SCORSESE
FINALLY TAKES TOP DGA HONORS
By DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press, 2/4/07
Martin
Scorsese won the top honor Saturday from the Directors Guild of
America for his mob saga "The Departed," moving him a
step closer to finally receiving Hollywood's biggest filmmaking
prize at the Academy Awards.
Scorsese was chosen as filmmaker of the year by his peers, his first
win at the guild awards after six previous nominations. The guild
winner usually goes on to win the best-director Oscar.
The self-deprecating Scorsese said he was pleased at the apparent
success of the film but that he only became convinced it was doing
well when the studio called with box-office revenues from the first
couple of weekends.
"If you look at the graph at the spikes at where the picture
is doing really great figures, it's like looking at a veritable
map of the American underworld," such as Boca Raton, Fla.,
Scorsese said. "Vegas, forget about it, it was amazing."
Adapted from the Hong Kong crime thriller "Infernal Affairs,"
"The Departed" stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a cop who's
undercover in a Boston crime outfit, Matt Damon as a mob mole who
has infiltrated the police, and Jack
Nicholson as the merciless
gang leader pulling everyone's strings.
It has become Scorsese's biggest commercial hit, and critics praised
it as a welcome return to the vivid, bloody crime genre whose modern
conventions the director helped pioneer in such films as "Taxi
Driver" and "Goodfellas."
"I started watching his work when I was 15 years old, said
DiCaprio, who has starred in Scorsese's last three films and introduced
the director to the guild audience earlier in the evening. "It
was like entering a seamless cinematic reality."
"The Departed" marked Scorsese's sixth nomination for
best director at the Academy Awards, an honor that also has eluded
him. A sixth loss at the Oscars would put Scorsese in the record
books as the filmmaker with the most nominations without winning.
But many awards watchers feel this is Scorsese's year, labeling
him the front-runner for the Feb. 25 Oscars. A Directors Guild win
helps give him the inside track.
The guild prize is a solid forecast for who might win the directing
honor at the Academy Awards. Only six times in the 58-year history
of the guild awards has the winner failed to go on to receive the
directing Oscar.
The other guild nominees were Bill Condon for the musical "Dreamgirls,"
Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris for the road-trip tale "Little
Miss Sunshine," Stephen Frears for the palace saga "The
Queen" and Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu for the ensemble drama
"Babel."
Scorsese, Inarritu and Frears were the only three of the five guild
nominees who also earned best-director slots for the Oscars. The
other Oscar nominations went to Clint
Eastwood for the World War II epic "Letters From
Iwo Jima" and Paul Greengrass for the Sept. 11 docudrama "United
93."
"Dreamgirls" had been viewed as a potential best-picture
favorite at the Oscars, but it missed out on a nomination, as did
director Condon. With Condon out of the race, Scorsese's path to
Oscar victory could prove a bit easier.
Scorsese was coy backstage when asked if it was his year to win
at the Oscars.
"I don't know," Scorsese said. "It's good to have
a nomination, especially for this picture."
TO
READ GUY FLATLEY'S 1973 NEW YORK TIMES INTERVIEW WITH BUDDING DIRECTOR
SCORSESE, CLICK HERE.
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