Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Mardik Martin: A new documentary

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Mardik Martin: A new documentary

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Oct 19 2007

    Mardik Martin

    A new documentary
    By Robert W. Welkos, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    October 19, 2007


    Ask Mardik Martin how tall he is, and the rumpled, white-haired,
    barrel-chested USC screenwriting professor replies good-naturedly: "5
    feet 4. I used to be 5 feet 6 but had back surgery and they shortened
    me. I'm not joking. I lost a couple of spine rings, or whatever they
    call them. Look," he pauses, "short isn't exactly the end of the
    world."

    Nor, one might add, loss of fame, fortune and having your name on the
    credits of big Hollywood movies.


    Professor
    It's been decades since he wrote "Raging Bull"
    (sharing screenplay credit with Paul Schrader). Yet today, while
    virtually everyone knows that Martin Scorsese directed the classic
    1980 boxing movie starring Robert De Niro, few outside of a certain
    generation in Hollywood or in the rarefied world of academic
    cineastes have ever heard of Mardik, the name he is affectionately
    called by his students and friends.

    Now 70 and light years from the era when he and his New York
    University film school buddy Scorsese collaborated on "Mean Streets,"
    "New York, New York" and "Raging Bull," Martin is not bitter seeing
    the great heights to which Scorsese has ascended in the intervening
    years. In fact, watching Scorsese finally win the Academy Award for
    best director for "The Departed" this year made Martin very happy.

    "He has kind of been waiting for it for years," Martin told The
    Times. "He's still a good friend. Unfortunately, he's in New York
    most of the time. I'm not too crazy about New York, so I don't go
    there that often. But I think Marty is great. I think, visually, he's
    without peer."

    Today, Martin will receive his own moment in the spotlight when a new
    documentary titled "Mardik: From Baghdad to Hollywood" is screened at
    5 p.m. at the ArcLight in Hollywood as part of the Hollywood Film
    Festival. The 82-minute film by producer-directors Ramy Katrib and
    Evan York and producer Jeff Orsa chronicles what the filmmakers note
    is Martin's unlikely journey from Iraq to NYU film school, from
    busboy to writing "Raging Bull," from being the hottest writer in New
    York to losing it all in L.A., and from forsaking his craft to
    becoming a favorite screenwriting teacher at USC. The film features
    interviews with Scorsese, director Amy Heckerling, producers Irwin
    Winkler and Gene Kirkwood, author Peter Biskind and others.

    "We couldn't believe that this man who was living in this normal
    apartment [in Studio City] was the writer of 'Raging Bull,' " said
    Katrib, the founder and CEO of DigitalFilm Tree, a Hollywood
    production and post-production company. "We would just go to his
    house and hang out. He was a wealth of information. He would usually
    start by screaming at us saying, 'That was a dumb question!' He
    wouldn't terrorize us, but he'd say, 'Just get to the point!' Most
    teachers tend to be flat. He was dynamic. He would always use a
    real-life story to illustrate a point."

    Raised in Baghdad in an Armenian family, Martin said his love of film
    was inspired by American movies.

    "You have to understand," he said, "Baghdad, even then, was filthy,
    dirty, disgusting, with dust and sand. Then you see Betty Grable in
    unbelievable Technicolor and the beautiful scenery in the background.
    It's like another dimension, it's like finding paradise."

    At 18, he was sent to America by his father so he wouldn't have to
    join the Iraqi army and also to get an American education. But not
    long afterward, his father lost his business when revolution swept
    Iraq in 1958. Martin supported his schooling by working as a busboy
    and then as a waiter at Toots Shor's famous restaurant in Manhattan.

    It was at NYU that he met Scorsese. "We spent a lot of time together
    aside from writing," he noted. "We had like 15 ideas, a lot of ideas.
    'Let's do this, let's do that.' "

    "Everything [Scorsese] did coming out of NYU is basically Marty and
    Mardik," Katrib said. "They were like a team."

    They made a documentary about Scorsese's parents called
    "Italianamerican." Martin did the pre-production interviews. "I put
    the answers down on paper," he recalled. "You don't ask questions if
    you don't know the answers already."

    But it was 1973's "Mean Streets" that catapulted their careers.
    Audiences marveled at the gritty dialogue. "They think it's all made
    up on the screen, which is untrue," Martin said, noting that he
    achieved the realistic dialogue by reading what he had written into a
    tape recorder until the lines were just as he envisioned the actors
    doing them.

    "Mean Streets" changed not only their careers but also those of the
    movie's stars, Robert De Niro and Harvey Keitel.

    "The whole situation became suddenly a different world for us,"
    Martin said. "I stopped teaching and moved to L.A. I got a couple of
    jobs, did some documentary-style writing for some people. I signed
    with Chartoff/Winkler" (the producers of "Rocky").

    He reteamed with Scorsese on "New York, New York" and recalled how
    "they had to shoot whether the script was ready or not. That was the
    problem." But he adds: "Right now, I think it works better than it
    did then. Years have done justice to it."

    Still, it is "Raging Bull" that he will be most remembered for. He
    spent a year and a half researching the life of boxer Jake LaMotta.
    "De Niro wanted to make 'Raging Bull,' but Marty didn't [because] he
    hated boxing and sports," Martin said.

    "Bob and I sat down and watched every boxing movie ever made -- not
    to copy, just the opposite, not to do what other people had done,"
    Martin recalled. They convinced Scorsese there was a movie in it by
    having him visualize scenes, like fighters' blood spraying the crowd.

    But Hollywood was changing. "Star Wars" and "E.T. the
    Extra-Terrestrial" highlighted the new world of computer wizardry in
    films. "I can't write that kind of stuff," Martin said. His scripts
    were, after all, rooted in realism, not fantasy.

    As is so common in Hollywood, he found himself unable to get his
    projects up and going.

    "He was the original writer on 'Carlito's Way' and then he made fun
    of one of Al Pacino's movies and ended up losing the account," Katrib
    said. "He was nitpicking 'Scarface.' When he talked to us about it,
    he said . . . he didn't think it was a good story."

    There was another project he hoped to make about a famous
    photojournalist of the 1930s known as Weegee, but somebody else beat
    him to the punch with a similar movie. "When it bombed, nobody would
    touch my story."

    Along the way, Martin had become hooked on cocaine. He used the drug,
    he said, not to party but "only to keep me up" at night so he could
    keep writing.

    "He speaks out about it to his students," Katrib said. "What teacher
    says, 'Hey, kid, don't do that'?"

    Martin eventually lost his house and his personal belongings. One of
    the movie's poignant scenes has Martin expressing regret that he
    never fathered any children. He was married for six years, he said,
    but writers and marriage do not make for stable relationships.

    He is in his 11th year of writing a book about screenwriting. He said
    he likely will have to take time off from teaching to finish the
    work.

    On Nov. 4, Martin will be honored with a lifetime achievement award
    at the 10th annual ARPA International Film Festival at its gala
    awards banquet held at the Sheraton Universal Hotel.

    http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et -mardik19oct19,0,454280.story?coll=la-headlines-ca lendar
Working...
X