Martin Scorsese Casino Interview
2021年12月18日Register here: http://gg.gg/xa7ez
*Martin Scorsese Biography
*Upcoming Martin Scorsese Movies
I met Martin Scorsese for the first time in 1969, when he was an editor on ’Woodstock.’ He was one of the most intense people I’d ever known - a compact, nervous kid out of New York’s Little Italy who’d made one feature film and had dreams of becoming a big-time director one day. I met Martin Scorsese for the first time in 1969, when he was an editor on ’Woodstock.’ He was one of the most intense people I’d ever known - a compact, nervous kid out of New York’s Little Italy who’d made one feature film and had dreams of becoming a big-time director one day. It would take him five years.
*From ’Mean Streets’ To ’Taxi Driver,’ ’Raging Bull,’ ’Goodfellas’ To ’The Irishman,’ Martin Scorsese. Goodfellas, Raging Bull and Casino. You once told me when we did an interview for The.
*The Tangiers Was A Combination Of 3 Vegas Casinos. As mentioned earlier, The Tangiers Hotel.
*Interview: Martin Scorsese By Harlan Jacobson Subscribe to the magazine Very careful, and very open. Those attitudes marked both Scorsese’s ballsy adaptation of the Nikos Kazantzakis novel and his conversation with me, a week after The Last Temptation ’s opening.
He finally took one of them - a Roger Corman exploitation picture called ’Boxcar Bertha’ - because he needed to direct again. ’Corman thinks it’s an exploitation picture,’ Scorsese told me, ’but I think it’ll be something else.’ He was right; his talent made the film, which starred Barbara Hershey and David Carradine, better than it had to be.
The movie got him more work. In 1973, on a small budget but with total artistic freedom, he made ’Mean Streets,’ a sequel to ’Who’s that Knocking.’ It was a ferocious, painful, deeply felt masterpiece. In 1974 he made his big critical and box office success, ’Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,’ for Which Ellen Burstyn won an Oscar. Scorsese was established, was ’bankable.’
His new film, which opens here Friday at the McClurg Court, Lincoln Village and five suburban theaters, is ’Taxi Driver’ with Robert DeNiro - a violent and frightening return to the New York of Mean Streets. It looks like another hit.
Scorsese and I met for lunch during his visit last week to Chicago and were joined by Paul Schrader, who wrote the screenplay for ’Taxi Driver.’ They were a study in opposites: Schrader, a Midwestern Protestant in pullover sweater and tie, and Scorsese, a New York Italian-American, in jeans and a beard. But they’d been working together on this screenplay since 1972.
Scorsese: Because there’s a lot of violence to this picture, some of the New York reviews are calling it an exploitation film. Jesus! I went flat broke making this film. My films haven’t made a lot of money. Right now, I’m living off my next film.Martin Scorsese Biography
Schrader: If it’s an exploitation film, I wish we had a dollar for every time we were told it would never be a success at all. This screenplay was turned down by everybody.Upcoming Martin Scorsese Movies
Scorsese: We showed it to some New York media educators, and I thought we’d get lynched. And we showed it to some student editors..there was one wise guy there I recognized from a screening we had of ’Alice.’ He asks whether, after all my success, I’m about ready to fall on my ass. I’ve hardly gotten started!
Register here: http://gg.gg/xa7ez
https://diarynote.indered.space
*Martin Scorsese Biography
*Upcoming Martin Scorsese Movies
I met Martin Scorsese for the first time in 1969, when he was an editor on ’Woodstock.’ He was one of the most intense people I’d ever known - a compact, nervous kid out of New York’s Little Italy who’d made one feature film and had dreams of becoming a big-time director one day. I met Martin Scorsese for the first time in 1969, when he was an editor on ’Woodstock.’ He was one of the most intense people I’d ever known - a compact, nervous kid out of New York’s Little Italy who’d made one feature film and had dreams of becoming a big-time director one day. It would take him five years.
*From ’Mean Streets’ To ’Taxi Driver,’ ’Raging Bull,’ ’Goodfellas’ To ’The Irishman,’ Martin Scorsese. Goodfellas, Raging Bull and Casino. You once told me when we did an interview for The.
*The Tangiers Was A Combination Of 3 Vegas Casinos. As mentioned earlier, The Tangiers Hotel.
*Interview: Martin Scorsese By Harlan Jacobson Subscribe to the magazine Very careful, and very open. Those attitudes marked both Scorsese’s ballsy adaptation of the Nikos Kazantzakis novel and his conversation with me, a week after The Last Temptation ’s opening.
He finally took one of them - a Roger Corman exploitation picture called ’Boxcar Bertha’ - because he needed to direct again. ’Corman thinks it’s an exploitation picture,’ Scorsese told me, ’but I think it’ll be something else.’ He was right; his talent made the film, which starred Barbara Hershey and David Carradine, better than it had to be.
The movie got him more work. In 1973, on a small budget but with total artistic freedom, he made ’Mean Streets,’ a sequel to ’Who’s that Knocking.’ It was a ferocious, painful, deeply felt masterpiece. In 1974 he made his big critical and box office success, ’Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore,’ for Which Ellen Burstyn won an Oscar. Scorsese was established, was ’bankable.’
His new film, which opens here Friday at the McClurg Court, Lincoln Village and five suburban theaters, is ’Taxi Driver’ with Robert DeNiro - a violent and frightening return to the New York of Mean Streets. It looks like another hit.
Scorsese and I met for lunch during his visit last week to Chicago and were joined by Paul Schrader, who wrote the screenplay for ’Taxi Driver.’ They were a study in opposites: Schrader, a Midwestern Protestant in pullover sweater and tie, and Scorsese, a New York Italian-American, in jeans and a beard. But they’d been working together on this screenplay since 1972.
Scorsese: Because there’s a lot of violence to this picture, some of the New York reviews are calling it an exploitation film. Jesus! I went flat broke making this film. My films haven’t made a lot of money. Right now, I’m living off my next film.Martin Scorsese Biography
Schrader: If it’s an exploitation film, I wish we had a dollar for every time we were told it would never be a success at all. This screenplay was turned down by everybody.Upcoming Martin Scorsese Movies
Scorsese: We showed it to some New York media educators, and I thought we’d get lynched. And we showed it to some student editors..there was one wise guy there I recognized from a screening we had of ’Alice.’ He asks whether, after all my success, I’m about ready to fall on my ass. I’ve hardly gotten started!
Register here: http://gg.gg/xa7ez
https://diarynote.indered.space
コメント