Martin Scorsese is no doubt one of the greatest film makers
of all time based on awards, critiques and film fans alike. Three of Scorsese’s
films made it onto the American Film Institute’s “The 100 Best Films of All
Time” list (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull and Goodfellas). Now obviously many things
make him a great, his plots are deep and enthralling, he always
seems to get the most out of his actors and his staging of shots are
unbelievably good. However of all of the things Scorsese does well, I am going
to talk about his use of lighting and staging of shots in Raging Bull, Taxi
Driver and The Departed.
Now the focus/point of all three films are very different
however Scorsese uses the same elements to achieve these effects. In Raging
Bull, the point is to depict the emotional trauma of Jake La Matta’s life. Taxi
Driver deals with social issues of Prostitution, Mental health, and the scum
that inhabits the night life in the rough parts of NYC. And The Departed shows
the workings of organized crime and the holes in our justice system.
Scorsese’s use of shading and lighting throughout all of his
works is more than just a way to depict the emotions in each scene; they display
deeper meanings in the overall theme of the story. I think that the most evident of these is in The Departed. In the final shot we see the justice building of
Boston glowing in the vast sunlight and a rat on a rail covered in shadow
perfectly in line with the dome of the building. In a story all about rats in
crime and the law, its sums up the movie. But the lighting ads more than that, it
becomes slightly political in nature just based on the shading. We see the
Police as a place that stands for clean, wholesome, law-abiding people by
definition. Hence the building is bathed in sunlight. However, organized crime
doesn’t survive without rats in the government and that is what you don’t know
about. The rat is bathed in shadow, hidden from plain view. Light is also
probably the most important feature of Raging Bull. Probably some of the most
obvious is Vicky especially early in the film. Everything about her is white
when she first appears, from her hair to her dress to the bed that Jake seduces
her on. This highlights her youth, her innocence and her standing in Jake’s mind as
the girl who “you don’t just bang and forget about”. But let’s not forget Taxi
Driver and all of its focus on night and day. Just as Travis says everything
comes out at night. The strange red lighting during his conversations at night,
when his mental state is rapidly deteriorating, is to alert the viewer of the
way that this conversation is actually affecting him.
Now, let’s look at Scorsese staging in each film. In Taxi
Driver, when Travis goes to see Palantine arriving in his limo and he talks to
the Secret Service man, Scorsese stages the shot so perfectly to emphasize
Travis’ lack of appeal and his inability to fit in society. He has an inspiring
campaign poster of Palantine in the foreground, a very tall clean cut Secret
Service man in the middle ground, and an awkward Travis looking very undersized
and uncomfortable in the background. This shows the importance of each of these
characters but also the roles and their importance in the mind of Americans.
People like Senators are talked about all the time, government looks out for
your average Joe but little attention is given to those like Travis who really need
it. In The Departed we have so many of really interesting shots but the two I
want to focus on are of Damon before he enters the force and just after
Nicolson dies. In the first shot Damon is inside a circle, the circle then
expands out to show Damon alone outside with a lot of sunshine in the center of
the street in the city of Boston. The
second time we see Damon alone in the dark in his office with busy people
crossing back and forth with many things around him, the shot then moves to the
circle we first saw him in at the beginning. The flipping of these shots is
ironic because at that time in the movie Damon has a lot of support, in fact he
has the entire mafia behind him. But in the final shot he is all alone, the
leaders of the mob have been killed and the only tie to the organization he
just burned. The shot symbolized not only the switch of him standing alone among the mob
to being just another cop but also his incredible isolation now.
Great job here. These are two really nice points about Scorsese's work. Good job catching them. I also really liked the rat scene at the end of the Departed. I've heard some complain that it's too "in your face," but for a final shot, I feel it should be in your face. But, I hadn't noticed the lighting within that shot--nice work pointing that out. Keep up the good work. I hope you felt you got a lot out of these films!
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