Martin Scorsese

Sara Vilkomerson’s Guide to This Week’s Movies: Stones Shine a Light, Clooney Hits the Mud

Overture Films

Every time we think the weekend box office can’t surprise us, something comes along to make us say … really? Last weekend, the surprise prize went to 21, the blackjack movie we know, logically, we can’t truly judge without seeing, but yet we still feel like we kind of can. Doesn’t the preview tell us all we need to know?  read more »

It’s Only a Rock ’n’ Roll Documentary (But I Like It!)

Let’s spend a couple hours together: Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Martin Scorsese, Mick Jagger and Ron Wood.
Brigitte Lacombe
Let’s spend a couple hours together: Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Martin Scorsese, Mick Jagger and Ron Wood.

SHINE A LIGHT
Running time 120 minutes
Directed by Martin Scorsese  read more »

Mortimer, Haley Join Scorsese's Shutter Island

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Martin Scorsese has admitted two new mental patients to Shutter Island, his adaptation of Dennis Lehane's novel. Emily Mortimer, who will perform in the Neil Pepe-directed play Parlour Song starting March 5 at the Linda Gross Theater, and Jackie Earle Haley, who got an Oscar nomination last year for his role as a creepy perv in Little Children, will play mental patients in the mystery drama, the Hollywood Reporter tells us. They join Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo in the cast. They play two U.S. marshals who travel to a Massachusetts island to investigate the disappearance of a patient from a hospital for the criminally insane. Ben Kingsley, Michelle Williams and Patricia Clarkson also star in the film, which was adapted by Laeta Kalogridis from Mr. Lehane's 2004 novel. He also wrote Mystic River.

Documentary Auteur Albert Maysles Assembles His Scrapbook

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On the evening of Friday, Feb. 15, an exhibition of documentarian Albert Maysles’ photographs and cinemagraphs opened at the Steven Kasher Gallery in Chelsea. The event coincided with the release of a new book, A Maysles Scrapbook, which features a preface by Martin Scorsese, who praises the iconic, collaborative efforts of Mr. Maysles and his late brother and soundman, David Maysles.  read more »

Martin Scorsese's $12.5 M. Townhouse Deal is Done

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Martin Scorsese has had a good year: He won his first Academy Award, for The Departed (even though his breakthrough Mean Streets was five times better), and of course he sold his townhouse at 217 East 62nd Street for $6.1 million. Now, city records show, he and his wife Helen have closed on a nearby 10-room beauty for $12.5 million.

The East 64th Street house, near Park Avenue, has a sand-colored stucco facade, plus "opulent hand blown glass window panels," according to old listings.  read more »

Mann Replaces Scorsese for Frankie Machine

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CHUD via Variety:

Four months ago, it looked as though Don Winslow's aging hitman saga, The Winter of Frankie Machine, was going to be the (potentially) perfect coda to the Martin Scorsese/Robert De Niro mobster trio of Mean Streets, Goodfellas and Casino. Alas, it didn't work out.

But, in a semi-inversion of what went down with The Aviator, Michael Mann has now stepped in to replace Martin Scorsese (who was actually never signed in the first place). This is, I think, a more-than-acceptable trade-off.

Before you get too excited, I should note that Mann has only signed to develop Frankie Machine (as it's now being called). And while Brian Kopperman and David Levien seemed an ideal duo to adapt Winslow's tome, their draft is now getting what Variety's Michael Fleming terms a "major overhaul" by Alex Tse (who re-tooled David Hayter's script for Watchmen before getting re-re-tooled himself by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman).

Scorsese, DiCaprio Team Up for Shutter Island

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Variety reports:

Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio will reteam early next year on "Shutter Island," a Laeta Kalogridis-scripted adaptation of the Dennis Lehane novel.
...
Drama is set in 1954, with DiCaprio in final talks to play U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels, who is investigating the disappearance of a murderess who escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane and is presumed to be hiding on the remote Shutter Island.

You Buyin’ From Me? Moneyman Nabs Scorsese Townhouse for $6.15 M.

There’s a master bedroom-turned-media room, plus a wet bar in the parlor hidden behind double doors.
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There’s a master bedroom-turned-media room, plus a wet bar in the parlor hidden behind double doors.

Martin Scorsese sold his five-bedroom townhouse at 217 East 62nd Street at the end of last month, public records show, for $6,158,250.  read more »

Back to the Garden!

David Chelsea

The Museum of Modern Art (that’s MoMA to you, sucka!) honors Leon and Debra Black and (yea!) Martin Scorsese tonight at a Party in the Garden that benefits the—shocker—museum and the maintenance of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden.  read more »

Martin Scorsese, Now a Great Hong Kong Director

Hollywood has been trying to get a handle on Hong Kong moviemaking for more than a decade now, ever  read more »

Harvey's Big Gangs Bang

Martin Scorsese.
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Martin Scorsese.

I’ve cringed a lot for Martin Scorsese over the last few weeks, but his March 3 appearance on  read more »

Harvey's Big Gangs Bang

I’ve cringed a lot for Martin Scorsese over the last few weeks, but his March 3 appearance on The  read more »

Martin Scorsese Asking $6.7 M.

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Scorsese at home.
Director Martin Scorsese is asking $6.7 million for his East 62nd Street townhouse, according to the New York Post. Mr. Scorsese has owned the five-story home for close to 20 years, before listing it with Edward Lee Cave. (Not sure if the vintage Renior poster is included in the asking price).

Also, Robert De Niro--who's starred in plenty of Mr. Scorsese's films--might still be looking for an uptown place, too. His wife, Grace Hightower, was reportedly checking out the $49 million triplex apartment at 823 Park Ave.  read more »

And Philip Seymour Hoffman was seen cruising down Gay Street--checking out a townhouse.

- Michael Calderone

Cassavetes, Volatile Contrarian, Mulish Master of Improvisation

The movies of John Cassavetes are for and by actors—at their worst, they’re about actors, too.  read more »

Thoughts on Cinema's Potty Mouth: Really, What's the [F-Word] Big Deal?

Think Film

Before I try to explain why you will probably enjoy seeing and hearing—particularly hearing&md  read more »

Welcome Back, Palmer: Travolta Returns in Be Cool

Be Cool can be considered a sequel to Get Shorty (1995), even though 10 years have passed since the  read more »

Wannabe Film Moguls Come to Tribeca (Where Else?)

Film producers Graham King and Rick Schwartz were on the set of The Aviator, on a soundstage in Mont  read more »

Where Is De Niro?

The worst role any performer can be saddled with is that of Greatest Actor of his Generation.  read more »

Marty's Mistake: Leo as Hughes

At the movies, the Christmas countdown is here.  read more »

High-Strung Howard Hughes Swoops and Soars in The Aviator

Martin Scorsese's The Aviator, from a screenplay by John Logan, has evoked in its earliest reviews a  read more »

Citizen Insane

"We are in a street fight," seethes Leonardo DiCaprio, as Howard Hughes in The Aviator, speaking abo  read more »

Will 2004 Be the Year Tribeca Sells a Film?

It was only four days before the opening of the behemoth nine-day Tribeca Film Festival, and executi  read more »

Tad Low's TV Panty Twist

Wednesday, May 7Tonight, May 7, well-known television innovator ( Pop-Up Video ) and nut case Tad Lo  read more »

Harvey's Big Gangs Bang

I've cringed a lot for Martin Scorsese over the last few weeks, but his March 3 appearance on The To  read more »

Breaking the Code Of New York's Gangs

One of the mysteries of Gangs of New York concerns the moniker of the Dead Rabbits-the mythic, suppo  read more »

Gruesome, Never Gratuitous, Gangs of New York Rings True

Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York , from a screenplay by Jay Cocks, Steven Zaillian and Kenneth Lo  read more »

Gangs Looks Good, But Disappoints

Not bad enough to dismiss but too dense and boring to praise, let's just call Martin Scorsese's Gang  read more »

What's Gangs Like? Apocalypse Then

Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York takes place in Manhattan of the 1860s-a place described by Leona  read more »

Who's Master Now?

The last two standing from Seinfeld are its co-creators, Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, and the two  read more »

Who's Master Now?

The last two standing from Seinfeld are its co-creators, Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, and the two  read more »

Jane and Silent Bob Strike Back

If Hollywood is high school with money, Tribeca's film industry is Dalton downtown: sophisticated, s  read more »

This Is His Moment

Kenneth Lonergan's moment is making him itchy. Mr.  read more »

How Do You Negotiate Respect?

LOS ANGELES-February marks the end of the rainy season inLos Angeles. The air is cool.  read more »

Two Guys, a Girl and None of Them Gay

Damon Santostefano's Three to Tango , from a screenplay by Rodney Vaccaro and Aline Brosh McKenna, t  read more »

Scorsese, Schrader's Ambulance Driver … Hee Haw Goes Hollywood

Scorsese, Schrader'sAmbulance Driver

Just when we thought it was safe to return to the streets of  read more »

Hoarding Men, Avoiding the Single Girl

After wrestling for longer than usual to get into his formal attire for the Film Society Gala, my hu  read more »

Jesus vs. the Sneaker Pimps, Where Basketball Is a Religion

Spike Lee's He Got Game hurls a basketball as far and as high as it can go to demonstrate its metaph  read more »

A Cubist Coen Comedy … Men In White Meet Men With Guns … Scorsese's Cheat Sheet on American Film

Joel Coen's The Big Lebowski , produced by his brother Ethan Coen, turns out to be a cubist comedy c  read more »

Forget Kundun ; We've Got a Dollah-lama

It's that time of year when, sated with binge buying and partying, getting and spending, we New York  read more »