Martin Scorsese caused a storm yesterday when the American auteur joined Letterboxd, an app that movie watchers use to log movies they've watched. While the memes have been plentiful, it is wonderful to see Scorsese join another Gen Z-heavy app (the filmmaker made an appearance on his daughter Francesca Scorsese's TikTok to show how well he knows Gen Z lingo) because it shows that Scorsese knows how to stay relevant in the modern culture.

Now on Letterboxd, Scorsese has found his young audience and is taking the chance to share some wisdom and cinema history with them.


In a list created by the filmmaker titled "Companion Films," Scorsese writes, "I love the idea of putting different films together into one program. I grew up seeing double features, programs in repertory houses, [and] evenings of avant-garde films in storefront theatres. You always learn something, see something in a new light, because every movie is in conversation with every other movie. The greater the difference between the pictures, the better."

Scorsese continues writing, saying that he has been asked over the years to pair his films with the ones that inspired him. While he states that "inspiration" and "influence" are not accurate terms for this list he created, he does say that these companion films capture the spirit of his related projects.

Here is a slide show of companion films to Scorsese's filmography, created by the legend himself.

'Boxcar Bertha'

Exploitation cinema revolutionized cinema in the '60s and '70s. The best part about the genre was that it could be made for pennies. Run and gun filmmaking was the rage, and pushed a new movement for young and hungry filmmakers to go out and make something... anything! It is why Boxcare Bertha was inspired by the indie filmmakers that later defined the '60s and '70s era of filmmaking.

The companion piece to Boxcar Bertha is Guns Don't Argue (1957).

Credit: The Movie Database

'Guns Don't Argue'

Source: Letterboxd