Mr. Scorsese (2025) s01e04 Episode Script

Total Cinema

1
Boycott MCA!
It has mushroomed
into one of the hardest-fought battles
in movie history.
The film portrays Jesus
as too much flesh and blood
for many church critics.
What are you going to stand
before God with?
Are you gonna stand with the movie?
What do you think about the movie?
I haven't seen it yet. I don't know.
Boycott! Boycott! Boycott!
I read
The Last Temptation of Christ in 1971.
For me, it's never been just another film.
It was the most important film
I've ever had to make.
Because of my religious background,
the fact I wanted to be a priest,
the fact the church has never left me
and I have never left it.
He had that in his system, in his mind,
that one day
he was going to make the picture.
I personally didn't want him to make it,
because I was afraid.
What has caused a furor
is a dream sequence in the film
in which Christ makes love
to Mary Magdalene.
It is the most
serious misuse of film craft
in the history of movie-making.
The film is incredibly insensitive
toward people who believe
that Jesus is Lord and Savior.
It's just an exploration. Exploration
so we can get to know him better.
Get to know him better,
get to know his ideas better.
We might begin to live out his ideas.
So you're telling Catholics not to see it?
I-- Not only that, sweetheart.
I am telling Catholics out there
that if they go to see this movie,
they will have committed a sin
against the Holy Spirit.
Boycott! Boycott! Boycott!
It was during the rise
of the political power
of the religious right in this country.
We want to say to Hollywood,
"Don't ever do this again."
Hollywood is attempting to titillate.
They're trying to take everything
that relates to God away from us.
On top of that, the Jews got blamed.
A Christ figure bloodied
by a Hollywood executive
was the centerpiece of a Passion Play
in the home of MCA Chairman Lew Wasserman.
Lew Wasserman looked out the window
and there was a man dressed as Jesus
being forced on the ground,
and a Jewish businessman
with his foot on him, whipping him.
With signs saying, you know,
"You Jews have done this."
Bankrolled by Jewish money!
The director, Mr. Scorsese, is he Jewish?
No, he's not, but he was hired
by these two Jewish men.
We expected some opposition.
The nature of the opposition,
the ugly quality of it,
is surprising and shocking, and saddening,
really. I find it saddening.
Why do you think people were so upset?
Well, they didn't see it.
They'd seen an early version
of Schrader's script
and they thought it was a movie about
Jesus and Mary making out.
Or something. You know.
They willfully misunderstood it.
Mr. Penland, have you seen the film?
I do not want to see the film.
I do not want to snort cocaine, either.
What about waiting
until it's cut and ready to be seen?
Then you can't stop it
from being released.
They haven't seen the movie.
The very gutsy Head of Production
at Universal
thought the best way to minimize
the controversy was to get the movie out.
But we had to work
day and night to finish the film.
I probably would have edited
the film more, there's no doubt.
But they said, "We have to release
the film, just finish it as best you can."
That's what we did.
We released it in August.
And then, of course,
the movie never got a fair shot.
There was some real violence.
Somebody set off a bomb
in the theater in Paris.
And somebody died.
It never played in many
of the major cities in this country.
Blockbuster Video refused to carry it.
They carry chainsaw movies.
But they wouldn't carry this.
Marty was getting FBI protection
for the second time.
Threats in the mail, and people were
examining his mail for bombs.
Oh, my It was awful.
I went to a restaurant one night,
sat at a table and I heard the maître d'
lean over to one of the waiters.
He says, "I see we have
the Antichrist with us tonight."
Yeah.
I did start a dialogue
on the nature of Christ,
but it became something that
was sensational, rather than serious.
Then I realized,
there's no sense in arguing anymore.
Just try to answer the questions
as best you can, as honestly as you can,
and simply
forget it. And move on.
Unfortunately, the dialogue Yeah, okay.
When I did Color of Money,
I remember reading a review
of Wiseguy by Nick Pileggi.
The book came out, and it did very well.
New York magazine put it on the cover.
I got a message, said,
"Call Martin Scorsese." And he said,
"Would you be interested in doing this?
I wanna write it with you."
I liked that book.
It's about a guy who's not a boss.
He's not made.
But yet he had access to almost
every level of that way of life.
Nick understood it. He just knows it.
Both of us grew up in those neighborhoods.
We never wound up in that life,
but I went to school with a lot of
the guys I wound up writing about.
They shot me! Help! Help!
- Henry, shut the door! Shut the door!
- Cut!
Okay, that's gotta be done much faster.
Take it off as fast as you can.
I only write nonfiction,
and I only get it from the people
who were really there.
And that's what Marty wanted.
He always says, "What really happened?"
That's what he keeps wanting to know.
What really happened.
I mean, Nick being the expert
on the Mafia,
and Marty having lived in it,
so the two of them together,
that script is unbelievable.
I mean, every frame of that script
is in the movie.
As far back as I can remember,
I always wanted to be a gangster.
I just saw it very clearly.
We had it on the page.
I knew where the camera was gonna go.
I didn't realize at the time,
but he had already seen the movie.
The movie you saw, with all the music,
he had already made it up
in that mind of his.
I knew the edits.
I had the freeze frames. It's all there.
That's when I knew I would never
have come back from Florida alive.
On set, it was almost an afterthought,
'cause I did it all on the page with Nick.
The way you use voiceover
is so freeing, it seems.
Yes. Really, it's a guy on a street corner
telling a story.
That's what the movie is.
Every day I was learning
to score. A dollar here, a dollar there.
I was living in a fantasy.
I talked to Henry for four years.
And I talked to his wife and his kids.
So, Marty, in the middle of it,
he said, "You know,
why not have Karen's voice?"
Marty had that vision.
Why not have multiple points of view?
I know there are women,
like my best friends,
who would have gotten out of there
the minute their boyfriend
gave them a gun to hide.
But I didn't.
I gotta admit the truth. It turned me on.
At the end, in the courtroom,
he speaks to the camera.
Forget it.
We ran everything. We paid off cops.
I broke as many rules as possible.
I said, "We have to take a risk,
and push it."
Everything was for the taking.
And now it's all over.
Marty not only saw the movie,
but he heard the music.
And I remember typing a scene and he said,
"Put in 'Cream'."
I don't know what he's talking about.
"Just type it in!"
It was that scene where Bob De Niro
is at the bar
looking out and his eyes get squinty,
and the guy is thinking
about murdering Morrie.
Marty already was listening to the music.
He was always editing like that
when we were writing.
I think he came out of the womb an editor.
Before Marty shot the movie,
he knew that when the trunk slams
that that's where he wanted
that music to hit.
And then, as this accident
begins to develop,
he wanted to have the Stones.
"I want it, I want it, I want it."
And then The Who here.
And that film also feels like
pure montage.
He took mercy on me. He gave me
ten milligrams of Valium and sent me home.
It's just constant galloping,
snowballing montage
that is kind of weightless and airless.
And, like, he did create a new language,
which felt like I mean, it feels like
something like total cinema.
It was pure cinema.
It's a film with crazy energy,
it's like a runaway train.
I had to start braising the beef,
pork butt and veal shanks
for the tomato sauce.
He deliberately wanted
to do tons of jump cuts,
make things very jerky.
And so I was home
for about an hour. And--
Now, that was considered very unorthodox
in those days.
- Right.
- Now everybody does it!
I kept looking out the window
and I saw that the helicopter was gone.
You can't wait for the next voiceover,
'cause you know the second
you hear Ray Liotta's voice,
the story's gonna accelerate.
The music in Goodfellas is as much
of an accelerant of the narrative
as Nick Pileggi's script.
Oh, God, I see it!
Most movies have four gears.
Marty has 14 gears in Goodfellas.
It just keeps shifting
higher and higher and higher.
That's Henry's day.
We just wrote what happened.
Got someplace better to go?
It was all real.
You lying son-of-a-bitch! I hate you!
Every time we looked at it,
we would make it faster and faster
and jerkier and jerkier.
To the sudden moment
when everything comes to a grinding halt
when Bo Dietl points a gun at him
and arrests him.
Police! Freeze!
Don't you move, you motherfucker,
or I'll blow your brains out.
Shut the car off slowly.
We were riding that script.
I mean, I felt like I was on a horse.
For a second, I thought I was dead.
But when I heard all the noise,
I knew they were cops.
Only cops talk that way.
Don't fucking move.
If they had been wise guys,
I wouldn't have heard a thing.
You've got the script,
and every once in a while
there's a little starburst of improv.
I asked Joe to be in the movie,
Joe Pesci, and he didn't wanna be in it.
But eventually he said, "I'll be in it
if you do this one scene with me."
And he acted out this scene.
I said, "That's terrific."
'Cause it actually happened to him.
I said, "I know exactly where to put it."
So it's not in the script,
but I knew where to put it.
One of the reasons
Joe doesn't do these interviews,
nobody would understand his background
and how he grew up.
He was marked much more than me
in that world,
hanging around with those people.
You're really funny!
What do you mean I'm funny?
It's funny, you know? It's a good story,
it's funny. You're a funny guy.
What do you mean?
You mean the way I talk? What?
It's just, you know
You're just funny. It's
The way you tell the story and everything.
Funny how? I mean, what's funny about it?
And then on set,
I decided there'd be no close-ups.
Because as the tone of the piece changes,
you needed to see the people around them
their body language change
and their eyes become more
you know, more alarmed.
What do you mean, "funny"?
Funny how? How am I funny?
I don't know, just you know,
how you tell the story. What?
No, no, I don't know. You said it.
How do I know? You said I'm funny.
How the fuck am I funny?
What the fuck is so funny about me?
Tell me. Tell me what's funny.
- Get the fuck out of here, Tommy.
- You motherfucker!
I almost had him! I almost had him.
We did two or three takes,
and that was it.
But then you have very long,
choreographed shots
Exactly. I wanted
the edge of the frame, like,
things, like, falling out of the movie.
- Thank you, sir.
- I'll see you later. Thanks.
What are you doing?
The action can be behind you
in the theater. It continues going.
It's almost like this
maximalist or Baroque sensibility
- That's what I embraced.
- is born in you.
And becomes, in a way,
I feel like, your style.
That's what's happened.
I normally go this way,
it's better than waiting in line.
The Copa scene, if you read the book,
it's, like, three or four sentences.
But Marty sees it visually. You know,
it's like a six-minute steadicam.
The hardest thing to do
is to think of a design for a picture.
What the scene needs, visually. What's
in the frame, what isn't in the frame.
Should the camera move?
Should they be moving in the frame?
Should there be movement in the frame
and the frame itself?
Should it be a track in or track out?
Should it just be "leave it be"?
Don't move the camera at all.
Just hold it, you know?
If he or she goes out of frame, do you
follow them or let them come back in?
All of this, I like to play with.
I have to get the philosophy of the shot
before I go on set.
The philosophy, what the shot means.
The Copa, it was kind of a Valhalla,
in a way, of New York nightlife.
It was really this paradise
of New York nightlife.
And the reason why that scene
had to be done in one take
through the underground labyrinth
of this world
and then to emerge in the spotlight,
like a king and queen
was because this was the highest
he could aspire to.
- Excuse me.
- Hello!
- How you doin'?
- Henry, nice to see you.
But that comes from personal
experience. We used to go to the Copa
with my friend Dominic. His father
was the bartender in the lounge.
We'd be allowed to see Sinatra there
and see whoever was there, Sammy Davis.
And whenever we went,
we'd get what we thought were good tables,
so we were able to see the show.
And then right before the show started,
the tables would come
flying in with the wise guys.
And they'd sit down in front of us
and we couldn't see anything.
Tony, thanks a lot. I appreciate it.
Thanks.
Hey, how you guys doin'?
How are you?
- It's good to see you.
- Henry. How are you?
Good, good. How you doin'?
Marty saw it as almost a love scene.
'Cause that's where he seduces her,
with all of this glamor and
I mean, what they thought of as glamor.
- Salute.
- Thank you. Salute.
She's gone. She's just mad for the guy.
- What do you do?
- What?
- What do you do?
- I'm in construction.
They don't feel
like you're in construction.
I'm a union delegate.
And now, ladies and gentlemen
It's a specific piece of grammar,
and Goodfellas just shows
the power of the gangster.
The gangster as American hero,
in the sense that people vicariously
enjoy watching a person do what they want.
Air France made me.
We walked out with $420,000
without using a gun.
And we did the right thing.
The star of the film
is the lifestyle itself.
There's no Scarface.
There's no James Cagney in Public Enemy.
There isn't one character.
It's a whole group of characters.
The real character in the movie
is the way people live in that world.
I think what he is working
particularly in Goodfellas
is the attraction of the Mafia,
how powerful it is.
That's what I grew up with.
I saw it all the time.
Did you guys know any people
who became foot soldiers with a family?
Oh, sure, absolutely.
Absolutely. Many, many guys.
Yeah.
To me, what I saw of it was wonderful.
I mean, guys dressed up,
had great cars, you know?
It was like, you know, that's the life.
That's what you want.
I had a pocket full of money.
You know, I had a lot of respect,
had all the
you know, the real hot girls and
You know, I I can't explain it.
I just I can't explain it.
Hi, Mom! What do you think?
Look at my shoes. Aren't they great?
My God, you look like a gangster.
The way of life in the film is
at first extremely romantic and appealing.
But then of course, one begins to see
what the lifestyle really is about.
You know, just a dead end.
A moral, spiritual dead end.
In my personal experience,
it's the behavior of the people.
You hear a rumbling. Next thing you know,
somebody's killed or
That feeling I had.
Where's my fucking drink?
I asked you for a drink.
- You wanted a drink?
- I just asked you for a fucking drink.
I thought you said that
you were "All right, Spider."
No, no, no.
That poor character, Spider.
Now, it's based on a real kid.
It's in the book.
I thought I heard
someone say something "Spider"
- Spider, Spider
- I thought it was Henry
You are a fucking mumbling,
stuttering little fuck, you know that?
It's funny. It's funny.
But then he gets shot in the foot.
Now he's moving!
A week later, he's back.
That's the point. That's the lifestyle.
'Cause where's he gonna go, Paris?
- There you go.
- Thank you, Spider.
Hey, Spider, that fucking bandage on your
foot is bigger than your fucking head.
You gotta be careful.
Every day, you gotta be careful.
Looking for sympathy, is that it, sweetie?
Why don't you go fuck yourself, Tommy?
Did I just fuckin' hear right?
Couldn't believe what I just heard!
Unless you were somebody's son
or somebody, whatever,
you had to be careful.
- It was very easy to fall into.
- Yeah.
To get involved with something over there
that you don't wanna get involved in.
You gonna let this fucking punk
get away with that?
What's the matter with you?
What's the world coming to?
That's what the fucking world
is coming to. How d'you like that?
How's that, all right?
We had a preview.
I counted, I stood outside, and we had
32 walk-outs
in the first 20 minutes or so.
People hated the movie.
It shook the confidence of the studio.
There was a lot of pressure
to try to cut things out.
Oh, God.
Previews are funny, because
they have these preconceived ideas
before they come in,
that it should go a certain way.
Well, then, go see other pictures.
What the hell they want from me?
What do they want from me?
The meetings after the previews
were savage.
There was a lot of pressure
to try to cut things out.
And I had to fight back.
We had a meet in Terry Semel and
Bob Daly's office from Warner Bros.
Too many curse words, it was too long.
We should cut the last 20 minutes,
which is the coked-up scene.
They thought if we got rid
of the coked-up scene,
the movie would really work.
It's You gotta watch out,
because things will be sacrificed
that shouldn't,
and you have to stand up, as Marty does.
He's very tough
with all that stuff, because
I don't know how he does it.
I directed two movies, and
But Marty
he's good with a sit-down.
He said to me,
"I grew up with men of power.
I know what they're about.
And I know how to maybe
get in there and get them to listen."
In tense situations, you had
to be able to, if you felt any danger,
either, you know, you had to find a way
to extricate yourself
without causing a problem
or get through it somehow
and behave as if you're one of them.
You know?
Interestingly enough, he's very respectful
of other people's opinions.
Like, when we had
that disastrous screening of Goodfellas,
Marty was great.
He agreed to everything they said.
Didn't do any of 'em,
but he agreed to 'em!
And then they finally gave in.
But one of the things we lost,
we were supposed to open
in 1,600 theaters.
They opened in 800 theaters.
Warner Bros. flipped us.
But then the reviews started coming in.
Everyone loves a wise guy.
Goodfellas? Great film.
Number one in box-office sales
during its very first week.
This is a great film.
Scorsese is at the peak of his art.
There is no director better.
Do you think I'm funny?
- I do, as a matter
- Do you find me amusing?
No, I do, I think you're funny.
Joe Pesci gets really angry and goes,
"Am I a clown to you?
Am I here to make you laugh?
How am I funny?"
Yes. No, sure, I remember.
That was awesome.
Thank you. Thank you. Thanks.
Not only was that film recognized, but
Raging Bull was recognized the same year.
Best films of the '80s?
Raging Bull is number one.
The first film on my list?
Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull.
There was no question in my mind.
After Goodfellas, Cape Fear.
It was a big hit.
Not my favorite of my films,
but there's some really interesting
elements that we tried about fear.
Take off your clothes
and get down on your knees!
No!
Don't!
Did it end up I don't know
what the box office was on it.
It was very good.
All of a sudden everybody turned around
and said, "Wait a minute. Oh, yeah!"
The films are raw, violent,
and in one way or another,
autobiographical.
They killed people other places
and came and dumped the bodies here.
- Right there?
- I remember vividly.
It was a whole different time.
My mother and father were alive,
as I said, and they enjoyed it.
What college did he go to?
New York University.
Right, NYU.
And, at the time,
the tuition was pretty cheap.
We played it up. We had some fun.
Now, do you make the dough?
Do you start from scratch?
- I start from scratch, that's right.
- Did you make the sauce yourself?
- Watch your shirt.
- Oh, yeah. Don't wanna get
Smear it around. Yeah, nice, Not too much.
Don't make it too much, it gets too heavy.
That's it.
Robert De Niro comes over
and eats this pizza?
Robert De Niro loves it. He says I make
the best pizza in the whole world.
- Why is this different than other pizza?
- Because it's made by me.
She was amazing.
Well, you've seen her in the movies.
- Yeah.
- And he didn't really direct her much.
He would just turn her on.
I mean, he literally would just say,
"Okay, Mother, start now."
I don't wanna wake her up.
- Oh
- Look who's here! Look who's here.
- Hey, Ma. What you doin' up?
- What are you doing?
- What happened?
- No, nothin'.
When she sees, for example,
the blood on Joe Pesci's shirt
here, that's a genuine reaction.
- And?
- Well, tonight we were out late.
We took a ride out to the country
and we hit one of those deers.
That's where the blood came from,
I told you. Jimmy told you before.
That reminds me, Ma, I need this knife.
Now he starts me always off
with the first sentence, that's all.
That's all he gives me.
He says, "You have to improvise."
I say, "What do I say?"
He says, "You'll know what to say.
As soon as you start,
it'll just come to you."
- Why don't you get yourself a nice girl?
- I get a nice one almost every night, Ma.
Yeah, but get yourself a girl
so you can settle down.
I settle down almost every night,
but in the morning I'm free.
I love you. I wanna be with you.
It turns out there's a body
in the trunk of the car.
Marty didn't tell her.
When she found out, she was looking
to chase him and hit him in the head.
Because she felt
that if she had known
there was a body in the trunk of that car,
she wouldn't have made them breakfast.
You know your mother
had been in your short films.
They had to be. Any student filmmaker,
first persons you go to are your parents.
He made me get up to cook spaghetti
at 4:30 in the morning.
I was in the Mean Streets.
He made me do that scene 22 times.
And I had to go to work in the morning.
It was 2:00 in the morning!
And I was still doing that scene.
And I says to him, "I've had it,
Marty. I gotta go to work in the morning."
He says, "Go in that corner
and don't come out till I call you!"
From doing Italianamerican,
she had such a
composure in front of the camera.
The camera didn't seem to exist.
Take a few spoonfuls of tomato
and throw them in here,
because your meatballs remain very soft.
Not like some of the meatballs
you eat sometime,
- if you're invited somewhere.
- Yeah?
You eat a meatball
and it's as hard as can be.
You throw it at the wall,
the wall would crack!
I just relate to it
as something that's convincing.
I don't like when he puts me in a picture,
then he takes me out.
Well
It's not fair. I work so hard.
She was cut out of Taxi Driver.
She was Travis's first passenger.
- That's right.
- With shopping bags.
You know those shopping bags
they couldn't get in the car
They were so heavy! I says
Mom, something had to go.
You had to go, that's it.
My parents enjoyed
the reassessment, so to speak,
of me and my work.
But, you know, they were at the Oscars,
and the Oscars meant a great deal to them.
Was Marty excited
when you were nominated for an Oscar?
I remember sitting at the table
for the honorees.
And an old member of the Academy
was at the table.
And he leaned over to me, says,
"Try to keep your language clean."
He actually thought that I spoke
like the guys in the movie.
We were from New York.
We were that level.
We just didn't belong, and we felt it.
I think Goodfellas did this
strange thing in Scorsese's career,
which is, it allowed people to label him
"the Mob movie-maker".
But I've always felt it's really silly,
'cause he doesn't have one element.
His element is worlds,
particular, enclosed cultures,
whether that is organized crime
in Goodfellas,
or the world of New York society
in The Age of Innocence,
which is an Edith Wharton novel.
The thing with Age of Innocence
was my interest in, not history,
but a kind of anthropology, maybe.
When Archer enters
the Beaufort house for the first time
for this big ball,
there's a table laid out with gloves.
That's about the tradition in those days.
You would go to a ball, if you were a man,
with a stack of gloves, and every time
you danced with another woman,
you would change your gloves.
That's not explained in the film,
but it's there as part of the texture.
I was astonished,
'cause, like most people,
it wouldn't have been a film
I'd have imagined from Martin.
Until later on, of course,
it made complete sense.
What do you mean?
Well, because of the savagery in it.
It was not the custom
in New York drawing rooms
for a lady to get up and walk away
from one gentleman
in order to seek the company of another.
But the Countess
did not observe this rule.
We're in a world where
the passion is subjugated,
to the circumstances
and the world that he's in.
And that's interesting.
Is it wrong to be in love?
No. He's in love.
She's in love. But he's married.
I think we should look at reality,
not dreams.
- I just want us to be together.
- I can't be your wife, Newland.
Is it your idea
I should live with you as your mistress?
I wa--
Somehow I want to get away with you and
find a world
where words like that don't exist.
In that world, there were limits.
Where is that country?
Have you ever been there?
It's the old story
of "do the right thing".
What is the right thing
under these circumstances?
I'd experienced a few things in my life
by that point where I understood
the excruciating nature of this love
that cannot be consummated.
Ellen
The hands, the way you use hands
in Age of Innocence.
Is that something you
thought about a lot, or it just happened?
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
It The extremities
The best I could do was, maybe, you know,
barely, you know, feel that electricity
You know, barely touch, and you can feel
the electricity between the fingers
- of one person and the other.
- Yeah.
You know, you just see it light up
and imagine the touch.
It's amazing. That touch
really means something. You see?
So, that was very special, that touch.
It's almost like
a sustained erotic moment
that has no completion.
But it's a sustained erotic moment.
That was the idea.
Erotic moment which is stretched forever.
And then, ultimately,
in the final moment, when it's revealed
that he is stuck.
I said we'd do it in one shot.
I had found a certain freedom
from Goodfellas.
And I extended it into Age of Innocence.
And you use voiceover to free you up.
Yes, exactly. Yeah.
There was a hired chef,
two borrowed footmen,
roses from Henderson's
They're surrounded by fetishistic objects
which keep them where they are
and sustains that culture.
My mind just went past all those objects
and you see they're all there
to keep him where he was.
And so it was natural to do that.
It was like a prison.
Archer saw all the
harmless-looking people at the table
as a band of quiet conspirators
There's the language
there on the page, Edith's Wharton's.
with himself and Ellen
the center of their conspiracy.
This culture
that he finds himself trapped in,
that he can't break out of it.
He just can't do it.
That's a very Marty subject.
With Martin,
the camera is always at the service
of something that's instinctual in him.
Something in his belly.
That's why it works.
That's why it's not just beautiful
but it's meaningful.
He's such an interesting
combination of things,
'cause he is, I think, a sensualist,
but he works like a coal miner.
And he has the vocation
of a man of the cloth.
And in Marty's case, you understand
that that has been his vocation.
Dad I've heard him talk about
having a vocation.
That also sort of means,
like, when he's in that world
that's the world he's in.
And so my relationship with Dad
has been about me
coming into the world that he's in.
So this is one of my happiest memories
with Dad.
He loves his actors
and, in a way,
that was a really incredible experience
to walk into it and
feel that.
Oh, I didn't mean to disturb you.
Are you Miss Blenker? I'm Newland Archer.
Oh, yes, I've heard so much about you.
My dad, in between takes,
he would come away from the monitor
and he would get kinda quiet
and be like
"Yes, that was really great. Okay."
And encouraging. And then go,
"Yeah, you know, that's interesting.
Let's do one more little something"
And you'd feel the love and the care
in the intensity and focus to the details.
It was a sense of safety
that
It was funny to find it there.
His focus and intensity and brightness,
it's like that incredible beam
from a lighthouse.
If he's working on the film,
it's right there. He's on the film.
And then, if you're not in the sphere
of that light,
it's sometimes You can feel its absence.
And I know when he finds a collaborator,
like a true collaborator,
the collaborators
are even more like family.
You know?
When I did Goodfellas,
I hadn't worked with Bob in nine years,
from King of Comedy.
We'd gone off on totally different paths.
He went off on his own,
I went off on my own.
But with Goodfellas, it all came back.
The love is there, the trust is there,
it's still there.
I mean, what better place
for drama, right?
And then on Cape Fear, he was great.
But he made it very clear to me,
at a certain point,
that he preferred making films with me
that had more to do
with the American underworld.
Yeah. I said, "All right."
I had this Vegas story, Casino.
I said, "Maybe, you know,
that's something I could do."
You could generally say
that the genre of the underworld,
the closest it comes to the overworld
is in Vegas.
Casino, I wrote with Marty.
Those characters were real.
Lefty Rosenthal,
the Bob De Niro character,
I spent years with Lefty, telling me
what it was like having Joe Pesci,
Tony Spilotro, as his best friend.
Where the fuck do you get off talking
to people behind my back,
- going over my head?
- What people?
Did you think I wasn't gonna find out?
I had this idea they were given paradise
and were kicked out of paradise,
like Adam and Eve.
And you got this paradise of evil.
And even there,
they're so evil they get
kicked out of paradise.
But I took it to the edge on Casino.
You watch it and you're just like,
"That's unlike any movie
I've ever seen in my life."
It's a totally unique structure.
You can see the connection to Goodfellas,
but it's like one step further.
I call this Marty's Mount Rushmore shot.
In Vegas, everybody's gotta watch
everybody else.
Marty often uses real people.
So all the people in the gambling scenes
were all real dealers, real boxmen.
The dealers are watching the players.
Six!
The boxmen are watching the dealers.
All of that
had to be so carefully planned.
Which way are you swish-panning?
Are you swish-panning right or left?
I was more interested in the
I don't know,
the people around the table,
people in the game,
and the dealers, you know? The dealers.
We have kind of a story going,
but then there are all these tangents.
The casino manager
is watching the shift bosses.
I'm watching the casino manager.
And the eye in the sky is watching us all.
Plus, we had a dozen guys
up there, most of them ex-cheats
who knew every trick in the house.
Probably my favorite female
character in a Scorsese film
is Ginger, Sharon Stone's character.
She's so key to Lefty's life.
- How you doing tonight?
- Good. How are you?
- Beat.
- Ginger had the hustler's code.
- Take one for you.
- Thank you.
She knew how to take care of people.
And that's what Vegas is all about.
She's a street girl. She's not
But she's very sophisticated.
I hate to even use the "street girl" word.
She made money.
Ginger was a hustler.
Do you know what I mean? That was her gig.
My job was to come in and hustle him.
When I think of Casino,
it's really, more than anything, the need
to possess a woman that you're kind of
attracted to because she's wild
and kind of beyond you.
And that's a real recurring thing.
You have it in Taxi Driver
with Cybill Shepherd.
The idealization of this woman
that is not attainable.
Hi.
Cathy Moriarty in Raging Bull.
Nice to meet you.
It shows up again in King of Comedy.
I love you. I wanna help change your life,
if you just give me a chance.
In Casino, it reaches
maybe its fullest expression.
I wanna settle down. I want a family.
You got the wrong girl, Sam.
He asks her to marry him
and she says, "I don't love you."
You don't know me. You've known me
two, three months. What do you know?
But no, he's gonna make her love him.
I'll take care of you
better than you'd ever imagine.
- What are you pitching me?
- Just what I said.
You'll be set up for the rest
of your life. That I can promise you.
Wanna take a chance?
It's shocking,
but also, it just feels true.
Like, it just feels like, yeah, this is
It's it's a portrait of a fool.
Fuck! You fuck! I'm sick of you!
I am fucking Nicky Santoro! I am!
He's my new sponsor! How about that?
You fuckhead! What are you looking at?
Did you ever have
disagreements or conflict with Marty?
I came to work,
and the first thing we were shooting
was a scene in a hotel room.
And they blocked it without me.
And then just sort of
brought me in to shoot.
So she felt, naturally, "What's going on?"
And I thought, "Uh-oh.
The men are just gonna be,
like, the key players
and they're just gonna move me around
like a potted plant."
You know, they are a group,
they're a team, they're a unit.
They've known each other all their lives.
And then Marty would get in the trailer
with Bob every morning
or Joe Pesci,
and they'd have these long discussions.
What about this or the blue one?
Little bit of light,
little bit of a line to it, you know.
- With the maroon.
- Got the piping on here, black piping.
All right, then.
What about this full blue one here?
That's nice.
This kind of French blue is nice.
I gotta say, those characters, Pesci,
De Niro, they all took a lot of time.
- Right.
- Okay.
Nothing for me. And I was like, "Uh-oh."
So I just started following Marty around.
Like, "Marty! Marty!
Marty! Marty?
Marty? Marty!"
And he was just like,
"I'm a bit, you know"
The dawn's coming up in two hours!
And finally he turned around
and he was like,
"What do you want?
Sharon, what do you want?"
She goes, "In the morning,
first thing you do is talk to Bob.
And then you go talk to Joe.
But what about me?"
I was like, "I want you
to come to my trailer in the morning,
like you go and see Bob and Joey."
She felt like, with all these guys,
it's a boys' club or something.
"Well, yeah.
Yeah, but you're like
the key person here."
"So that's what you want?"
I'm like, "Yeah, Marty, it's what I want."
Then I realize, no,
you need to spend the time.
"I'll be in your trailer in the morning."
I'm like, "What do you have
for breakfast, Marty?
What do you like for breakfast
and how do you take your coffee?"
And he goes, "Well, you know,
I eat low-fat, and like this,
and this is how I like my coffee."
I'm like, "You got it, Marty!"
We were doing this scene
where I'm really stoned and in bed.
I was just trying to help him!
- It's not like I'm sleeping with the guy!
- Yeah, how do I know?
We get that scene,
and our first AD says to Marty,
"I really want to get this other scene
in here today."
Marty said, "I don't know.
It's a lot to ask of Sharon."
Because it's a really deep dive
to get into this place of drugged-out,
deep morass.
But I'm like, "I can do it."
And Marty just sat down with me
and took my hand in his.
And put my head on his head,
and he's like,
"I'm staying with you till we're good to
go, so you don't lose your momentum."
And he just sat there and like,
held on to me, held the space for me.
And we got the next scene.
He's just like that. He's
He's just right there.
Of course, we were so over budget
and so over time.
This movie turned into this,
you know, epic.
And in those days I had done
quite a lot of blockbusters.
So the head of the economic arm
of the studio called me
and said, "You're way over.
You're way over time."
My part was supposed to be five weeks.
I stayed five months.
"Should we pull the plug?"
And I said,
"My director is the king of filmmaking.
We're making a masterpiece.
And whatever this costs
and however long it goes,
you shouldn't pull the plug."
So, once they pulled that shit,
I started doing my own things in Vegas
nobody ever thought of doing.
To keep an eye on things,
I brought in my kid brother Dominick
I wanted to give that film
a musical structure.
What if you break into
the middle of the first act, let's say,
and you fly off and this music comes in
and you go off to another place.
It was like old times.
And I opened up
my own jewelry store, too. The Gold Rush.
Sometimes I used to go along
on a heist just for the fun of it.
Casino, we had probably seven boards up
around the editing room
with all kinds of music.
I was really a huge--
It was almost as long as this wall.
And it would have, say, "Scene 70",
and there would be five pieces of music.
Some people say that your use of music
overwhelms the picture.
I like the music.
I don't know, I mean, there's people who
say the camera moves too much too. Maybe.
Nobody out there
was expecting a guy like him.
For Nicky, Las Vegas
was the fucking Wild West.
Yeah, I think it was
pretty ground-breaking,
using wall-to-wall rock music
in this kind of movie, which
which is not about music or musicians.
It's mostly about gangsters.
And using it in these very key scenes,
you know,
where there's either
an introduction of a character
or a murder.
And some of them were very kind of
unusual choices of songs, in a way.
- Yeah, I laid nine.
- It was eight.
Get the fuck out of here.
It was nine. I laid nine.
There's a scene
where they use a very obscure song
called "Long Long While".
That's the one where he stabs him
in the eye with a pen.
Very odd song to use.
Basically, it's a ballad.
And they just use the end,
where I start sort of screaming a bit.
The music is a character, in a way.
Growing up,
music was playing all the time,
and very often it was in counterpoint
to what was happening.
I remember my brother had a car.
We'd go around the Bowery.
Turn the music up, and there's
"When My Dreamboat Comes Home",
Fats Domino. It was great.
It was great. And I look over to my
right and there's these two derelicts.
One's holding the other guy's forehead,
and the other guy's vomiting.
It was actually one of
the most tender things I've ever seen.
With that music.
It was disgusting,
but it was human, and it was moving.
It was part of the experience
of my life at any given moment.
Living down there.
It's all right, I think.
I think let's see the head and tails.
I remember Marty was editing Casino.
Calls me up, says, "Spike, come over to
the office. I wanna show you something."
It's the scene
where the guy's head is in the vise.
Listen to me, Anthony.
I got your head in a fucking vise.
I'm gonna squash your fucking head like
a grapefruit, if you don't give me a name.
And the guy's going like this,
and this and this and tighter.
Don't make me have to do this,
please. Come on.
Don't make me be a bad guy. C'mon.
He said,
"Don't let me be the bad guy."
- Fuck you!
- This motherfucker
"I don't wanna do this." Meaning,
if he didn't get that information
the next head in the vise is his.
Fuck me, you motherfucker? Fuck my mother?
The Academy didn't like the film.
It was too violent. It was in the papers.
But you understand
that these scenes are all true.
We didn't make up.
I didn't say to Nick Pileggi,
"Let's do a scene in which Nicky Santoro
puts one poor guy's head in a vise,
squeezes his head in a vise."
That happened.
This is the kind of man
who's running Las Vegas.
And the more gold you see in the movie,
the more blood you should see.
The United States of America
is based on violence.
That's the foundation.
Some people want to shield their faces
or turn away.
That's their choice.
That's what I love about Marty.
He's not gonna turn away.
That's why he's my guy!
I think there's a very strong
moral code to Marty.
He is a He's soulful.
I think he's a better person than I am.
Because I deal with these people
all the time. As my wife said,
"You'd talk to anyone.
You have dinner with murderers."
And I enjoy it.
And he would not.
His search for the spiritual
was always there.
And as he got older,
it got stronger and stronger.
My agent called me up and said,
"Would you be interested
in doing anything on the Dalai Lama?"
I said, "Yes, I would."
Why did you say that instantly?
Because over the years,
I've become interested
in that part of the world.
I'm a Catholic, I'm not a Buddhist.
But I've been interested
in the similarities
of religions around the world.
I'm curious about it. I'm curious
about how they face life and death.
And this is also in the Christian
or Catholic point of view,
which is the understanding
of nothing lasting.
In terms of the Buddhist,
it's impermanence.
There is no tradition
of acting within the Tibetan community.
Everybody who is in Kundun,
outside of the three Chinese actors
had never acted before.
One more time. It's a little rushed now.
"He's only a man"
"Just another human being like myself"
is too rushed.
Take your time. Okay, you ready?
And action.
And it just speaks to his ability
to work with people
and get performances from people
who have never done this.
I want new plum.
Lhamo, it'll be fine.
Who said you could sit here?
And then you take out the sweet, open it.
Slower. You know?
'Cause you're not gonna give him any.
The film came out in 1997,
during the holidays.
And basically, you know,
it didn't do well.
And then I made a film
called Bringing Out the Dead,
about EMS workers,
saving people at night in the streets.
- Am I gonna live?
- You're gonna live.
They're like modern saints.
Wild angels of mercy,
losing their minds
from the suffering around them.
And it's quite beautiful, I thought.
But I guess it just
didn't work, in terms of box office.
That really finished me off.
- Dead again.
- Dead again!
Dead again. Yet
All of a sudden, at a young age,
I became somebody
that could finance my own projects.
I didn't know I was gonna
get to work with Marty,
but I always knew I had to.
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