Scorsese was initially reluctant to develop the project, although he eventually came to relate with LaMotta's story. Schrader rewrote Martin's first screenplay, and Scorsese and De Niro together made uncredited contributions thereafter. Pesci was a relatively unknown actor prior to the film, as was Moriarty, whom Pesci recommended. Duringprincipal photography, each of the boxing scenes was choreographed for a specific visual style, and De Niro gained approximately 60 pounds (27 kg) to portray LaMotta in his later years. Scorsese was exacting in the process ofediting and mixing the film, expecting it to be his last major feature.
Raging Bull premiered in New York City on November 14, 1980, and was released in theaters on December 19. The film had a lukewarm box office of $23.4 million against its $18 million budget, and received mixed reviews from critics. While De Niro's performance and the editing were widely acclaimed, its violent content received criticism.Raging Bull received a leading eight nominations at the53rd Academy Awards, includingBest Picture, and won two:Best Actor for De Niro andBest Editing forThelma Schoonmaker.
In 1941,Jake LaMotta is a young up-and-comingmiddleweight boxer who suffers his first loss toJimmy Reeves after a controversial decision. Jake's brotherJoey discusses a potential shot for the middleweight title with one of hisMafia connections, Salvy Batts. However, Jake repeatedly refuses the Mafia's help, wanting to win the championship on his own terms. Jake spots a 15-year-old girl named Vickie at a swimming pool in hisBronx neighborhood. He eventually pursues a relationship with her, despite his being already married and her being underage. In 1943, Jake defeatsSugar Ray Robinson, and has a rematch three weeks later. Despite Jake dominating Robinson during the bout, the judges surprisingly rule in favor of Robinson, who Joey feels won only because he was enlisting in theArmy the following week.
By 1945, Jake marries Vickie, but he is controlling and domineering over her, and suspicious that she has feelings for other men. When she remarks off-hand that his next opponentTony Janiro is good-looking, Jake flies into a rage, asking her what she meant by that. At the fight with Janiro, with Vickie looking on in horror, Jake makes it a point to brutally disfigure his opponent. At theCopacabana afterwards, Joey sees Vickie approach a table with Salvy and his crew. Joey confronts Vickie, who implies that she is dissatisfied in her marriage. Enraged, Joey viciously attacks Salvy in a fight that spills outside the club. Localmob boss Tommy Como orders them to patch up, and has Joey tell Jake that if he wants a shot at the championship title, which Como controls, he will have to take adive. Jake thus throws his next match againstBilly Fox, but cannot convincingly fake his defeat. He is booed out of the building and shortly thereafter suspended from boxing on suspicion of throwing the fight. By 1949, he is reinstated and wins the middleweight championship title by defeatingMarcel Cerdan.
In 1950, Jake becomes increasingly paranoid that Vickie is having an affair. He asks Joey if he has slept with her, which enrages Joey and causes him to leave. After Jake presses Vickie too about this, she sarcastically confesses that she had sex with Joey, Salvy, and Tommy. In a fit of rage, Jake storms into Joey's house and assaults him in front of his wife and children, and knocks Vickie unconscious as well. Vickie returns to their home and threatens to leave, but they reconcile. After defending his championship belt in a grueling 15-round bout againstLaurent Dauthuille, he calls his brother to make amends. When Jake does not speak Joey assumes Salvy is on the other end and starts insulting him; Jake hangs up. Estranged from his brother, Jake's career declines, and he loses his title to Sugar Ray Robinson in theirfinal encounter in 1951.
By 1956, an aging and overweight Jake has retired and moved with his family to Miami. After he stays out all night at the nightclub he owns, Vickie tells him that she wants a divorce, as well as full custody of their children. She also threatens to call the police if he comes anywhere near them. Soon after, Jake is arrested for admitting underage girls into his nightclub, and he unsuccessfully attempts to bribe his way out of his criminal case by pawning the jewels on his championship belt. In 1957, he is put insolitary confinement awaiting his sentence, where he questions his misfortune and cries in despair. After returning to New York City in 1958 after serving six months, he encounters Joey, whom he forcefully embraces; Joey half-heartedly reciprocates.
In 1964, Jake performsstand-up comedy at various clubs. Backstage before a show, LaMotta prepares for his performance byshadowboxing, quoting scenes fromOn the Waterfront and chanting "I'm the boss".
Scorsese repeatedly turned down the opportunity to direct the film, claiming that he had no idea whatRaging Bull was about, although he had read some of the text. Never a sports fan, when he found out what LaMotta used to do for a living, he said, "A boxer? I don't like boxing...Even as a kid, I always thought that boxing was boring... It was something I couldn't, wouldn't grasp." His overall opinion of sport in general is, "Anything with a ball, no good."[8]
The book was passed on to Mardik Martin, the film's eventual co-screenwriter, who said, "The trouble is the damn thing has been done a hundred times before—a fighter who has trouble with his brother and his wife and the mob is after him." De Niro had even shown the book to producersRobert Chartoff andIrwin Winkler, who were willing to assist only if Scorsese agreed.[9]
After nearly dying from adrug overdose, Scorsese agreed to make the film, not only to save his own life but also to save his career. Scorsese began to relate very personally to the story of Jake LaMotta, and in it, he saw how the boxing ring can be "an allegory for whatever you do in life", which for him paralleled moviemaking: "You make movies, you're in the ring each time."[10][11][12][13]
Preparation for the film began when Scorsese shot some 8 mm color footage featuring De Niro boxing in a ring. One night, when the footage was being shown to De Niro,Michael Chapman and his friend and mentor, the British directorMichael Powell, Powell pointed out that the color of the gloves at the time would have been only maroon, oxblood or black. It is one of the reasons that Scorsese chose to filmRaging Bull inblack and white. Other reasons were to distinguish the film from color films at the time, and to acknowledge the problem of fading color film stock—an issue that Scorsese recognized.[14][15][16] Scorsese attended two matches atMadison Square Garden to aid his research, picking up on minor but essential details, such as the blood sponge and subsequently, the blood on the ropes (which would be used in the film).[16]
Multiple titles were considered forRaging Bull, includingPrizefighter andThe Jake La Motta Story. Scorsese stated thatPrizefighter was his favorite title, but did not select it, for he was afraid that people would think that the film was solely about boxing.[17]
Under the guidance of Chartoff and Winkler,Mardik Martin was asked to start writing the screenplay.[18] According to De Niro, under no circumstances wouldUnited Artists accept Martin's script.[19] The story was based on the vision of journalistPete Hamill of a 1930s and 1940s style, when boxing was known as "the great dark prince of sports". De Niro, however, was unimpressed when he finished reading the first draft.[20]
Taxi Driver screenwriterPaul Schrader was swiftly brought in to rewrite the script around August 1978.[20] Some of the changes that Schrader made to the script include a rewrite of the scene with the undercooked steak, and the inclusion of LaMotta seen masturbating in aFlorida cell.
The character of LaMotta's brother Joey was finally added, previously absent from Martin's script.[19][20] United Artists saw a massive improvement on the quality of the script. However, its chief executivesSteven Bach and David Field met with Scorsese, De Niro and producerIrwin Winkler in November 1978 to say that they were worried that the content would beX-rated material and have no chance of finding an audience.[14]
According to Scorsese, the script was left to him and De Niro, and they spent two-and-a-half weeks on the island ofSaint Martin extensively re-building the content of the film.[10] The most significant change would be the scene in which LaMotta fixes his television and accuses his wife of having an affair.
Other changes included the removal of Jake and Joey's father, the reduction oforganized crime's role in the story, and a major rewrite of LaMotta's fight with Tony Janiro.[21][22] They were also responsible for the end sequence in which LaMotta is alone in his dressing room, quoting "I could have been a contender" fromOn the Waterfront.[22] An extract ofRichard III had been considered, butMichael Powell thought that it would be a bad decision within the context of an American film.[10] According toSteven Bach, the first two screenwriters (Martin and Schrader) would receive credit, but since there was no payment to the writer's guild on the script, De Niro and Scorsese's work remained uncredited.[22]
Cathy Moriarty (left) and Joe Pesci (right) on the set
One of Scorsese's trademarks was casting many actors and actresses new to the profession.[23] De Niro, who was already committed to play Jake LaMotta, began to help Scorsese track down unfamiliar names to play his on-screen brother Joey and wife Vikki.[24][25] The role of Joey LaMotta was the first to be cast. De Niro was watching a low-budget television film calledThe Death Collector when he saw the part of a young career criminal played by a relatively-unknownJoe Pesci as an ideal candidate. Prior to receiving a call from De Niro and Scorsese for the proposal to star in the film, Pesci had not worked in film for four years and was working at an Italian restaurant inNew Jersey.
The role of Vikki (spelled "Vickie" in the final film), Jake's second wife, had interest across the board, but it was Pesci who suggested the unknownCathy Moriarty from a picture that he saw at a New Jersey disco.[25] Both De Niro and Scorsese believed that Moriarty, at 18 years old, could portray the role after meeting with her on several occasions and noticing her husky voice. The duo had to prove to theScreen Actors Guild that she was right for the role whenCis Corman showed 10 comparing pictures of Moriarty and the real Vikki LaMotta for proof that she had a resemblance.[25]
Moriarty was asked to take a screen test, which she managed—partly aided by some improvised lines from De Niro—after some confusion wondering why the crew was filming her take. Joe Pesci also persuaded his former show-biz pal and co-star inThe Death Collector,Frank Vincent, to audition for the role of Salvy Batts. Following a successful audition and screen test, Vincent received the call to say that he had received the part.[26]Charles Scorsese, the director's father, made his film debut as Tommy Como's cousin Charlie.[26]
While in the midst of practicing aBronx accent and preparing for his role, De Niro met with both LaMotta and his ex-wife Vikki on separate occasions. Vikki, who lived in Florida, told stories about her life with her former husband, and showed old home movies (that later inspired a similar sequence to be done for the film).[15][27]
Jake LaMotta, on the other hand, served as his trainer, accompanied byAl Silvani as coach at the Gramercy club in New York City, getting him into shape. The actor found that boxing came naturally to him; he entered as a middleweight boxer, winning two of his three fights in aBrooklyn ring dubbed "young LaMotta" by the commentator. According to Jake LaMotta, De Niro was one of the top 20 best middleweight boxers of all time.[15][25]
Filming of the boxing scenes with director, Scorsese (center left, with beard) and the director of photography, Michael Chapman (center right, with white shirt)
According to the sound mixer, Michael Evje, the film began shooting at theLos Angeles Olympic Auditorium on April 16, 1979.Grips hung huge curtains of blackduvetyne on all four sides of the ring area to contain the artificial smoke used extensively for visual effect.
On May 7, the production moved to theCulver City studio, Stage 3, and filmed there until the middle of June. Scorsese made it clear during filming that he did not appreciate the traditional way of showing fights from the spectators' view.[16] He insisted that one camera operated by the Director of Photography,Michael Chapman, would be placed inside of the ring, as he would play the role of an opponent keeping out of the way of other fighters, so that viewers could see the emotions of the fighters, including those of Jake.[25]
The precise moves of the boxers were to be done as dance routines from the information of a book about dance instructors in the mode ofArthur Murray. A punching bag in the middle of the ring was used by De Niro between takes before he aggressively came straight on to do the next scene.[25][28] The initial five-week schedule for the shooting of the boxing scenes took longer than expected, putting Scorsese under pressure.[25]
According to Scorsese, production of the film was closed for nearly four months with the entire crew being paid, so that De Niro could go on a binge-eating trip around northern Italy and France.[15][28] When he arrived in the United States, his weight had increased from 145 to 215 pounds (66 to 97 kg).[25] The scenes with the heftier Jake LaMotta—which include announcing his retirement from boxing and LaMotta in a Florida cell—were completed seven-to-eight weeks later when approaching Christmas 1979, so as not to aggravate the health issues that were affecting De Niro's posture, breathing and talking.[25][28][29]
According to Evje, Jake's nightclub sequence was filmed in a closedSan Pedro club on December 3. The jail cell head-banging scene was shot on a constructed set, with De Niro asking for minimal crew to be present. There was not even a boom operator present.[citation needed]
The final sequence, in which Jake LaMotta is in front of his mirror, was filmed on the last day of shooting, requiring 19 takes, with only the 13th being used for the film. Scorsese wanted to have an atmosphere that would be so cold that the words would have an impact as he tries to come to terms with his relationship with his brother.[10]
The editing ofRaging Bull began when production was temporarily put on hold and was completed in 1980.[28][30] Scorsese worked with the editorThelma Schoonmaker to achieve a final cut of the film. Their main decision was to abandon Schrader's idea of LaMotta's nightclub act interweaving with the flashback of his youth, and instead followed the lines of a single flashback, in which only scenes of LaMotta practicing his stand-up would remainbookending the film.[31]
A sound mix arranged byFrank Warner was a delicate process that took six months.[30] According to Scorsese, the sound onRaging Bull was difficult because each punch, camera shot and flash bulb would be different. Also, there was the issue of trying to balance the quality between scenes featuring dialogue and those involving boxing (which were done inDolby Stereo).[28]Raging Bull went through a test screening in front of a small audience including the chief executives of United Artists,Steven Bach andAndy Albeck. The screening was shown at theM-G-M screening room in New York in July 1980. Albeck praised Scorsese by calling him a "true artist".[30]
According to the producers Robert Chartoff and Irwin Winkler, matters were made worse when United Artists decided not to distribute the film but no other studios were interested when they attempted to sell the rights.[30] Scorsese made no secret thatRaging Bull would be his "Hollywood swan song" and he took unusual care of its rights during post-production.[11] Scorsese threatened to remove his credit from the film if he was not allowed to sort a reel that obscured the name of a whisky brand (Cutty Sark) that was heard in a scene. The work was completed four days shy of the premiere.[32]
Paula Petrella, heir to Frank Petrello, whose works were allegedly sources for the film, filed for copyright infringement in 2009 based on MGM's 1991 copyright renewal of the film. In 2014, the Supreme Court held, inPetrella v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., that Petrella's suit survived MGM's defense of "laches", the legal doctrine that protects defendants from unreasonable delays by potential plaintiffs. The case was remanded to lower courts, meaning that Petrella could receive a decision on the merits of her claim.[34] MGM settled with Petrella in 2015.[35]
The brew of violence and anger, combined with the lack of a proper advertising campaign, led to the film's lukewarm box-office intake of $23 million, compared to its $18 million budget. By the time it left theaters, it earned $10.1 million intheatrical rentals (equivalent to $32.2 million in 2024).[36] Scorsese became concerned for his future, and worried that producers and studios may refuse to finance his films.[37] According toBox Office Mojo, the film grossed $23,383,987 in domestic theaters (equivalent to $74.5 million in 2024).[38]
When it premiered in New York City on November 14, 1980, the release ofRaging Bull was met with polarized reviews, but the film would receive widespread critical acclaim, and is widely regarded as one of Scorsese's best works.[30][31]
On thereview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 92% based on 151 reviews, with an average rating of 9.00/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Arguably Martin Scorsese's and Robert De Niro's finest film,Raging Bull is often painful to watch, but it's a searing, powerful work about an unsympathetic hero."[39]Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average, gave it a score of 90 out of 100, based on 28 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[40] Audiences polled byCinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on a scale of A+ to F.[41]
Critic forThe New Yorker,Pauline Kael described the film not as a biographical film about a boxer, but as a "biography of thegenre of prize fighting" further saying the film is "tabloid grand opera" and "overripe, ready for canonization" in which Scorsese puts his "unmediated obsessions on the screen."[42]
Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times said that Scorsese "has made his most ambitious film as well as his finest", and went on to praise Moriarty's debut performance, saying, "Either she is one of the film finds of the decade or Mr. Scorsese isSvengali. Perhaps both."[43][37]
Time praised De Niro's performance because "much ofRaging Bull exists because of the possibilities it offers De Niro to display his own explosive art".[37]
Steven Jenkins from theBritish Film Institute's (BFI) magazineMonthly Film Journal said that "Raging Bull may prove to be Scorsese's finest achievement to date".[37]
The Oscars were held the day after PresidentRonald Reagan was shot byJohn Hinckley, who did it as an attempt to impressJodie Foster, who played a child prostitute in another of Scorsese's famous films,Taxi Driver (which also starred De Niro).[46] Out of fear of being attacked, Scorsese went to the ceremony withFBI bodyguards disguised as guests who escorted him before the announcement of theAcademy Award for Best Picture was made (the winner being Robert Redford'sOrdinary People).
By the end of the 1980s,Raging Bull had cemented its reputation as amodern classic. It was voted the best film of the 1980s in numerous critics' polls, and is regularly pointed to as both Scorsese's best film and one of the finest American films ever made.[48] Several prominent critics, among themRoger Ebert, declared the film to be an instant classic and the consummation of Scorsese's earlier promise. Ebert proclaimed it the best film of the 1980s,[49] and one of the ten greatest films of all time.[50] The film has been deemed "culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant" by the United StatesLibrary of Congress and was selected for preservation in theNational Film Registry in 1990.[51]
Raging Bull was listed byTime magazine as one of theAll-TIME 100 Movies.[52]Variety magazine ranked the film number 39 on their list of the 50 greatest movies.[53]Raging Bull is fifth onEntertainment Weekly's list of the 100 Greatest Movies of All Time.[54] The film tied withThe Bicycle Thieves andVertigo at number 6 onSight & Sound's 2002 poll of the greatest movies.[55] WhenSight & Sound's directors' and critics' lists from that year are combined,Raging Bull gets the most votes of any movie that has been produced since 1975.[56] In 2002,Film4 held a poll of the 100 Greatest Movies, on whichRaging Bull was voted in at number 20.[57]Halliwell's Film Guide, a British film guide, placedRaging Bull seventh in a poll naming their selection for the "Top 1,000 Movies".[58]TV Guide also included the film on their list of the 50 best movies.[59]Movieline magazine included the film on its list of the 100 best movies.[60]Leonard Maltin includedRaging Bull on his100 Must-See Films of the 20th Century list.[61]Video Detective also included the film on its list of the top 100 movies of all time.[62]Roger Ebert named "Robert De Niro's transformation from sleek boxer to paunchy nightclub owner inRaging Bull" as one of the100 Greatest Movie Moments.[63] TheNational Society of Film Critics ranked it #75 on their100 Essential Films list.[64]Rolling Stone magazine ranked it #6 on their list of the100 Maverick Movies in the Last 100 Years.[65]
A 1997 readers poll conducted by theL.A. Daily News ranked the film #64 on a list of the greatest American movies.[66] In 2006, theWriters Guild of America named the film as the 76th best screenplay of all time.[67]Raging Bull is #7 onTime Out Film Guide's "Centenary Top 100" list,[68] and it also tied at #16 (withLawrence of Arabia) on their 1998 readers poll.[69] In 2008,Empire magazine held a poll ofThe 500 Greatest Movies of All Time, taking votes from 10,000 readers, 150 film makers, and 50 film critics in whichRaging Bull was placed at number 11.[70] It was also placed on a similar list of 1000 movies byThe New York Times.[71] In 2010,Total Film selected the film as one ofThe 100 Greatest Movies of All Time.[72]FilmSite.org, asubsidiary ofAmerican Movie Classics, placedRaging Bull on their list of the 100 greatest movies.[73] Additionally, Films101.com ranked the film as the 17th best movie of all time in a list of the 10,790 most notable.[74]
In 2012, theMotion Picture Editors Guild listed the film as the best-edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership.[75][76] In the2012Sight & Sound polls, it was ranked the 53rd-greatest film ever made in the critics' poll[77] and 12th in the directors' poll.[78] Contemporaries of Scorsese, likeFrancis Ford Coppola, have included it routinely in their lists for favorite films of all time. In 2015,Raging Bull ranked 29th onBBC's "100 Greatest American Films" list, voted on by film critics from around the world.[79]
Martin Scorsese decided to assemble a soundtrack made of music that was popular at the time using his personal collection of78s. With the help ofRobbie Robertson, the songs were carefully chosen so they would be the ones that a person would hear on the radio, at the pool or in bars and clubs which reflected the mood of that particular era.[84][85] Some lyrics from songs would also be slipped into some dialogue. TheIntermezzo fromCavalleria rusticana by Italian composerPietro Mascagni would serve as the main theme toRaging Bull after a successful try-out by Scorsese and the editor,Thelma Schoonmaker, over the film's opening titles.[85] Two other Mascagni pieces were used in the film: theBarcarolle fromSilvano, and the Intermezzo (Ratcliff's Dream) fromGuglielmo Ratcliff.[86] A two-CD soundtrack was released in 2005, long after the film was released, because of earlier difficulties obtaining rights for many of the songs, which Scorsese selected from his childhood memories growing up in New York.
In 2006,Variety reported thatSunset Pictures was developing a combination sequel and prequel film entitledRaging Bull II: Continuing the Story of Jake LaMotta, chronicling LaMotta's life before and after the events of the original film, as told in the memoir of the same name.[87] Filming began on June 15, 2012, withWilliam Forsythe as the older LaMotta andMojean Aria as the younger version (before the events of the first film).[88] The film, directed by Martin Guigui, also starsJoe Mantegna,Tom Sizemore,Penelope Ann Miller,Natasha Henstridge,Alicia Witt,Ray Wise,Harry Hamlin, andJames Russo asRocky Graziano.[89][90] In July 2012,MGM, owners of United Artists, filed a lawsuit against LaMotta and the producers of the new film to block it from being released. MGM argued that they had the rights to make any authorized sequel to the original book, tracing their claim back to an agreement LaMotta and co-author Peter Savage made with Chartoff-Winkler, producers of the original film. MGM argued that the defendants were publicly claiming the film to be a sequel to the original film, which they said could "tarnish" the original film's reputation.[91] In August 2012, the suit was settled, with producers of the new film retitling itThe Bronx Bull and agreeing not to market it as a sequel toRaging Bull.[92] The film was released in 2016.
^Spy (November 1988)."The Unstoppables".Spy: The New York Monthly. New York: Sussex Publishers, LLC: 90.ISSN0890-1759.Archived from the original on February 6, 2021. RetrievedOctober 28, 2020.
^abcdefEvans, MikeThe Making of Raging Bull pp. 124–129