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Italianamerican
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Directed by Martin Scorsese
In this warm, funny, and illuminating documentary, filmmaker Martin Scorsese interviews his parents, Catherine and Charles Scorsese, in their modest apartment in New York's Little Italy. The casual and relaxed atmosphere of the film makes viewers feel as if they are eavesdropping on an intimate family evening. Catherine prepares tomato sauce and meatballs while explaining how she learned to cook from her mother and mother-in-law as a young woman. After looking at vacation photos while sitting on the plastic-slip-covered living-room sofa, the family shares dinner together. Much is revealed as son Marty gently guides the conversation with questions revolving around what life was once like for Catherine and Charles and their parents, and contemporary street scenes, archive shots, and family photos are interspersed among the responses. What emerges is a vivid personal view of history, a slice of life as it was lived during the first half of the 20th century in New York and in Italy. The film also indirectly sheds some light on the environment and the influences that shaped the creative vision of Martin Scorsese, a passionate, intense, and original filmmaker. The film's end credits include the recipe for Catherine Scorsese's tomato sauce. ~ All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Originally funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities for the Bicentennial series "Storm of Strangers," Martin Scorsese's documentary Italianamerican became not only a personal journey through the Italian immigrant experience, but also an illuminating portrait of the artist's roots. Shot in the Little Italy apartment where Scorsese grew up and "starring" the director's engaging parents Catherine and Charles, Italianamerican showcases the Scorseses' gift for frank, humorous storytelling as they recount their early 20th century youth, dexterously augmented by archive clips and family photo montages. As their reminiscences unfold over the course of an evening, it becomes quite apparent how their son learned to spin emotionally true tales; Scorsese's attention to minute, expressive details is even analogous to his mother's technique for making pasta sauce and meatballs (the recipe received a standing ovation at the New York Film Festival). Once described by Scorsese as the best film he ever made for the way it "freed" him stylistically for his later work, Italianamerican is also a vital nonfiction counterpart to his breakthrough classic Mean Streets (1973). ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 

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