It certainly wasn't the first time the Academy got it wrong, but rarely did the oversight seem so glaring, the snub so overt. When 'Raging Bull' lost that year's Best Picture Oscar to the fine but painfully pedestrian and oh-so-mainstream family drama, 'Ordinary People,' and the renegade Scorsese lost the Best Director award to industry darling Robert Redford, my sense of outrage and disappointment knew no bounds. Rarely, if ever, had I seen such total command of the medium, such muscular enthusiasm on screen, and I was awed by it. Like La Motta himself, Scorsese pummeled me with an almost non-stop barrage of breathtaking cinematic punches, but unlike the fighter's battered opponents, I exited the ring feeling exhilarated. As a dedicated student of film history at Northwestern University, I was well-versed in the styles of such lauded auteurs as Hitchcock, Ford, and Hawks, but Scorsese told the tale of boxer Jake La Motta with such bold style and invention, seamlessly combining grit and elegance, I knew I had just witnessed the work of a modern master. ![]() ![]() That was my initial reaction after watching Martin Scorsese's 'Raging Bull' for the first time during its 1980 theatrical release.
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