Key Takeaways:
- New book ‘Dialogues on Faith’ presents Martin Scorsese’s films through the lens of faith as persistent tension between guilt, desire and violence.
- The conversations with Jesuit Antonio Spadaro span a decade and reveal how Scorsese’s Catholic upbringing shaped his moral vision.
- Faith in Scorsese’s work is posed as conflict rather than consolation, influencing characters and narrative choices across his career.
- The book has attracted attention in academic and cultural circles, including Brazil’s Instituto Humanitas Unisinos.
Martin Scorsese’s cinema is cast in a new light in Diálogos Sobre a Fé, a book of extended conversations with Jesuit priest and editor Antonio Spadaro. Compiled over ten years and published by Record, the dialogues offer an interpretative key that invites audiences to revisit the director’s body of work through faith understood not as solace but as ongoing moral tension.
Scorsese faith in cinema
The central claim of the book is straightforward: faith in Scorsese’s films functions as persistent friction among guilt, desire, violence and moral conscience. Rather than delivering tidy answers or spiritual reconciliations, the director’s engagement with religion is presented as a source of questions. Scorsese treats belief as destabilising—an engine that exposes moral ambiguity in characters and narrative choices.
The dialogues trace the origins of that tension to the director’s childhood in Little Italy, New York. A frequent asthmatic and often confined indoors, Scorsese became an attentive watcher of neighbourhood rituals, parish devotion and street violence. That early experience, he says in the book, produced an acute awareness of finitude and a habit of observation that later shaped his filmmaking. Reading and cinema took on the structural role of an intimate prayer, a means to order fear and guilt and to hold the perception of death at bay.
Importantly, the book avoids devotional hagiography. Spadaro’s role as interlocutor prevents the conversations from sliding into self-justification. The Jesuit editor presses Scorsese on contradictions, refusing to smooth away the rough edges of a faith formed amid historical violence and personal responsibility. As a result, religion becomes an intellectual and aesthetic problem to be grappled with rather than a doctrine to be endorsed.
The interpretative frame supplied by the book alters how specific films register. In Taxi Driver, Raging Bull and GoodFellas, the possibility of redemption never erases wrongdoing; even narratives explicitly religious, such as The Last Temptation of Christ, stage faith as trial and suffering. Violence in Scorsese’s cinema is not spectacle or praise but a symptom of a world in which transcendence remains unresolved. Faith becomes a language for managing guilt, not a route to absolution.
That approach has broadened interest beyond strictly religious audiences. Academics and cultural institutions have taken note, including Brazil’s Instituto Humanitas Unisinos, which highlighted Scorsese’s refusal to compress faith into an easy answer. The result is a book that will appeal to readers who prefer rigorous cultural inquiry over devotional reading—those who accept that art often raises questions rather than supplying solutions.
Diálogos Sobre a Fé does more than add a biographical footnote to Scorsese’s career. By framing faith as a persistent conflict within his films, it helps explain why ethics, violence and a sense of transcendence are inseparable in his work. For critics, students and general readers alike, the book offers a new vantage point from which to watch and reconsider one of contemporary cinema’s most consistently probing voices.

















