Tags / Martin Scorsese

"Martin Scorsese"

11 BuzzVerdicts

Raging Bull

4.5

1980 · Martin Scorsese · 129 min · Drama / Biography / Sport

Raging Bull is Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro at their most uncompromising, a portrait of self-destruction so complete it refuses to offer the audience a single comfortable handhold. De Niro's physical and emotional transformation into Jake LaMotta is one of the landmark performances in cinema history, and Scorsese's black-and-white photography turns the boxing ring into a space of almost expressionist intensity. The film offers no redemption arc, no easy sympathy, and no concessions to entertainment. That relentlessness is exactly what makes it one of the greatest American films ever made, and exactly what makes it a difficult watch that not everyone will want to endure.

The Irishman

4.3

2019 · Martin Scorsese · 209 min · Crime / Drama

The Irishman is Martin Scorsese's final word on the gangster film, a three-and-a-half-hour meditation on loyalty, violence, and the emptiness that waits at the end of a life spent serving other men's interests. Robert De Niro's quiet obedience, Al Pacino's theatrical charisma, and Joe Pesci's terrifying stillness form a trio that elevates every scene they share. The de-aging technology distracts at times, and the runtime will turn away viewers who aren't ready for its contemplative pace. But the final hour is among the most devastating work Scorsese has ever done, a portrait of old age and regret that reframes everything that came before it.

Killers of the Flower Moon

4.3

2023 · Martin Scorsese · 206 min · Crime / Drama / Historical

Killers of the Flower Moon is Martin Scorsese at 80, telling the story of a real American atrocity with the patience and craft of a filmmaker who has nothing left to prove. Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro deliver some of their most unsettling work, but it's Lily Gladstone who anchors the film with a performance of quiet devastation that earned her an Academy Award nomination. The 206-minute runtime is a real commitment, and the deliberate pacing will challenge audiences accustomed to tighter crime narratives. What Scorsese builds with that time, though, is something few other filmmakers would even attempt: a portrait of systemic evil that refuses to let its audience look away or find comfort in simple moral categories.

The Wolf of Wall Street

4.3

2013 · Martin Scorsese · 180 min · Biographical Dark Comedy Crime

The Wolf of Wall Street is three hours of controlled chaos that somehow never loses momentum, anchored by one of DiCaprio's most committed performances and a supporting cast that matches him beat for beat. Whether it glorifies or condemns Jordan Belfort's world is a question the film deliberately refuses to answer for you, which is either its greatest strength or most frustrating quality depending on what you bring to it. Scorsese is making a film about seduction, and he's very good at it.

Casino

4.2

1995 · Martin Scorsese · 178 min · Crime / Drama

Casino is Martin Scorsese working at full operational scale, a 178-minute chronicle of how greed, ego, and love brought down the mob's last great enterprise. Robert De Niro anchors the film with controlled precision, Joe Pesci brings terrifying volatility, and Sharon Stone delivers career-best work as the woman caught between them. It lives permanently in the shadow of Goodfellas, and the runtime demands real commitment, but the film's meticulous reconstruction of Las Vegas in its mob-run golden age is a feat of filmmaking craft that rewards every minute of patience.

Shutter Island

4.1

2010 · Martin Scorsese · 138 min · Thriller / Mystery / Psychological

Shutter Island is Martin Scorsese working in full psychological thriller mode, crafting a film that plays differently on every rewatch. Leonardo DiCaprio carries the film with a performance of escalating intensity, and Scorsese fills every frame with visual clues and misdirection that reward close attention. The central twist will determine your relationship with the film, either deepening everything that came before or reducing it to a clever trick. The atmosphere is relentless, the dream sequences push into territory that tests some viewers' patience, and the film leans heavily on genre conventions that Scorsese both embraces and subverts. It's a puzzle box made with master-class craft, and the final line lands like a gut punch.

The Age of Innocence

4.1

1993 · Martin Scorsese · 139 min · Drama / Romance / Historical

The Age of Innocence is Martin Scorsese directing with a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer, and the result is one of the most precisely crafted period dramas in American cinema. Daniel Day-Lewis, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Winona Ryder inhabit a world of suffocating social ritual where the most devastating acts of violence are delivered through dinner invitations and seating arrangements. The pacing will test anyone expecting Scorsese's usual kinetic energy, and the emotional restraint of the story can feel like watching passion slowly suffocate under good manners. For those willing to meet it on its own terms, the film reveals itself as one of Scorsese's most emotionally devastating works.

The Aviator

4.0

2004 · Martin Scorsese · 170 min · Drama / Biography

The Aviator is a gorgeous, sprawling portrait of ambition and obsession that gives Leonardo DiCaprio the role that announced his arrival as a serious dramatic actor. Scorsese's recreation of Hollywood's golden age and early aviation history is visually stunning, and DiCaprio's portrayal of Howard Hughes's descent into mental illness is brave and unflinching. The 170-minute runtime stretches some sequences past their natural endpoint, and the supporting characters can't always compete with the spectacle at the center. But as a study of what extraordinary talent costs the person who carries it, the film achieves something truly moving.

Hugo

3.9

2011 · Martin Scorsese · 126 min · Adventure / Drama / Family

Hugo is Martin Scorsese making a children's film that doubles as an argument for why cinema matters, and the result is something too unusual to fit neatly into any category. The 3D cinematography is among the best ever produced, Paris in the 1930s is rendered with genuine wonder, and the film's emotional payoff around the history of early filmmaking is surprisingly powerful. The first half struggles with pacing as it establishes its clockwork mystery, and younger audiences may find the extended love letter to silent cinema more educational than exciting. It's a beautiful, heartfelt, slightly uneven film that finds Scorsese operating far outside his comfort zone with more success than he's often given credit for.

Mean Streets

3.9

1973 · Martin Scorsese · 112 min · Crime / Drama

Mean Streets is the film where Martin Scorsese found his voice and Robert De Niro announced his arrival, a raw, energetic portrait of small-time hoods in Little Italy that trades plot for atmosphere and character in ways that felt revolutionary in 1973. Harvey Keitel's Charlie is a man paralyzed between obligation and conscience, while De Niro's Johnny Boy is a live wire who makes every scene he enters unpredictable. The low budget shows, the narrative wanders, and the film lacks the polish of what Scorsese would achieve later. But the vitality on screen is undeniable, and its influence on independent American cinema and the crime genre has only grown over fifty years.

Gangs of New York

3.8

2002 · Martin Scorsese · 167 min · Crime / Drama / Historical

Gangs of New York is a film built around one of the greatest screen villains ever committed to celluloid. Daniel Day-Lewis's Bill the Butcher is a towering creation that dominates every frame he occupies and exposes the limitations of everything around him. The historical recreation of Five Points Manhattan is staggering in its ambition and detail, but Leonardo DiCaprio's revenge plot can't support the weight Scorsese places on it, and the film's final act struggles to balance personal drama with historical spectacle. It's a flawed, fascinating epic that reaches higher than it can consistently grasp.