Films of the 2000s: Gangs of New York, The Aviator, and The Departed

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Also known as: Martin Marcantonio Luciano Scorsese
Quick Facts
Original name:
Martin Marcantonio Luciano Scorsese
Born:
November 17, 1942, Queens, New York, U.S. (age 82)
Awards And Honors:
Praemium Imperiale (2016)
Emmy Award (2011)
Cecil B. DeMille Award (2010)
Academy Award (2007)
Kennedy Center Honors (2007)
Grammy Award (2005)
Academy Award (2007): Directing
Cecil B. DeMille Award (2010)
Emmy Award (2012): Outstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming
Emmy Award (2012): Outstanding Nonfiction Special
Emmy Award (2011): Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series
Golden Globe Award (2012): Best Director - Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (2007): Best Director - Motion Picture
Golden Globe Award (2003): Best Director - Motion Picture
Grammy Award (2006): Best Long Form Music Video
Married To:
Barbara De Fina (1985–1991)
Laraine Brennan (1965–?)
Helen Morris Scorsese (1999–present)
Julia Cameron (1975–1977)
Isabella Rossellini (1979–1982)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"Raging Bull" (1980)
"Quiz Show" (1994)
"30 Rock" (2009)
"Hollywood Green Cards: Doggy Date" (2014)
"Jimmy Kimmel Live!" (2014)
"Search and Destroy" (1995)
"Shark Tale" (2004)
"Campus Code" (2015)
"Cannonball!" (1976)
"Dreams" (1990)
"Bringing Out the Dead" (1999)
"The King of Comedy" (1982)
"Curb Your Enthusiasm" (2002)
"The Muse" (1999)
"Il pap'occhio" (1980)
"Guilty by Suspicion" (1991)
"Taxi Driver" (1976)
"'Round Midnight" (1986)
"Entourage" (2008)
Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
"New York, New York" (1977)
"Italianamerican" (1974)
"Boxcar Bertha" (1972)
"Hugo" (2011)
"Taxi Driver" (1976)
"Vinyl" (2016)
"Gangs of New York" *(2002)
"The Blues" (2003)
"A Letter to Elia" (2010)
"Shine a Light" (2008)
"George Harrison: Living in the Material World" (2011)
"After Hours" (1985)
"The Last Temptation of Christ" (1988)
"Raging Bull" (1980)
"Public Speaking" (2010)
"The King of Ads" (1991)
"New York City... Melting Point" (1966)
"The Wolf of Wall Street" (2013)
"Street Scenes" (1970)
"The Departed" (2006)
"Shutter Island" (2010)
"Goodfellas" (1990)
"The Age of Innocence" (1993)
"The Aviator" (2004)
"Cape Fear" (1991)
"Mean Streets" (1973)
"Silence" (2016)
"Century of Cinema" (1995)
"American Masters" (2005)
"Bringing Out the Dead" (1999)
"My Voyage to Italy" (1999)
"The King of Comedy" (1982)
"American Boy: A Profile of - Steven Prince" (1978)
"Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese" (2019)
"The Irishman" (2019)
"The 50 Year Argument" (2014)
"New York Stories" (1989)
"The Last Waltz" (1978)
"Who's That Knocking at My Door" (1967)
"Amazing Stories" (1986)
"Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" (1974)
"The Color of Money" (1986)
"Casino" (1995)
"Kundun" (1997)
"Boardwalk Empire" (2010)
Movies/Tv Shows (Film Editor):
"New York City... Melting Point" (1966)
"Reflections" (1969)
"Woodstock" (1970)
Movies/Tv Shows (Writing/Creator):
"A Letter to Elia" (2010)
"My Voyage to Italy" (1999)
"Goodfellas" (1990)
"Obsessions" (1969)
"Casino" (1995)
"Silence" (2016)
"New York City... Melting Point" (1966)
"Century of Cinema" (1995)
"Mean Streets" (1973)
"Who's That Knocking at My Door" (1967)
"Vinyl" (2016)
"The Age of Innocence" (1993)

Gangs of New York (2002) was a project Scorsese had sought to film since the late 1970s. It had an epic canvas: the chaotic peril of 1860s New York City, culminating in the Draft Riot of 1863. Leonardo DiCaprio (in the first of a number of films he did with Scorsese) starred as Amsterdam Vallon, a young man seeking to avenge the death of his father at the hands of Bill the Butcher (Day-Lewis at his most mordant), a kind of godfather to the unruly Five Points mobs. Gangs of New York was nominated for 10 Oscars, including nods for best picture and director.

The Aviator (2004) was a biopic of aviator and movie producer Howard Hughes, and Scorsese lavishly re-created 1930s and ’40s Hollywood. As Hughes, DiCaprio gave an appropriately intense interpretation of a man driven by both his own genius and an acute case of obsessive-compulsive disorder. The film was a box-office success and garnered 11 Oscar nominations, including best picture and director. Cate Blanchett picked up the award for best supporting actress for her spot-on performance as silver-screen legend Katharine Hepburn. Scorsese and cinematographer Robert Richardson (who also won an Oscar that year for his work on the film) did impressive work in replicating the various stages of color-film technology that evolved over the years in which the film was set.

Scorsese then made The Departed (2006), which was based on the Hong Kong action film Mou gaan dou (Infernal Affairs, 2002). DiCaprio and Matt Damon starred as doppelgängers who live on opposite sides of the law—Billy (DiCaprio) as an undercover cop assigned the highly perilous task of penetrating the organization of crime lord Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson, submitting one of his showiest performances as a psychopathic mastermind based on Boston mobster Whitey Bulger) and Colin (Damon) as a Boston detective raised since childhood by Frank to become his mole. The film became one of Scorsese’s biggest box-office hits, and it enabled him to finally win an Oscar for best director. The film itself also won for best picture.

In the 2000s Scorsese also directed a pair of musical documentaries. No Direction Home: Bob Dylan (2005) was a wide-ranging exploration of the iconic singer-songwriter, and the concert film Shine a Light (2008) starred the Rolling Stones.