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“Cinema is a matter of what's in the frame and what's out”
Martin Scorsese
“Your job is to get your audience to care about your obsessions.”
Martin Scorsese
“Movies touch our hearts and awaken our vision, and change the way we see things. They take us to other places, they open doors and minds. Movies are the memories of our life time, we need to keep them alive.”
Martin Scorsese
“Violence is not the answer, it doesn’t work any more. We are at the end of the worst century in which the greatest atrocities in the history of the world have occurred... The nature of human beings must change. We must cultivate love and compassion.”
Martin Scorsese
tags: peace
“And as I've gotten older, I've had more of a tendency to look for people who live by kindness, tolerance, compassion, a gentler way of looking at things." ~ Martin Scorsese”
Martin Scorsese
“The most interesting of the classic movie genres to me are the indigenous ones: the Western, which was born on the Frontier, the Gangster Film, which originated in the East Coast cities, and the Musical, which was spawned by Broadway. They remind me of jazz: they allowed for endless, increasingly complex, sometimes perverse variations. When these variations were played by the masters, they reflected the changing times; they gave you fascinating insights into American culture and the American psyche.”
Martin Scorsese, A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies
“Now more than ever we need to talk to each other, to listen to each other and understand how we see the world, and cinema is the best medium for doing this.”
Martin Scorsese
“You don't make up for your sins in church. You do it in the streets. You do it at home. The rest is bullshit and you know it.”
Martin Scorsese
“If you’re looking for the origins of film culture in America, look no further than Amos Vogel.”
Martin Scorsese
“Because of the movies I make, people get nervous, because they think of me as difficult and angry. I am difficult and angry, but they don't expect a sense of humor. And the only thing that gets me through is a sense of humor.”
Martin Scorsese
“I would have practically done all my films in 3D. There is something that 3D gives to the picture that takes you into another land and you stay there and it’s a good place to be. (…) It’s like seeing a moving sculpture of the actor and it’s almost like a combination of theater and film combined and it immerses you in the story more. I saw audiences care about the people more. The minute it started people wanted three things: color, sound and depth. You want to recreate life.”
Martin Scorsese
“There's no such thing as simple. Simple is hard.”
Martin Scorsese
“My father took me to see this film in 1950, when I was eight years old. And I’ve never forgotten it. I wouldn’t know how to begin to explain what this film has meant to me over the years. It’s about the joy and exuberance of film-making itself. It’s one of the true miracles of film history. What keeps nourishing me over the years is the spell the film casts, how it weaves the mystery of the obsession of creativity, of the creative drive. It all comes down to that wonderful exchange early in the film when Anton Walbrook confronts Moira Shearer at a cocktail party. ‘Why do you want to dance?’ he asks, and she answers, ‘Why do you want to live?’ The look on his face is extraordinary.’ Over the years, I’ve thought a lot about that exchange. It expresses so much about the burning need for art – the mystery of the passion to create. It’s not that you want to do it, it’s that you have to do it. You have no choice. You have to live it and it comes with a price. But what a time paying it.

[on, The Red Shoes (1948)]”
Martin Scorsese
“There's a way that the force of disappointment can be alchemized into something that will paradoxically renew you.”
Martin Scorsese
“No matter where the cinema goes, we cannot afford to lose sight of its beginnings.”
Martin Scorsese
tags: cinema
“I had a fascination with 3D that goes back to the View-Master. I'd always dreamed of making a film in 3D. It's like a combination of theatre and film. There's something 3D gives to a movie that takes you to another land. Working with RealD creatively was a liberating experience. Thank you RealD for allowing us to make something like Hugo.”
Martin Scorsese
“I seriously doubt that Agnès Varda ever followed in anyone else’s footsteps, in any corner of her life or her art…which were one in the same. She charted and walked her own path each step of the way, she and her camera. Every single one of her remarkable handmade pictures, so beautifully balanced between documentary and fiction, is like no one else’s—every image, every cut… What a body of work she left behind: movies big and small, playful and tough, generous and solitary, lyrical and unflinching…and alive. I saw her for the last time a couple of months ago. She knew that she didn’t have much longer, and she made every second count: she didn’t want to miss a thing. I feel so lucky to have known her. And to all young filmmakers: you need to watch Agnès Varda’s pictures.”
Martin Scorsese
“[Luchino] Visconti came from the Milanese branch of one of Europe’s oldest families, whose roots can be traced back to the early 13th century. He might have appeared as a character in one of his own films about the aristocracy, such as Senso or The Leopard – that’s the life he was born into. But at a certain point in the 1930s, his passion for theatre, opera and the cinema set him on a radically different path.

(...)

He has often been referred to as a great political artist, but that’s too limiting and frozen a description. His sense of European history was vast and he knew the lives of the rich and powerful first hand – but at a certain point he became drawn to understand the other side of life, that of the poor and powerless. He had a strong sense of the particular manner in which absolutely everyone, from the Sicilian fishermen in his neorealist classic La Terra Trema to the Venetian aristocrats in Senso, was affected by the grand movements of history.”
Martin Scorsese
“Minhas primeiras experiências com amor, basicamente, foram com meus pais. Então o conceito de amor em si veio através da doutrinação da igreja no começo dos anos 50.
Passei por uma porção de mudanças desde então. Mas olhando para quem nós somos como espécie, o amor parece realmente ser a única resposta. Então como alimentar isso? Como isso se desenvolve nos seres humanos? Em nossas ações, particularmente.
Muitas vezes, eu penso em 'A ponte de San Luis Rey [The Bridge of San Luis Rey - cinco pessoas numa ponte, todas são mortas por um terremoto. O romance de Thornton Wilder e o filme de Mary McGuckian, de 2004, perguntam se suas mortes foram parte de algum plano cósmico ou meros acidentes]. Parece não haver nenhuma razão particular para elas estarem lá. A enfermeira, no final - creio eu que era uma freira -, esta cuidando de todas as outras vítimas e de repente pensa: E se não existir Deus? Então ela olha em torno e diz para si mesma: Eles precisam de sua ajuda de um jeito ou de outro, e volta diretamente para o trabalho. Essa é a beleza da coisa.”
Martin Scorsese, Conversations with Scorsese
“Do we exist without our memory?”
Martin Scorsese
“Martin: Chíngas a tu madre...”
Martin Scorsese

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