Scorsese and DiCaprio back together again with 'Killers of the Flower Moon'.

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hhttp://variety.com/2017/film/news/martin-scorsese-development-killers-of-the-flower-moon-dante-ferretti-1202495680/

Dan Worsley, Friday, 14 July 2017 17:03 (six years ago) link

The story it's based on is nothing if not fascinating and undoubtedly gruesome. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osage_Indian_murders

Will be keen to see if they can do justice both to the victims and the source material.

Dan Worsley, Friday, 14 July 2017 17:05 (six years ago) link

o damn adapting the grann book ? u crazy for this one marty

johnny crunch, Friday, 14 July 2017 17:09 (six years ago) link

he better get to that Pacino-De Niro film before they all croak

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Friday, 14 July 2017 17:25 (six years ago) link

i thought they were going to do the adaptation of Devil in the White City? this sounds like it's more interesting, though. i'd be worried the former would just be a Chicago GoNY.

nomar, Friday, 14 July 2017 17:27 (six years ago) link

two months pass...
one year passes...

so do his dogs

https://www.instagram.com/the.scorsese.dogs/

devvvine, Wednesday, 31 July 2019 15:58 (four years ago) link

one year passes...

After working with Malick, Lynch, PTA, De Palma & more, legendary production designer Jack Fisk is teaming with Martin Scorsese for the first time with 'Killers of the Flower Moon' https://t.co/vTYuqPkTPe pic.twitter.com/BuTVFwsGSd

— The Film Stage đź“˝ (@TheFilmStage) April 7, 2021

too cool for zen talk (Eazy), Wednesday, 7 April 2021 02:02 (three years ago) link

Jason Isbell & Sturgill Simpson announced as part of the cast for this!

honestly i’m into it, it’s a wild story & will make a great movie if they do it right

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 7 April 2021 02:09 (three years ago) link

one month passes...

https://i1.wp.com/bloody-disgusting.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/killers-of-the-flower-moon-scaled.jpg?w=2560&ssl=1

I'm looking forward to this one, I think! Good cast, good source material, sometimes OK screenwriter, seems like a good fit for Scorsese.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 10 May 2021 20:03 (two years ago) link

I'm about 3/4ths of the way through the book right now, looking forward to this.

soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 10 May 2021 20:05 (two years ago) link

two years pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EG0si5bSd6I

omar little, Thursday, 18 May 2023 17:27 (eleven months ago) link

The book was good. This looks promising!

SQUIRREL MEAT!! (Capitaine Jay Vee), Thursday, 18 May 2023 17:34 (eleven months ago) link

Was Plemons in that trailer? Must have missed him.

206 minutes.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 18 May 2023 18:38 (eleven months ago) link

Plemons is there at least once, looks like an interrogation scene w/dicaprio.

there's thoroughly unnerving vibe to that, which is appropriate for the story.

omar little, Thursday, 18 May 2023 18:44 (eleven months ago) link

Feels like this has been in the making for 10 years, looking forward to it though

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 18 May 2023 18:47 (eleven months ago) link

(only 5 years apparently)

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 18 May 2023 18:49 (eleven months ago) link

Took them that long develop the technology to make De Niro look so old.

Dan Worsley, Thursday, 18 May 2023 18:53 (eleven months ago) link

Bet in another ten years things will have progressed that they can make him look even older

Vinnie, Thursday, 18 May 2023 23:25 (eleven months ago) link

I read the book last summer. It was a deeply horrifying story of murder, racism, greed, conspiracy, and exploitation committed against indigenous people that everyone needs to hear about. But I didn't care much for that trailer. They made it look like some kind of big budget horror movie.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 18 May 2023 23:49 (eleven months ago) link

Guardedly optimistic based on that trailer; some great images. (Haven't read the novel.) The very last words I'll utter on my deathbed, though, will be "Scorsese and DiCaprio...I don't get it."

clemenza, Friday, 19 May 2023 14:11 (eleven months ago) link

The lead actress is from Montana so the article in my local paper is all about her, as it should be.

Trailer Released for New Martin Scorsese Film Starring Blackfeet Nation’s Lily Gladstone

The first official teaser trailer for the director Martin Scorsese’s new movie “Killers of the Flower Moon,” which stars the actress Lily Gladstone, was released online Thursday ahead of the film’s world premiere this weekend at the Cannes Film Festival.

Gladstone, who is of Blackfeet and Niimíipuu heritage, was born at Kalispell Regional Medical Center and spent her early years living on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Browning, before her family moved to Seattle when she was in middle school. A 2016 profile of Gladstone written for the University of Montana’s “Montanan” magazine describes how at an early age she was cast in a Missoula Children’s Theatre production of “Cinderella” that was performed in East Glacier Park, and how eventually she began pursuing ballet, learning in the basement of a Browning church, and taking lessons in Columbia Falls. She eventually focused on theater, performing in high school and community theater productions. Gladstone went on to enroll in the University of Montana’s Davidson Honors College where she ultimately graduated with a BFA in acting and a minor in Native American studies.

but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 19 May 2023 14:45 (eleven months ago) link

Gladstone was wonderful in Reichardt's Certain Women several years ago.

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 19 May 2023 14:49 (eleven months ago) link

I think the horror element one feels watching that trailer is key, considering it's a late chapter in what is one of the true American horror stories. I think the POV shots seen in that trailer are thoroughly key.

omar little, Friday, 19 May 2023 15:05 (eleven months ago) link

I hadn't clocked the horror feel but that would certainly explain why this is the first Scorsese movie I've been mildly enthusiastic to see since, well, Shutter Island

fair but so uncool beliefs here (Eric H.), Friday, 19 May 2023 15:10 (eleven months ago) link

But Silence was a horror movie!

the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 19 May 2023 15:14 (eleven months ago) link

three months pass...

As beautiful and powerful as you'd expect but does tend to reduce attempted genocide to an opportunity for Leo to do his moral dilemma face for an hour or two. If you thought Oppenheimer was problematic then hoo, boy...

Piedie Gimbel, Friday, 22 September 2023 14:23 (six months ago) link

Just saw Lily Gladstone is going to campaign for lead actress and not supporting, which good

50 Best Fellas (Eric H.), Friday, 22 September 2023 14:30 (six months ago) link

Potentially stiffer competition, tho

jaymc, Friday, 22 September 2023 14:40 (six months ago) link

three weeks pass...

I'd normally rush off and see this, but I'll probably hold off a couple of weeks for a friend who's on the road. Will make sure to avoid all reviews. Remain hopeful.

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:20 (six months ago) link

(And will also, as always, go in with an unreasonably high bar I expect it to meet.)

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:22 (six months ago) link

may I suggest that while you're waiting, you read the book. the basic story will be the same in book and film, but the depth of detail will be much greater in the book and the details accumulate to make a very overwhelming impression that spreads well beyond the confines of the basic story.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:28 (six months ago) link

I thought I'd been nailed with another "It's the thread revive we all hoped for!"--close call.

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:40 (six months ago) link

chalk that other up to The Goodfellas Effect

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:48 (six months ago) link

I'm not a great reader of fiction--I've always got a couple of non-fiction books on the go--so I always give precedence to the film. I've occasionally followed up a film I liked by reading the novel (The Spy Who Came in from the Cold comes to mind--and I did think the novel was excellent), but not very often.

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:52 (six months ago) link

Well then you're in luck because Killers of the Flower Moon is nonfiction (and very good).

jaymc, Saturday, 14 October 2023 18:57 (six months ago) link

Didn't know that, thought it was historical fiction...Being Scorsese, I'm still going to give the film priority.

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 19:04 (six months ago) link

the process of turning the book into a script and a film will necessarily introduce various kinds of compression, elision, and other minor fictionalizations, but as you watch be aware that the murders, the murderers and their motives were all too real

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 14 October 2023 19:18 (six months ago) link

That was my assumption: that the book was a fictionalization of real events. Reading up, I see it's straight reportage (and that there was an earlier novel based on the same events).

clemenza, Saturday, 14 October 2023 19:22 (six months ago) link

the book is great but the last third where the author inserts himself into the narrative--understandably so, as he helped solve some of the underlying crimes, i can't remember the exact details--really took wind out of the sails for me. up to then, it had been an excellent read

a (waterface), Monday, 16 October 2023 14:16 (six months ago) link

I'm invited to the press screening tomorrow night, but a 3:26 film on a Tuesday night when assignments are due at midnight is a burden too heavy to bear.

hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 October 2023 14:20 (six months ago) link

I was actually disappointed by the Grann book, most especially the way he chose to structure it as a whodunnit when the villain of the piece seemed pretty obvious almost right away (and looks even more obvious in the trailer for the Scorsese adaptation). I did like lots of the incidental details about various outlaws, bandits and ne'er-do-wells, and I hope the long run time allows Scorsese to keep some of that flavour.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 16 October 2023 14:25 (six months ago) link

Watching this tonight, thankfully basically blind and hopeful

Peach’s burner account (H.P), Friday, 20 October 2023 00:35 (five months ago) link

Really, the best way to watch a movie.

clemenza, Friday, 20 October 2023 00:40 (five months ago) link

saw this tonight, thought it was good but not great. I am not really someone who demands that films “center” certain perspectives, but I do think there was a certain incoherence to the point of view of the film: not nearly enough of the interior life of molly, and eventually as marty realizes he isn’t sure how to bring this out of her, the focus shifts to the internal conflict within earnest. which overall is fine — I’m not the biggest leo guy, but I think this is one of his better performances. de niro was also very good obv.

and while despite the 206 minute runtime the movie somehow did not drag…I still really feel as though a good 30 minutes or more could have been cut, leaving a still very good, still very long film

k3vin k., Friday, 20 October 2023 00:48 (five months ago) link

doing some quick skimming of some reviews — I’m glad I’m not the only person who thought of PHANTOM THREAD!

k3vin k., Friday, 20 October 2023 01:17 (five months ago) link

this might be an anti-cinema opinion but I couldn't help thinking it would have been better as a ten-hour series

symsymsym, Friday, 20 October 2023 01:25 (five months ago) link

Blind willie Johnson montage the highlight of the film. Really ugly watching the first 2/3’s. Made the one gag in the film (“can I…. Can I talk alone to this man for a moment?”) absolutely sparkle with life lol.

It was long, but justified. The better half who is not a movie person at all and groaned when I told her the length came out enjoying it so that’s as good an endorsement as any that it didn’t drag its heels

Peach’s burner account (H.P), Friday, 20 October 2023 12:04 (five months ago) link

People assert highly subjective opinions here as if they're facts all the time.

I see what you did there. ;-)

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:30 (three months ago) link

There you go...it's impossible not to. (I just did it again.)

clemenza, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:31 (three months ago) link

Raging Bull has a few decade lead time but just on quotes/memes, it's fairly objectively more resonant than the Irishman, but I dunno if that necessarily reflects on quality, since I still think about Godfather III's "every time I thought I was out" line.

But makeup in Raging Bull vs makeup in Irishman feels like Irishman has aged much worse in a much shorter time.

Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:32 (three months ago) link

I actually do, often, go out of my way to include "if you ask me" or "I'd say" or other such qualifications, and sometimes I'm not sure it's worth the effort. But I do it anyway, for the very reason Daniel_Rf cites.

clemenza, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:33 (three months ago) link

Well the nature of message boards is such that whenever this happens, the next person can say "nah that's crazy talk" and the ensuing discussion can turn out interesting or lame or whatever but the premises get questioned. An essay does not allow for that.

I agree the conflation of the two modes was very common for critics of his era (and beyond, think it was still default circa gen x) and I'm not a purist about it but I do think it's ultimately lazy thinking and once you get to the idea that even the artist themselves must surely secretly share your assesment of their work, as I said, that's just a bit goofy.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:39 (three months ago) link

many xposts

Well yes Raging Bull objectively has left a bigger mark as a pop culture reference point but I dunno that this is what Marcus means by lingering in the heart.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 19:40 (three months ago) link

What the fuck is "heart"

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:10 (three months ago) link

Raging Bull lives in my head almost shot for shot and line for line. I can barely remember anything about The Irishman.

― clemenza, Wednesday, January 3, 2024 2:04 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglin

And this is a perfectly defensible opinion. It has nothing to do with "heart"

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:12 (three months ago) link

Also, is there a contemporary film critic you can cite who's not Kael, Marcus, etc.? It's not like film crit is dead!

Ultimately it comes down to: "I love these guys' films from my youth, I don't want to engage what they're doing anymore."

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:14 (three months ago) link

And we all do this, btw, especially with musicians. But let's be honest.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:15 (three months ago) link

I would say he's a much better filmmaker in recent years than he's been for a very long time, since the mid-90s at least.

This is true even when I don't embrace every object. My heart finds his '80s comparably barren compared to what he's done now.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:23 (three months ago) link

It's weird seeing Marcus write that because he's had high praise for Scorsese's films before (most notably The Last Waltz for obvious reasons).

I actually like Scorsese's work over the past 30 years - none are less than interesting and all have something to recommend - and there's at least several that I'd hold up as great films, particularly in more recent years, but I'm not the only one who thinks his best and most memorable work spanned Mean Streets through The Age of Innocence. And I think Marcus is dead wrong - at least for me, Scorsese's work lingers a LOT more "in the heart" (or really the mind) than that of any other Hollywood filmmaker from that same time frame. He had good competition, but guys like Stanley Kubrick, David Lynch and Albert Brooks weren't as prolific. (The closest would probably be David Cronenberg who didn't really cross over into Hollywood until the mid-'80s.) It's definitely not just the '70s: without hesitation, I'd put Raging Bull, The King of Comedy, After Hours, The Last Temptation of Christ and Life Lessons among the very best films of the 1980s, regardless of where and how they were made.

birdistheword, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 20:53 (three months ago) link

I think he's always effusively praised the early films, but his praise for anything from the last two or three decades has been guarded at best. (He did really like the George Harrison documentary.) Here's his career rundown from the "Real Life" column...I won't post anymore than that.

There are Scorsese films that stay with you because the desire is too strong and the loss too painful to forget--Who’s That Knocking at My Door, Mean Streets, Raging Bull, The King of Comedy most of all--is there anything since The Departed? Is there anything in the lumbering The Wolf of Wall Street--three hours--or even more intractable The Irishman--three and a half hours--and never mind the watchable and empty Goodfellas, the pointless Casino, the paint-by-numbers The Color of Money, the epic without a cause Gangs of New York, and the rest--that as something that years later can still make you find yourself alone and consumed by sorrow and lost hope, even shaking with a sense of clarity about life and what it costs, as in the way Spike Lee gives Edward Norton, Rosario Dawson, and Philip Seymour Hoffman only so much room to move as they struggle toward the end of 25th Hour?

So there are a few things I disagree with--love Goodfellas, think The Color of Money is underrated, not big on The Departed, didn't like 25th Hour--but I agree with his general point: the first four films he mentions are qualitatively different than most of what comes later. I know Casino is admired here--I like maybe half of it.

clemenza, Wednesday, 3 January 2024 21:04 (three months ago) link

I was surprised how many people have tried to re-evaluate Casino as this great, underrated film in recent years. David Ehrenstein (possibly since it was released) has argued it's superior to GoodFellas. I've seen it three times over a dozen years, and the third time was this fall during a long flight to Alaska. Third time's the charm - I thoroughly enjoyed it from start-to-finish whereas before it was a slog once it got to the second half. I still don't think it's one of his best films - it breaks no new ground - but everything showcases his strengths. It's great how he details the entire casino operation, and it's great to see Sharon Stone delivering what may be her best performance in a movie that isn't complete schlock or burdened with horrible dialogue. It's not De Niro or Pesci or Woods's most distinguished performances, but they're all still in their prime and they're not phoning it in - they're all committed to their roles.

A lot of cinephiles seem to be fans of The Wolf of Wall Street (Richard Brody in particular, who believes it's a masterpiece). I'm not one of them, it would be a chore for me to sit through it again, BUT I do think it's misunderstood, it has what are good performances given the material, and I think the final shot is a truly great ending, maybe even the best Scorsese's ever done.

The Color of Money is fine, the merits outweigh everything that isn't so inspired, but even though I love seeing Newman as Fast Eddie again, the film doesn't even approach the level of The Hustler.

Gangs of New York can be a slog to get through, but I've seen it maybe four times now from start-to-finish, and I've grown to appreciate as a flawed but often inspired epic. There's a lot that's great about it, especially the first half, but it does feel like there's perhaps too much being packed into 167 minutes - I'm tempted to say it would've been better to break it up into two feature-length epics (with each part running at least two hours) but financially that would've been unlikely. The other shortcoming is the casting - DiCaprio seems too pretty for the role. I'm not sure if Daniel Craig or Michael Fassbender would've worked - and besides they were still unknowns, not someone that would secure the enormous budget they needed - but just physically they would be convincing as scarred individuals driven (and aged) by a lifetime of vengeance. And I don't think Diaz was very good - I wish Sarah Polley had gotten the role, I think she would've been far better.

25th Hour I had to see twice, and the second time I did (years later), it all came together - I think it's possibly Spike Lee's greatest work along with Do the Right Thing. There's a lot that seemed to linger after watching it the second time - Jonathan Rosenbaum said it made him really think about what it meant to imprison somebody, and I think he hits on something there. The whole film is swallowed up in grief and loss, both in the immediate present and the foreseeable future - it's hard to articulate, but I want to say if you end up becoming moved by the film, it'll give you a greater sense of how easily anything can be thrown away or taken away, especially what's most valuable, and how permanent that damage can be, in a way that only grows with time.

As for latter day Scorsese, I'd say Hugo, The Silence, and The Irishman stick out as the most personal films he's made in decades, and they feel appropriate for a filmmaker who's aware of his mortality and wants to say everything he can say while there's still time. He knew and befriended many filmmakers in his lifetime who were just like Méliès in Hugo, feeling broken and forgotten, maybe even regretful of their choices despite the work they created. He came very close to being one of those people too, or at least felt like it. The Silence is possibly the most revealing statement he can make about his faith and the work he's known for, and The Irishman is similar in that respect, making it clear why the director behind GoodFellas doesn't relate to anything about The Sopranos even when most of the world lumps those works together as if there were a kinship.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 00:38 (three months ago) link

What does "personal" mean here?

The Age of Innocence, Silence, and Killers... are the only Scorsese films since 1990 I care about.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 January 2024 00:47 (three months ago) link

Directly relating to himself and his own life. It's difficult for a good, much less great, auteur filmmaker to make anything that is really impersonal, but those films together speak directly to either his relationship to cinephilia - as a cinephile but also as a filmmaker, historian and preservationist - or his faith or the crime films he's arguably best known for (i.e. perhaps the most visible legacy he'll leave behind).

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 00:58 (three months ago) link

I feel like he's more personal, or at least more revealing at his dorkiest rather than most transcendent, like hamming it up as van gogh in the kurosawa movie he helped fund (pretty much the trifecta of him speaking as a filmmaker, historian, preservationist), or shilling for amex with tina fey. but maybe those things are more "marty" than "scorcese" for most people.

Philip Nunez, Thursday, 4 January 2024 02:25 (three months ago) link

I haven't gotten around to Silence, I guess I should. I tend to like Scorsese more in New York than anywhere else, almost all my favorite Scorsese films are in New York. And even less-favorite ones (Raging Bull, Gangs, New York, New York) still have good New York energy.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 02:54 (three months ago) link

One of my last chats with Morbius was about our proselytizing on behalf of Silence to our friends.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 January 2024 02:55 (three months ago) link

I remember he admired it.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 02:56 (three months ago) link

xps I don't know if I'd call hamming it up revealing - it's generally the side he typically shows in public, which to be fair is great. It shows he's been in a much better place long after some harrowing stretches in the '70s and early '80s. But when I wonder "what happened to the guy who studied for priesthood?" you see that in The Silence, and not simply because it deals with priests - his faith hasn't faded with time, and the complications that arise from it are something he still thinks about it, even if he's more at peace with it now.

That personal dimension aside, the film did have a lot to say about religion and its complicated place in politics, especially when it premiered in late 2016, after the evangelical vote sold their souls to a fascist waste dump. Look at the Falun Gong - on the one hand, practicing their faith in China is more or less an act of rebellion against authoritarian rule, and yet they're also publishing the batshit insane, far-right Trump-loving Epoch Times here in the U.S.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 03:09 (three months ago) link

Well as the OG Mormons showed you can be both persecuted and a lunatic cult.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 03:46 (three months ago) link

As I alluded to in another thread, I've been thinking a lot of Spielberg and Scorsese in tandem, as two virtuoso stylists and synthesists steeped in cinema history, where almost every shot and scene I suspect has its roots in a very specific antecedent. With one or two exceptions, at their worst their films are almost always fascinating outlets for their abilities, passions and references. Even when they don't end up where I want them, I can almost always tell where they are going and what they are going for. I would never pit the directors against one another, mind. More that they set a standard few other directors consistently reach, especially late career, given the standard they each set for themselves so early.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 4 January 2024 11:34 (three months ago) link

I feel like Scorsese lost it a bit between 1997 to 2011. Trying to ape genres that didnt really suit him like Shutter Island and Gangs of New York. The Departed was enjoyable but far from essential and felt like he was trying too hard to recapture former glories - like a later Stones album or something. I think hes on a roll since Wolf of Wall Street though and is making his best films as good as his recognised classics. Not sure Killers totally landed for me though.

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 4 January 2024 13:27 (three months ago) link

Scorsese has alluded to this many times over the years without delving too much into the topic (for tactful reasons), but he knows he's taken on a fair share of projects that he clearly "had" to do in order to make certain films he already had in development, and there have been times where he realizes "I shouldn't have agreed to direct this" but has to power through and find a way to get the film done as best as he can because it's too late to back out. The Departed is very likely one of those - to me, it never seemed like a conscious attempt to recapture his past work because if you watch Infernal Affairs, it doesn't feel like they were trying to transform the material so much as streamline it and adapt it to a Boston setting with Hollywood movie stars. In other words, very professional in a pretty cold way. I'm not a huge fan of Cape Fear, which was another film that was brought to him (by Spielberg no less), but he seemed to make a bigger effort in transforming that material and making it closer to him. The Wolf of Wall Street was also brought to him - DiCaprio really had to push Scorsese, selling it as "no studio's really making a movie like this anymore with this kind of money - it's a rare opportunity."

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 17:27 (three months ago) link

The Departed is very different in tone to Infernal Affairs, basically a comedy, of a piece with Wolf of Wall Street. Maybe the "one for them" movies are the ones where he lets loose and has the most fun? To me, that's letting his guard down.

Philip Nunez, Thursday, 4 January 2024 17:37 (three months ago) link

the editing and arrangement of the departed is neither professional nor cold imo

ivy., Thursday, 4 January 2024 17:42 (three months ago) link

Wolf of Wall Street might be one for the studio but it definitely utilises the style of Goodfellas/Casino.

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 4 January 2024 17:50 (three months ago) link

I think that happens a lot with directors when the stakes feel lower - one of Scorsese's most enjoyable works over the past 20 years is a Hitchcock tribute he did for a commercial:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjQrDn1IR0Q

One major element of Wolf of Wall Street is the visual subjectivity, which reflects how these characters have a warped view of life. It's partly what makes the last show so powerful and damning for me but Scorsese also has a lot of fun with that concept via the quaaludes gag.

Also to be clear, when I say "professional," I don't mean phoning it in - he never does that. He's always committed to doing his best, even when he has doubts - it's always going to look like a Scorsese picture. But The Departed does feel a bit cold to me. Funny, entertaining, but not a whole lot underneath the surface.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 18:38 (three months ago) link

RE: "I think that happens a lot with directors when the stakes feel lower," I mean relax and have more fun.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 18:39 (three months ago) link

* the last shot

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 18:39 (three months ago) link

if you watch Infernal Affairs, it doesn't feel like they were trying to transform the material so much as streamline it and adapt it to a Boston setting with Hollywood movie stars.

He didn't streamline it tho, he made it baggier — added 50 minutes and a whole layer of (tedious imo) Catholic framing to it.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 18:49 (three months ago) link

Yeah, if his last couple films are any indication, his movies can often use a bit more streamlining (imo). And coincidence or no, some of my least favorite of his films are the ones that cost the most. I think I like him best when he's ambitious and scrappy and not self-consciously over-inflated.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 4 January 2024 19:20 (three months ago) link

ok which one of you replaced his bio with this on letterboxd

https://i.imgur.com/KzFcyv2.png

ciderpress, Thursday, 4 January 2024 19:32 (three months ago) link

He didn't streamline it tho, he made it baggier — added 50 minutes and a whole layer of (tedious imo) Catholic framing to it.

Hah, yes he did! It's been too long since I saw either. But the Catholic framing, do you mean the sense of guilt? I remember that being in Infernal Affairs as well though it wasn't rooted in Catholicism. (Regardless, that part never made a strong impression either.)

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 19:44 (three months ago) link

Yeah, it was there in the original but rooted in personal loyalties. But Scorsese can't help letting Catholicism run all over everything (explicitly or otherwise).

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 19:49 (three months ago) link

It made logical sense when they transplanted the film to Boston - it's almost become a cliché at this point, so many Boston-based dramas I've seen over the past 20 years work the Catholic presence, whether it's Mystic River or (for obvious reasons) Spotlight.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 19:53 (three months ago) link

I don't mind it. I like when artists' religion and politics bleed all over the place.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:00 (three months ago) link

I mean, why else watch Scorsese? If I want amoral gangster shit I can watch a Warner Bros pic or Brian De Palma.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:00 (three months ago) link

Very true. Honestly, it's hard to imagine his work without it, but if you somehow wrote that out of the scripts for, say, Mean Streets or Raging Bull, I don't think he'd ever make those films and I'm not sure there would be any real merit to them. Jake LaMotta truly does become nothing more than a cockroach, which is what the reluctant execs at UA initially believed when they were pitched the film.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:09 (three months ago) link

Actually, LaMotta is a cockroach. The Age of Innocence, Silence, Killers of the Flower Moon >>>>>> Raging Bull.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:10 (three months ago) link

LOL, we'll have to disagree, but I always thought that was Scorsese's best film because of what he finds in that story.

And also to add what I posted before, I say that as an agnostic - what makes Scorsese (or Leo McCarey or Paul Schrader among others for that matter) so compelling is a lot of what they explore through their faith is universal. The struggles their characters go through feel very honest, something anyone can recognize or experience.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:13 (three months ago) link

Sure, the "Catholic stuff" is part of what makes his great stuff great. But in what should have been a trifle like The Departed, to me it felt like padding, like he had to find a way to make the story feel important enough for him or something.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:16 (three months ago) link

(I don't like The Departed anyway, if it's not clear. It cracks me up that it was his Oscar film.)

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:17 (three months ago) link

Yeah, far from my favorite, but it was such a big success that it made Hugo possible, which again is one of my favorites from recent years. I think he said it allowed him to pass on some projects he would've considered before as well.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:25 (three months ago) link

Hugo is the only Scorsese I havent watched!

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 4 January 2024 20:51 (three months ago) link

I watched Hugo. It felt like Scorsese wanted very badly to make a magical kid's movie tapping into our sense of innocent wonder and he just didn't have the chops for it. It's way too heavy to get airborne.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 4 January 2024 21:00 (three months ago) link

Innocent wonder is like a Spielberg fantasy, I never got the impression Hugo was interested in those sort of illusions. The heart of it is about a very bitter and broken man, and the war played a huge role in that. It's still uplifting to me because of the way they find their way out of despair. I don't doubt that's heavy, but that's pretty much why it left a lasting impression.

birdistheword, Thursday, 4 January 2024 21:17 (three months ago) link

one month passes...
one month passes...

Lily Gladstone honored by the Blackfeet tribe in Montana:

Today the Blackfeet Nation celebrated Lily Gladstone Day. Lily made history as the first Indigenous person to be nominated for an Academy Award and to win a Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild award for Best Actress in “Killers of the Flower Moon.” Her achievements are a beacon… pic.twitter.com/fwJCqH2U76

— Ryan Busse (@ryandbusse) March 26, 2024

The poster, Ryan Busse, is running for governor against Greg "human garbage" Gianforte this year.

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Tuesday, 26 March 2024 22:37 (three weeks ago) link


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