How Scorsese's First Feature Was Saved From Disaster

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  • Опубликовано: 30 окт 2022
  • Start your 30 DAY FREE TRIAL now at mubi.com/royalocean
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    Sources / Further Reading:
    Audio Selections are from Scorsese’s commentary track on the DVD version of Who’s That Knocking At My Door
    Roger Ebert on The Charlie Rose Show (Dec. 2002) - bit.ly/3fifIaw
    Roger Ebert’s review of I Call First - bit.ly/3NwG3hT
    Martin Scorsese: A Journey by Mary Pat Kelly - amzn.to/3SOmvGH
    The Films of Martin Scorsese, 1963-1977 by Leighton Grist - amzn.to/3sDEsgm
    Scorsese on Scorsese edited by Ian Christie and David Thompson - amzn.to/3W5S7KC
    The Word Made Flesh: Catholicism and Conflict in the Films of Martin Scorsese by Michael Bliss - amzn.to/3SNeW2M
    Music:
    Density & Time - “Roots of Legend” - bit.ly/3DgZYMN
    Kevin MacLeod - “Dances and Dames”, “Boss Antigua”, “Long Stroll” - incompetech.com/
    Dyalla Swain - “Psyche” - / dyallas
    You can follow me through:
    Website - andrewsaladino.work
    Twitter- / andymsaladino
    Vimeo - vimeo.com/theroyaloceanfilmso...
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Комментарии • 84

  • @livingabstraction2206
    @livingabstraction2206 Год назад +45

    Man always a trip recognizing Scorsese early work and how he honestly always had it. Rough as it was

  • @RickLilShore
    @RickLilShore Год назад +467

    This Marty guy seems like a promising new talent. Maybe he'll make a cool Marvel movie some day.

  • @edvaira6891
    @edvaira6891 Год назад +13

    I’m kinda Partial to his Second Movie, Boxcar Bertha, which was another example of Roger Corman finding a really talented young director and letting them just go to town on a genre picture and prove to the world how talented they are…he was able to get the financing for Mean Streets because of this very underrated 1972 crime movie

  • @amoviekid
    @amoviekid Год назад +85

    Seriously though, imagine how many more visionary directors and actors we would have, that would shape the film industry in ways wouldn't expect.

    • @halloweenfriday
      @halloweenfriday Год назад +3

      There are a lot of new independent filmmakers out there who are being overlooked, and it’s about time for us to be seen. I recently wrote and directed a short film a few months back, and it already won an award at its first festival. People like Martin Scorsese and John Cassavetes inspire a lot of people to this day.

    • @dylan-Z-anson
      @dylan-Z-anson Год назад

      @@halloweenfriday was that the 48 hour one or do you have another not on your channel?

    • @halloweenfriday
      @halloweenfriday Год назад +1

      @@dylan-Z-anson I have another one that’s currently in its festival run. It’s a dark comedy-horror short film called Mrs. Halloway.

    • @dylan-Z-anson
      @dylan-Z-anson Год назад +1

      @@halloweenfriday that’s the pie one right? I saw the trailer, looks like it has comedic potential and the mise-en-scene is good. The one big bit of advice from me though, from everything I’ve seen on your channel is that you should try to colour grade you footage. It all looks just a bit bland right now, but it’s a pretty easy, though time consuming fix.

  • @blownupfishnchips9071
    @blownupfishnchips9071 Год назад +30

    You definitely should make a video about early features and see what impact they made.

  • @EyebrowCinema
    @EyebrowCinema Год назад +24

    Real good stuff. Nice to see a focus on Scorsese's more humble origins - and how essential those origins are to the man.

  • @Memo2Self
    @Memo2Self Год назад +18

    Gosh, I love this. I went to NYU GradFilm for my Masters in the early 70s, and all anyone there could talk about was Haig Manoogian in the UNDERGRAD program, and why didn't WE have anyone like that encouraging US? Thanks so much for the essay!

  • @jasonblalock4429
    @jasonblalock4429 Год назад +7

    I love your style overall, but those slideshow transitions absolutely floored me. Great stuff.
    Speaking of directorial debuts, how about a video on Spielberg's Duel? It's surprisingly under-discussed these days, and everyone seems to act like his career started with Jaws. (Not to mention the completely forgotten Sugarland Express in between.)

  • @zaydc.6461
    @zaydc.6461 Год назад +56

    Time and time again I am just floored by how genuinely amazing these video essays are. It is so easy to see just how much work and research has gone into each of these. Each is carefully crafted essay that is focused and superbly well written. They walk a perfect line of bring informative, visually interesting, and being able to construct a narrative out of a particular topic giving any viewer a crash course on that subject. I'm crossing my fingers and praying to the Criterion gods that maybe one of these days one of your visual essays will get featured in one of there releases because they are just that good.

    • @Stoney-Jacksman
      @Stoney-Jacksman Год назад +1

      'criterion gods' ..Can you be a bitt less of a c word please. Thanks.

    • @ts4gv
      @ts4gv Год назад

      reminds me of the satisfying aesthetics of 1791L but without the right leaning politics

    • @jonathanmelendez7489
      @jonathanmelendez7489 Год назад

      The best video essayist since Every Frame a Painting

    • @ts4gv
      @ts4gv Год назад +1

      @@Stoney-Jacksman lmao

  • @Advent3546
    @Advent3546 Год назад +8

    I love talking Martin Scorsese. He's such an icon and an inspiration.

  • @codyeasonBGR
    @codyeasonBGR Год назад +1

    Love the effect you put on behind Martin, when you pulled the light to his voice. Your so good at making these. Love Royal ocean .

  • @alejoparedes2388
    @alejoparedes2388 7 месяцев назад +3

    Hey man what happened to you? We miss you, Royal Ocean!

  • @Munkaa
    @Munkaa Год назад +5

    Hey Andrew, thank you for making these!

  • @gabepiper8745
    @gabepiper8745 Год назад +3

    Always been curious about the making of this film, thanks for the awesome video with great insight into the master Martin Scorsese ❤

  • @teddyfurstman1997
    @teddyfurstman1997 Год назад +9

    Scorsese is a cool director. Hope he'll be big someday.

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 10 месяцев назад +6

    I can't help but find it staggeringly unfair how poorly this video performed considering its quality, and the subscriber count of the channel that uploaded it.

  • @aadamtx
    @aadamtx Год назад +3

    Thanks for the upload! I'm behind on my Scorsese's - took a wrong turn at b/w Japanese films of the late 1930s, then unseen classics of the 1950s (PANDORA AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN, for instance). When does one find the time?

  • @MariaVosa
    @MariaVosa Год назад +2

    Absolutely fantastic video - and great way to highlight that individual talent alone is rearely enough. Every film is team work. And how important it is for established people with experience to help out younger talent with bith advice and network opportunities. It's also kind of fascinating that this new director making a low budget movie managed to get a raw and unknown talent like Keitel in the lead role. This movie would have easily become a parody with the wrong actor in the part.

  • @shilstone_arts
    @shilstone_arts Год назад +3

    Great to see you branch out from animation! Quite a fan of your taste. Found you through your UPA series.

  • @nabinroychoudhury2154
    @nabinroychoudhury2154 Год назад

    Great video...A Lot to learn

  • @Azmar.
    @Azmar. Год назад +7

    Do NOT tell me THAT is where the Lee Marvin reference in Reservoir Dogs comes from 🤯

    • @neonatalpenguin
      @neonatalpenguin Год назад

      More likely The Big Heat (1953) is the Lee Marvin film being referenced by Tarantino, given some of the similarities in plot and staging in Resevoir Dogs.

    • @Azmar.
      @Azmar. Год назад

      @@neonatalpenguin Gonna check that one out, thx o/ tho I still believe that Michael Madsen calling Harvey Keitel a Lee Marvin fan will forever have a whole new sound to it, now that I've watch this video :)
      (I mean if it is simply a coincidence it's still awesome)

  • @oleksandryakovyshyn1881
    @oleksandryakovyshyn1881 Год назад +4

    Yay, new video🎉

  • @acalmerkarma
    @acalmerkarma Год назад +3

    If this was an hour long I'd watch it over and again

  • @wesmooremedia
    @wesmooremedia Год назад

    Great video as always!!! ❤ But I’ve been looking for the song that appears at 7:58 for years it’s a theme song for a podcast that I’ve listened to but could never identify it. The link in the description lists long stroll but the link takes you to a page of various royalty free music without that song and when searching the only version of “long stroll” seems to be a slowed down jazz song but not what is featured here. Anyone have any idea?

  • @gustavohernandeza.890
    @gustavohernandeza.890 Год назад +1

    Great video!

  • @user-ld7ch1er6j
    @user-ld7ch1er6j Год назад +3

    Just great. I can watch anything on Scorsese all day.

  • @alejoparedes2388
    @alejoparedes2388 Год назад +1

    What a great video!

  • @StreetHierarchy
    @StreetHierarchy Год назад

    wow i never thought the Charlie Rose music would hit me like this...

  • @SuperCosty2010
    @SuperCosty2010 Год назад +1

    ...and while Scorsese was helping Harvey Keitel to start his career, De Palma was doing the same with De Niro with very similar movies

  • @mechajay3358
    @mechajay3358 Год назад

    It's fascinating watching how Scorsese's began his own film career to get to where he is now.

  • @toddaulner5393
    @toddaulner5393 Год назад

    Watching videos on how to make a film is one thing, learning to accept possible failure is not my idea of fun.

  • @C1ockwork
    @C1ockwork 5 месяцев назад +2

    Where are you brother? :(

  • @shubhangsriram7198
    @shubhangsriram7198 Год назад +1

    i thought the guy on the left was Vijay Sethupathi 😂

  • @user-dv6zd9zl2w
    @user-dv6zd9zl2w Год назад +3

    Do more Scorsese videos plz!!!😍😍😍😋🔥😭🙏🏻

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe Год назад

    You continue to be the cream of the crop!

  • @gabe_s_videos
    @gabe_s_videos Год назад

    We almost didn’t see his six minute film about a man shaving??

  • @kino_verite
    @kino_verite Год назад

    nice, new vid 😎

  • @auldthymer
    @auldthymer Год назад

    You're telling me that Marty was not about Marty???
    /s

  • @johnstrawb3521
    @johnstrawb3521 Год назад

    Mean Streets is 'a great film'? You've watched it, yeah? The focus on deNiro's stunted character is his biggest mistake. Consistent with 13:11 it's an interesting failure, however.

  • @cinnamon4605
    @cinnamon4605 Год назад

    " Master Scorsese "

  • @Arcanist_The
    @Arcanist_The Год назад +1

    You didn't mention Goncharov shame on you 😔😔😔😔😔😔

  • @rendroaryo5387
    @rendroaryo5387 Год назад

    💙

  • @JhreynoldsPort
    @JhreynoldsPort Год назад

    4 stars

  • @mE-zx7pt
    @mE-zx7pt Год назад

    This Martin Scorsese, he's a funny guy.

  • @nathanhiggins3677
    @nathanhiggins3677 Год назад +2

    So basically just find someone with shittones of money?

  • @the-np4mr
    @the-np4mr Год назад

    Midceses

  • @tear728
    @tear728 Год назад

    Are you 1791L?

  • @Arowrath
    @Arowrath Год назад +1

    Comment for the algorithm

  • @lishap
    @lishap Год назад +1

    Can you do an essay about Thelma and Louise? Less men please

  • @Noms_Chompsky
    @Noms_Chompsky Год назад

    It's a shame he's so jealous of Marvel Movies, proly still bitter over being the shiznit until Star Wars came out, got on top with Good Fellas and Casino again then Matrix happened, picked things back up with Gangs of New York and boom Lord of the Rings, finally got that Oscar Nicholson strong armed the academy for him with The Departed and what happens, fucking Iron Man happens. Poor guy, his mobster flicks and book adaptations can never catch a break.

  • @jeffersontom8716
    @jeffersontom8716 7 месяцев назад +1

    not sure why you have comments off on the Up Series video, just wanted to say good vid 🫡