Mr. Scorsese (2025) s01e03 Episode Script

Saint/Sinner

1
Do you think if you don't
take yourself to the limits
physically and mentally,
it may have some sort of effect
on your work?
Because you do push yourself a lot.
Yeah, to a certain extent,
I think that's true. I think it's true.
In the '70s, between
New York, New York, the opening of that,
and the opening of Last Waltz was '78,
I was not able, ultimately, with
chemicals that I was putting in me,
not being able to function, really.
There were these parties
and they were quite something.
For me, the sin is enjoyable.
I enjoyed when I was bad,
I enjoyed a lot of it.
Of course, then I collapsed.
I was spending a lot of time
with Robbie Robertson from The Band.
When we were
living together and everything,
we were very conscious of work.
We weren't trying to get crazy
but it was really unhealthy.
And Marty got so run down, so run down.
You know, they call it "bottoming out."
I did see Marty pretty wired up.
It wasn't like one foot
over the precipice.
He was like Wile E. Coyote.
He was in the air, like this.
At some point,
I'm not sure exactly the timing,
but maybe you were still living together,
when he ended up in the hospital
and almost died because
he was taking so much cocaine.
Yeah, it was in New York.
Were you married
when he was in the hospital?
No, but we were together.
I think I was 24 or 25 years old
when I met Marty.
And I was working for Italian television,
and I was doing interviews.
So I interviewed him for
The Last Waltz, that just came out.
I knew that I was in the presence
of somebody that was exceptional,
but Marty did have a problem with drugs.
And then Marty, one morning woke up,
and he was all black and blue
as if somebody has beaten him.
I called the parents, he ended up
in a hospital, and he was dying.
The doctor came in and he looked at me,
he said, "Is this your blood?"
I said, "Yes."
"You're coming with me."
I said, "No, I have work to do."
"No, you're not, you're gonna have
a brain hemorrhage any second."
I was bleeding internally everywhere.
I was going to die, basically.
My mother and my stepfather sat me down
and they said, "It's very bad,
like he could die, it's that bad."
And I said, "I don't want to go.
I'm scared."
It was more I was scared.
The strangeness of it was that I did not
accept the fact that I was dying.
Yet, it was like
a very, very major part of me wanted to.
Why?
I didn't know how to do the work anymore.
I didn't know
how to create anymore. Simple.
A friend of mine took me
to the emergency ward,
and left me there, basically.
And I was in there ten days and nights,
pumped me full of cortisone.
And then Bob came to the hospital.
We had been taking a break.
I had said, "Where are we going
as a collaboration?
What stories do we want to tell?"
Can you remember coming to the hospital?
Yeah. Yeah, I mean
I was worried about him.
And I
I was starting to work on Raging Bull.
While we're doing New York, New York,
Bob carried around the Raging Bull book
with him all the time.
It was about Jake LaMotta,
a really tough, tough guy,
and, you know, really questionable
character. And I'm being kind.
Bob kept pushing him, saying,
"Come on, let's make this movie"
and Marty kept saying no.
Driving me crazy
with doing this boxing movie.
You know, I don't do sports.
I couldn't imagine anybody else doing it.
It had to be him.
So Bob is there at the hospital.
It was a question that I was
thinking that maybe he won't do it.
I said, "You know, this is
This is something to do."
And looked at me and said,
"What the hell do you wanna do?
You wanna die like this?" You know.
"You wanna die?"
It was a low point, and I said, "Marty"
"You're right for this picture.
You should do it."
You know, so I said-- I looked at him,
and I said, "Okay."
Bob insisted we go to Saint Martin.
And that's where we created the film.
Paul Schrader had already
written the script
and then told us, "Now, you guys take it."
We went over the whole thing
and changed the dialogue
and came up with, "I thought of this,
I could do this here, what about that?"
We would sometimes improvise
our dialogue together on audio tapes.
And then I'd write it all longhand.
Each scene.
We just finished up the script, came back,
called Irwin.
I read it and I liked it a lot.
And then we had to get the money,
so we had a meeting
with the two heads of production
at United Artists.
So, Bob is there,
and the two guys come up and
they ask these questions.
We sensed something was wrong.
They said to Bob, "Why would you want
to play this cockroach?"
De Niro was standing
in the doorway of the kitchen
and he looked over and he said,
"He's not a cockroach."
We left and it looked like we weren't
gonna make the picture, but I knew
that they wanted to make Rocky II.
I produced Rocky, and it had been
this phenomenal success,
and they wanted to do a sequel.
So we told them the only way
we'd do Rocky II
is if they agreed to do Raging Bull.
Basically said, "You want Rocky II,
you're going to have to do Raging Bull."
I had to figure out how
to design the boxing scenes.
I'd never seen a real fight.
I mean, I saw on television,
but I couldn't tell what was happening.
The two little figures, I didn't know.
In any event, in Madison Square Garden,
there was a night of five different bouts
and we were in, like, the third row.
And that's the night I saw
the blood on the ropes.
And I saw the blood in the sponge.
On the back, they squeeze the sponge.
And also, being close up,
thrust of an arm.
You actually feel,
it's like a car going by.
I started to get-- I said, "All right."
I just stayed alone in my bedroom,
and I played the video they gave me
of Bob working out each fight.
And so I just would stop it,
design shots by myself.
The sequence in the last Sugar Ray fight
where he gets beaten to a pulp,
I drew the shots based on
the shower sequence in Psycho.
Translated, reinterpreted,
and it kind of kicked off a lot of images.
Often surreal, because a lot
of the bloodletting is not realistic.
But I told Bob,
"This is gonna be special,"
I said, "the fight scenes.
And I'm gonna need your patience."
And he said, "No, okay."
Everybody quiet
and that's it, ready? Okay.
You cannot imagine
how long it took to shoot all the fights.
To get all the blood right
and the perspiration.
De Niro was unfailingly patient.
Marty had the blood spurting
from elaborate devices
that are hooked at the back
of De Niro's head.
And he's not actually being hit here,
but he's moving his head perfectly
as if he has been.
A shot like this could take an hour.
Often, we'd only get maybe
one or two shots a day.
Because of the rigs that had to be built,
and because when you change
the speed of the camera,
you also have to change the iris.
So there had to be one assistant here,
one here, and then there's the cameraman.
And if you're moving,
they have to move with you.
And you'll have seen in certain scenes
where it's normal speed, then suddenly
goes into slow motion, then comes back.
I mean, that was all done with three
or four people on one Arriflex.
You know, so
With Raging Bull,
when you worked with Thelma,
was it a very different experience
suddenly working with Thelma?
We hadn't seen each other for nine years.
After Woodstock, we didn't connect at all.
I was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
working on this ridiculous movie
about the Supreme Court.
I got this call
and I couldn't believe it, really.
I didn't know whether I could believe it.
She said, "I don't know how to--
I never cut a feature before."
I said, "Just-- It's no different,"
I said, "from what we used to do."
Originally, with Marty,
with me, it was trust,
he felt that we wouldn't have to indulge
in ego battles over which cut was better.
"Keep the director out
of the editing room,"
was something that I heard a lot.
Or at least this director.
She seemed to agree to work with me.
We were editing
in Marty's apartment, in a bedroom.
We cut all night. I would start
at, like, 9 o'clock at night
and work until dawn.
When the birds started to sing,
he wanted to stop.
He would start editing
with Thelma at 9:30, 10
and work till 8 o'clock
the following morning.
I woke up, had breakfast,
he had dinner, he went to sleep,
I did my day, and then they started again.
When Thelma was editing,
she would find what she called
the value of the shot itself.
Which means just because
you shot this image in this way,
and it was meant
for a certain place in the film,
it may work somewhere else
that has nothing to do with it.
Robinson, apparently tired
Now, this is one of the most
brilliant things Marty did.
You'll see in a moment.
To have the lights go down.
The camera change speed.
During the shot, hardly any sound.
Probably another director might have had
a thousand people yelling,
"Come on, come on, kill him,"
or "Come on, Jake!"
No. You just hear a little bit
of an animal breathing.
And then it gets collapsed
all into this dramatic cutting.
The one thing that we found
was that Vickie, the wife of Jake LaMotta,
her reaction to what she's seeing
was something that we decided
to build the whole sequence about.
She's just putting her head in her hands
at the horror she's watching.
And those cuts to her are so important.
These are clean, whistling shots.
So it all became very visceral,
like creating a sculpture.
No man can endure this.
He works extremely hard
to try and come up with something new
or something at least visually arresting.
Sometimes he doesn't want
to be visually arresting.
Sometimes he just wants to be static
because he knows that's what
the subject matter requires.
- You're home.
- Hi, Vick.
[Vickie] Hi, Joe.
Hi. Where were you?
I went out. What's the matter?
This is very simply shot.
Where'd you go?
No fancy camera moves
except the devastating move
when Cathy goes upstairs,
and it pans back to him.
You have a sense of dread
about what's going to happen.
Jealousy, the lack of trust.
What's the matter with you, huh?
What's with this kissin' on the mouth?
I just said hello,
can't I kiss my sister-in-law?
Ain't her cheek good enough for you?
There was a script,
but it was all being developed
as they shot the scene.
What are you givin' me dirty looks for?
We've always come up
with stuff all the time.
He knew where to keep up the guardrails,
but he would always be
never afraid to try anything.
What are you telling me?
I heard some things.
You heard some things about what?
Me and Salvy? What'd you hear?
I heard some things.
You heard some things.
Robert does this,
and Marty knows that he does it.
He keeps aggravating, he already said
what he was supposed to say
and he keeps on going.
I heard some things, Joey.
Well, what did you hear?
What do you mean you heard things?
I heard.
And you as an actor saying,
"I answered you already.
I said no."
I told you, I heard some things.
You heard some things.
To where you really
start to get aggravated.
It is real. Do you know what I'm saying?
What'd you hear?
I heard some things.
De Niro and I both liked
the Abbott and Costello comedy routines.
- What's the guy's name on third base?
- No, What's on second.
- Who's on second?
- Who's on first.
- I don't know.
- He's on third.
It has a lot to do
with language, with word play.
- What do you mean?
- That's not what I heard.
- What'd you hear?
- I heard some things.
Play on words, and
has more to do with, like, Samuel Beckett
than anything else.
All right, I think we should keep going.
Yeah. Take it from
"I heard some things."
It's very tricky, because it doesn't mean
you take the material and twist it
so that it twisted out of shape
so that you could be amused.
It means something truthful is there
and you could pursue it
with your key collaborators,
which are the actors.
You're gonna let this girl ruin your life.
Look at you.
She really did some job on you,
you know how fuckin' nuts you are?
- Look what she did to you.
- You fuck my wife?
- What?
- You fuck my wife?
How could you ask me a question like that?
How could you ask me? I'm your brother.
You ask me that?
Where he tells Joe,
"Did you fuck my wife?"
you know, that became, like,
the centerpiece for the whole movie.
Come here.
Jake gets the most
beautiful woman to marry,
to almost make himself miserable because
he knows men are going to look at her.
And then, naturally, as a human being,
she may look back. God forbid.
What was all that about?
All what?
You know what I'm talking about,
what was that all about?
With him?
There's several scenes
of sexual jealousy
- Several?
- in Raging Bull, aren't there?
Yeah, well. Yeah.
Also it's very much myself.
Meaning it was very much
what I'm fascinated by.
Look at that beauty.
Just as beautiful as ever.
Jealousy is one aspect.
It was like a symptom I guess.
Right, you would say?
Of what what the sickness is.
And what is the sickness?
A loss of faith, a loss of your soul.
Loss of your soul.
Get away!
- Open the door.
- No.
Raging Bull?
The violence is not in the ring,
the violence is at home.
Why'd you do it, huh?
- Why'd you do it?
- I didn't do anyth--
Certain kinds of stories
have to have a hero.
One could take that rule
of how a hero should behave,
and what if he doesn't
behave that way?
Is he still a hero of the story?
I have to eat like you, like a gavone?
Oh, God! What's the matter with you?
You fucked my wife, huh?
You fucked my wife
I think Marty understands
internal violence
is gonna manifest itself physically,
and it is a reality.
And internal violence is sin.
Sin means violence as grace means love.
Marty has a strong sense
of the reality of sin
and it hit me as I watched that.
Growing up, my brother
was the one always in trouble.
The bad one. I was the good one, right?
But my feelings of rage, I guess,
anger towards my father, let's say,
or my brother,
images of violence in my head
were such that I was the bad one.
Always have been.
And I just have to live with that
and figure out,
you know, don't take it out
on other people.
You know, don't--
Remember, the anger's there,
don't let the anger consume--
Anger's good.
Anger's good, but you have to rein it in.
Eventually, he becomes
so negative a character
that he cuts off everyone around him,
including himself from his own soul.
How do you feel that Marty
identified with Jake LaMotta,
you know, enough to make the movie
at that particular moment in his life?
I think you have to ask him that.
Bob and I, working together on the script.
That's when I really understood.
We got to the scene in the end,
where Bob is thrown into jail,
and Schrader had it where he was having
images of people in his past
and he masturbates.
See it, see it?
Bob didn't go for that, so he said,
"I have an idea," and he got up
and he went to the wall,
he put his hands up against the wall,
and then he just banged his head.
Banged his head, banged his head.
And then I realized that's me.
I understood that.
Dummy, dummy, dummy.
I always say Marty is a saint-sinner.
Un santo peccatore.
There's something saintly in him
in the sense that he asks the questions,
"Why are we here?
Is there life after death?
Is there a morality?
Is there goodness and badness?"
But he's a human being and a sinner,
so he falls a lot of times
into bad things.
He wanted to be a priest,
he ended up being married many times,
so Marty felt tormented.
Somebody said to me, "Why make
a film of this guy? He's a cockroach."
Yeah.
The despised, the dispossessed.
A lowlife is not a cockroach.
So fuckin' stupid.
So stupid.
They call me an animal.
I'm not an animal.
I'm not an animal.
They wanna treat me like this?
I'm not that bad.
I'm not that bad. I'm not that
Loving the least of these.
Marty found a way to love this guy
that I never could.
That most people, many people couldn't.
But Marty not only was capable
of finding it, but transmitting it.
I was in a fugue state.
You know, at the end of that picture,
I couldn't talk to anybody.
I didn't want to see anyone.
I was, you know--
I wasn't me anymore.
And, sorry to say,
I was them, on that screen.
I didn't want to be them.
So Marty has gotten me closer to the edge
than just about any other filmmaker
I can recollect.
When you think that Marty
didn't want to make it originally,
and look what he did with it.
It was his salvation.
And this seems to me
like almost giving last rites, this.
I remember seeing Raging Bull.
And I said, "Oh, my God."
He's done it again.
Because we were a little competitive.
I think, "Oh, my God.
This is a brilliant movie.
There's Scorsese, he's done it again."
At the end of the movie,
he has this quote from the Bible.
Marty told me it was
because of the drug overdose
and the quote refers to him.
I had a famous
Native American medicine man look at me
when I was doing Raging Bull, and
he looked at me and he said, "You died.
In that hospital,
before your friend came and said,
'Come out, let's make this movie.'
You died, but now you're alive again."
And so yeah, you die,
people die in life, they come back.
So it was Marty who asked me to marry him.
Nobody had asked me before.
And, I
I said yes.
I said yes, because I loved him,
but I also knew from the beginning
that he was an exceptional person.
He had a powerful mind,
but in this very small body.
So he was also very vulnerable.
Of course, my background is in film.
My mom was an actress, Ingrid Bergman,
and my father was the director,
Roberto Rossellini,
so there was a familiarity in the passion,
in the eccentricity.
And I remember one day,
I said, "Marty, but--
When you're in
your own thoughts all day long,
you really think, 'How? Why do we live?
Where do we come from? Where do we go?'"
He said, "Yes, all the time.
What do you think, Isabella?"
I said, "I think, 'What's for lunch?'"
It's much simpler.
But I knew that was always in his head,
big question,
and a torment, kind of.
And always seeking.
What I wanted to do
was Gangs of New York and Last Temptation.
We had a script that Jay and I worked on,
and I also had a script
of Last Temptation of Christ
that Paul Schrader had put together.
So my two projects were Gangs
and Last Temptation.
I tried to get it financed,
and we almost did,
but we just couldn't get it financed,
it was too expensive.
You know, sort of the infrastructure
of the epic author film had died.
The '80s was the worst period for me.
Hollywood had changed.
Do people in this business
want to make movies?
- Or do they want to make money?
- They want to make money.
Rocky and other pictures,
that became the lifeblood of the industry.
The feel-good, and the fantasy.
I actually sensed it the day Jaws opened.
I knew it.
It was really great for Steve
and all that, but I realized
something's going to change here.
Jaws was the beginning,
then when Star Wars
came out two years later,
everything really did shift.
There was much more money available
on movies that might attract
a blockbuster audience.
Studios were less interested in movies
that were going to be personal expressions
of individuals.
And it wasn't the healthiest thing
for independent filmmakers
when that happened.
The commercial prospect of the film
is the primary prerequisite
as to whether it's going to get made.
The studio system today basically
is a financial banking apparatus.
We had the control,
but those days are over.
Which sort of started to fall apart
after Heaven's Gate.
The studios had had enough
of these self-indulgent auteurs.
And here was the proof.
It would open one night and was closed.
We were out of control
and we had to be stopped.
And we were.
I was going to go off and make films
on the lives of the saints in Rome.
But was that because
you weren't gonna get other opportunities,
or you just wanted to do lives
of the saints more than anything else?
I don't know, even if there were
other opportunities, what was I gonna do?
My next big thing was Gangs of New York,
and-or Last Temptation.
Where was the financing
going to come from?
I didn't think
I'd be making films again, no.
But then Bob asked me
to make King of Comedy.
I really kind of wanted to do that
and was pushing him to kind of do it.
- What is the new film you're doing?
- It's called The King of Comedy.
We'll be doing
It's about someone who kidnaps
a talk show host.
Gee, thanks a lot.
I wasn't enthralled by it,
but I said, "Yeah, let's do this."
It's basically about
a young guy who wants to be a comedian,
and who idolizes the character
that Jerry Lewis plays
called Jerry Langford.
I came to believe
Jerry Lewis would be the best
because he was part of the great team,
Martin and Lewis
which was total mayhem.
He also did talk shows,
he did Broadway, he did Vegas,
and he was a great filmmaker too.
He's done everything.
Hey, Jerry, how you doin'?
The scenes in the street,
and people are yelling "Hey, Jerry."
Yeah.
I said we'll line up some people.
He said, "You won't need to."
"What do you mean?" He said, "Watch."
We shot him with a hidden camera
and people are really yelling.
- That was real?
- That's real, yeah.
People yelling, construction workers,
"We love you, Jerry,"
all that sort of thing.
I wasn't trying to make
any major statement about celebrity,
it was just this obsession,
you needed to possess Jerry.
Jerry Langford had to be possessed.
I had read that script
right before we did Taxi Driver,
I didn't care for it very much,
but I began to understand it better.
Because you became famous?
Well, somewhat.
Between doing Taxi Driver,
New York, New York, Last Waltz,
going around the world,
being around everyone,
I began to see what this is like.
Would you please welcome Martin Scorsese.
King of Comedy,
it's just his own fear of fan behavior.
"Fan-sanity," I guess you could call it.
Sometimes, we could go
to the ice cream shop
a block and a half or so away,
and get an ice cream and it was okay.
But there have been some moments
of, like, being in an elevator with him
and someone else,
and that person going, you know,
"Travis Bickle, man,
he's, like-- he's my guy,"
and we're both, like
Do you remember the time
where he stopped being able
to just go to the corner store or
I remember it very well.
John Lennon
was shot and killed last night--
A lone gunman waited for
his hero outside the Dakota apartments.
He stopped going out
after John Lennon was shot.
Like, for a few months, he didn't
leave the house. He was, like, freaked.
Because people recognized him
all the time,
and he'd, you know, sign an autograph,
but after that, he was like
Especially because look
at who you're talking about,
you're talking about John Lennon,
Mr. "Let's give peace a chance"
and my father and the movies he makes,
and John Lennon gets blown away
on a New York City street.
Marty felt very tormented.
But I remember people writing to Marty,
and sometimes there were things
that were petrifying.
Years earlier, we'd finished Taxi Driver
and I was beginning New York, New York,
and I received a letter.
This letter said, "If little Jodie
wins the Academy Award
for what you made her do in Taxi Driver
you'll pay for it with your life.
This is no joke."
And so we called the FBI.
For years, we thought,
"What was that letter about?"
And it was Hinckley?
I said-- Yeah.
So, what, four years later
You know?
Mr. President--
Today, shots have been fired
at President Reagan.
An assailant took at least
three shots, and possibly as many as six.
The bullet is still lodged in his chest.
It happened the day before
the Oscars were supposed to happen.
We were up for Raging Bull.
The Academy Awards were canceled.
And the next morning,
the information, I think,
came out about the Hinckley thing.
John W. Hinckley, the 25-year-old drifter
apparently was infatuated
with Jodie Foster.
Hinckley had mentioned Jodie
and mentioned the film.
Hinckley may have been
trying to act out
the plot of the movie Taxi Driver.
He was inspired
by the movie in some ways.
Taxi Driver figured
in John Hinckley's thoughts.
I'm sure that all of you understand why
we've delayed this program for 24 hours.
We went the following night,
it was enormous tension.
Marty had to wear a bulletproof vest
under his tuxedo.
They didn't understand
if it was a conspiracy
or if it was one lone wolf.
We had to have FBI people with us.
There was a whole series
of things going on.
I don't recall anymore.
But we didn't-- I didn't know.
And it was a terrible thing, and Yeah.
I feel like Rupert Pupkin
and Travis Bickle
are weirdly like two completely
mirror images of the Underground Man.
It's the same violence.
Wait. Okay, Jerry. Get over here.
Get in there. I'm not fooling around.
What the hell are you talking about?
What are you doing?
I remember we were rehearsing
the kidnapping of Jerry.
We had, like, a talk for a minute,
you know, thinking about what
had happened with Hinckley and all that,
and this kind of, "I don't know"
But, you know, I--
We said, "We have to do it." Period.
She's going to hold a gun on your head.
Don't make any false moves,
I'd hate to have to do anything drastic.
Now, if everything works out,
you should be out of here
by the very latest 12, 12:30.
It's the adulation.
I walked out of that show
like I was in a dream, you know.
After that, I started catching
all your guest appearances on Sullivan.
Because I think that you are the most
beautiful woman I've ever seen.
The danger in that.
And the need for the god
or the goddess to be taken down.
Or it's like a blood sacrifice
has to be done.
Like the ancient world. Gotta take
them down, then everybody will be okay.
the afternoon shooting
outside the Washington Hilton hotel.
Does that scare you
that sometimes violence can leap
- from films to people?
- Certainly, yeah.
But there are certain pieces of music,
rock music or, you know,
by some wonderful groups,
that have been accused of
inspiring madness, you know
The Sorrows of Young Werther,
which is Goethe.
A lot of people committed suicide.
They committed suicide
after reading that book.
All the young lovers committed suicide.
End of the 18th century,
beginning of the 19th, right? Yeah.
They touch on something, you don't know.
You touch on something.
We were touching--
We thought we were tapping into a truth.
King of Comedy was a hard film to make.
Didn't you say
you were late a lot on that film?
Yeah, I was late. Sometimes I wouldn't
show up till the afternoon.
I can't just make the picture.
I'm not that kind of director,
I found out.
See, Bob wanted me to do
The King of Comedy,
and he may have felt very strongly
about the material, but maybe I did not.
We fell into, where could Bob go with me,
and where could I go with him
as a collaboration?
What were we going to find in each other?
And not just creatively, as people.
standards and practices,
I'm gonna tell you that.
Yeah.
- You said that in the rule book, too.
- Yeah.
That's okay, though. It should be, like,
a less than 15-second scene.
We often would do 35 takes. Maybe more.
Still rolling, guys.
Is that common for you
to do that many takes?
No.
- Yeah, Marty?
- Yeah?
Why don't you come back
and tell me one more thing?
Should I wait for the plane?
- The plane is a little
- Jesus. Okay.
It would be valid
ten or twelve different ways.
But which way did I want to go?
Do you want--
I'm sorry, I just want to go on,
but I went over-- Should I match the thing
where I go over to her and listen to him,
then the Langford thing,
blah, blah, blah?
Yeah, let's match this.
The point is that you need
to want to be there,
and then I felt terrible that I didn't
want them to--
to understand
that I didn't want to be there.
We have one like this,
is that enough for?
Let's forget it.
Forget about it, let's go.
We got it, yeah, that's a nice one,
very nice.
- Okay, guys, thanks.
- It's a wrap.
Did you ever feel like you were lost?
Well, yes, I think so.
I think I really felt lost
in the creative work.
Because the creative work
was the religious connection.
Because it's like a gift.
If you had this gift, then you're
You were utilizing the gift.
You were enriching the gift.
This is something you're given
and that's a sacred thing, that's all.
And so I finished the film despite myself.
Can film today be
a medium of self-expression?
Yes, but you have to be prepared
to lose everything.
And lose it.
And you do, you know.
But I mean everything,
I just don't mean money.
- What are the things you lose?
- Your family, your life.
In King of Comedy,
I wasn't as much around.
I could tell that Marty
didn't want me around.
Are you shooting this?
Meanwhile, Marty could get really angry.
Not toward me,
he never hit me or anything like that,
but he could demolish a room.
A friend of his once filmed him
and showed it to him.
Marty was shocked, because
he didn't realize the level of violence
that this minuscule body,
asthmatic could--
It was like a volcano. It was terrifying.
You botherin' me about a steak, huh?
You botherin' me about a steak?
They would have found it!
Why did you do that?
Goddamn it! Baby, you know,
you got real anger issues!
I don't even remember
why he got so mad.
I think that sometimes it could be
a very silly little reason
that would make him go over the top.
Okay, I'm gonna show you something now.
I wanna show you something.
And sometimes he will wake up,
like, "Fuck it, fuck it, fuck it."
And I would say, "Marty, the day
hasn't even started."
"What 'fuck it'? What 'fuck'?"
Then I understood that partially also
this rage was part of the fuel
to give him courage.
Because, you know, he was
this little boy from Little Italy
and now was this big director
who had to direct big film and big budget.
And I think rage gave him that stamina
to get through the day,
to get through, finish the film.
Because it's not easy.
So it was complex to be with him.
I actually went
to Marty's apartment the day she left.
I just remember it being
this big empty apartment.
And there was Marty,
downtown, all by himself.
I have a very distinct memory of that.
I was just basically alone.
Nobody would come around me.
Thelma was editing in a loft that I had.
And my parents would come over
and make sure we were okay. That was it.
Everyone else stayed away
because I was behaving--
- I was very erratic.
- Your behavior was bad?
Well, up to a point,
and then it all stopped.
When everybody left, finally,
it was almost as if--
It's almost as if you had better--
It would've been better
if I said, "Leave."
- But
- I didn't.
- They just left on their own.
- Yeah.
Yeah, well, drive people out, you know.
That's what happened.
And then there was nothing except me.
Has he talked to you about King of Comedy?
- A little bit, yes.
- Oh.
That should start here.
It was hard for him. It was very hard.
He had mood swings.
He was very emotional.
Extremely depressed.
It's sort of like living with a volcano.
On King of Comedy, I was having
personal problems so severely
that I couldn't edit the film,
and they threatened,
said, "Look, we're gonna
have to take it away."
The movie will be out?
I Some time.
Just a breakdown of some kind.
- You were depressed?
- Very much so, yeah.
But I can't really talk now.
I never experienced such depression.
Trying to work, not being able to work.
Having problems, complaining,
getting crazy, and you know.
I would try to meet other people,
I would try to start
to have relationships. Never worked.
If it wasn't for the doctor, five days
a week, phone calls on the weekend,
strong, steady work
on straightening my head out,
I'd be dead.
I was on medication that was very strong,
and I was getting through.
You know, it was very lonely,
but it was my doing.
King of Comedy lasted one week.
It was chased out of the theaters.
Because it got good reviews,
but nobody went to see it.
At the end of that year,
Entertainment Tonight was on.
And it said, "Now, the flop of the year,"
and the curtain opened
and there was my picture.
The King of Comedy.
That's one of my favorites.
Rupert, what's his last--?
Pupkin, P-U-P-K-I-N.
- Pumpkin?
- Pupkin.
People love that film now.
But when it came out Shit
It got no love.
There's many things, there's many factors,
but the bottom line is it just didn't hit.
I was still attending my cocktail parties
and little gatherings in LA,
but I was kind of ridiculed to my face,
you know, by people saying,
"Ha, yeah, right," you know.
"Yeah, yeah, yeah."
You know, that kind of thing.
Basically, somebody told me,
"In Hollywood,
they're saying you're washed up."
A writer told me that. I said, "Ah, okay."
So I was washed up.
I'm going back down. Okay.
And did that have something
to do with deciding to do After Hours,
- which was a tiny film--
- Yes, yeah, yeah.
It was back to square one.
On all levels.
No-- No hurry.
It was made for very little money.
Incredibly little money,
but his career was in a terrible state,
and this was his way
to reestablish himself
as a responsible filmmaker.
What have they done?
It was like a handmade film, like--
The film where kids would get together
and say, "Let's put a show on in the barn.
You be this and I'll be that."
Of course, the key to this was the
director of photography, Michael Ballhaus.
I met Ballhaus and I said,
"I've lined up all these shots, but
I don't see how we're gonna get them all."
"Well, I figured it out," he said.
"It averages to 16 set-ups a day."
He says, "We can do it."
I said, "We'll never do it."
I couldn't believe he could do it. He did.
I'll probably get blamed for that.
I just reacted to the man
being put to the test
by these different characters.
It's like the book of Job,
but as a comedy.
Funny. Yeah.
Then there's that great moment
where he finally kneels down
"Do I have to die for it?" Yes.
I said, "Yes, you do."
I'm just a word processor,
for Christ's sake!
All the bad things that had been
happening to you, it's like, you know
That's what it is.
That's what the movie is.
The film was successful,
and I started to pull myself together.
I'd just got married to Barbara De Fina,
who was an incredible producer.
I met him
when he was finishing King of Comedy.
Then I actually went away
and did a few movies
and then when I came back,
actually, we got together.
Marty was not really
interested so much in being married.
He really wanted to make films,
but he wanted to take care
of that aspect of his life.
Like, "I'm married, I have a wife."
Also maybe to help him with temptations.
I found that I enjoyed being alone,
but I was so afraid of being alone.
And I would have Relationships
very often, were almost like
familial, brother and sister
kind of thing,
to have companions to be with.
Do you feel that he has
a complex relationship with women?
He works
with a tremendous number of women.
And I know that the relationship
with Barbara De Fina
was very important for Marty's career.
- Good. That was good. Cut.
- Cut!
In fact, it was De Fina
who suggested he make After Hours.
And she said, "You have to just
reestablish your reputation,"
and he did.
I remember
I had just finished After Hours,
and Mike Ovitz met me in Los Angeles.
Ovitz was a big figure in Hollywood,
and he said, "Your films over the years
have been pretty interesting, etc., etc."
And I said, "Well, you know, I had some
problems in a certain period of my life."
He goes, "Do you have them now?"
I said, "No."
He said, "Okay. What movie
do you want to make most of all?"
I said, "Last Temptation of Christ."
"All right, I'll get it made for you."
In the meantime,
he put me together with Newman.
I got a hunch, fat man.
I got a hunch it's me from here on in.
And put together
a sequel to The Hustler
with Paul Newman and Tom Cruise.
- Damn!
- All yours.
I was trying to prove
that I can make a film again,
that I could be trusted with a budget,
and with people on that level.
- Oh, yeah?
- Yeah.
The big problem were the pool scenes.
And I designed these very complex moves.
It turns out when we shot it,
they were the easiest things to do
because Paul actually plays
and Tom has played. It's real.
They did it, the camera
hit the right spot at the right moment.
Like, maybe at the most, two takes.
At the most.
And it was suddenly, like, "Okay,
we have extra time today."
We finished one day under schedule
and a million under budget.
It was the closest I came
to being a "director."
- Yeah.
- A professional director.
For me, the main thing
is to continue making pictures.
I hope the picture makes money
so I can continue making films.
The film was successful.
Paul won his Oscar.
Mary Elizabeth got nominated for an Oscar.
I think you've had more women
nominated for Academy Awards than any--
Yeah, that's right.
I think there were 10 or 11.
But when the film was released,
I felt not quite there with it.
In fact, Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel
got mad at me.
They slapped me
and, "Don't do that again."
Linear, linear, just as we've seen it
in so many other movies.
You expect with Scorsese
more character things, more twists,
not just that the point
is to tell the story.
Ebert and a number of others pointed out
that you've got to push yourself further.
So, I realized, "Yeah, all right."
But I was just trying
to get to Last Temptation.
Back in the '70s, Marty always had
the Kazantzakis book,
The Last Temptation of Christ.
Marty wanted to do it
and insisted on doing it.
I'd been interested my whole life
around the concept of Jesus Christ.
Who is it? What is it?
Well, if there's a sacrifice of the cross,
it's easy because he's God.
Well, no, he's equally human.
So, in other words,
he suffers the way we do.
Yeah, that's why the book hit me.
When I read the book,
I said, "This is someone you can talk to."
A very human Jesus that
I thought was more accessible.
That I thought would in a sense
be more shocking.
Nobody really wanted to make it.
Barry Diller,
head of Paramount at the time,
wanted to know
why I wanted to make the film
and I said,
"I want to get to know Jesus better."
And his face turned red, because
they didn't know what to do with me.
You don't tell this to a studio executive.
Was I out of my mind?
But Color of Money actually did very well.
So Mike Ovitz said, "I know
how much it means to you,
I'm gonna make this work."
And so I finally got a chance
to make The Last Temptation.
It was an independent picture
that would be bought by Universal,
made for very, very little money.
We shot in Morocco.
And we were
in so much difficulty shooting.
Let's get ready, please.
Standby for picture, let's clear.
Well, we ran out of light at 4 o'clock.
Tomorrow we'll make
the entire scene in one day.
The experience was an emergency
because we had no money.
We literally couldn't go beyond
one or two takes.
"Baptize me,"
we're going from "Baptize me."
Marty, this isn't like making a movie,
it's like being in the paratroopers.
- Okay, ready.
- Let's go!
- Sorry. Ready.
- And rolling.
We're trying to get everything shot
for the end of the crucifixion.
Hopefully, we get everything done today.
We had planned three days
to shoot the crucifixion.
Let's go, let's go.
Oh, my God. Oh, God.
They said, "We can't make it.
We have to do everything in two days."
Starting at the crack of dawn
to the sunset.
Every minute. And it's a crucifixion.
A guy says, "Marty,
you've only got so much money,
but you want ten things.
What do you want to do?"
This shot should take fifteen minutes.
This should take five.
Hey, Joe, let's go.
- I'm going. I'm trying to hurry.
- Get the wind machine up.
Yeah, the wind machine--
It's faced the right way, isn't it?
Filling up that blood. Yep.
Meanwhile, Willem Dafoe
can only be up on the cross
for five minutes at a time
because you suffocate,
that's what happens when they crucify you.
You slump and you can't breathe.
It was insane.
I had 25 set-ups each day.
And we did 'em.
The beautiful thing about it
is it's about Jesus
being seriously tempted
with the one thing he could never have.
Life as a man.
It's a temptation from the Devil.
I don't have to die on the cross
for the sacrifice, for sin, so to speak.
I don't have to be sacrificed?
No. No, you don't.
I'm not the Messiah?
No. No, you're not.
I took it as far as I could,
and I told him, "You can live this way.
And it's wonderful to live this way.
You can have children." You know?
We could have a child.
We could have a child.
The beauty of the temptation,
though, is that the life that we're given
is beautiful to God.
That he's tempted by saying, "You know
it would be nice just to stay there."
But, at the last minute, he realizes
he's got to go through with the sacrifice.
And that's all there is to it.
And he does.
And the last thing he says,
"It is accomplished. I did it. I did it."
It is accomplished.
It is accomplished.
This is the Jesus I wanted to make. See?
So, that's why I thought
a dialogue would happen.
Instead, we got yelled at.
Don't release the film!
It has mushroomed into
one of the hardest-fought battles
in movie history.
A controversial movie
many Christians
consider to be insulting
and blasphemous
called The Last Temptation of Christ.
I said, "Marty, we set out to make a film
that would upset people.
They are now upset."
He says, "Yes, but I didn't think
they would be this upset."
The people who have put this thing on,
I think we should go after them!
This man is a charlatan.
The most satanic movie
that's ever been filmed.
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