
Raging Bull (1980)
Director: Martin Scorsese
Plot Synopsis[]
The life of boxer Jake LaMotta (Robert De Niro), whose violence and temper that led him to the top in the ring destroyed his life outside of it.
Male Deaths[]
- Bill Hanrahon [Eddie Eagan]
- Floyd Anderson [Jimmy Reeves]
- Johnny Turner [Laurent Dauthuille]
- Louis Raftis [Marcel Cardan]
Female Deaths[]
- None
Note: The four actors (who are listed in the Male Deaths section) played real life people who died before 1980 (the film's release date).
Trivia[]
- It is now considered as Martin Scorsese's magnum opus
- When the real Jake LaMotta saw the movie, he said it made him realize for the first time what a terrible person he had been. He asked the real Vicki LaMotta "Was I really like that?". Vicki replied "You were worse."
- In 1978, Martin Scorsese was at an all-time low after his last movie New York, New York (1977) had bombed at the box office, followed by a near-overdose resulting from an addiction to cocaine. Robert De Niro visited him at the hospital, and told him that he had to clean himself up and make this movie about a boxer. De Niro had asked Scorsese many times before, but he had always refused (he didn't like sports movies anyway), but due to De Niro's persistence, he eventually gave in. Scorsese believed that his American career was over anyway, so he wanted to do one final film there, and then move to Europe to make smaller movies. Many (including Scorsese) claim that De Niro saved Scorsese's life by getting him back into work, and that this movie cemented Scorsese's reputation as one of the most important American filmmakers.
- When Martin Scorsese visited some boxing matches, he was immediately struck by two images: the blood-soaked sponge wiped across the fighter's back, and the pendulous drops of blood hanging off the ropes.
- In preparation for his role, Robert De Niro went through extensive physical training, then entered in three genuine Brooklyn boxing matches and won two of them.
- The reasons why the film was made in black and white were for period authenticity, but mainly to differentiate it from Rocky (1976), as well as from Rocky II (1979), The Main Event (1979) and The Prize Fighter (1979), three other movies about boxing also in production at the time. Another reason was that Martin Scorsese didn't want to depict all that blood in a color picture. Also, in the book, Jake LaMotta says "Now, sometimes, at night, when I think back, I feel like I'm looking at an old black and white movie of myself. Why it should be black and white I don't know, but it is."
- Robert De Niro accidentally broke Joe Pesci's rib in a sparring scene. This shot appears in the film: De Niro hits Pesci in the side, Pesci groans, and there is a quick cut to another angle.
- This is the first collaboration of Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci.