Over 50 years into Martin Scorsese’s career, a picture is emerging from the mosaic of movies he has made. “His larger project is a portrait of America,” says fellow filmmaker Rebecca Miller. “It is one of the greatest portraits of America there has ever been – and from so many different points of view.”
So what does his portrait of America over the last half century tell us about the America of today?
“How has it changed is maybe not the question. It’s how has it not changed. Some of his observations of truths – I would say he’s primarily a very truthful artist – has to do with power, the forming and protection of groups, friendship and betrayal – these are elements which hold true still now, because they’re eternal.”
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Scorsese is a director who feels familiar because his work is so ubiquitous and so influential, but through Miller’s documentary series Mr Scorsese, a fresh portrait of the artist emerges. Decade by decade, this definitive retrospective released this week reveals that the passions that drove him as a young maverick outsider in the industry are still motivating him into his 80s.
The seed of the series germinated through the pandemic. The initial idea was a single film but grew into five episodes. “There was a version where we cut his childhood into 15 minutes, and it was just so truncated,” Miller explains. Childhood reminiscences are key in the documentary as it becomes clear just how significant his early years growing up on the mean streets of Manhattan, surrounded by not very good fellas, would be.