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Performing Arts History & Criticism

Hollywood's New Yorker

The Making of Martin Scorsese

by (author) Marc Raymond

Publisher
State University of New York Press
Initial publish date
Jan 2014
Category
History & Criticism, Entertainment & Performing Arts, Individual Director
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781438445724
    Publish Date
    Jan 2014
    List Price
    $45.95
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781438445717
    Publish Date
    Apr 2013
    List Price
    $128.95

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Description

A fresh look at the director's career.

When Martin Scorsese finally won an Academy Award in 2007, for The Departed, it was widely viewed as the crowning achievement of a remarkable film career. But what it also represented was an acceptance by Hollywood of a man who became a prestigious auteur precisely because of his status as an outsider from New York. For someone with a high-culture reputation like Scorsese's, this middlebrow sign of respectability was not about cultural standing; rather, it was about using and even sacrificing his distinctive outsider status for a greater share of industry authority within the world of Hollywood.

In Hollywood's New Yorker, Marc Raymond offers a fresh look at Scorsese's career in relation to the critical and social environment of the past fifty years. He traces Scorsese's career and films through his association with various cultural institutions, from his role as a student and instructor at New York University, to his move to Hollywood and his relationship with the studio system, to his relationship with prestigious institutions like the Museum of Modern Art. This sociological approach to film authorship provides analysis of previously overlooked Scorsese projects, particularly his documentary work, and gives importance to the role his extracurricular activities in the film preservation movement have played in the rise of his reputation.

Hollywood's New Yorker places Scorsese and his films firmly within the various time periods of his career and compares the director with his peers, from fellow New Yorkers like Brian De Palma and Woody Allen to New Hollywood movie brats such as Francis Ford Coppola and Steven Spielberg. The result is a complete picture of Scorsese and the post?World War II American film culture he has both shaped and been shaped by.

About the author

Contributor Notes

Marc Raymond is Lecturer at the International Language Center at Gachon University in Seongnam, South Korea.

Editorial Reviews

"Arriving at a moment wherein Scorsese's relevance as anything more than a contemporary commercial Hollywood filmmaker is frequently doubted, Raymond's book repositions the director as a culturally significant figure, and in doing so broadens our understanding of his films as well as the various vicissitudes of authorship in today's Hollywood context." — Screening the Past