The age of innocence

1993 Color USA 139 minutes


 

Michelle Pfeiffer + Daniel Day LewisMichelle Pfeiffer Daniel Dat-Lewis

Daniel Day-Lewis + Alexis Smith + Michael Gough + Siân PhillipsMiriam Margolyes

Daniel Day-Lewis

Winona RyderDaniel Day Lewis + Winona RyderDaniel Day Lewis

Daniel Day LewisDaniel Day-Lewis + Michelle Pfeiffer.

Winona Ryderf

Scorsese directsOn the set

 

Michelle Pfeiffer

Trivia

Release date: September 17, 1993

The movie was shot in: The state of New York, Pennsylvania (both USA) and Paris (France). A lot of the exteriors were shot in the town of Troy, upstate New York.

Writer Edith Wharton won in 1921 the Pulitzer Prize for her novel The age of innocence

The film was originally to be released in fall of 1992, but was held back by over a year to allow director Martin Scorsese more time to edit.

Researchers looked for all the places Wharton knew in New York. Artists recreated 500 paintings for all the rooms. There are seven dinner scenes in the movie. Each of them represents a family, and the differences in design suggest the differences in the families.Source / More (Book)

The movie was released two times before: In 1924 (silent) and in 1934.

The book The Age of innocence was named to the list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century by the editorial board of the American Modern Library.


Bio

Martin Scorsese

Photo of Martin Scorsese

Remarkable:

Scorsese turned down the chance to direct Schindler’s list in the 1980s, as he felt he couldn’t do as good a job as a Jewish director. He agreed to swap films with Steven Spielberg, taking over Cape Fear (1991) instead.

Born:

November 17, 1942

Scorsese, an asthmatic child, was raised in New York's Little Italy (USA) and spent most of his early years frequenting movie theaters. After he tried unsuccessfully to enter the Roman Catholic priesthood, Martin graduated from New York University as a film major in 1966.

In 1968 he made his first feature film, Who's That Knocking at My Door?, and then agreed to work as an assistant director and editor on the musical documentary Woodstock (1970).

Scorsese won in 1973 critical attention with Mean Streets and even more with Taxi Driver (1976), a brutal, uncompromising film that starred Robert De Niro as a lonely, psychopathic New York cabbie. Martin chose for his next project, Raging bull (1980), black-and-white cinematography to render stark realism to the story of boxing champion Jake La Motta.

In 1986 Scorsese made a conventional Hollywood movie, The color of money but two years later he sparked controversy with his film adaptation of the novel The Last Temptation of Christ. He returned to more familiar subject matter in GoodFellas (1990) and Casino (1995) but turned to unexpected material with The age of innocence (1993).

By making Kundun (1997) Martin was barred from entering Tibet. His latest film The departed was his biggest financial success to date and it won Martin's only Oscar.

It has been announced that Scorsese will be working on The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt and on Silence, the story of Portuguese Jesuit missionaries in feudal Japan.

Academy awards

2007 Won Oscar for: The Departed (2006)
2005 Nominated Best Director for: The Aviator (2004)
2003 Nominated Best Director for: Gangs of New York (2002)
1994 Nominated Best Writing for: The age of innocence (1993)
1991 Nominated Best Director for: Goodfellas (1990)
1991 Nominated Best Writing for: Goodfellas (1990)
1989 Nominated Best Director for: The last temptation of Christ (1988)
1981 Nominated Best Director for: Raging bull (1980)

Selected Movies

Books

Lester Keyser -> Martin Scorsese (1992)
Mary Pat Kelly -> Martin Scorsese: A Journey (1996)
Lawrence S. Friedman -> The Cinema of Martin Scorsese (1998)