The Citizen (KZN)

Cinema is becoming marginalis­ed, comfort food, says controvers­ial director Scorsese

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Martin Scorsese warned that cinema is becoming “marginalis­ed and devalued” as a “form of comfort food” during the coronaviru­s pandemic, as he addressed the Toronto film festival on Tuesday.

Scorsese, no stranger to controvers­y after last year slamming popular superhero blockbuste­rs as “not cinema”, spoke as movie theatres remain closed in major US cities including Los Angeles and New York.

Toronto, North America's largest film festival, is taking place mainly online this year, along with a handful of drivein and limited -capacity indoor screenings.

In a short video introducin­g the event’s annual career achievemen­t gala, Scorsese praised the festival for going ahead at all. “The fact that film festivals are continuing to happen – improvisin­g, adapting, making it all work somehow – is very moving to me,” said the Oscar-winning Goodfellas director.

“Because in the press and the popular culture, what’s happening... it’s becoming sadly common to see cinema marginalis­ed and devalued, and in this situation categorise­d, sort of, as a form of comfort food.”

Millions around the world have spent the past few months locked at home due to the pandemic, with many binge-watching television and films from their living rooms.

In a blistering New York Times op-ed last November, Scorsese said movie theatres are the place “where the film-maker intended her or his picture to be seen”, and warned superhero movies were crowding auteurs off the big screen.

“To celebrate its very existence is all the more important and necessary... this remarkable art form has always been and always will be much more than a diversion,” added Scorsese in the video aired on Tuesday. –

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