Martin Scorsese in "Mr. Scorsese," premiering October 17, 2025 on Apple TV+.

A five-part deep dive into Martin Scorsese’s career promises unprecedented access, candid stories, and the kind of archival treasures cinephiles dream about.


Martin Scorsese may be one of the most visible filmmakers alive, but he rarely turns the camera on himself. Outside of a rare acting cameo or a social media clip guessing Gen Z slang, the legendary director tends to let his work speak for him. That changes this fall, when Apple TV+ premieres Mr. Scorsese — a five-part documentary series offering an unfiltered, deeply personal look at the life and career of one of cinema’s most enduring voices.



Premiering October 17, the series promises “unrestricted access to Scorsese’s private archives” and gathers an almost impossible lineup of collaborators and admirers. Cate Blanchett, Daniel Day-Lewis, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jodie Foster, Mick Jagger, Margot Robbie, Thelma Schoonmaker, Paul Schrader, Steven Spielberg, Sharon Stone — and, naturally, Scorsese himself — all appear in interviews that span decades of film history.




The first trailer offers an instant jolt of film history gold. Spielberg recalls a now-legendary moment during the post-production of Taxi Driver, when Scorsese called him in a panic. “You got to help me,” Scorsese told him. “They want me to cut out all the blood.” The director even threatened — perhaps only half-jokingly — to buy a gun if the studio tried to hold his rough cut hostage. The story has circulated for years in film circles, but this time, the details come straight from the source.


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Behind the camera is director Rebecca Miller, whose previous documentary Arthur Miller: Writer (2017) examined her father’s life and legacy. In a statement accompanying the trailer, she called Mr. Scorsese “a filmmaker’s dream,” citing the privilege of working with not only Scorsese but his inner circle of creative partners. “I believe this will resonate with everyone from dedicated Scorsese fans to anyone who has grappled with failure and reached for the stars,” Miller said. “This includes the true version of a mythic, never-before-told story about Taxi Driver, and how thanks to Marty’s perseverance, the film retained its integrity and became one of the most culturally significant works of all time.”




For cinephiles, Mr. Scorsese is more than just another career retrospective. The access to his archives, paired with candid interviews from some of the most influential figures in modern cinema, makes this a rare opportunity to see the director’s career — from Mean Streets to Killers of the Flower Moon — through his own lens. With five episodes, Apple TV+ seems to be aiming for a definitive, richly detailed portrait rather than a highlight reel.




So here’s your challenge: you’ve got two months to watch (or rewatch) all 27 of Scorsese’s feature films before Mr. Scorsese premieres. That’s everything from the grit of Taxi Driver and the operatic crime saga of Goodfellas to his quieter, more meditative works like Silence and The Age of Innocence. It’s no small feat — but then again, neither is telling the story of Martin Scorsese.



Watch the Trailer Below:



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