Guillermo del Toro Defends Scorsese After ‘Cruel’ Essay Calls Him ‘Uneven Talent’: ‘This Article Baited Them Traffic, but At What Cost?’
Guillermo del Toro does not have time for anyone’s Martin Scorsese slander. The “Pan’s Labyrinth” and “Shape of Water” Oscar winner took to social media to defend Scorsese against an “offensive, cruel and ill-intentioned” essay published by The Critic that slammed Scorsese as an “uneven talent” whose “self-indulgence” has “debased his talent.”
“I very, very seldom post anything contradictory here,” del Toro posted, “but the amount of misconceptions, sloppy inaccuracies and hostile adjectives not backed by an actual rationale is offensive, cruel and ill-intentioned. This article baited them traffic, but at what cost?”
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“To be clear: If God offered to shorten my life to lengthen Scorsese’s — I’d take the deal,” he continued. “This man understands Cinema. Defends Cinema. Embodies Cinema. He has always fought for the art of it and against the industry of it. He has never been tamed and has a firm place in history.”
The Critic essay, written by Sean Egan, criticized “The Wolf of Wall Street” for being “achingly slow” and called “Raging Bull” “across-the-board bad filmmaking,” two claims del Toro rejects. The filmmaker wrote that “film language discussions, history lessons and research may be needed” for anyone who thinks such things.
“When I read pieces like this one. Aimed at one of the most benign forces and one of the wisest, I do feel the tremors of an impending culture collapse — and I do wonder: ‘To what end?’ …and find myself at a loss,” del Toro concluded.
Del Toro has long been an outspoken champion of Scorsese. During the festival rollout of “The Irishman” in 2019, del Toro posted a lengthy Twitter thread in which he praised the film as a masterpiece for how it “transmogrified all the gangster myths into regret.”
Next up for del Toro is the release of his stop-motion “Pinocchio,” which debuts on Netflix on Dec. 9 after world premiering next week at the BFI London Film Festival.
I very, very seldom post anything contradictory here- but- the amount of misconceptions, sloppy innacuracies and hostile adjectives not backed by an actual rationale is offensive, cruel and ill-intentioned. This article baited them traffic, but at what cost? https://t.co/YEwTi46A2O
— Guillermo del Toro (@RealGDT) October 7, 2022
I don't shit talk, I don't "slam" and I support- but if anyone thinks that WWS is "…achingly slow" or that Raging Bull is "… bad filmmaking" and that "No studio dares to utter the word 'no' to him." Film language discussions, history lessons and research may be needed.
— Guillermo del Toro (@RealGDT) October 7, 2022
When I read pieces like this one. Aimed at one of the most benign forces and one of the wisest, I do feel the tremors of an impending culture collapse- and I do wonder: "To what end?" …and find myself at a loss.
— Guillermo del Toro (@RealGDT) October 7, 2022
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