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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, January 28, 2007

Scorsese due for directing Oscar

By Stephen Hunter
Washington Post

SCORSESE'S PAST COMPETITION

1980 (53rd Academy Awards)

  • "The Elephant Man": David Lynch

  • "Ordinary People" (winner): Robert Redford

  • "Raging Bull": Martin Scorsese

  • "The Stunt Man": Richard Rush

  • "Tess": Roman Polanski

    1988 (61st Academy Awards)

  • "A Fish Called Wanda": Charles Crichton

  • "The Last Temptation of Christ": Martin Scorsese

  • "Mississippi Burning": Alan Parker

  • "Rain Man" (winner): Barry Levinson

  • "Working Girl": Mike Nichols

    1990 (63rd Academy Awards)

  • "Dances With Wolves" (winner): Kevin Costner

  • "The Godfather, Part III": Francis Ford Coppola

  • "GoodFellas": Martin Scorsese

  • "The Grifters": Stephen Frears

  • "Reversal of Fortune": Barbet Schroeder

    2002 (75th Academy Awards)

  • "Chicago": Rob Marshall

  • "Gangs of New York": Martin Scorsese

  • "The Hours": Stephen Daldry

  • "The Pianist" (winner): Roman Polanski

  • "Talk to Her": Pedro Almodovar

    2004 (77th Academy Awards)

  • "The Aviator": Martin Scorsese

  • "Million Dollar Baby" (winner): Clint Eastwood

  • "Ray": Taylor Hackford

  • "Sideways": Alexander Payne

  • "Vera Drake": Mike Leigh

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    Is the sixth time a charm?

    That's the question for the great Martin Scorsese, who has been five times nominated for a Best Directing Oscar and has never won. Now, his film "The Departed" has been nominated in five categories, directing among them, and the question is: Will he at last get to make the speech with the golden statuette in his hand?

    Why not? Scorsese, 64, is recognized as one of America's finest directors — if not the finest — a consummately engaged member of the film community, active in film restoration and other initiatives. He's kept his hand in the documentary world, and often segued from big-budget Hollywood pictures to small, hard looks at issues and artists.

    So it's his due. It's his time.

    But ... questions: Does Scorsese care? Does he deserve it for "The Departed"? Why hasn't he won before?

    And, most important of all, should we care?

    Scorsese surely does, not because "The Departed" is his masterpiece. It's not. It's nowhere near his masterpiece, an earnest bit of corporate filmmaking designed to honorably milk genre expectations for maximum profit. It's somehow largely unconnected with his previous great films and, happily, also unconnected with his previous mediocre films.

    But an Oscar signifies something that's clearly important to the New York filmmaker, and that is acceptance in the far glades of Los Angeles filmmaking. You would think it meaningless after all the success he's had, all the praise, and that if the work isn't its own reward, then the rewards were their own rewards. But an Oscar, particularly for a sickly kid who grew up thinking he'd be a priest? Especially someone so sunk in film history and culture? John Ford won Oscars, and Billy Wilder, and Steven Spielberg, and he'd want to be a part of that set.

    LEAST SCORSESESQUE

    If he wins, it'll be for one of his least Scorsesesque films.

    "The Departed" isn't set in New York, where all of Scorsese's great films were set, and it's not set among the Italian-American Mafia subculture, and its characters seem by far a cooler lot than Scorsese's typical crew of hotheads and sociopath outsiders who yearn to belong and start killing when they don't.

    Nor does it have the hypnotic intensity that Scorsese brings to his typical film, that sense of hyper-realism that takes on a nightmarish clarity.

    It doesn't have Scorsese's old friend and collaborator Robert De Niro (who was off making his own film, "The Good Shepherd"), thus vacating a fat old-guy role for Jack Nicholson, who brought a different and distinctly non-Scorsese tone to the piece.

    Where De Niro would have been manic, obsessed, riveting as the gang lord Frank Costello, Nicholson plays the old guy in an almost comic tone. He's in the game still, after all these years, because he loves the game. De Niro's Costello would have still been in the game all these years because he loves to win. De Niro would have driven the movie faster, his pathology would have made it hang together more.

    This latest film from Scorsese represents a kind of professional directors' conceit. All these guys — Scorsese, Spielberg, De Palma, the generation that broke through in the '70s — seem to be hitting a similar stage in life. They understand they are not wunderkinder anymore; they don't want all the Sturm und Drang on the set. Somehow, they became the establishment and decided they'd rather do 10 more films that are pretty good than one more that's a difficult work of genius.

    Scorsese seems to have drawn a lesson from "Gangs of New York." That was his baby and getting it made, with budget overruns and editing problems and fights with management, must have nearly killed him. Even when he did succeed, he was a full year behind schedule. When the film earned mediocre reviews and did mediocre business he must have wondered: Why did I put myself through that?

    His two films since then — "The Aviator," his highly praised bio of Howard Hughes' struggles to make "Hell's Angels" (which perhaps reminded him of his own struggle on "Gangs") and now "The Departed" — both have been mainstream entertainment and star-driven, both have been made quietly, competently, professionally, and neither has really expressed the Scorsese personality in the way that the earlier, better movies did.

    'MEAN STREETS'

    The filmmaker was a Little Italy kid through and through, but a childhood of ill health reportedly kept him sealed off from the normalcy of boyhood culture. After high school, he went to seminary; the passion of commitment to a higher order burned within him. But after a year, he quit, and went to New York University's film school. His devotion to the art was almost as pure as the ideal priest's and he seethed with the need to save the movies from themselves.

    His breakthrough film, "Mean Streets," in 1973, jangled with this energy. It was the story of a young Mafioso torn between his ambitions to be a good hood but also to save his less stable friend, whose survival he sees as a kind of religious salvation. That part — Charlie — was played by Harvey Keitel, but the role that was to provide the basis for most of Scorsese's later work was Johnny Boy, played by Robert De Niro. Johnny was angry, volatile, spilling toward selfdestruction at every turn, unwilling to pay back his debts or show respect to his elders. He's on a one-way ride to hell, and we know that he will bring everybody along for the ride.

    With rare exceptions ("Taxi Driver"), that became the ur-tale for Scorsese: A responsible male tries to keep an irresponsible male from destroying himself.

    That's true in "Raging Bull," where De Niro's Jake LaMotta makes war on the world while his brother, played by Joe Pesci, tries to rein him in. It's certainly true in "GoodFellas," where Pesci plays the bullgoose crazy one, and it's Ray Liotta who is the ameliorating factor. In "Casino," again Pesci gets the crazed, depraved role, probably the most violent punk Scorsese has ever put on screen; it's his pal, De Niro, who talks him down, tries to rescue him.

    That's another reason "The Departed" seems to have been made by a Scorsese imitator, not Scorsese himself. There's almost no sense of comradeship in the movie. It's totally each man for himself and the most shocking moment comes when expectations of loyalty are dashed.

    The film, based on a Hong Kong movie of surprising restraint and complexity called "Infernal Affairs," tracks the progress of two moles — one in the police department (Matt Damon) and the other in the mob (Leonardo DiCaprio), who learn about the existence, but not the identity, of the other. Each is assigned to locate the other.

    The situation itself is nothing like Scorsese. It lacks his signature obsessions and it's so intricate that it requires a felicity for detailed storytelling that he's never shown before (which is why it occasionally loses its way). His movies have never been overplotted; they're so obsessed with the moment and the psychological state of the protagonist that they instead discover and stick to very basic situations.

    It's also guilt-free. The truth is, these are probably the least interesting characters Scorsese has ever covered. None of them seems haunted or torn, no one has issues. Instead, they're so consumed with the nuts-and-bolts of complex professional obligations, that's all there is to them.

    Then there's milieu. Boston? Boston Irish?

    Scorsese doesn't have the feel for the Irish he seems to have for those New York Italians, even if so much of his cast (like Damon and Mark Wahlberg) can claim a Boston heritage.

    Which brings us to this: Is the argument that he will win the Oscar for "The Departed" but doesn't deserve it? Hardly. The truth is, as anyone who's ever won a major national award can attest, whimsy often has more to do with the results than justice. The people who give awards give them for their own reasons, not the recipient's: to look good, to make up for past failures, to make a comment, to feel virtuous.

    The award that Scorsese may get in February will be savored but doubted; it will feel more like a career salute (Scorsese has already won an AFI Life Achievement Award) than a particular embrace of a particular film. And so what? That's the way awards work.