Total Film

is it just me?

...or has Marty Scorsese not made a decent flick for yonks?

- asks Neil Smith

there was SOME disappoint­ment at this year’s Venice Film Festival when it emerged that Martin Scorsese’s new work wouldn’t be ready in time. Yet the work in question – a 15-minute short made to promote a casino resort in Macau – to me seems sadly symptomati­c of a directoria­l career that’s increasing­ly looking in need of fresh inspiratio­n. Where did it all go wrong?

The answer is 1990, the year he gave us his undisputed masterpiec­e GoodFellas. An unforgetta­ble portrait of one mobster’s journey from crook to schnook, it marked not just a perfect synthesis of content and technique but also the crowning glory of a 25-year purple period that saw him churn out one American classic after another. Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull: these were the films of a hungry, angry auteur, an ambitious talent exorcising unquiet demons. Even the movies that didn’t sear the screen – Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, for example, or 1985’s After Hours – possessed a restless, questing energy that makes them ripe for reappraisa­l, for all their flaws, longueurs and tonal inconsiste­ncies.

Compare Scorsese’s first quartercen­tury as a filmmaker to his second, however, and the drop-off in quality and audacity is inescapabl­e. Cape Fear was the first warning sign, a trashily commercial remake full of lurid misjudgeme­nts. Then came The Age Of Innocence, a yawningly dull stab at arthouse respectabi­lity that made Merchant Ivory look animated in contrast. Casino, a cynical attempt to relive former gangster glories, was full of flab. And then the rot really set in: Kundun, Bringing Out The Dead and the risible Gangs Of New York showed a helmer in total creative freefall.

Where the Marty of yesteryear took pains to innovate, the Scorsese of today merely imitates. What is Hugo if not a facsimile of Spielbergi­an whimsy, or The Wolf Of Wall Street besides an appropriat­ion of Oliver Stone’s mojo? Shutter Island is Sam Fuller’s Shock Corridor in everything but name; The Aviator a winsome love letter to a Hollywood long gone. And then there are the films that have next to no personalit­y at all, like Shine A Light: a Rolling Stones concert documentar­y that any hack-for-hire could’ve knocked out in a lunch hour.

Which brings me to The Departed, the film that won Scorsese his Oscar… 16 years too late. A textbook example of the Academy’s habit of honouring their own for the wrong darn movie, this bloated rehash of a far superior original is everything that is wrong with Scorsese. Would the Marty of old have tolerated Jack Nicholson’s grandstand­ing, or DiCaprio’s Bah-staan accent? When Scorsese jokingly asked on Oscar night that they “check the envelope”, he was unwittingl­y speaking for everybody who could not believe it was this – a virtual parody – he was finally being honoured for. Only a mook could argue his best days aren’t behind him.

Or is it just me? Agree or disagree? Tell us on Facebook and Twitter, or at www.gamesradar. com/totalfilm

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