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I suppose I should post on an ILX Scorsese thread.
Still the same film to me as when I sat in an almost-empty theatre in 1980 (probably an afternoon screening close to its opening) at the age of 19. Three or four minutes I don't like, wouldn't change a second elsewhere.
The two times I think Scorsese overreaches, trying clumsily to get at something beyond primal: 1) the last Robinson fight where he slows everything to a halt before La Motta gets pummeled. I think the choreography of the fight scenes is usually beautiful, but that sequence loses the rhythm altogether; 2) La Motta's self-flagellation inside the Dade County prison. I've never liked either passage, and I look away during Dade County.
Things I still find very moving: 1) the home-movie sequence, intercut with stills from a procession of fights. I was at a remembrance beforehand today for my best friend's mom, and he'd made up a collage of home movies dating back to the early '60s that was shown. Old home movies are very powerful; 2) When Jake finally wins the title against Marcel Cerdan--the way the referee walks over in slow motion to let La Motta know the fight's over, La Motta breaking down as he lifts his arms over his head; 3) The last scene between Jake and Joey in the parking lot, Joey agreeing to get together at some point; 4) The parable at the end, followed by the dedication to Haig P. Manoogian: "With Love and resolution, Marty."
I liked what Marcus wrote in his '80s wrap-up in Film Comment: "There isn’t a false moment in this good story, and Robert De Niro turns other actors into fools. But the language of the movie was made for video, or laser disc: you get to try to break the dreamlike, unutterably brutal fight scenes down to single frames, to demystify their force, to expose their artifice, and it can’t be done. You find yourself staring at Francis Bacon paintings, paintings so strong you can hardly bear to start the film again." (Laser discs!) I've also always remembered this from Final Cut, an in-house screening of the film for some executives (was able to cut-and-paste from online):
The lights came up slowly in a room full of silence, as if the viewers had lost all power of speech. Nor was there the customary applause. Martin Scorsese leaned against the back wall of the screening room as if cowering from the silence. Then Andy Albeck rose from his seat, marched briskly to him, shook his hand just once, and said quietly, "Mr. Scorsese, you are an Artist " He turned and left and walked back to 729 and to work.
― clemenza, Monday, 29 May 2023 05:31 (one year ago) link
Thanks. Guessing you're the same Jay earlier in the thread?
I was thinking about the whole "toxic masculinity" thing last night (I use the quotations not because the concept isn't real, just because I hate using clichés), about whether it's about the thing or the thing itself. If I had to choose one or the other, I'd easily go with the first--I can't believe anyone could come away from the film thinking Scorsese is celebrating La Motta's violent brutishness--but I'd rather not choose. It just is--it's art. It's as mysterious as the parable that ends the film.
― clemenza, Monday, 29 May 2023 15:52 (one year ago) link
I can see Scorsese saying he was meaning to criticize not celebrate La Motta's toxic masculinity in Raging Bull, but he made it the focus and iconic center of a very glamorous movie, like with The Wolf of Wall Street
it doesn't cut it with me
― Dan S, Friday, 9 June 2023 00:31 (one year ago) link
Also, if your intention is to criticize something, how could it not be at the center of the film? If he had relegated it to the margins, made La Motta less brutish, he'd be guilty of soft-pedalling that.
― clemenza, Friday, 9 June 2023 01:39 (one year ago) link
1) the last Robinson fight where he slows everything to a halt before La Motta gets pummeled. I think the choreography of the fight scenes is usually beautiful, but that sequence loses the rhythm altogether;
strongly agree with this criticism, it feels like he wants to be, idk, maybe peckinpah in that moment? but it's all wrong