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De Palma and Scorsese on Welles and Hitchcock | The Dick Cavett Show 

The Dick Cavett Show
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Brian De Palma and Martin Scorsese discuss filmmaking technicalities and two of the all time greats.
Date aired - June 15th 1978 - Brian De Palma & Martin Scorsese
For clip licensing opportunities please visit www.globalimag...
Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
#thedickcavettshow

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27 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 998   
@checkyourhead9
@checkyourhead9 4 года назад
No clapping every two.minutes! No talking about this actor or that actor. I love it
@Kareragirl
@Kareragirl 4 года назад
That's how it should be. Let's face it, most actors are interchangeable. They don't have the capacity to save a movie like Daniel Day-Lewis does, and get far too much credit for their work. Directors have the hardest job. They're responsible for all the parts coming together.
@DarthRelkew
@DarthRelkew 4 года назад
Actors are just people who are props for the director to tell the story. We just happen to admire, alot, about what they do.
@FirstnameLastname-my7bz
@FirstnameLastname-my7bz 3 года назад
@@Kareragirl neither does DDL, come on now
@kangaroo3708
@kangaroo3708 Год назад
They literally talked about how important casting is and how Tippi Hedrins performance made the birds a lesser movie than it could have been
@kangaroo3708
@kangaroo3708 Год назад
@@Kareragirl Daniel day Lewis isn’t the only actor that can make a bad movie watchable Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Philip Seymour Hoffman could just to name a few. And De Palma literally says at the end of the video how important it is to cast properly and he used Tippi Hedrins performance in the birds as an example. Maybe watch it to the end
@HermanFalckHow
@HermanFalckHow 5 лет назад
What is this craziness... Film makers discuss film technique and not just talk about how it felt to work with "X actor".
@lamolambda8349
@lamolambda8349 5 лет назад
Also the host isn't laughing at everything
@angiecuteass
@angiecuteass 5 лет назад
When film making was actually an art....
@sawrado375
@sawrado375 5 лет назад
@Vincent H. Today's blockbusters are much worse than blockbusters back then.
@louiso.4325
@louiso.4325 5 лет назад
@@sawrado375 Interesting cinema today is independent stuff that flies under the radar. Check out stuff by A24 for example.
@danilogondim9300
@danilogondim9300 5 лет назад
@Vincent H. Chris Stuckman is alright, there's much worst film critics on youtube (Angry Joe)
@gozorak
@gozorak 5 лет назад
an interview of two master film directors by an intelligent host interested in facilitating interesting conversations about craft instead of catering to the audience or public expectations? Such a thing existed at one time? Why yes it did.
@carrrexx7190
@carrrexx7190 5 лет назад
An example of over speak with no payoff.
@gozorak
@gozorak 5 лет назад
@@carrrexx7190 you dont deserve a happy ending cause your too uptight to even know how to enjoy it
@carrrexx7190
@carrrexx7190 5 лет назад
@@gozorak you're not your. English is apparently a slippery slope for you.
@gozorak
@gozorak 5 лет назад
the only slippery slope you need to concern yourself with is the slippery slope of self righteous smugness which you have already tumbled down. Its sad actually
@HermanFalckHow
@HermanFalckHow 5 лет назад
We probably shouldn't pretend that it was common or that we don't have that now. Podcasts do that pretty well for a lot of film makers. But it does make general audiences stupider that every time film makers are on talk shows they talk about loose concepts and things not related to their craft.
@interfusor
@interfusor 5 лет назад
Scorsese talks fast even at 0.75 speed.
@shaunpearson7905
@shaunpearson7905 5 лет назад
This may have been his cocaine years :)
@interfusor
@interfusor 5 лет назад
@@shaunpearson7905 True but look at recent interviews. He's still machine gun fast in his seventies.
@ceejay1794
@ceejay1794 5 лет назад
He’s tremendously syncopated. It took me years to figure out that it wasn’t a chemical or emotional response. It’s just Marty.
@TheRubberStudiosASMR
@TheRubberStudiosASMR 5 лет назад
Was he addicted to coke or something? I know he had a problem with something
@amsheel9921
@amsheel9921 5 лет назад
@@TheRubberStudiosASMR He had a coke addiction around the 70s and 80s.
@louieandtommysdiscountedit3177
DePalma, Scorsese, Coppola, Spielberg, Lucas...these guys were constantly inspired by each other to do better, and some of the best movies came out of it. Thanks for the many meaningful hours spent staring at a screen, guys.
@eddwardfchaos
@eddwardfchaos 5 лет назад
ThisGuysAMook - That's why they make & spend the big bucks , but we're not gonna pay , we're NOT paying cause disguy (points) dis guyz a fuckin' mook !
@bebaguette766
@bebaguette766 5 лет назад
Friedkin was kind of part of the gang as well.
@louieandtommysdiscountedit3177
Henry G Bogdanovich too, I think
@rockhero2274
@rockhero2274 5 лет назад
@@eddwardfchaos Mook? Whatsa mook?
@rockhero2274
@rockhero2274 5 лет назад
@@bebaguette766 Not really. Paul Schrader maybe.
@tarnopol
@tarnopol 5 лет назад
Oh, De Palma and Scorsese talking about Welles and Hitchcock? What film lover would want to bother with that? :)
@RoyBatty555
@RoyBatty555 5 лет назад
This is like a seven course gourmet meal if ur a film lover!
@ceejay1794
@ceejay1794 5 лет назад
😁
@TEDDYBEAR-le1ew
@TEDDYBEAR-le1ew 4 года назад
Lots of film lovers would, these guys are good directors...
@microtasker
@microtasker 4 года назад
a required sit at USC or NYU one could assume.
@burlhorse61
@burlhorse61 3 года назад
just an amazing insight into geniuses
@ChubbyChecker182
@ChubbyChecker182 5 лет назад
Martin Scorsese, the Yorkshire Ripper years
@mrkeogh
@mrkeogh 5 лет назад
The coke years?
@breathefree4056
@breathefree4056 5 лет назад
Now then, Now then 👅
@dtzjones7632
@dtzjones7632 5 лет назад
😂😂
@dtzjones7632
@dtzjones7632 5 лет назад
@@mrkeogh 😂😂
@hudsonsirheshicks2653
@hudsonsirheshicks2653 5 лет назад
LOL
@sagarsaxena6318
@sagarsaxena6318 4 года назад
Dick Cavett's interviews were so great because he tried to understand the intricacies of each guest's profession. His research was thorough and it seems he got some off-the-book kind of nuggets as well. This made his questions and the answers far more insightful than the regular interview.
@hoganholo99
@hoganholo99 5 лет назад
Old interviews of Scorsese and DePalma are really eye-opening in the sense that you can see how their temperaments have evolved over decades. It seems as if modern-day Scorsese and DePalma have switched demeanors. In older interviews with Scorsese, he comes across as much more restrained and serious--in contrast, recent interviews with him show someone more candid and friendly. DePalma seems to have gone in the opposite direction. He's definitely not jaded or overly-cynical now, but I think his relationship with film critics in the 70's and 80's might have permanently soured his relationship with the media. In the 2015 documentary, "DePalma", he still appears aggrieved by the critical reception of some of his movies. Despite this, he's lost none of that brazen quality he's known for. In fact, he currently comes across as more wise and hardened. It's pretty fascinating to me how differently the film industry has affected these two.
@Daddy0os
@Daddy0os 5 лет назад
As for Scorsese in the late 70's, drugs are involved.
@SX1995able
@SX1995able 4 года назад
I wonder if the fact that he isn't as well regarded as a Scorsese (outside of cinephile circles) has affected him
@johnnyskinwalker4095
@johnnyskinwalker4095 4 года назад
that's because their careers went into opposite directions ah ha
@chazzdurden
@chazzdurden 4 года назад
Wow thank you so much for this comment, I thought I was the only one who noticed that, also, "no grey hair" Scorsese looks really really serious vs grey hair, black eyebrows nowadays sweet and smiley Scorsese :D that was really interesting and weird, they completely changed his attitude towards the media, is really amazing how they have evolved in their own way.
@nr655321
@nr655321 4 года назад
Taxi driver is the most important film in the history of cinema. Period. Unfortunately, past-Taxi Driver Scorsese movies are mostly duds... Which can't said about De Palma: his output is generally good through and through.
@A-small-amount-of-peas
@A-small-amount-of-peas 5 лет назад
Really hope the younger generation finds this show. No unnecessary audience whooping, no pre interview to set up stories. Just interesting people who know what they're doing... Talking
@BluesRiffage
@BluesRiffage 3 года назад
The young generation are getting plenty of that with podcasts.
@luisvickers2799
@luisvickers2799 2 года назад
I’m 18 if that counts as being part of the younger gen
@jiquenohnson
@jiquenohnson 2 года назад
@@BluesRiffage depending on the podcast I’m sure lol
@lerm2866
@lerm2866 5 лет назад
Very cool to see these two in their prime having absolutely no idea the joy and impact they would have on others for decades to come.
@walt4670
@walt4670 5 лет назад
Interesting to hear Scorsese talking about his trouble with reading and writing as a creative back then, knowing he probably never sought nor was given a dyslexia diagnosis in 1978.
@zapkvr
@zapkvr 5 лет назад
Yes and diagnosis are ultimately limiting. It's why labels like autism should be resisted.
@kennethlatham3133
@kennethlatham3133 5 лет назад
@@PeterKKraus I don't think so. At one point, Scorsese mentions "Taxi Driver", his 1976 film.
@kennethlatham3133
@kennethlatham3133 5 лет назад
@@zapkvr That's very interesting; one wonders what the artistic visions of autistics might be.
@joaquincasares2895
@joaquincasares2895 5 лет назад
I think your diagnose is incorrect. He said he had trouble concentrating, also his fast speed talking may suggest Attention deficit disorder. Any way this types of labels often make people think of Scorseses as better or grandiose because of having this "condition". I think it's bullshit it doesn't make him any better or worst. He's just an excellent director. Any way if someone has depression and he smiles would you see him as better or grandiose? It's only a label, it doesn't make you any better or worst.
@crazymaner2003
@crazymaner2003 4 года назад
@@joaquincasares2895 His trouble concentrating was probably because he was gorged out on drugs at this time in his life.
@ng2603
@ng2603 4 года назад
Scorsese was so serious back in the day ... he really seemed to lighten up and relax with age. Now he cracks jokes, chuckles after everything he says, etc. Love both Scorcese versions tho
@daustin8888
@daustin8888 3 года назад
I really hate how people gave him a hard time about his comments on those Marvel films.
@ciaran6309
@ciaran6309 3 года назад
@@daustin8888 hes right🤣
@Fan_Made_Videos
@Fan_Made_Videos 3 года назад
What you don't understand that his interview happened right after Travis Bickle dropped him off at the studio.
@Hritik9000
@Hritik9000 3 года назад
@@Fan_Made_Videos Do you see the women in the window. That's my wife but it's not my apartment 💀
@totalpartykill999
@totalpartykill999 3 года назад
well.... he's wealthier than God now.
@KraigOliver
@KraigOliver 5 лет назад
this was a tv show. talking industry. imagine kimmel or fallon doing this?
@juffan
@juffan 5 лет назад
I would like to see Conan have conversations like this. He could pull it off.
@KraigOliver
@KraigOliver 5 лет назад
juffan Conan could! Or Ferguson!
@Magooch86
@Magooch86 5 лет назад
Dick Cavett wasn't a variety host like Carson etc, he was more like Parkinson in the UK, where the focus was the interview and not all round entertainment. There are hundreds of interviews like this on RU-vid now, you don't need Kimmel or Fallon to conduct these sorts of interviews.
@markant9534
@markant9534 5 лет назад
@@KraigOliver Conan would keep making jokes all the way through this interview.
@valerio1292
@valerio1292 5 лет назад
it's just a different format come on... i like this format more, but i'm sure also at the time there were entertainment shows like kimmel's. and despite this, there are intelligent hosts like o'brien who can do both, buffoon and introspection
@melquizedec
@melquizedec 3 года назад
PACINO: Hey Brian, how this guy Carlitos should look, man? DE PALMA: You know, many years ago I was in an interview with a friend...
@nomalk
@nomalk 4 года назад
Scorsese seems like in he's in a turmoil by the situation. I know he and De Palma were friends but you can feel his rivalry in him. Tarantino said in so many words that after De Palma did a great film he went to see "raging bull" and said "ah.. there's always Scorsese.."
@BloodIncantationTab
@BloodIncantationTab 5 лет назад
this is hypnotic, two geniuses, and Cavett handling them effortlessly. Media was different back then, more wholesome and effervescent
@vinylsbyqwest
@vinylsbyqwest 3 года назад
Most definitely
@kalyan6045
@kalyan6045 3 года назад
Dick Caveatt knows a lot about filmmaking. I would like see these kind of intelligent questions asked
@santafucker1945
@santafucker1945 4 года назад
Talk show hosts back in the 70s: _asks intelligent and interesting questions_ Talk show hosts now: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA
@mnkykungfu
@mnkykungfu 3 года назад
They go with what the audience demands the most. Audience=dumber, Show focus=dumber.
@bencummings5304
@bencummings5304 3 года назад
But TV shows were all they had back then, now they have Podcasts
@curatorcogs5438
@curatorcogs5438 3 года назад
It’s just Jimmy Fallon honestly, he’s murdered the Tonight Show. Also, audiences were more respectful back then and saw talk shows as light conversation, not total comedy shows. These days hosts are very concerned about attention spans so they keep making comedy bits for everything, which is mostly how hosts like Kimmel, Fallon and even Norton operate (i personally think Norton’s show is the finest on television at the moment despite of this problem), but there are a couple of hosts still around that are able to handle seriousness, like O’Brien and Colbert. I think Colbert has gone much too political, and O’Brien is unfortunately ending his show.
@agraciotti
@agraciotti 3 года назад
Lol. So true
@Jackkenway
@Jackkenway 3 года назад
@@curatorcogs5438 I totally agree, I was gonna comment about how political talk shows are today then I saw your comment, it's sad to see this lvl of conversation gone, the hosts back then knew how to ask the right questions, how to make the audience hooked up and most importantly how to interview the gusts, nowadays it's all politics, whether it's the monologs or the question, except I very few shows like you mentioned, Conan is by far the most interesting imo, I used to like Colbert but he took it way too far, his show became like the news basically, except funnier, so I find myself watching clips like this one and longing to that era, although I wasn't even born yet back then.
@nicholasdove5109
@nicholasdove5109 5 лет назад
They NEVER interview directors anymore on talk shows. It's just actors and nothing else. People of this period had a grip of how a movie is made but now people just want garbage churned out on Netflix daily
@BookClubDisaster
@BookClubDisaster 5 лет назад
Directors aren't auteurs anymore. They mostly are studio hacks except maybe Nolan, Tarantino, PTA, etc.
@janetmccoy2192
@janetmccoy2192 5 лет назад
Nicholas Dove a Not true Charlie Rose has interviewed all of the great directors.
@Sdfghjk442
@Sdfghjk442 5 лет назад
@@BookClubDisaster scorsese is still making movies you know.
@teodelfuego
@teodelfuego 4 года назад
Charlie Rose was a great interviewer.
@krisinsaigon
@krisinsaigon 4 года назад
I've seen scorsese on numerous chat shows, he still does them when he has a film out
@svjim1
@svjim1 5 лет назад
The thing with Wells and Hitchcock is they didn't have a film school to teach them, they just did it.
@BradleyPaulValentine
@BradleyPaulValentine 5 лет назад
Again, not to be a d/ck, but you're really posing this as some kind of advantage? I mean, it could be for all I know. But you realize the industry went for something like 50yrs without a film school turning out directors. How many Welles and Hitchcocks did we get then? In fact, the studio system itself was the film school, which probably provided better education than film schools today.
@svjim1
@svjim1 5 лет назад
@@BradleyPaulValentine My point was they had no one to emulate and came up with their own style and technique.
@IgnorancEnArrogance
@IgnorancEnArrogance 5 лет назад
"I was cut off from the world. There was no one to confuse or torment me, and I was forced to become original" - Joseph Hadyn
@jacobbegley5026
@jacobbegley5026 5 лет назад
You re right. That's exactly it
@nathanwalker6360
@nathanwalker6360 5 лет назад
Speaking on studio systems and learning about directing, not to take away from what Hitchcock went on to further develop. But in his earlier years when he was making silent films and before then too, he spent alot of time in Germany with the directors round there. Probably people like Fritz Lang.
@thomass1891
@thomass1891 4 года назад
Scarface was a fantastic movie. Brian De Palma did a great job
@johnperrigo6474
@johnperrigo6474 5 лет назад
Oh my God! They're having a conversation. On a talk show. Will wonders ever cease!
@ethanholgate2512
@ethanholgate2512 4 года назад
Two of the greatest directors of all time two of my favourites this interview was a joy to watch
@aleksisuuronen5969
@aleksisuuronen5969 5 лет назад
Gus Van Sant should've watched this before making the Psycho "It will have no soul"
@johnnyskinwalker4095
@johnnyskinwalker4095 4 года назад
I liked it though. it was a nice experiment and even Tarantino liked it
@gianca60
@gianca60 4 года назад
Please don't nominate Van Sant in a video with De Palma and Scorsese.
@gocsa
@gocsa 3 года назад
I still don't know whether Van Sant was aware of it all or not. He either pulled a huge prank on a major Hollywood studio's dime or was absolutely up his own ass. It's still a 50-50 chance for me.
@jamesoblivion
@jamesoblivion 3 года назад
Most expensive film school project ever made.
@nightmaster5593
@nightmaster5593 3 года назад
Dick Cavett is so damn smooth! What a phenomenal interviewer! He makes it look so easy
@africastle94
@africastle94 5 лет назад
The energies of both of these directors, given their films, is so evident. What an incredible record.
@marvwatkins7029
@marvwatkins7029 3 года назад
Two great directors discussing the technical aspects of their craft with such insight.
@Sdfghjk442
@Sdfghjk442 5 лет назад
"No matter how good you are, no matter how good you think you are, there is always Martin Scorsese" - de palma
@charisma7312
@charisma7312 4 года назад
I feel like their personalities switched after this
@022171
@022171 3 года назад
I agree 100% with De Palma about The Birds. Tippi Hedren's performance kept that film from really landing for me. Hitch loved his "icy blondes". Hedren took "icy" to another level.
@FormulaVase-kp3dc
@FormulaVase-kp3dc 4 года назад
1:09 The look on Scorsese's face after being interrupted.
@microtasker
@microtasker 4 года назад
Yeah, the guy was a teacher for so long. That's definitely his teacher face coming out.
@resolving_boris
@resolving_boris 3 месяца назад
I love how Cavett is so calm and level, letting the guests talk and engages with them on close to their level, as opposed to chat show hosts today.
@alexd2555
@alexd2555 5 лет назад
It would’ve been absolutely incredible if these legends would have co-directed a movie together
@zyrrhos
@zyrrhos 5 лет назад
Nah, the best films come from a singular artistic vision.
@marydestefano9487
@marydestefano9487 Год назад
@@zyrrhos LOL. The best films are the products of dozens of collaborators.
@zyrrhos
@zyrrhos Год назад
@@marydestefano9487 I work in TV & film as a writer/director. It does take a lot of people to make a film, but the best ones come from the singular artistic vision of (typically) the director.
@johnk5398
@johnk5398 Год назад
When you consider that they critiqued eachothers scripts and dailys over the years , all these guys did kind of collaborate on each others projects
@atroyz
@atroyz Год назад
Notice how they refer to Hitchcock in the present tense. The master was still working in 1978.
@reginaldstyles9549
@reginaldstyles9549 Год назад
Two Absolutely Amazing Directors 😊❤
@aaoppe
@aaoppe 3 месяца назад
It can’t be coincidence that interviews done by Dick Cavett are the ones where I truly feel I get to know the subjects he’s interviewing. It’s like I get to vicariously hang out with them. His style is an artform in and of itself.
@philmstud2k
@philmstud2k 5 лет назад
So sad that what De Palma said about trying to perfectly replicate the success of something but it having no soul, just like with all these Disney live-action reboots.
@ilikeemerica9619
@ilikeemerica9619 5 лет назад
And the shot for shot remake of psycho
@AnnaMaria-oy1fp
@AnnaMaria-oy1fp 4 года назад
@@ilikeemerica9619 Haven't seen the remake but I know that it's like a copy paste version.
@sandorx4
@sandorx4 4 года назад
Or his own far too Hitchcockesque works.
@southlondon86
@southlondon86 4 года назад
Lion King was apparently an exact copy of a 60s Japanese cartoon.
@hailalexander93
@hailalexander93 3 года назад
@@southlondon86 c'mon seriously? The Lion King is the oldest story of humanity. Kingly, noble father assassinated, The Prince is overthrown by the jealous uncle, the Prince's journey back to the crown and his birthright. Ffs read a real history book. If that's still allowed.
@nitehunter91
@nitehunter91 4 года назад
I may be the only one to defend Tippi Hendren in "The Birds", but I'll do 'til my death.
@Whippets
@Whippets 3 года назад
A very "clean", classy and well coiffed/manicured sensual beauty to juxtapose Suzanne Pleshette's simplicity and earthiness ... I think it was brilliant casting, both of them.
@dougshelton260
@dougshelton260 3 года назад
She was perfect, and had to withstand much harassment from Hitchcock: She was actually injured by real birds during the shooting; It's still the scariest Hitchcock film, in my opinion.
@ninamc6116
@ninamc6116 3 года назад
No you won’t be. She was great!
@ninamc6116
@ninamc6116 3 года назад
Perfect person in the role!
@fenwar9060
@fenwar9060 3 года назад
@@Whippets On that point, I'll stand by you.
@neezdutz7443
@neezdutz7443 3 года назад
6:53 "You can copy a film shot for shot, but it will have no soul." Sounds a lot like the live-action Disney remakes
@nikolarajkovic4595
@nikolarajkovic4595 3 года назад
They don't care. They're printing money. How dumb is making live-action Lion King and yet it's one of the most profitable movies ever made.
@boneeatingsilicate580
@boneeatingsilicate580 3 года назад
Grateful for these two with bringing Bernard Herrmann back to Hollywood
@alexdawson
@alexdawson 3 года назад
Great interview and De Palma’s career long appreciation of Hitchcock as ‘artist’ rather than ‘showman’ is great to see
@ЫРІ
@ЫРІ 5 лет назад
Scorsese talks so slowly, I almost fell asleep
@kennethlatham3133
@kennethlatham3133 5 лет назад
I LOVE good sarcasm!
@markreynolds1436
@markreynolds1436 4 года назад
Waddayatalkingabout?
@Newtman98
@Newtman98 3 года назад
I like how Depalma says they don’t draw attention to themselves with camera movements when they’re both really well known and admired for their unique and innovative camera movements.
@ernestolombardo5811
@ernestolombardo5811 5 лет назад
I can't get over DePalma without a beard, for some reason I imagined him with a perpetual beard like his comrades Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola. And just now it hit me: due to the incredible camerawork and editing, Goodfellas is our era's Citizen Kane. This may be a good short way to introduce the Orson Welles classic to those who regard old, Hayes Code black and white Hollywood films as stilted and boring.
@ChooseCompassion
@ChooseCompassion 2 года назад
Dick Cavett was a part of our household forever growing up and after. He is a thoughtful, insightful, highly intelligent with whit and charm to boot. Not to mention good looking and cooler than he thought he was. I’m so grateful that this channel exists to be able to go back and watch the ones I loved it and the ones I missed. Thank you!
@FixFilmsLtd
@FixFilmsLtd 3 года назад
What a great interview - love DePalma and Scorsese's films. Brilliant to hear them speak so exquisitely about there work.
@TheRubberStudiosASMR
@TheRubberStudiosASMR 5 лет назад
Damn I wish we had film makers like this now. I know these two are still around but they'd be forced to direct Thor 22 or some shit.
@GIBKEL
@GIBKEL 4 года назад
This was great....I get exactly what Dick was on about with the movement. It was part of my favorite part when leaving a movie when I was young. I always felt that I was still in the cinema experience with motion and the ideas of what comes next.....
@scampoli25
@scampoli25 5 лет назад
Please tell me you have more of this interview
@m0jumb0
@m0jumb0 5 лет назад
they have all of it. they're just trickling it out :)
@Constantijn09
@Constantijn09 5 месяцев назад
Dick Cavett understood the art of interviewing, he really listened, which is harder than it sounds
@stevebutler812
@stevebutler812 5 лет назад
Mel Brooks did that: High Anxiety the camera under the glass table looking up.
@kennethlatham3133
@kennethlatham3133 5 лет назад
I was thinking about that coffee table scene, too, while they were talking, lol!
@kevinr.3542
@kevinr.3542 4 года назад
There's another movie too, where it's really exaggerated. Glass table, with perfectly placed glasses everywhere that frames the characters perfectly. It wasn't a great movie, some crime drama. Can't think of the name, just one actor in it and he's not that famous
@johnjackson7045
@johnjackson7045 3 года назад
2 legends talking about 2 legends.respect
@roberta9734
@roberta9734 5 лет назад
Love all this Dick Cavett content with Scorsese/De Palma
@b4_480p
@b4_480p 4 года назад
9:02 Scorsese "It's the Editing"
@aidan738
@aidan738 4 года назад
i liked it when they actually talked on talk shows
@doninvictoria
@doninvictoria 5 лет назад
Thank you, Dick. Keep 'em coming!
@12Jakeyboy
@12Jakeyboy 4 года назад
To get Scorsese to sound like a normal person you have to put the video at 50% speed. You can't make this up, Martin Scorsese honestly talks twice as fast as everyone else.
@peliche77
@peliche77 Год назад
Scorsese always talks like three times the normal speed. Sometimes I need to listen to him slowed down to the maximum to be able to understand him 😅😅
@lee-annebarrett366
@lee-annebarrett366 2 года назад
Cant imagine the women on the view asking intelligent questions like this.
@SilverSurfer5150
@SilverSurfer5150 5 лет назад
Fascinating stuff! De Palma and Scorsese, brilliant directors.
@prowlie
@prowlie 4 года назад
Good interview ... love both directors... saw air date.. realized it was 3 months before i was born lol
@abus3od11
@abus3od11 5 лет назад
Keep it going with the uploads please
@macvoutie
@macvoutie 3 года назад
Brian DePalma's films are the most blatant copies of the work of other directors. Every artist "steals" be they painters, musicians, poets, directors, actors, comedians, etc. but they disguise or scramble or morph what they take and make it their own and we never realize the source unless we really scrutinize. With DePalma, if you're familiar with the history of film or an everyday film buff, you can point to the source of practically every scene he shot instantly.
@DieFilmshow
@DieFilmshow 5 лет назад
06:31 funny as 20 years on, that is EXACTLY what they did with "Psycho" - and of course, the failed.
@integral
@integral 5 лет назад
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this YT channel. Cavett did some of the best, coolest, most thoughtful interviews. Is there anyone getting even close to this these days?
@greyeyed123
@greyeyed123 Год назад
I take it no one told Gus Van Sant that recreating a Hitchcock movie shot for shot was futile because it would have no soul.
@kevinwhelan9607
@kevinwhelan9607 Год назад
Can anyone imagine Graham Norton or Jonathan Ross being able to engage with such brilliant men as Cavett does with such elan here? Not gonna happen! Thanks for uploading.
@tomrock7019
@tomrock7019 3 года назад
I’m crying. Why must the world lose its class?? Look at the class and manners here.
@ErikBAnderson
@ErikBAnderson 5 лет назад
The editors must be big Tippi Hedren fans.
@XXthekingofyouXX
@XXthekingofyouXX 5 лет назад
Erik B. Anderson - Lol. I know. Tippi's a flake.
@felixthelmocevallosmorales41
Richard Alva Cavett (/ˈkævɪt/; born November 19, 1936) is an American television personality and former talk show host. He appeared regularly on nationally broadcast television in the United States for five decades, from the 1960s through the 2000s.
@mrkeogh
@mrkeogh 5 лет назад
Marty looks like a Just For Men advert.
@daviddemar8749
@daviddemar8749 5 лет назад
This was golden Thanks for posting it!!
@baxter326
@baxter326 5 лет назад
The 1970s was the best decade for cinema.
@BrotherApexx
@BrotherApexx 5 лет назад
Depends on the genre and generation. For Baby Boomers, it was probably the 70's. Lots of great drama, romance, and political thrillers. For Gen-Xers like me, nothing beats the 80's with its action, adventure, fantasy, and comedy.
@zapkvr
@zapkvr 5 лет назад
The thirties were the best. And the twenties were very good.
@jackmeyer8656
@jackmeyer8656 4 года назад
70's and 40's.
@IlluminatiLand
@IlluminatiLand 4 года назад
Nah,, the 1950s was
@jackmeyer8656
@jackmeyer8656 4 года назад
IlluminatiLand Well, it’s subjective, but the greatest films of the fifties were carrying on a tradition started in the 40’s. Also, I’m speaking about American film, the fifties was greater in other parts of the world.
@rpm4679
@rpm4679 5 лет назад
They should make a biopic about Scorsese with Oscar Isaac playing him. Scorses's life is amazing and it should be shown on the big screen.
@orangenblue6981
@orangenblue6981 4 года назад
This is why Americans were calmer and smarter in the 70s and 80s.
@SX1995able
@SX1995able 4 года назад
Brian De Palma looked like any next door dad
@BMG19FUNNYDIE
@BMG19FUNNYDIE 4 года назад
The audience was really into it. Ambitious craftsman tales and insights met with dead silence.
@johndalton3180
@johndalton3180 5 лет назад
I just realized right now- I knew what Scorcese, Coppola, Lucas and Spielberg look like, but not until now have I ever seen De Palma! He must be shy.
@johnfitzpatrick3094
@johnfitzpatrick3094 5 лет назад
De Palma looks different without his beard and jacket.
@BrotherApexx
@BrotherApexx 5 лет назад
Does he seem shy, the way he talks and talks in this interview?
@johnfitzpatrick3094
@johnfitzpatrick3094 5 лет назад
@@BrotherApexx De Palma isn't the warmest person in the world. He's also not the easiest person to interview. He often bristles at many of the accusations leveled against him, such as misogyny, violence, Hitchcock influences, style over substance.
@BrotherApexx
@BrotherApexx 5 лет назад
@@johnfitzpatrick3094 Well that's much different than being shy, don't you think?
@johndalton3180
@johndalton3180 5 лет назад
@@BrotherApexx you're right. Quite the opposite.
@oslafoirausuebutuoy5457
@oslafoirausuebutuoy5457 3 года назад
Ralph Fiennes could interpret De Palma in a movie, their face structure is similar.
@vinylsbyqwest
@vinylsbyqwest 3 года назад
Without a doubt
@johndogwater
@johndogwater 2 года назад
I think Marty, the answer to why you have trouble getting through a book might be the amphetamines. I LOVE Scorsese.
@doma7887
@doma7887 4 года назад
De Palma is absolutely right about The Birds. When the birds attack her that's us the audience. Wait a minute...Hitchcock you genius!
@kingcaesar5
@kingcaesar5 4 года назад
Welles is the father of modern filmmaking and Hitchcock the father of modern cinema.
@robstearns7080
@robstearns7080 2 года назад
ITS SIO SOOTHING TO JUST DISSOLVE INTO LISTENING TO THESE INTELLIGENT CONVERSATIONS
@gianca60
@gianca60 4 года назад
Orson Welles was 25 when he made the greatest film ever. It was his first feature film. And that was the problem when he made all his other movies. There's Citizen Kane...and the rest of Welles' movies.
@rbrookswilliams1689
@rbrookswilliams1689 Год назад
And the rest is pretty damn good, in their own right..............THE STRANGER, LADY FROM SHANGHAI, CONFIDENTIAL REPORT, TOUCH OF EVIL, THE TRIAL, CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT.
@RollingOrmond
@RollingOrmond 5 лет назад
De Palma quotes Welles so often (the deep focus and worm's-eye view of the church and Capone scenes in The Untouchables, deep focus in Black Dahlia), in fact his career got kind of lost in homages to the masters. Scorsese using Hitchcock's composer Bernard Herman on Taxi Driver was about the extent of his.
@bloodySunday77
@bloodySunday77 5 лет назад
He also used him on the remake of Cape Fear if I remember correctly. But that was a more direct tribute to Hitchcock. Very enjoyable though, and not really an exercise on copying or mimicking as you make it look - for De Palma neither.
@RollingOrmond
@RollingOrmond 5 лет назад
@@bloodySunday77 Herman was dead by the time Cape Fear came out.
@badinfluence3814
@badinfluence3814 5 лет назад
@@RollingOrmond Elmer Bernstein scored Cape Dear based on Herman's score for the original film.
@ricardocantoral7672
@ricardocantoral7672 3 года назад
Both of them sample heavily from various films.
@savage_skirt5386
@savage_skirt5386 Год назад
all 3 of these men were around 40 here (in fact, i think Marty might be 35). just goes to show you how much style choices matters; they look much older
@MarkTarmannPianoCheck_it_out
@MarkTarmannPianoCheck_it_out 4 года назад
Thank you, Mr De Palma. Remakes, "have no soul": Usless.
@markreynolds1436
@markreynolds1436 4 года назад
And he did Scarface 😁
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 2 года назад
Welles showed ceilings in CITIZEN KANE. Cavett asked such provocative questions.
@MarcusGoodwyn
@MarcusGoodwyn 5 лет назад
I had no idea Martin Scorsese used to be Bernard the elf
@hang-sangitch
@hang-sangitch 5 лет назад
😂
@mindtrapped9934
@mindtrapped9934 3 года назад
This feels like a yesteryear version of a famous RU-vidr on a video podcast. Never thought the artistry of film making would be where it is today
@eti401
@eti401 5 лет назад
Lol, try putting Scorsese on half speed, it sounds normal 7:30
@kargs5krun
@kargs5krun 5 лет назад
I played him 1.5 speed; intense, when he could get a word in with DePalma hogging the mic.
@ferodrigues811
@ferodrigues811 4 года назад
Young De Palma looks like Ralph Fiennes
@Robotron2084psn
@Robotron2084psn 2 года назад
Jeez, who could ever have a problem with Tippi Hedren!?
@Marcusx1980
@Marcusx1980 5 лет назад
Gold! So weird to see De Plama being goofy here. Young yes but different
@shaun5944
@shaun5944 3 года назад
A great interview by a great host and two great film 🎥 directors, these guys are so creative, especially De Palmer, you can tell by he's excitement and enthusiasm on the subject of films 🎥 👍👋🇬🇧
@slowboy9565
@slowboy9565 3 года назад
thats really the fit de palma went with ahaha
@mike04574
@mike04574 8 месяцев назад
and now filmmakers still look towards welles and hitchcock as well as these 2 legends here to improve their craft
@davidcawrowl3865
@davidcawrowl3865 4 года назад
De Palma slams Tippi Hendrin in The Birds as "uninteresting". Then again Hitchcock cast her with no prior acting experience, and his motives were less than admirable.
@DINOLOVER6717
@DINOLOVER6717 4 года назад
I totally know what Dick Cavett means! Like the picture books where the image would pop out 3D after staring at it...
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