A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies | |
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![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Martin Scorsese Michael Henry Wilson[1] |
Written by | Martin Scorsese Michael Henry Wilson[2] |
Produced by | Florence Dauman Martin Scorsese |
Starring | Martin Scorsese |
Cinematography | Jean-Yves Escoffier Frances Reid Nancy Schreiber |
Edited by | Kenneth Levis David Lindblom |
Music by | Elmer Bernstein[3] |
Production companies | |
Release dates |
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Running time | 225 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies is a 1995 British documentary film of 225 minutes in length, presented by Martin Scorsese and produced by the British Film Institute.[5]
In the film Martin Scorsese examines a selection of his favorite American films grouped according to four different types of directors: the director as storyteller; the director as an illusionist such as D.W. Griffith and F. W. Murnau, who created new editing techniques among other innovations that made the appearance of sound and color possible later on; the director as a smuggler such as filmmakers Douglas Sirk, Samuel Fuller, and Vincente Minnelli, who used to hide subversive messages in their films; and the director as an iconoclast, those filmmakers attacking social conventionalism such as Charles Chaplin, Erich von Stroheim, Orson Welles, Elia Kazan, Nicholas Ray, Stanley Kubrick, Arthur Penn, and Sam Peckinpah.