Artistic Pride

I was watching Jodie Foster play a game in a Variety video called Does Jodie Foster Know Her Lines?  The gist was her holding some oversized black index cards (Note: With the Variety logo facing camera front in case we forgot who thought up this game),  reading a line she’s said in one of the 50 plus films she’s made in the last half-century, and then guessing which movie it was from and which character said it.

Needless to say, Jodie scored 100%, not because she’s always perfect but due to the fact that she seems to have been smart and present in her life.  And has always been a storyteller.

Click here to see the full video

The latter really got to me as I begin to plunge back into writing a new, very extended story project of my own that I honestly have some trepidation about.  It’s not that I don’t want to tell this story but more that I have some fears about telling it right; and doing it justice.

As if that isn’t the way it always is. Or that there is ever a right or a just way to tell a story.  

Because all stories have some lies in them.  The question to always ask yourself is if you are telling some basic truth.

At least as you see it. 

But more importantly, as you know it.

Time Pressure Can Squeeze the Truth - WSJ
Masks off — for real

Unvarnished.

And honestly.

Like she did in such classic movies as Taxi Driver, The Accused, Silence of the Lambs and, more recently, Nyad.

You don’t have to be a teenage prostitute to play one in Taxi Driver but you do have be confident and a bit no-nonsense, or at least able to project it.  That’s the reason Martin Scorcese cast her in the film in the first place.  When he first worked with her at the age of 11 years old (Note: In Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore) he said he’d seldom seen anyone be so professionally direct and confident while working on a movie set.

Not in an obnoxious, braggadocio way.  Just in a direct and honest way.

JODIE FOSTER, Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974), 35mm Transparency #256
That 70s hair! #jealousevennow

It makes me wonder whether my reservations have not so much to do with justice and rightness but in the ability to be unvarnished and real to some very personal situations, as I know them, when I write about them.

It seems to me that if you have a modicum of skill in any type of artistic endeavor,  allowing that essential truth to “come out” is the most essential element. 

How you get there, well, that’s another story.  It involves who you are and the type of storyteller you want to be.   Or, truly, ARE.

Medidating GIFs - Find & Share on GIPHY
Who am I?

Being present helps because you can draw on what you recall, what you saw and, most importantly, how you felt. Memories and visuals are all well and good but they can be deceptive and elusive and precious.  But how those make you feel, well, that’s something else.

Being smart is also valuable since it helps you perceive stuff below the surface.  Though that too can get in your way if you become too intellectual about a situation because it leads you to believe that life, and the people who inhabit it, are always logical.

It is not and we all definitely will not be all, most, or even some of the time. 

Thank you for shutting down my idea. It was far too logical and made way  too much sense.
Going for “movie logic” only

Depending on who we are, the lives we’ve had, the genes we’ve inherited and the behaviors we’ve learned.

I think that’s the artistry Jodie (Note: Sorry, can’t help calling her by her first name in print, even though I’ve only met her twice for about 30 seconds in total) brings to everything she does professionally, as well as how she’s navigated her personally, very private life.

She may not have always been the “out” celebrity everyone wanted to have but, at the same time, none of us have lived her very private life.  And before counter-arguing consider what it must have been like to be both an Oscar nominee and the very public inspiration behind a very internationally public, attempted presidential assassination at the very beginning and very end of your teenage years.

Yikes No GIFs - Find & Share on GIPHY
That’s a big yikes

I barely got through mine with acne and the death of Janis Joplin.

As I venture into new artistic territory at the start of Pride Month I find it interesting to be instinctually drawn back to the expression of truthful storytelling and the films, and life, of Jodie Foster. 

And marvel at how the organizers of the annual West Hollywood Gay Pride Parade could have EVER thought naming MAGA adjacent Real Housewife Kathy Hilton its grand marshal brought any justice, rightness and collective truths to our stores…

At least if they’d asked Jodie, she would have given them an honest answer.

”My Name Is Tallulah” – Jodie Foster in Bugsy Malone

Mr. Scorsese

There are barely a handful of American directors who have been making movies for more than half a century and still working at the top of their craft and Martin Scorsese is one of them.

The rest are these guys

But that’s not the only reason to watch Mr. Scorsese, the excellent five-part documentary of his life and films, now streaming on Apple TV.

Rather it’s the candor in which the director, his family, and his long-time friends and collaborators so openly lift a veil of privacy to share his flaws, his genius, his often volatile nature and lifelong devotion to film, as well as his obsessive fervor and determination to make each of his movies to the absolute best of everyone’s abilities, especially his own.

MR. SCORSESE (2025): New Trailer For Documentary About Film Director Martin  Scorsese… | The Movie My Life
The man behind the eyebrows

Never a part of Hollywood (Note: Whatever that is) and yet an undeniable part of Hollywood film history for present and future generations, Marty, as almost everyone calls him (Note: Except Daniel Day-Lewis, who for some reason only uses the more formal Martin) is that rare documentary subject that emerges not so much noble or admirable but merely very human and very, very, very hard-working. 

So much so that when you’re done with the five-hours it’s hard not to feel you should immediately get to work on your next six projects and begin considering the seven others that could be percolating on the back-burner. (Note: Whether you’re in show business or not).

Get to work Chairy!

Yet as directed by feature filmmaker, documentarian, novelist and former actress Rebecca Miller, Mr. Scorsese, more than anything else, is a true portrait of an artist.

You meet the short, asthmatic kid who grew up in Queens and Little Italy among professional gangsters and street bullies that became the inspiration for so much of the subject matter he covered in movies like Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Good Fellas and Casino.  But you also meet the devoted Italian Catholic kid who studied for the priesthood and made The Last Temptation of Christ, Kundun and Silence.  Not to mention, the lifelong movie fan who brought his encyclopedic knowledge of cinema to New York, New York, The Color of Money and The Aviator. Even the director-for-hire who was so able to bring himself to other people’s projects –  Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, The King of Comedy and The Departed, to name a few – and transform them into award-winning cinema that captured the zeitgeist of their times.

Cheers to you, Marty

Still, this is not so much a lesson in film history than a fairly unvarnished exploration in what makes a person in the public eye we feel we somewhat “know,” tick.  There are many dozens of interviews, mostly new but others archival, including a significant amount with the director himself, detailing his drug use, periods of clinical depression, faltering marriages and unbridled fits of rage and frustration with not only his career, but his failure at life.

Among them are also a lot of incredibly funny stories about his “lacks,” often told in a self-deprecating manner by Mr. Scorsese himself.  Despite his gargantuan successes, the amount of times the director went from being at the top of the directing heap to virtually “dead” in the business (Note: His words, not mine) become head-spinning and almost comical.  While it doesn’t seem like someone at his “level” (Note: Again, whatever that means) would have to go butt heads with studio moguls or beg for money, Scorsese jokes that he’s been there a lot.  He even recounts one hilarious story where he threw the desk of someone he perceived to be a studio spy out a third floor window, admitting that right after he did it he was told it wasn’t even the right desk.

Oops?

I’ve seen every Scorsese film with the exception od Silence (2016) (Note: Some snowy night in front of the fire, as Joseph Mankiewicz wrote for Margo Channing to say in All About Eve) so by the end of Mr. Scorsese I wondered if there was anything significant I or the documentary hadn’t covered.. 

That is besides his 2024 Chanel commercial with Timothee Chalamet. Note: Ok, here it is:

Turns out there was one thing.

Ten years ago Marty directed an amusing 16 minute short film called The Audition, starring Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio playing fictional versions of themselves.  It was essentially made as a promotional tool for a new casino in Macau at a reported cost of $70 million, and has never been released theatrically, but, well, okay, you can watch it here:

The premise is that De Niro and DiCaprio arrive separately in Manila, run into each other, and find they’re both up for the same lead role in Scorsese’s next feature film. Written by his Boardwalk Empire collaborator Terrence Winter (Scorsese directed the pilot of the hit HBO series that Winter created, winning an Emmy in the process), it plays on a generational rivalry between the two stars and frequent Scorsese leading men as they try to one-up each other in front of the boss in order to land the role.

Scorsese being… well… Scorsese, even the short doesn’t take the easy way out.  Not only are both stars  full of themselves, but so is the fictional version of the director.  He’s clandestinely pitted them against one other, siding with each in different moments, until finally Brad Pitt shows up to make his cameo appearance by the end (Note: You know he’s coming at some point because he gets third billing). 

After that, well, you can probably figure it out what happens to the two Scorsese veterans.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro are starring in Martin Scorsese's next  movie
They beat each other up with their awards?

The quick, stylish directorial touches, clever asides (Note: I particularly loved the moment an annoyed De Niro begins imitating DiCaprio in disdain) and morally questionable behavior of the characters of the “director” “and his “actors,” are everything we come to expect from the Scorsese “brand.” (Note: Coined before that term was a de rigueur thing for anyone doing any job in the business).

But what’s most memorable about The Audition is just how keenly aware Mr. Scorsese is of the fact that to be in entertainment industry means that even when you reach the brand level of a Scorsese, you will spend the rest of your life, now and likely well into the hereafter, forever auditioning, often in uncomfortable, demeaning or even faux-demeaning situations.

The question is – will you let it get the best of you, or will you make the best of it?

Liza Minnelli – “New York, New York”