
An asthmatic child raised in Lower Manhattan’s Little Italy, Scorsese grew up around mobsters, but initially trained as a Catholic priest. Swapping the seminary for NYU film school, he then pioneered the application of highly personal, European auteur-style film-making to American stories. Working with Method heavyweights including Harvey Keitel and, repeatedly, Robert De Niro, Marty began to examine the elemental passions of New York, America and the world through the prism of his own Italian-American heritage.
A product of the pre-rock’n’roll Rat Pack era, Scorsese even turned up to assist on Michael Wadleigh’s seminal Woodstock documentary wearing a suit jacket and cufflinks. But he adapted pretty sharpish to ‘70s Hollywood excess, developing a major cocaine habit while living with his long-term music advisor, The Band frontman Robbie Robertson, whose work he immortalised in the magnificent rock-doc The
Last Waltz.
Beginning with his 1980 masterpiece Raging Bull, Scorsese’s last quarter-century has produced peak after peak, from operatic gangster sagas to low-budget black comedies, historical epics and religious blockbusters. Having just completed his new Howard Hughes biopic The Aviator, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Marty continues to tell ambitiously complex American stories on a grand canvas. His current pet projects include long-cherished Dean Martin and Mick Jagger biographies. Who better than a cinematic genius with more than a little sympathy for the Devil?

Drawing on his Little Italy youth, Scorsese’s restless, punchy breakthrough feature brought European social realism to the American gangster genre. Harvey Keitel and Robert De Niro co-star as volatile, troubled, sin-obsessed Italian-American street toughs. The director makes a macabre cameo as an angel of death.

Based on Paul Schrader's bleak script, Scorsese’s brooding nocturnal milestone stars De Niro as Travis Bickle, an alienated sociopath bent on rescuing Jodie Foster’s teenage prostitute from the "scum" on Manhattan's streets. Features another memorable Marty cameo, substituting for an actor who failed to show.

Robert De Niro persuaded Scorsese to direct him in this emotionally wrenching, Oscar-winning biography of boxer Jake LaMotta. Shot in sumptuous monochrome, it is less a sports drama than a Shakespearean study in machismo and redemption. Widely seen as Marty’s masterpiece.

A commercial flop only later hailed for its prophetic genius, Scorsese’s bruise-black comedy about deranged celebrity worship stars De Niro as a lowly armchair comedian and Jerry Lewis as the sour TV chat-show host he stalks and kidnaps. Britpunk legends The Clash have a small cameo as “street scum”.

Years before The Sopranos, Scorsese conducted this magnificent, generation-spanning soap opera about the rise and fall of a real-life mafia foot soldier who eventually informed on his bosses. Ray Liotta holds his own against De Niro and Joe Pesci while Marty savours the rich social fabric of Mob life.


















