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In Reply to: Oh, c'mon! If you can't see the difference between posted by tinear on August 3, 2005 at 13:51:42:
...large size brush you use when saying "Elevating murderers to mythic status is reprehensible for any artist."
We are talking about Scorsese and not, ssssh, Will, after all.
;0)
Follow Ups:
directors cannot find some other subject than glorifying the worst members of the community.
African-American directors seem to have the same agenda, however, so I guess greed and sensationalism isn't culture specific.
Sure reinforces stereotypes, however, and makes for a one-dimensional portrait of an entire people.
> > directors cannot find some other subject than glorifying the worst members of the community. < <Scorsese actually has quite a number of films that don't glorify the worst members of the community. Admittedly, his work on Michael Jackson's HIStory is unforgiveable... ;-)
here... "Elevating murderers to mythic status is reprehensible for any artist."Of course Tarantino DOES do that... mafia or not. Methinks you have a bit of a double standard going :-)
"Where are we going? And what am I doing in this hand basket?"
Many directors deal with a gentler side of the Italan American experience. I think of "Big Night", "Mac', "A Bronx Tale", and others (OK,OK, maybe not "A Bronx Tale").
Paul Sorvino and Debi Mazar (Liottas coked out girlfriend in Goodfellas), resurface as pillar of society Italian-American go-to-work types who don't do drugs or kill anyone; or even talk about it, the whole seriesI am fairly sure those roles were a penance equivalent to being forced to sit and watch traffic passing through the NJ turnpike in comparison to the latitude Goodfellas would have allowed them
Disclaimer: I only ever watched this 'cos Ellen Burstyn was in it (honest) It wasn't any kind of fascination with how boring any particular ethnic group could be portrayed; or anything like that
And in the hope that Joe Pesci would make at least a cameo appearance and liven things up a bit.... Alas, it was not to be
Tarantino does that at least as much as Scorcese... if not more so.
"Where are we going? And what am I doing in this hand basket?"
s
So, it is okay to glorify organized crime, which Tarantino most certainly does, but not okay to glorify (for the sake of argument) organized crime as organized by Italians. Commonly known as the Mafia. Yep. No double standard there.
s
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