Raging
Bull is
not a film about boxing but about a man with paralyzing jealousy and
sexual insecurity, for whom being punished in the ring serves as
confession, penance and absolution. It is no accident that the
screenplay never concerns itself with fight strategy. For Jake
LaMotta, what happens during a fight is controlled not by tactics but
by his fears and drives. Martin
Scorsese's
1980 film was voted in three polls as the greatest film of the
decade, but when he was making it, he seriously wondered if it would
ever be released. Scorsese and De Niro had been reading the
autobiography of Jake LaMotta, the middleweight champion whose duels
with Sugar Ray Robinson were a legend in the 1940s and '50s. The
movie won Oscars for De Niro and also was nominated for best picture,
director, sound, and supporting actor (Joe
Pesci), actress
(Cathy Moriarty). It lost for best picture to Ordinary
People,
but time has rendered a different verdict.
Showing posts with label Robert DeNiro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert DeNiro. Show all posts
Monday, December 3, 2012
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Review: Taxi Driver
Martin
Scorsese is one of the most accomplished directors in the history of
Hollywood, and Taxi Driver is
his masterpiece. It was robbed of the Academy Award by Rocky
in 1976 because the Academy is
more likely to award feel-good movies rather than the dark
introspective nightmare that is Taxi Driver. The
movie takes place in New York, but it's not a movie about the city,
it's about the way the a man views the city and how it damages him.
Like many of Scorsese's films, there really isn't any cohesive plot,
it just sort of wanders from one idea to another giving us an idea of
who Travis Bickle is and why he does the things he does, how the city
transforms him from a just a taxi driver who writes letters to his
parents on their anniversary to a killer on a rampage.
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