The Deep Duality of Martin Scorsese

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  • Опубліковано 4 чер 2024
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    Most people know Martin Scorsese for his depictions of terrible people. But he also spends a lot of time exploring spiritual and religious themes and subject matter in his films. Are these two aspects of Scorsese's work in conflict? Or can we resolve the Sacred and the Profane in Scorsese's films and see the bigger questions that run through the heart of his entire career?
    0:00 Intro
    0:51 I The Sacred and Profane
    03:00 II "As far back as I can remember I always wanted to be a missionary"
    07:08 III Stepping on the Image of Christ
    10:41 IV You are the Judge.
    13:24 V What can be Forgiven?
    This video contains spoilers for Silence, Mean Streets, and Goodfellas.
    // SOURCES
    Interviews with Scorsese on Faith:
    • Conversation with Reli...
    • Exclusive: Martin Scor...
    • A Conversation with Ma...
    Last Temptation Protest Coverage:
    • Protests at Martin Sco...
    • Andre's Pit - "Last Te...
    • C.A.N. News (Community...
    • Oprah, "The Last Tempt...
    Films Referenced:
    Raging Bull, The Wolf of Wall Street, Goodfellas, The Irishman, Silence, The Last Temptation of Christ, Kundun, Mean Streets, Cape Fear, Bringing Out The Dead, The Departed, and Taxi Driver.
    Special Thanks to Julian @TheDiscardedImage for his input.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 694

  • @ThomasFlight
    @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +304

    After seeing "Silence" in 2016 Terrence Malick wrote Scorsese a letter asking "What is it that Christ asks of us?" That same year, Malick would start production on his own film examining that same question: "A Hidden Life"
    I write more about Malick's letter and the conversation between the two films in the latest issue of my newsletter: thomasflight.substack.com/p/malicks-letter-to-scorsese-thomas

    • @leniobarcelos1770
      @leniobarcelos1770 2 роки тому +10

      He could've just read the Bible...

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 2 роки тому +3

      I’m glad that I found this channel. I’m a HUGE Scorsese fan (He just might be my favorite director. Taxi Driver is my favorite movie.), and this makes me want to actually see the movie Silence (Religion isn’t my thing, and I know that the movie is looooong!). I can appreciate his work a little bit more now. Thanks for doing this video.

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 2 роки тому +2

      MALICK wrote Scorsese that? Damn! That’s a HUGE achievement (Malick is supposed to be a hermit.)!

    • @SincerelyBradley
      @SincerelyBradley 2 роки тому +2

      "A Hidden Life" is one of the most beautiful, intense, and difficult-to-watch films I've ever seen. "Stays with you long after the credits roll" is thrown around liberally, but I think about that film quite a bit.

    • @ssssssstssssssss
      @ssssssstssssssss 2 роки тому +1

      Video is interesting. I wonder why you didn't discuss Bringing Out the Dead much, though. Like that is one of his most religious films.

  • @walnutsandbeastiality866
    @walnutsandbeastiality866 2 роки тому +361

    _"You're very observant: the sacred AND the _*_propane."_*
    ("Little" Carmine Lupertazzi Jr., The Sopranos, 1999)

    • @raatoraamro1093
      @raatoraamro1093 2 роки тому +19

      Glad you caught that Alexandra

    • @DatBoi-mo9vc
      @DatBoi-mo9vc 2 роки тому +11

      I thought this was a hank hill quote

    • @jakek1735
      @jakek1735 2 роки тому +27

      You know Quasimodo predicted all of this

    • @walnutsandbeastiality866
      @walnutsandbeastiality866 2 роки тому +9

      @@jakek1735 It's interesting though, they'd be so similar, isn't it?
      And I always thought, okay, Hunchback of Notre Dame. You also got your quarterback and halfback of Notre Dame.

    • @ExtremelyOnlineGuy
      @ExtremelyOnlineGuy 2 роки тому +2

      @@DatBoi-mo9vc underrated as FUCK

  • @theohaegele9011
    @theohaegele9011 2 роки тому +720

    "Believe it or not, Mean Streets is my most spiritual film."

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +326

      “Can you elaborate on that?”
      “No.”

    • @wiseauserious8750
      @wiseauserious8750 2 роки тому +33

      The Hollywood theater near my home played Mean Streets in theater, it was amazing to see on the big screen with an audience, people cheered when they first introduced DeNiro walking in slow motion through the bar

    • @Yellow.1844
      @Yellow.1844 2 роки тому +34

      @@ThomasFlight sigma male grindset

    • @leif54
      @leif54 Рік тому +4

      ”Focus on the donut, not the hole”

    • @archiehurwitz4890
      @archiehurwitz4890 Рік тому

      @@wiseauserious8750 thst was like his introduction to the world

  • @OutstandingScreenplays
    @OutstandingScreenplays 2 роки тому +1333

    The most personal is the most creative. - Martin Scorsese

    • @plasticweapon
      @plasticweapon 2 роки тому +7

      not necessarily - a realist

    • @tanvirhasankhan4178
      @tanvirhasankhan4178 2 роки тому +26

      @@plasticweapon People get the most creative when they have a deep personal interest in the task. It comes because of the deep emotional investment they jave in the job. Office clerks usually don't love their job the way PABLO PICASSO or STEVE JOBS did. A successful artists work ALWAYS reflects their personal tastes and points of view in some way. - A PRACTICAL PERSON.

  • @ahmedlachtar
    @ahmedlachtar 2 роки тому +814

    The Irishman hit me the hardest because at the end I realized how old Scorsese, De Niro, Pesci, and Pacino are. I can't imagine a world without them, and I think the film's layer of vulnerability reflects on how the characters' interact with each other when they reach their final years.

    • @blokey8
      @blokey8 2 роки тому +50

      Also, just shockingly easy to watch for a three and a half hour movie. I went to see it at my local indie and thought I'd be in for a marathon, but it plays so well that I kept going "wait, was that half an hour?"

    • @Leo-ox1rd
      @Leo-ox1rd 2 роки тому +12

      its really sad to think his next movie will probably be his last :(

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 2 роки тому +21

      I am with you there. I don't think old age and regret have ever been so well portrayed in a film as they are in the scene where De Niro and Pesci eat the bread and grape juice in prison. All those power plays, all those deaths, all that exploitation to make a buck...and for what?!

    • @djangofett4879
      @djangofett4879 2 роки тому +1

      The Irishman is total crap

    • @blokey8
      @blokey8 2 роки тому +6

      @@davidlean1060 Oh yes. And it actually recontextualises something like Goodfellas in fascinating ways. You look at Henry at the end, commencing life "as a schnook" and honestly, he's luckier than he knows.

  • @mikeyp2277
    @mikeyp2277 2 роки тому +229

    Seeing all these Goodfellas clips reminds me, Deniro and Pesci are the ones that always get showered with praise, as they should. But Liotta was incredible in that movie.

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +41

      I agree.

    • @Rompler_Rocco
      @Rompler_Rocco 2 роки тому +1

      I still feel EXTREMELY BAD for Ray Liotta!! Nothing to do with Goodfellas, though. Remember "Killing Them Softly"?? Poor Trattman. 😞

    • @BillLaBrie
      @BillLaBrie 2 роки тому

      Crashed hard afterwards. Sad.

    • @turtleboy1188
      @turtleboy1188 2 роки тому

      Ray Liotta Private Select?

    • @TSFboi
      @TSFboi 2 роки тому +1

      "This isn't a goodfella! This is a baaaad fella!"
      - Barry B Benson, Bee Movie

  • @garrettlenzen
    @garrettlenzen 2 роки тому +363

    As someone who works as a full-time pastor and is currently a seminary student, I have to say that I really enjoyed this video. I've seen many of these films. Oddly enough the two I haven't are The Last Temptation and Silence. Silence is one I've always wanted to see and The Last Temptation is one I was driven away from as a child because of its reputation. However, now I plan to watch it. I find the tension between Christ's humanity and divinity very compelling and knowing that's the main theme of the movie makes it a must-watch.
    I think what you have highlighted in this video is that Scorsese isn't afraid to address the very real and challenging aspects of faith. Temptation and doubt are two things I have struggled with throughout my walk with Christ yet are often not discussed in Christian music and films. And when they are the message is very heavy-handed and not as well directed lol.
    I wish more Christians were open to engaging in the conversations that these movies were having.

    • @hamish_c7
      @hamish_c7 2 роки тому +12

      If you haven't seen it yet, I implore you to see Silence. It truly is a beautiful, poignant film.

    • @goodial
      @goodial 2 роки тому +11

      I just saw your post! And I agree with most of it! A lot of christian music is driven by its popular appeal and has difficulty to approach such themes. Music that has less of a large appeal in the christian community can go these lengths though, which makes them always interesting listens for me. the songs Clarity by Andy Mineo is an example, Prophet by Fit For a King or music by the band Red :)

    • @chrisdelisle3954
      @chrisdelisle3954 2 роки тому +4

      As a lapsed Catholic, I will tell you that I've never felt holier and more in touch with what God is than after reading Kazantzakis' book "The Last Temptation of Christ." It engaged me more than 20 years of going to church and going to a Catholic high school ever had. I can guarantee that few, if any, of the people who were so outraged over the movie coming out had read it. If they had, I wonder if they would have felt the same outrage. I recommend watching the movie, but highly recommend reading the book.

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 2 роки тому

      Possibly unrelated.. but Im finding your wording "someone who works as a full time pastor" interesting... Why did you not say "I am a pastor"? 🤔

    • @gold_green2001
      @gold_green2001 2 роки тому +2

      @@goodial Oh my gosh, yes! Prophet is definitely the best song on The Path. God of Fire is also pretty great, as I love Ryo Kinoshita’s voice, but I’m biased because I was at the show where it made its debut before the album was even announced. I highly recommend Oblivion off their album Dark Skies, which is probably my favorite metal album. Fit for a King is undoubtably one of my favorite bands.

  • @ROP632
    @ROP632 2 роки тому +35

    Mean Streets
    Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
    Taxi Driver
    Raging Bull
    The King of Comedy
    After Hours
    The Color of Money
    The Last Temptation of Christ
    Goodfellas
    Cape Fear
    The Age of Innocence
    Casino
    Bringing Out The Dead
    Gangs of New York
    The Aviator
    The Departed
    Shutter Island
    Hugo
    The Wolf of Wall Street
    Silence
    The Irishman
    [Killers of The Flower Moon]
    One of the most eclectic and versatile filmographies ever displayed in cinema history.
    Scorsese, the greatest and most consistent filmmaker of the last 40 years of cinema.
    Unparalleled GOAT.

    • @deantreur248
      @deantreur248 2 роки тому +3

      @Da Dole99 also "Who's That Knocking At My Door?", "Boxcar Bertha", "New York, New York" and "Kundun"

    • @krypticunlimited6925
      @krypticunlimited6925 2 роки тому +7

      Consistency is the one thing he should always be praised for. While other directors of his time like Cameron, Spielburg, and Lucas created films that have made more money and left even more of an impact, Martin is pretty much the only one out of all of them that has put out a consistent and versatile filmography over the course of his entire career. The years have done him down but he still hasn't wavered, not one bit

    • @deantreur248
      @deantreur248 2 роки тому

      @@krypticunlimited6925 100% agree, Taxi Driver is my favorite and The Irishman my second favorite, he's always been amazing!

  • @mahfuzul082
    @mahfuzul082 2 роки тому +304

    I always thought Scorsese as a very religious filmmaker. The religious theme is pretty prevalent in almost all his films.

    • @JayLangly
      @JayLangly 2 роки тому +25

      The characters pay for their sins in one way or another.

    • @nenabunena
      @nenabunena 2 роки тому

      He is a friend to Fr. James Martin, that clues you in he isnt religious.

    • @bradleewalsh8995
      @bradleewalsh8995 2 роки тому +16

      @@nenabunena uhm, being friends with someone does not mean both peoples views and beliefs line up in every aspect of life...

    • @nenabunena
      @nenabunena 2 роки тому

      @@bradleewalsh8995 you are who your friends are.

    • @flipgsp
      @flipgsp 2 роки тому +21

      @@nenabunena Nonsense. I'm atheist and one of my best friends is Muslim.

  • @blaisetelfer8499
    @blaisetelfer8499 2 роки тому +297

    It's sad that people think of Pure Flix when it comes to Christian film. As a Catholic child, I thought of The Prince of Egypt and The Passion of The Christ when it came to religious movies; my parents would have pointed and laughed at things like God's Not Dead. A film like Silence, which challenges the viewer and encourages them to ponder on the nature of faith, is what should be encouraged by our religious leaders.

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 2 роки тому +13

      Maybe we shouldn’t be looking to movies for spiritual guidance

    • @chevychelios4672
      @chevychelios4672 2 роки тому +5

      Let's have a wisdom that God is not limited to anything. He can use anything to reveal His will. All glory to the Most High.

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 2 роки тому +1

      @@chevychelios4672 so why would he be using Hollywood to further his message? It’s unlikely

    • @Jupiter862
      @Jupiter862 2 роки тому +9

      @@starwarsroo2448 God does many things unlikely. But i agree with you that perhaps we ought not look to movies for spiritual guidance. It is not movies that are God breathed, but scripture, God's holy Word.

    • @starwarsroo2448
      @starwarsroo2448 2 роки тому

      @@Jupiter862 that’s exactly the point

  • @diamonddogez4270
    @diamonddogez4270 2 роки тому +491

    I always thought that Last Temptation is actually the best Jesus movie for how it actually tries to engage with Christianity's contention that Christ is both man and God fully. Very few depictions of Jesus actually attempt to even explore this belief and its implication. To think he wouldn't have doubts or a full spectrum of human emotions is just lying.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 2 роки тому

      Bang on the money. Jesus is tempted by Satan and he rejects him. He takes the pain and dies. How is that not a triumphant story? Modern Christians know fuck all about the teachings of the man, let's face it!

    • @shmadsta
      @shmadsta Рік тому +59

      Absolutely. I believe there's even a part of the Bible where Jesus is *literally* tempted and he has to deal with his internal conflict of being a human with temptations and also trying to accept his Godly purpose. And either before or during the crucifixion, he actually asks God if he has to go through with it. (At least, that's what I remember from growing up a Christian).

    • @skinnymun
      @skinnymun Рік тому

      That is a Nestorianism (a Christian heresy). The devil tried to tempt Christ but Christ was never tempted due to His divinity. Many Christians (from Orthodox, to Catholics to Protestants) had a problem with this when depicted because it is entirely inconsistent with our beliefs.

    • @santaclause760
      @santaclause760 Рік тому +34

      @@shmadstawhat you should know and remember, is that regardless of temptation, Jesus never sinned, GOD has never and will never sin, all humans are sinners, so what man can live and bear no sin? God in the flesh, Jesus Christ!

    • @ryandozier8053
      @ryandozier8053 Рік тому +8

      The funny thing is that now a lot of Christian media is less afraid to go there.

  • @sk8adio42
    @sk8adio42 2 роки тому +51

    Excellent essay, as always. The quote referenced at the beginning of this piece was a tribute to Haig Manoogian, the director of the NYU Film Program who championed his student Scorsese’s work, even putting a second mortgage on his house to help finance Scorsese’s first feature “Who’s That Knocking at My Door?”. Manoogian died during the making of “Raging Bull”, and the quote directly refers to how the teacher, Manoogian, brought light to the student, Scorsese. In his last year at NYU Haig let me into his film program on his instinct and my colorful back story. He brought light to me as well. Impossible to imagine that happening today.

    • @jeanpaulmichell7243
      @jeanpaulmichell7243 2 роки тому +2

      Wow, that's awesome you knew the guy. I bet you have some stories to tell.

    • @xaviconde
      @xaviconde 2 роки тому +4

      The way I always interpreted that quote is that Scorsese after New York New York was at a low point personally, had almost died by an overdose and he had lost his passion for living, hurting people around him and nearly losing his career. Only under that circumstances he could relate to the character of Jake LaMotta. Dedicating the movie to his teacher he was affirming that he'd been saved by the love of cinema that Manoogian taught him.

  • @kh7688
    @kh7688 2 роки тому +372

    It's truly remarkable that we're seeing Scorsese's battling of his inner demons, play out through all his films.
    It's sad that he has to go through this, in order to give us these masterpieces of cinema.
    On the other hand...He is giving us MASTERPIECES!!
    An excellent video.

    • @bencarlson4300
      @bencarlson4300 2 роки тому +16

      The inner struggle is especially evident to me recently in The Irishman and Silence. Both ask the question of whether this character will, not only be redeemed in the mind of the audience, but forgiven by God in the afterlife. This is the ultimate question for Christians, and it’s honestly refreshing to have a filmmaker ask “Will God forgive me?”, because we cannot have that answer in this life.

    • @CashelOConnolly
      @CashelOConnolly 2 роки тому

      Hugo a masterpiece!?! I don’t think so!!!!

    • @fuferito
      @fuferito 2 роки тому

      @@CashelOConnolly,
      I saw _Hugo_ for the homage to the craft of filmmaking itself, even though I didn't care for it too much.

    • @josh3112
      @josh3112 2 роки тому

      I don’t think demons are exclusive to scorsese everyone deals w this question

    • @CashelOConnolly
      @CashelOConnolly 2 роки тому

      @@josh3112 I presume you don’t mean demons as in the Biblical sense because they’re fiction

  • @MariaVosa
    @MariaVosa 2 роки тому +63

    So few film makers have managed to walk the line of both trying to say something profound with his creative works and being successful with the general public. Even if not with every movie. We are blessed to have him enrich our lives.

    • @VandalSauvage
      @VandalSauvage 2 роки тому +5

      And that’s why Martin Scorsese remains my all-time favorite filmmaker; even when it doesn’t appear that he’s saying anything profound or significant on the surface, you can look on his work after the fact and deconstruct how he “speaks” about violence itself.

    • @myusernameusedtobereallycr2075
      @myusernameusedtobereallycr2075 2 роки тому

      @Da Dole99 he doesn't achieve mainstream, widespread success with every movie, the silence didn't make much money for example

  • @stevenschwartz7855
    @stevenschwartz7855 2 роки тому +108

    When I heard Scorses speak at Tribeca, he touched on this very poignantly:
    “For me, that faith I was instilled with when I was a kid - that changes. You get older. You go through the sixties and everything is open, stuff is going on. You start to question everything. Ultimately, it’s been a long kind of struggle - I’m not finished, of course - towards a mature faith, whatever that is. This film Silence is one that took me a long time to pull together.
    Jay Cox and I wrote the script, based on Shusaku Endo, his novel, and it took so long because I didn’t know how to write it based on the script. I didn’t know what he was getting to. Finally, I think I got it. I think. I’m not sure.
    Ultimately, it’s a struggle towards the very essence of faith, not certainty. Right now faith, I don’t know, at a certain level is very surface… the kind of thing I’m dealing with here and even The Last Temptation of Christ is not fashionable. But, it doesn’t mean it isn’t true. It doesn’t mean you don’t do it with conviction. It doesn’t mean there isn’t room for it. We may wind up against a wall, who knows. But, what is faith?
    [Terrance] Malick wrote me a letter when he saw the picture and he said, “What does Christ want from us?” It’s interesting, but it’s not in-demand.”

    • @funkystyle7249
      @funkystyle7249 2 роки тому +3

      Damn, what he said at Tribeca, I relate to it so much.

    • @quinngalloway4989
      @quinngalloway4989 2 роки тому +3

      Conservative Christianity: “The film is an attack and mockery of Orthodox Christian authority”
      Scorsese: “It’s a sincere attempt depiction and consideration of what it means to earnestly grapple with humanity in the context of faith, forgiveness, and salvation”.
      Conservative Christianity: “Then we agree. Good.”

    • @johnnykilonzo2103
      @johnnykilonzo2103 11 місяців тому

      The book of Romans outlines what apostle Paul went through. The same struggle I have noticed in myself and also in Martin Scorsese

  • @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747
    @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 2 роки тому +566

    When discussing Scorsese, most people focus on the way he potrays violence, which is understandable, as violence is a prevalent aspect in most of his works, even when it isn't explicit. But people totally miss the point of why he even focuses on violence so much.
    I find really baffling that Scorsese is sometimes criticized for the extreme violence, and also by religious groups when he made Last Temptation, because that really proves the point that I want to make.
    When Mel Gibson made the Passion of the Christ, it was a harrowing, gratuitous, display of brutal violence that was well received by some religious groups, the same that condemn other displays of violence. When you look at religion, at leats the christian ones, it is bloated with horrible acts of violence, but what differenciates something of substance from something shallow, is the meaning behind it.
    I argue, that Scorsese's use of violence is his extreme way of showcasing what he really wants to tell, he isn't concerned so much with violence itself but with the moral implications that it carries.
    Scorsese uses violence as just one aspect of sin, just like he also potrays several cases of greed, corruption, lust and pride. But what truly makes Scorsese films so powerful, is that at the end, he understands catholicism theology as that of redemption. As a humanist, Scorsese understand that we all are, to a degree, sinners, but we all have the chance to redeem ourselves and become better people.
    Which is why I finf Scorsese films to be the most compasionate, spiritual and human films out of any filmmaker. I'm not a religious person myself, but watching The Last Temptation of Christ touched me very deeply unlike any other potray of Jesus Christ.

    • @ronnyofthenorthsky595
      @ronnyofthenorthsky595 2 роки тому +1

      Wow 😣😳

    • @rickardkaufman3988
      @rickardkaufman3988 2 роки тому +23

      TL;DR- Religious groups hated a nuanced portrayal of the crucifixion of Christ by Scorsese but loved a more brutal and shallow portrayal of the crucifixion of Christ by Gibson. Right?

    • @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747
      @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 2 роки тому +7

      @@rickardkaufman3988 Yes, that's what happened and I hate it.

    • @rickardkaufman3988
      @rickardkaufman3988 2 роки тому +9

      @@luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 This is what I hate. They're not willing to see the flaws of humanity and how we use sin to reflect ourselves from a guy who questions his faith but will pay to see a film about strawmaning atheism and philosophy from a guy who knows nothing about his faith.
      Edit: I'm referencing that trash God Is Not Dead.

    • @joaovitor9673
      @joaovitor9673 2 роки тому +13

      The Passion of Christ is by no means shallow

  • @archer1949
    @archer1949 2 роки тому +86

    Silence was my favorite movie of that year. An unappreciated masterpiece.

    • @RSG_TheMonster
      @RSG_TheMonster 2 роки тому +1

      @Da Dole99 Yeah, But that resulted in Scorsese going the streaming way with The Irishman and Killers of the Flower Moon

    • @mikevalenzuela3974
      @mikevalenzuela3974 2 роки тому

      Paramount totally foocked it up with the marketing of the movie.

    • @elijahalbiston
      @elijahalbiston 2 місяці тому

      I stand by my belief that Andrew Garfield should have been nominated for that film.

  • @JLeppert
    @JLeppert 2 роки тому +19

    1) Jesus was back on the cross, saying "it is finished" at the end of the Last Temptation of Jesus Christ. He fulfilled his role as Savior, after struggling with his humanity. I wish the local town minister I grew up in, my pops, would have actually watched it. He would have loved it.
    2) Silence is, in my opinion, Martin's best film. I realize I'm coming from a different experience so I'm looking at them differently. The priest that abandoned Jesus to save the lives of the villagers did the most Christian thing he could have done- sacrifice himself for the innocent!
    3) thank you so much for shedding a light on the themes present in Mr. Scorece's films. I look forward to rewatching them with this on mind.
    4) you've earned a Patreon.

  • @nischayjitsingh4453
    @nischayjitsingh4453 2 роки тому +40

    Scorsese is a gem. Every current and upcoming filmmaker owes him. I am more than willing to give him 20 years of my life. May he live long and continue making great films

  • @davidsrq
    @davidsrq 2 роки тому +176

    Being a christian who wants to be a filmmaker, Scorsese is really really interesting to me! Now I really want to watch more of his films (I’ve only seen 4) to see this relationship with faith they have!

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  2 роки тому +66

      If you like Scorsese's explorations of faith, I also highly recommend Ingmar Bergman. The way he deals with faith in Winter Light and The Seventh Seal is equally as thought provoking and profound.

    • @davidsrq
      @davidsrq 2 роки тому +2

      @@ThomasFlight I’ll check it out for sure!!

    • @CashelOConnolly
      @CashelOConnolly 2 роки тому +5

      His belief in a make believe god is ridiculous and he knows it but his Catholic guilt won’t let him believe in the logical it tells him to only believe in fairy stories.
      I was brought up an Irish Catholic (as a young teenager in Dublin I even considered joining the priesthood,I visited seminary’s with my parents. For those who don’t know what a Catholic seminary is it’s a boarding school where they teach you on the priesthood)and a tiny bit of me makes me feel guilty for even making this comment,which is outrageous when I believe there’s no God!!!! I feel sorry for him,a little

    • @elrincondelocutre9884
      @elrincondelocutre9884 2 роки тому +2

      I'd recommend you Tarkovsky's films like Stalker or The Sacrifice, or The Gospel According Matthew by Pasolini and as the video's creator said Bergman films like The Silence or Through a Glass Darkly are very good to start.

    • @marcogianesello6083
      @marcogianesello6083 2 роки тому +40

      @@CashelOConnolly yeah yeah you're an atheist, we get it, only we stopped acting like that made us cool when we were 15. You're a little behind on schedule apparently.

  • @Rozza2k
    @Rozza2k 2 роки тому +26

    Martin Scorsese is great at setting up a character who seems like they have it all but then shows that anything achieved through violence or crime is short lived and never worth it. People think he glorifies it but in reality he gives warnings of where that road leads. Only someone who was raised around that life will appreciate it

  • @adityamukherjee3177
    @adityamukherjee3177 2 роки тому +49

    Thank god. Finally someone talked about this. That is why I love Thomas Flight.

  • @EAGalvez
    @EAGalvez 2 роки тому +23

    Scorsese makes me a more spiritual and "classical" (whatever that means) filmmaker. And I love him for that.
    "The Last Temptation of Christ" is a masterpiece.

  • @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747
    @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 2 роки тому +84

    Finally! someone acknowledge the brilliant jewel masterpiece that is The Last Temptation of Christ.
    Well done Tom.

    • @madmax2778
      @madmax2778 2 роки тому +1

      I mean Roger Ebert did it years ago.

    • @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747
      @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 2 роки тому +1

      @@madmax2778 I meant, here in UA-cam by more recent content creators. But I guess you're right, people were still pissed off because of how "controversial" it was.

    • @brotherjustincrowe
      @brotherjustincrowe 2 роки тому +5

      It’s by far my favorite of his films, which is not something I say lightly.

    • @28Pluto
      @28Pluto Рік тому +1

      What do you mean "finally"?
      Last Temptation is widely considered a great film.

  • @altonkatz2041
    @altonkatz2041 2 роки тому +9

    I’m my opinion bringing out the dead is his most underrated film. Those Paul Schrader collabs hit different

    • @apseudonym
      @apseudonym 2 роки тому +1

      Paul Schrader is great. Hardcore is underrated

  • @sunjoexys7251
    @sunjoexys7251 2 роки тому +28

    I always felt that Scorsese framed Jordan Belfort as a religious/cult figure in his movie The Wolf of Wall Street. Belfort is a priest of mammon, the religion that blatantly worships the power of money. Even when he ended up in prison, he still played this role to the inmates, as the camera sweeps over their pious faces looking up to Belfort to mediate such power to them.

  • @gpanthony
    @gpanthony 2 роки тому +24

    The conflict of stepping on the image of Christ in Silence to me is pretty interesting, as all 12 of the Apostles, including Peter in his three denials, essentially did this when they abandoned Christ at Gethsemene and went in to hiding. But after His resurrection, Jesus' first words to them is "Peace be with you", denoting that he understood their fear at the time and forgave their abandonment. He even foreshadows this insight in telling them while at Gethsemne "the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak."

  • @blindmanbaldwin667
    @blindmanbaldwin667 2 роки тому +19

    "The Last Temptation of Christ" is my favorite film ever, love to see it get more attention. Love Scorsese, all his films and his exploration of faith.

  • @mrnelsonius5631
    @mrnelsonius5631 2 роки тому +15

    The Last Temptation of Christ is the most spiritual film I’ve ever watched. Hands down. For all its faults it’s one of my absolute favorite movies ever made. The knee jerk reaction against it by Christian groups is telling: they are more concerned with religious iconography (idolatry) than an actually spiritual message of man’s struggle to honor the divine in a profane world. The vitriol was misguided and sad and not very Christ-like! Me, I came away from it deeply inspired

  • @lobsterdfw1
    @lobsterdfw1 2 роки тому +5

    I’m glad you caught that, Thomas Flight. Very observant. The Sacred AND the Propane.

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito 2 роки тому +10

    Even as a young teen I knew what _The Last Temptation of Christ_ was trying to do, and I found the protests by folks who hadn't even seen it, and never would see it as idiotic.
    They were even mocked on _Father Ted,_ with Ted and Dougall instructed by the bishop to picket a 'prophane fillum' with signs saying,
    "Down With This Sort of Thing."

  • @sator_project
    @sator_project 2 роки тому +8

    As a Catholic, it makes perfect sense to me that the Good Fellas guy was raised Catholic. I think if you only see the faith from the outside, it can be easy to overlook just how visceral and dramatic it gets at times.

  • @ViMBarN
    @ViMBarN 2 роки тому +10

    This was wonderful... always learning more about your favorite artists and their work. Thanks.

  • @bradleewalsh8995
    @bradleewalsh8995 2 роки тому +5

    Silence is truly one of the most impactful films I have ever seen. I genuinely think it is a movie everyone should watch at least once. It left me so conflicted and drained.

  • @TheBeird
    @TheBeird 2 роки тому +9

    Silence was a pretty great adaptation of a pretty great book. Both helped me begin to understand religious conviction, even if I'm not 100% on board with it.

  • @nkanyisoinnocentkhwane3752
    @nkanyisoinnocentkhwane3752 2 роки тому +4

    I really needed this lens to view Scorcese's work, I'm really interested to see how watching the rest of his films goes now that I have this overview of his filmography

  • @gabrielidusogie9189
    @gabrielidusogie9189 2 роки тому +3

    Your video essays continue to astound me. My personal goal is to make one of these half of good.

  • @alancastillo7932
    @alancastillo7932 2 роки тому +1

    Haven't seen the whole video because I haven't seen all the films you mention and want to, but the editing choices in the first half mimicking the style in Scorsese's films is a neat little touch!

  • @hayk3000
    @hayk3000 2 роки тому +10

    I've been enjoying Scorsese's most famous films this week, most of them for the first time. And it's so sad to see a man who's so devoted to the christian church and making sense of it, and in response the church feels absent. There's a great clip on youtube of Marti asking to the pope a very profound question about poverty in the streets he grew up in and how could they help these people, and the pope's response was some stupid platitude that basically ignored the question.
    I guess at least his suffering brings us exceptional art.

  • @ignasvieversys6127
    @ignasvieversys6127 2 роки тому

    Your videos keep getting better and better. No idea how you're doing it

  • @Rompler_Rocco
    @Rompler_Rocco 2 роки тому +2

    Wow! Thank you for one of the most well done, insightful, & worthwhile dives into Scorsese's work out there!!

  • @MegaMac464
    @MegaMac464 Рік тому +2

    Silence is one of Scorsese's most beautiful films. Every shot is a painting and adds so much to the message

  • @Mariana16562
    @Mariana16562 2 роки тому +5

    I honestly want to become a Pateron just to watch your analysis on Silence because it's my favorite movie ever and I love how there a lot of different interpretations of it and what it means.

  • @sayandeepsaha6079
    @sayandeepsaha6079 2 роки тому +8

    It was very interesting to see Satyajit Ray being mentioned towards the end of this video. Martin Scorsese actually played a great role in the preservation and restoration of Ray's films and was also one of the most important individuals behind Ray's honorary Academy Award win in 1992. He has mentioned in the past that Ray's Panther Panchali struck him very early when he was growing up and that Ray's films have inspired him as a filmmaker, you can find some inspiration from Ray's 1962 classic Abhijan in Scorcese's Taxi Driver.

  • @ruly8153
    @ruly8153 2 роки тому

    Beautifully made essay Tom

  • @matthewschwartz6607
    @matthewschwartz6607 2 роки тому +3

    I remember Scorsese being on Inside The Actors Studio (I believe.) with James Lipton , and he was asked during the roundup what his favorite curse word (All of the guests were asked that.)is. He said that he didn’t even like to curse (And he joked that Joe Pesci should say it instead.).

  • @TheOneWhoNeverWas
    @TheOneWhoNeverWas Рік тому +2

    The Last Temptation is based on the 1955 novel of Nikos Kazantzakis (nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in nine different years) and they almost banned his books because of this.

  • @martitinkovich4489
    @martitinkovich4489 2 роки тому +11

    I saw the "Last Temptation of Christ" at the show when it first came out back in the Detroit area. It was disturbing to have those strange people try to block us from seeing the movie. I never had an experience like that, before or since. The movie affected me deeply, as did "The Mission" which came out a year before this one, I think. Over the years I wondered what it was that mobilized so many to try to keep others from seeing it. The story showed Jesus in conflict between being just a man or embracing his role as a savior. I thought it was an interesting film and don't what anyone would be offended about. If anything it humanized Jesus, which is a good thing. Maybe the movie was too much like real life and folks don't like this topic to be too real.........I don't know. Anyway, I thought I had a point to make, but maybe not.,sorry.

    • @johnnykilonzo2103
      @johnnykilonzo2103 11 місяців тому

      As Christians we should always look and appreciate both the divinity and humanity of Christ inorder to understand ourselves as the book of Romans states

  • @Thespeedrap
    @Thespeedrap 2 роки тому +9

    I would like to meet Martin Scorsese.He seems like a guy who's very spiritual.

  • @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368
    @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 2 роки тому +5

    _The Irishman_ is my all-time favourite Scorsese movie.

  • @cheesewald
    @cheesewald Рік тому

    This. THIS is a youtube video! This is what i want when watching a youtube video. Professional and well made, you can "see" the time and care it took to make this.
    Good job, man! Have a sub

  • @kristinalfc5846
    @kristinalfc5846 Рік тому +1

    I havent yet watched the video, but I just wanted to say your title made me immediately think of 'the sacred and the propane' from the Sopranos , which is fitting for a Scorsese essay lol...would love it if you ever made a Sopranos essay

  • @AustinDallasPictures
    @AustinDallasPictures 2 роки тому

    Such an amazing video exploring what makes Scorcese's work so great.

  • @damnmillennials3913
    @damnmillennials3913 Рік тому

    Please do a full video on Silence! It's one of my personal favorite movies

  • @sunity12
    @sunity12 2 роки тому +8

    Thanks!

  • @DanielSantosAnalysis
    @DanielSantosAnalysis 2 роки тому +1

    This video makes me want to buy up Scorsese's entire filmography on Criterion. Impeccable work as always Thomas.

  • @hmidk6030
    @hmidk6030 2 роки тому

    Interesting video that offered me a new perspective on his films, thank you! Keep up the wonderful work :) I really enjoy your content.

  • @secretstairsrecords9972
    @secretstairsrecords9972 2 роки тому

    Wonderful video essay. So thoughtful and thought provoking. What a sojourn it is to discovery our absolution. 💛

  • @StephenRansom47
    @StephenRansom47 2 роки тому +3

    To see Last Temptation, I crossed those picket lines… I am a Catholic and had no problem exploring my insight and faith with this film. I was fascinated by this subject and went on to look into the book Holy Blood Holy Grail to explore my Lord even more… and all before The Da Vinci Code.
    Redemption is a personal business between you and your faith… nothing stands between these two parties EVER. If you want to be redeemed, you’re halfway there already. Martin is Motivated to do it his way, just like Charlie.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 2 роки тому +1

      That book has been refuted since mind you. Much of it is nonsense.

    • @StephenRansom47
      @StephenRansom47 2 роки тому

      @@davidlean1060 O’boy, thanks for telling me… Now I will change into a complete cynic. 😊
      The entire world is full of unprovable nonsense. Dark Matter, anyone? Thanks for playing.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 2 роки тому +1

      @@StephenRansom47 No need for that. To me, the book seemed to be trying to take the king of the common man and turn him into a literal king. Do you think the real Jesus, if he existed, would have stood for that? I don't. The man who stormed the temple and threw out the merchants, the man who stood up for the poor, the sick and the down trodden then marries into european Royalty? The very premise is balderdash!

    • @StephenRansom47
      @StephenRansom47 2 роки тому

      @@davidlean1060 Sorry for that… it felt unnecessary. No Prob.
      About that book and all of the other info out there, I just take it all in and let my mind sift the information. It’s like sniffing milk to see if its okay. I believe in the instinct to sense evil and lies. I remain a skeptic about it and merely use it to speculate on events. Information is powerful but insight is divine. In these strange time anything could be going on and several groups will take advantage of anything. For instance, how does this info correlate with Italy being an epicenter in the recent crisis. Just think of our “group” dealing with all of this. For that matter, how about ALL secret groups.
      Continue to think openly.

  • @matthewchiarotto
    @matthewchiarotto Рік тому

    Brilliant video Thomas, we love you!

  • @oliverjohnson4614
    @oliverjohnson4614 2 роки тому

    an awesome video man. thank you for making it.

  • @maxim-andreinedelcu9311
    @maxim-andreinedelcu9311 2 роки тому

    great video dude

  • @user-kv6ki9ge2z
    @user-kv6ki9ge2z 2 роки тому +1

    Great analysis. Would love to see a video on Paul Schrader's "First Reformed."

  • @benj7483
    @benj7483 2 роки тому

    This is something to really think about.
    Thanks for making this video, Thomas. It was really insightful.

  • @jasonshaw2065
    @jasonshaw2065 2 роки тому +5

    I thought Shutter Island was such an outlier in his filmography, in both tone and subject. But your framing of his spiritual themes makes even that film fit easily. Would I rather be sane & guilty or deluded and a hero? Without divine intervention, these are the only options. Great video thank you!

    • @jeanpaulmichell7243
      @jeanpaulmichell7243 2 роки тому +1

      Good observation. I admittedly am familiar with only a hand full of Scorsese's films, but I LOVE Shutter Island. As a horror/thriller fan, it is one of the very best in that genre. And yes I can see how that theme ties into the ending of Shutter Island.

  • @RemnTheteth
    @RemnTheteth 2 роки тому +1

    Your analysis has given me a whole new take on the layers in Scorsese's films. Really found this to be valuable and perspective building. 🙏.

  • @user-cv2df5cr8i
    @user-cv2df5cr8i 2 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your thoughts and creating a thoughtful space and sphere ✨

  • @Decapitatiing
    @Decapitatiing 2 роки тому

    excellent video as always, much love !

  • @johnwhitehead7693
    @johnwhitehead7693 2 роки тому

    Thank you for this thoughtful essay.

  • @MarquisdeSuave
    @MarquisdeSuave 2 роки тому +2

    Marty Scorcese owes a BIG nod to Blake Edwards for that whole sequence in Wolf of Wall Street.

  • @zsofiavera4118
    @zsofiavera4118 2 роки тому +2

    Excellent video, filled with astute reflexion and great insights from amazing films.
    A couple years back, I remember hearing that Scorsese was attached to an adaptation of Graham Greene's The Heart of the Matter, which also explores a man's crisis of faith. Would still love to see it.

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 2 роки тому

      Wow, I didn’t know this. Is the project still in the works, or did it go by the wayside?

    • @zsofiavera4118
      @zsofiavera4118 2 роки тому

      @@matthewschwartz6607 It was about ten years ago, so I imagine it's no longer on the top of the list. But here's wishing!

  • @patrickpilkington6241
    @patrickpilkington6241 2 роки тому

    Wow! You’re so good at this. Really. Really really good. Thank you.

  • @mexicanheadchog7017
    @mexicanheadchog7017 2 роки тому

    great thought provoking vid, changes the way i see these movies

  • @MinimumEffortMedia
    @MinimumEffortMedia 2 роки тому

    This is a great video essay.

  • @MementoMorituri
    @MementoMorituri 2 роки тому +1

    I'm surprised that Scorsese has never done an adaptation of any of Graham Greene's works. They deal almost exactly with the same themes right down to the Catholicism.

  • @omarfarooq7211
    @omarfarooq7211 2 роки тому +3

    Silence is one of my favorite films for both the questions of faith it raises and the endo period japan it's set in. The duality of Scorcese is something I often think about how he makes either gangster or faith based films, great of you to talk about that.

    • @toomuchinformation
      @toomuchinformation 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe there isn't as much separation between those genres as you might think. Maybe the same values, conflicts and dilemmas underpin both, just manifested differently.

    • @omarfarooq7211
      @omarfarooq7211 2 роки тому

      @@toomuchinformation yeah this video does make that more clear

    • @bangslamwham88
      @bangslamwham88 2 роки тому +1

      You're leaving out his more off-beat work, like The King of Comedy, After Hours and New York New York.

    • @omarfarooq7211
      @omarfarooq7211 2 роки тому +1

      @@bangslamwham88 yeah I could have worded it better

  • @XanderShiller
    @XanderShiller 2 роки тому

    Dude this was great 👍

  • @ParkerThompsonVideo
    @ParkerThompsonVideo 2 роки тому +1

    This was so interesting. Thank you!

  • @nigelasipa4150
    @nigelasipa4150 2 роки тому

    Wow, this analysis was pretty engrossing so thank you. I now approach Scorsese’s work as an exploration of his own internal conflict. I get the sense also that he himself has to plummet himself and the audience into scenarios of the utmost profane to ask ‘what would you do?’. I guess that’s partly why he’s drawn to rise and fall stories as they often question if the allure of the protagonist’s environment is to blame or if the environment is changed by them. That to say how much agency do they truly have of their own circumstances

  • @hinglemccringleberry11
    @hinglemccringleberry11 2 роки тому

    Great take love your videos

  • @Ines-uk3hi
    @Ines-uk3hi Рік тому +1

    okay but can we talk about how goncharov (1973) is scorseses best work ever and is not talked about enough. its the best mafia movie ever made, it literally changed my view of the world and joe pesci's performance as ice pick joe was so immaculate, its sad it doesnt get more recognition.

  • @yakikadafi191
    @yakikadafi191 2 роки тому +4

    Your commentary is amazing thank you

  • @AquaticSkipper
    @AquaticSkipper 2 роки тому

    Great observation Thomas Flight, very allegorical. The sacred and the propane

  • @ashternawaz4033
    @ashternawaz4033 2 роки тому +2

    Scorsese almost quit filmmaking when The Last Temptation of Christ was cancelled two weeks before filming was supposed to start. Luckily, he was sent ‘After Hours’ script and decided to shoot that while negotiations were going on again for The Last Temptation of Christ.
    Imagine how many masterpieces we wouldn’t have today had he quit.

  • @sleepytinker008
    @sleepytinker008 2 роки тому +5

    I love the silence movie to the core.

  • @Pedanta
    @Pedanta 11 місяців тому +1

    Amazing video

  • @jaysonakridge
    @jaysonakridge 2 роки тому +1

    REALLY excellent video. Haven't had the chance to explore this topicin relation to Scorsese. Overall I enjoy Scorsese, but some of them,Taxi Driver being one of them, left me feeling so vacant-- And not in the human explorative/Introspective/existentialism kind of way. i’d be interested in re-watching a few with this particular topic in focus.

  • @LlamaDuck2211
    @LlamaDuck2211 Місяць тому

    That's a great video! Also, I am getting a Mubi trial on your behalf!

  • @christinacascadilla4473
    @christinacascadilla4473 2 роки тому +1

    When they showed “The Last Temptation of Christ” in Ithaca, NY, some lunatic drove a bus into the front of the theater.

  • @sethcostello3941
    @sethcostello3941 11 місяців тому

    I genuinely thought that line was a reference to a biblical quote or something "as far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a missionary." Like they took that scripture and just replaced it with 'gangster'. Great video

  • @yohei72
    @yohei72 2 роки тому +19

    The thing I couldn't stand about the Last Temptation protest movement was its dishonesty, which this video implicitly points out without directly discussing. The protesters claimed it was an attack on Christians and Christianity, while it was actually a devout Christian work that took a somewhat unorthodox approach. They portrayed themselves as persecuted by big, bad Hollywood, when the actual situation was that they were attacking a fellow Christian for not adhering to the exact way they wanted Christian issues discussed. Most of the picketers were probably just gullible dupes, but I regard the right-wing Christian opinion makers who led the charge as liars who took advantage of a pop cultural target to stir up their followers and get donations.

    • @psychonaut5921
      @psychonaut5921 2 роки тому +4

      My wife and I loved the film and insisted that my mother-in-law watch it too. Being a devout Catholic, she was reluctant because of all the hype around it. When she finally saw it she was profoundly moved and said that it only made her faith stronger. If only people would just sit down and watch a movie before condemning it...

    • @dionysus7045
      @dionysus7045 2 роки тому +1

      It's probably because Scorsese portrayed Jesus to be fallible, something some Christians would find offensive.

    • @yommish
      @yommish 5 місяців тому

      From what I’ve read of the Bible, some Christians seem to act in direct opposition to his teachings. Nasty and hateful.

  • @downinthehole
    @downinthehole 11 місяців тому +1

    Very observant, Thomas - the sacred and the propane!

  • @claudialmg
    @claudialmg 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent video. I'm fascinated by Scorcese's religious approach - Silence and Kundun are among my favorite films. So interestingly what this video does it making me see these themes in his secular movies which I like but am in general less interested in. Thank you! I was curious about hearing more about Kundun however. I find it very interesting how in a way, Buddhist practicioners play a role of "victims" in Kundun, and of "villains" in Silence.

  • @jneilson7568
    @jneilson7568 2 роки тому

    Excellent analysis. Incredible controversy, hysteria over Last Temptation, too. Father Ted skewered it beautifully...

  • @pjetrs
    @pjetrs 2 роки тому +2

    I would really like it if you would go in depth on the Sopranos, David Chase is a brilliant but troubled mind and I think the whole series is taking on big themes, both personal and on a society level

  • @josemorenorahn
    @josemorenorahn 2 роки тому +1

    loved the video, I think what was missing is the fact that most of these films, not all of them, are based on books. So it is very interesting to see what Scorsese highlights from these books, and what he adds to them in terms of faith, moral, and violence as well. I love movies based on books, and I think he does it better than most, but I think also that those books were just as equally good and their own thing, as Martin's.

  • @originaozz
    @originaozz 2 роки тому +1

    I've watched many Scorsese's films analysis and his themes of faith, but this must be the first to clearly illustrate how his filmography dealth with the internal conflict of "absolute forgiveness".
    It was also the belief that pulled me away from Christianity, which intrigued me that someone as religious also struggled with that. You make me want to rewatched many of his films now. Great video!

    • @chuckn4851
      @chuckn4851 2 роки тому

      I've struggled with all of this as well. To me, it's better in the long run to accept those aspects of faith as just that - faith, not absolute certainty. Struggling instead of turning away from these issues in faith has been a more fulfilling challenge imo

  • @dkt_1530
    @dkt_1530 2 роки тому

    I love Scorsese’s films and his overall theme of Judgement vs. Redemption. Awesome video!

  • @itsmyytaccount8498
    @itsmyytaccount8498 Рік тому

    excellent essay

  • @IHAVE1ARM
    @IHAVE1ARM 2 роки тому

    Excellent analysis. Made me see Scorcese's films in another way. Thanks!