Martin Scorsese, the 83-year-old cinema titan, just wrapped principal photography on his latest Apple TV Plus project, What Happens at Night, after a brisk 35-day shoot in Prague that ended April 2, with pick-up shots in Switzerland and interiors now underway in New York City. World of Reel reports the dream-like tale of a couple, played by Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence alongside Mads Mikkelsen and Patricia Clarkson, adapting Peter Cameron's novel and eyeing a possible Cannes 2027 debut—this marks one of Scorsese's shortest productions ever, a biographical pivot toward efficient, high-stakes storytelling. Dark Horizons reveals he's already gearing up for his next, Midnight Vendetta, a Mafia thriller penned by Eric Roth delving into organized crime's 19th-century roots in New Orleans, with casting calls signaling a December start there, post-May wrap on Night, potentially making 2026 his busiest directorial year yet.
No fresh public appearances or social media buzz in the past few days, but his influence ripples on: a documentary titled Mr. Scorsese snagged a Peabody Award nomination in the documentary category, as announced by the University of Georgia's Grady College, underscoring his enduring cultural pull ahead of winners on April 23. Production slates hum with promise too—Social Life Magazine lists ongoing developments like a Hawaii mob flick with DiCaprio, Dwayne Johnson, and Emily Blunt, plus a Grateful Dead biopic starring Jonah Hill—hinting at Scorsese's empire, pegged at $200 million net worth, expanding into fresh genres with biographical weight. In the past 24 hours, no major headlines broke, but these back-to-back films signal a late-career renaissance, cementing his legacy as Hollywood's unretiring maestro.
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