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Hacking Hollywood: The Creative Geniuses Behind Homeland, Girls, Mad Men, The Sopranos, Lost, and More

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by Chuck Salter


  Scorsese, to pick a side in an endless argument, is America’s greatest living director. And yet he still can’t make up his damn mind, still gets obsessed, still gets crazed by the same kinds of things that make any creative type nuts. Is he going to get the resources he needs? Will his bosses like what he’s doing? Will they give him another chance on another project? How much of his creative vision will get into this project? How much will the powers that be screw with his vision? When does he say “no” to them? When does he say “yes”? Whom does he trust? And how in the world is he going to get away with doing the work he loves for his whole life?

  In an era when careers are measured in months rather than decades, Scorsese has reliably delivered for 45 years—but it still isn’t easy. “There’s always been pressure,” he says. “People say you should do it this way, someone else suggests that, yes, there’s financing, but maybe you should use this actor. And there are the threats, at the end—if you don’t do it this way, you’ll lose your box office; if you don’t do it that way, you’ll never get financed again. . . . 35, 40 years of this, you get beat up.” Hollywood has always been a battlefield, as rough as any more-traditional corporate setting.

  And yet unlike so many creative geniuses, Scorsese hasn’t burned out, he hasn’t alienated the people he’s worked with, and he’s generally not considered a creep. Despite the fact that he’s never had a massive box-office hit (Shutter Island is his biggest grosser to date, with $300 million earned worldwide), Paramount decided to give him a reported $85 million to make a 3-D children’s movie about a broody child named Hugo Cabret. And while Hugo’s success is uncertain (for God’s sake, screams conventional wisdom, it’s two hours long, it’s dark, it takes place in France, and aren’t people over live-action 3-D?), Scorsese is well on his way toward funding his next project, Silence—an adaptation of a book about 17th-century missionaries. In Japan! (Which is yet another foreign country, people!)

  Any man who can get this stuff financed—never mind make great art from the material—has clearly learned a trick or two. Scorsese has sweated the details of his career as thoroughly as the details of his movies. As he explains here, in his own rat-a-tat style, the man knows a few things about constructing a life of meaningful work—things that apply to anyone in the business of trying to craft a creative life.

  RESPECT THE PAST

  Nobody talks about the movies the way Marty Scorsese can talk about the movies. His conversation bounds from John Cassavetes (a mentor) to Steven Spielberg (a friend) to Akira Kurosawa (an acquired taste) to George Melies, the silent-film director and innovator whose story forms the basis of Hugo. “When we begin a film,” says Dante Ferretti, the Oscar-winning production designer of Kundun, Gangs of New York, The Age of Innocence, and now Hugo, “I read the script and then Marty shows me films. Many, many films, with many different references he wants me to think of for the look of our movie. He carries all these films in his head. He shows me whole films for just one shot, telling me, ‘Remember this image, that’s the feel I want.’ ”

  Scorsese revels in such details. He likes to speak of directors on three levels: their films, their careers, and their lives within and without Hollywood. He is fascinated by how these men (and the occasional woman) made it—or didn’t make it—through the gauntlet. In 1995, he narrated and codirected a documentary about their careers called A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies. It’s a career how-to video disguised as the greatest lesson in U.S. film history. Going back to D.W. Griffith, through Howard Hawks and Billy Wilder, and up to modern-day filmmakers, he looks at how these “smugglers, iconoclasts, and illusionists” managed to get some version of their creative visions on-screen. “I was mainly interested in the ones who circumvented the system to get their movies done,” he explains in the video. “To survive, to master the creative process, each had to develop his own strategy.”

  For someone whose own innovations are numerous—the introduction of a certain New York street vernacular in Mean Streets and Who’s That Knocking at My Door, the intimacy of the boxing scenes in Raging Bull, the rush and flow of Goodfellas, and now, with Hugo, a reinterpretation or rediscovery of how 3-D can bolster a film’s beauty without intruding on the story—Scorsese understands himself as a product of, and a battler against, the Hollywood system. He draws clear lines from classics past to his own work: Nicolas Cage’s EMT in Bringing Out the Dead is “a modern-day saint, like what Rossellini did in Europa ’51”; the fight sequences in Raging Bull draw from, yes, the ballet in The Red Shoes. His comfort with the past is so deep that he romanticizes the old-Hollywood-studio system, where directors worked for one studio churning out at least a movie a year, if not three or four. “There was always a part of me that wanted to be an old-time director,” he says, laughing. “But I couldn’t do that. I’m not a pro.”

  TRUST YOUR CONFIDANTS…

  Ferretti is one of Scorsese’s trusted advisers at this point, along with director of photography Bob Richardson, costume designer Sandy Powell, casting director Ellen Lewis, and, above all, editor Thelma Schoonmaker. As much as possible, he enjoys working with the same crew. He enjoys working with the same actors, as well. First came Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel, and Joe Pesci; more recently it’s been Ben Kingsley and, of course, Leonardo DiCaprio; in Silence, he’ll turn once again to Daniel Day-Lewis.

  “Any great artist needs a lot of support,” says Schoonmaker. “We’re a group that is totally committed to his high standards, and we understand what he’s after.” The creative process of a director, unlike that of an actor, is essentially collaborative. And some of Scorsese’s greatest creative moments have come about because of suggestions by those closest to him. Watching some early takes on Raging Bull, British director Michael Powell remarked to Scorsese that “there’s something wrong about the color of those red gloves.” That, says Scorsese, was when he knew the film had to be shot in black and white. When Scorsese was scouting a location for his great Five Points battle in Gangs of New York, Ferretti pushed him toward the CineCitta production facilities in Rome. “We were in Venice talking about this,” says Ferretti.” We had considered New York, but there’s nothing in the city that looks the way it did back in the 1860s. We thought about Canada, but it’s too cold. So we decided to go to Rome to check out CineCitta. I loved this idea, since I live here [in Italy]. Before we went, I called up a restaurant, a good one just outside CineCitta, and I said, ‘Listen, I’m bringing Mr. Martin Scorsese, and it’s important that we eat well. Do you understand me? It’s very important that we eat well!’ So we went to CineCitta—Marty, Thelma, all of us—and after, we went to the restaurant. And that is why we shot Gangs at CineCitta! I mean, of course there were other reasons …”

  …BUT NOT TOO MUCH

  “There are two kinds of power you have to fight,” Scorsese says. “The first is the money, and that’s just our system. The other is the people close around you, knowing when to accept their criticism, knowing when to say no.” All directors face pressure to make their films shorter, and Scorsese simply cannot deliver a short film. He hasn’t made a sub-two-hour movie in 25 years, since the 119-minute-long The Color of Money. For children’s movies, the industry standard is to keep it under 90 minutes. Hugo is a two-hour visual feast, with stretches that even some adults at its New York Film Festival premiere screening found taxing. “Some may suggest—how can I put this?—that there’s an indulgence on my part,” says Scorsese. “But sometimes something needs time to work on a viewer. People talk about length, but it’s not just length. It’s pacing and rhythm. I’ve done some of the fastest pictures—the sequences in Goodfellas, and particularly those in Casino, which is a three-hour film that moves very fast.”

  It’s not just a question of ignoring what may seem like completely sensible suggestions. You’ve also got to know when a collaboration has run its course. “Over the years, people change and they want other things. You’ve got to understand when a collaborator isn
’t satisfied anymore,” says Scorsese. “Michael Ballhaus—he was a lifesaver for me, an extraordinary cameraman who helped me relearn how to make a motion picture on After Hours. The last picture he did with me was The Departed. It was a very tough picture to make. We had lots of problems with actors’ schedules, and I was constantly reworking the script. For The Aviator, the dialogue was very straightforward. But in The Departed, it was not, and with those actors! I mean, that’s why you want them, but that doesn’t make it easy. So Michael decided he wanted to do other things. That was very sad.”

  PLAY THE CORPORATE GAME

  Sometimes you just have to give in to the system. Scorsese comfortably admits that he made at least two movies for calculated business reasons: The Color of Money, in 1986, and Cape Fear, in 1991. The early ’80s were difficult for Scorsese. “For a long time,” says Schoonmaker, “our films were not recognized and did not make money—which was a serious problem.” As much as critics now admire Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, and even The King of Comedy, none of those movies ignited the box office. The Last Temptation of Christ had been ginned up in 1983, but six weeks before production was to begin, the studio pulled the plug. Scorsese’s follow-up to The King of Comedy was After Hours, a quirky comedy starring Griffin Dunne. The film was shot on budget and on time over 40 nights in SoHo and did fairly well as a low-budget film. But none of that mattered. “They saw me as outside Hollywood,” Scorsese remembers. “ ‘You’re gone, you’re in independent cinema now, on the outside from now on.’ ”

  Enter The Color of Money. Paul Newman was interested in doing a sequel to The Hustler, the 1961 movie he had starred in with Jackie Gleason. Scorsese abhorred the idea of doing a sequel to anything but says he was intrigued by the character of Eddie Felson: “Again, it was a guy who took too many risks, overstepped the line, didn’t understand his own self-destruction, and didn’t catch on until it was too late.” So he took the job, as a way of proving to Hollywood that he could make a box-office winner. “It was a calculated business move. I needed the new studio heads to think they could give me another chance, finance me again.”

  Color hit at the box office, and Paul Newman took home the Oscar for best actor. As a result, at least the way Scorsese tells the story, he won the right to finally make his passion project, The Last Temptation. But the tortured production drained Scorsese financially. “I was never interested in the accumulation of money, you know. And I never had a mind for business,” he explains. “There have been serious issues with money over the years. I have a nice house now, in New York. But there have been major, major issues. In the mid-’80s it was pathetic, I mean, my father would help me out. I couldn’t go out, I couldn’t buy anything. But it’s all my own doing.”

  Three confidants pushed him into Cape Fear: his agent, then-CAA chief Michael Ovitz, the best career counselor Scorsese ever had; De Niro, enthralled by the role of Max Cady, the psychotic criminal bent on revenge; and Spielberg. “We were down in Tribeca at dinner,” Scorsese remembers, “and I said, ‘Steven, I can’t do this, I hate the script.’ He said, ‘Marty, if you did the picture, would the family live at the end?’ I nodded yes. So he said, “If that’s the case, do whatever you want up until that! And, oh, by the way, this guy over here? He’s the scriptwriter. Wesley [Strick], meet Marty.’ ” He took the movie, with Strick as a willing participant. “We tried to push the genre as far as we could,” Scorsese remembers. “We pushed it as good as we could. And I’ll never forget the call I got from Ovitz after we’d done it. I pick up the phone and he says, ‘Congratulations, Marty, you’re solvent! Now don’t go screw it up again.’ ”

  DEFY THEM WHEN YOU MUST

  In the editing room, in the waning weeks of a production, everything is on the line. The studio pushes harder than ever for the film to satisfy its box-office needs. Actors, through their agents, plead for more screen time. Colleagues have their own ideas, and then there’s the despair of the director realizing all the mistakes he made during those precious, long-gone days of shooting. “This is when you see I ain’t got certain scenes and I wish I had them,” says Scorsese. “Maybe we didn’t have the money. Maybe I didn’t have time, but if I had chosen to shoot other things other ways, I would have had the time. Whatever—now it’s too late. Let’s say you make 25 or 30 decisions on a particular scene. If one or two big ones were off, they can ruin everything about that scene. And you only discover this in the editing room.”

  At this point, he says, everything is focused on one thing: “What does the film need, what does the scene need?” In every movie, whether a commercial play like The Color of Money or a passion project like The Age of Innocence, “there is an essence to the project that you must protect. You cannot make concessions on that, the story cannot be tampered with past that point; you have to fight off every power or force around you.”

  This is when Scorsese retreats to a long dialogue with his one constant collaborator, Schoonmaker, who has edited every film of his since Raging Bull. Unlike his other collaborators, Schoonmaker is not a child of the movies. Whereas Ferretti and Scorsese can go on and on about films they watched during their isolated childhoods, Schoonmaker grew up intending to be a diplomat and fell into editing after being chided in the early 1960s by State Department interviewers for her anti-apartheid views. Starting with their time together at New York University, she learned everything she knows about films from Scorsese, who also introduced her to her husband (Powell, the British director). “Thelma stays loyal to me, and to what I’m trying to do with the story, through everything. We’ll say anything to each other in the editing room—anything,” he says, smiling as he raises those famous eyebrows. “What can be done? What shouldn’t be done? If the studio is saying this, maybe what they really mean is this. There are so many issues, it can get very tricky, very political. She’ll see me getting tired and giving in, let’s say, to someone who has my ear and is very influential, to someone who uses threats. There are a lot of those more and more now, and she will say, ‘Be careful, because this is going to harm the whole thing, the whole project.’ She gets me back on track if I’m going off.”

  “Marty knows Hollywood very well,” says Schoonmaker, “and he handles them brilliantly. I could never do it. I’ve heard them say things in meetings—once someone said, ‘Why don’t you take Gone With the Wind and apply it to this movie?’ I swear to God! I would walk out, but he just takes it in stride. His neighborhood prepared him for dealing with Hollywood. And he will fight to the death for a film not to be ruined.”

  “Thelma and I,” says Scorsese, “we think alike in terms of culture and politics. The resistance is always there, that ’60s thing we grew up with. Not hippies or anything! I’m not a hippie, not that I had anything against them. We have a way, we can tell when something smells too much of being a part of the process, and we don’t want to get too close to that. Sometimes you wake up and you’ve gone there. But then you move on, watch that the next time you’re more careful.”

  FIND ANOTHER OUTLET—OR EIGHT

  Here’s a little list of the side jobs that Martin Scorsese, who turned 69 this November 17, has been involved in over the past two years.

  A Letter to Elia, a doc he directed about film director Elia Kazan.

  Public Speaking, a doc he directed about writer Fran Lebowitz.

  Boardwalk Empire, HBO’s epic gangster series set in Atlantic City. He directed the first episode and now executive-produces.

  Living in the Material World, the George Harrison doc he directed.

  Surviving Progress, a doc he produced, based on the book A Short History of Progress.

  La Tercera Orilla, a 2012 film directed by Argentine director Celina Murga, who was paired with Scorsese in the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. He will executive-produce her movie.

  A new Terence Winter project for HBO about a drug-fueled movie exec in 1970s New York; Scorsese will direct the first episode and executive-produc
e the series (with Mick Jagger).

  The Film Foundation, which has restored more than 550 old movies and basically salvaged the silent-film era. Scorsese is the founder and chairman—and is personally involved in the restoration of 10 films this fall, including four silents directed by Alfred Hitchcock.

  There are two reasonable responses to this kind of list:

  You should be doing more with whatever creative gift you have.

  As Tim Van Patten, an executive producer and director of Boardwalk Empire, says: “I don’t know how he does it. He’s always juggling. I have enough trouble doing this one job and having a life.”

  This work on the side, especially the music documentaries, has become increasingly vital for Scorsese. “There was a point with The Departed where I was ready to throw in the towel. I wanted to make the movie I thought the script was about, and I thought the studio wanted something else. I figured, Jeez, at this point in my career, I just want to make films where, granted I’ll stay within budget, but I just wanna make the movie I wanna make. You’re gonna come to me, especially on a project like this, my home turf sort of, and then you’re asking for these actors and this kind of movie? I thought this might be the end, just let me out of here and I’m going to shoot the Rolling Stones onstage, that’s it.”

  He did wind up making The Departed, as you may have heard. But since then, besides shooting the Rolling Stones in their most visceral stage performance in decades (Shine a Light), he also directed a great Bob Dylan doc (No Direction Home) and the George Harrison feature. These films are made on a much smaller budget than, say, Shutter Island or Hugo. But with less money comes more freedom. “When I get frustrated with the commercial playing field of feature films, I go to these movies. I have had the need, more and more, to explore the spiritual or religious. Elements of that find their way into my music films. Music is for me the purest art form. There’s a transcendent power to it, to all kinds, to rock ’n’ roll. It takes you to another world, you feel it in your body, you feel a change come over you and a desire to live,” he says, laughing at his enthusiasm. “That’s transcendence.” And a far cry from the mundane battles with Hollywood. “The Stones,” he says, “working the stage like that at their age, strong and visceral, pure movement and sound and images. That’s strong and powerful and defiant.”

 

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