorsese movie (aside from "Life Lessons," his crackerjack contribution to the
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Coppola-produced anthology film New York Stories ) to have at its center
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the relationship between a man and a woman. For another, it ends with Liza
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Minelli parading through a series of phantasmagoric stage sets singing a
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pointedly ironic song called "Happy Endings"--a sequence every bit as dazzling
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(and as mystifying) as the ballet from An American in Paris . Just as
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Mean Streets is an unparalleled demonstration of the power of film to
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convey reality, "Happy Endings" is a celebration of film's magical ability to
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create it. A moviegoer's dream, but good luck seeing it on the big screen.
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For its part, The King of Comedy , a creepy reprise
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of Taxi Driver --played, this time, for laughs--is a movie made before
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its time, back when celebrity-stalking was a piquant metaphor for our cultural
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ills, rather than the focus of our cultural life. De Niro and Sandra Bernhard
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kidnap Jerry Lewis (playing, brilliantly, a famous late-night talk show host),
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Bernhard steals the movie, and the ending is guaranteed to provoke long,
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excruciating arguments about the difference between fantasy and reality.
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In Biskind's account of the tragedy of the New
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Hollywood, Spielberg is the villain, Hal Ashby the martyr, and Scorsese the
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scarred survivor. After the failures of the early '80s, he picked himself up
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and made some more movies: the quirky, proto-Indie downtown comedy After
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Hours , The Color of Money (a respectable sequel to The
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Hustler ), and his long dreamed of The Last Temptation of Christ . His
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fortunes revived with GoodFellas , which was hailed as a return to form,
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and floundered again with The Age of Innocence , one of his periodic
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attempts--like The Last Waltz , Temptation and, most recently,
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Kundun --to defy expectation. Next came Casino, one of his
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periodic attempts to defy the expectation that he would defy expectations.
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Casino blends Raging
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Bull with GoodFellas and can
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be interpreted as a wry allegory of Hollywood in the '70s--a time when "guys
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like us" (i.e., the free-lancing gangsters played by De Niro and Joe Pesci)
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were allowed to run things without interference. Of course, they got too
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greedy, screwed everything up, and the big corporations turned their playground
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into Disneyland. At the end, De Niro's character, the scarred survivor, picks
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himself up and goes back to work.
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Scorsese keeps working too--upcoming projects
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include Gangs of New York , with Leonardo DiCaprio, and a Dean Martin
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biopic starring Tom Hanks. His extracurricular good works--overseeing the
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re-release of classics such as El Cid and Belle de Jour ,
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campaigning for film preservation, narrating a BBC documentary on his favorite
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movies--are testament to his abiding faith. But his movies more often than not
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feel cold and mechanical. They substitute intensity for emotion and give us
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bombast when we want passion. Why do we go to the movies? Pauline Kael used to
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say it was to be caught up, swept away, surfeited by sensation, and confronted
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by reality. Some of us keep going to Scorsese's movies because we still want to
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believe in that, and we leave wondering whether he still does.
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