For director Martin Scorsese, getting into the film industry was “all about the inspiration.” He made his first film “by the third year of Washington State College”, but it was inspiration rather than technique that he gained through studying. “[Professors] can’t tell you how to make the movie, you have to have it in you, you have to have inspiration and passion. The thing that is important is the inspiration from the professor.”
He was also inspired by films he watched as a child, “the Italian neorealist films… they cast a shadow over me.” He also cities “musicals, westerns, noirs – though at the time they weren’t called noirs, they were just movies – and all of British cinema” as key sources of inspiration. “The overriding British cinema was a major influence,” he says.
So, how does Scorsese suggest budding directors get started? He says be true to yourself instead of following trends: “don’t pay attention to the industry, do your own thing.” He also encourages the next generation of filmmakers to embrace new technology and try new approaches to film: “you younger ones, make a new art. Take what’s available and push it… You can do anything.”