Martin Brest
Martin Brest (born August 8, 1951) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer whose career spans action comedies and dramas, marked by early successes in the 1980s and a prolonged hiatus following creative disputes on later projects.[1] Brest's feature debut, Going in Style (1979), a comedy-drama about three elderly friends attempting a bank robbery to escape boredom, showcased his interest in themes of redemption and mortality.[2] He achieved major commercial breakthroughs with Beverly Hills Cop (1984), an action-comedy starring Eddie Murphy that emphasized fish-out-of-water humor and grossed over $234 million domestically, and Midnight Run (1988), a buddy film pairing Robert De Niro and Charles Grodin in a cross-country chase noted for its character-driven tension and rapport.[3] Brest demonstrated versatility by shifting to drama with Scent of a Woman (1992), directing Al Pacino as a blind, acerbic retired lieutenant whose performance earned an Academy Award; the film itself received nominations for Best Picture (with Brest as producer) and Best Director.[4] Later works included the supernatural romance Meet Joe Black (1998), which explored mortality through Brad Pitt's portrayal of Death incarnate, though it received mixed reviews for its length and pacing.[3] His career effectively concluded with Gigli (2003), a romantic crime comedy starring Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez, which suffered extensive studio-mandated reshoots and re-editing amid disagreements that halted post-production for eight months, resulting in a 6% Rotten Tomatoes score and box office underperformance that Brest attributed to lost creative autonomy.[3] Since then, Brest has not directed another feature, expressing reluctance to return without full control, despite earlier enjoying "success and freedom" in Hollywood.[3]Early years
Upbringing and family
Martin Brest was born on August 8, 1951, in the Bronx borough of New York City.[5][1] His parents were both born in Eastern Europe and instilled traditional values from their cultural backgrounds, though Brest later reflected on challenges in deriving personal satisfaction from those lifestyles.[6] Brest was raised in a Jewish family, with his early interests including photography, influenced in part by a relative working in the field.[1][6] Specific details on siblings or parental occupations remain limited in public records, reflecting the director's relatively private personal history.Education and entry into filmmaking
Brest earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in film from New York University in 1973.[7] At NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, he directed the short film Hot Dogs for Gauguin, starring Danny DeVito, which received awards for its execution.[7] After NYU, Brest pursued a Master of Fine Arts in directing at the American Film Institute Conservatory in Los Angeles.[1] While there, he wrote, produced, and directed Hot Tomorrows (1977), his first feature-length project—a 72-minute black-and-white film depicting a young writer's fixation on mortality and his interactions with a carefree friend during a single night.[8][1] Funded on a limited student budget through AFI, the film screened at festivals and showcased Brest's emerging command of intimate, character-driven narratives.[8] Hot Tomorrows served as Brest's professional launchpad, demonstrating his potential to studios and facilitating his transition to commercial features. In 1979, at age 28, he directed Going in Style, his debut theatrical release, which starred George Burns and Art Carney as elderly friends turning to bank robbery amid financial desperation.[1] The film's modest production, backed by Warner Bros., highlighted Brest's ability to blend humor with poignant social observation, earning critical notice for its fresh take on aging and autonomy.[1] This project solidified his entry into Hollywood directing, distinct from his academic origins.Professional career
Breakthrough film: Going in Style
Going in Style (1979) marked Martin Brest's feature directorial debut, where he also served as screenwriter. The film depicts three elderly widowers living in Queens, New York—Joe (George Burns), Willie (Art Carney), and Al (Lee Strasberg)—who, disillusioned with their stagnant pensioner lives, impulsively rob a bank in Manhattan. Blending elements of heist comedy and poignant drama, it explores themes of mortality, friendship, and rebellion against routine. Produced by Tony Bill and Fred T. Gallo for Warner Bros., the film had a budget of $5.5 million and a runtime of 97 minutes, earning a PG rating for mild language.[9][10] Brest, then in his late 20s, developed the project as his first commercial endeavor following film studies and shorter works. Originally titled Stepping Out, the script drew from observations of urban elderly life, emphasizing authentic character interactions over conventional plot mechanics. Principal photography occurred primarily on location in New York City, capturing a gritty yet intimate atmosphere that underscored the protagonists' isolation. Brest's direction prioritized naturalistic performances, allowing the veteran actors to improvise within scripted boundaries, which contributed to the film's understated tone.[11][12] Released on December 25, 1979, as Warner Bros.' prestigious holiday offering, Going in Style achieved commercial success, grossing $26.9 million domestically against its modest budget, yielding substantial returns in an era of inflation-adjusted equivalents exceeding $100 million. Critically, it garnered praise for its sharp dialogue, emotional depth, and the leads' restrained portrayals, with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 82% based on contemporary reviews highlighting its subtlety and avoidance of sentimentality. The New York Times noted its focus on widowers' existential heist as a fresh take, though acknowledging occasional vulgarity.[9][13][14] This debut propelled Brest's career, positioning him as a "wunderkind" and opening doors to higher-profile projects, including action-comedies that capitalized on his knack for character-driven narratives amid genre constraints. The film's moderate hit status and acclaim for innovative storytelling affirmed Brest's potential, influencing his subsequent emphasis on ensemble dynamics and thematic realism.[15][16][17]Major commercial hits: Beverly Hills Cop and Midnight Run
Beverly Hills Cop (1984) represented Martin Brest's ascent to major commercial success following his debut feature. Brest directed the action-comedy, which stars Eddie Murphy as Detective Axel Foley, a rough-edged Detroit cop who travels to Beverly Hills to investigate the murder of a friend, clashing with local authorities amid a smuggling ring. The film was released on December 5, 1984, with a production budget of $15 million. It earned $234.8 million domestically and $316.3 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing R-rated film at the time and the top box-office performer of 1984 in North America.[18] Production faced turbulence: originally scripted for Sylvester Stallone, who departed for Cobra (1986), the role went to Murphy mere weeks before principal photography, prompting extensive rewrites and an outline-based restructuring during filming to harness Murphy's improvisational energy against the story's grounded violence.[3] Brest, who decided to helm the project by flipping a coin, balanced anarchic humor with dramatic tension, adding elements like a closing freeze-frame as a studio compromise.[19] Midnight Run (1988), Brest's follow-up, solidified his reputation for profitable action-comedies blending buddy dynamics with high-stakes pursuits. Brest directed and produced the film, featuring Robert De Niro as bounty hunter Jack Walsh tasked with transporting embezzler Jonathan "The Duke" Mardukas (Charles Grodin) cross-country from New York to Los Angeles, evading the FBI, rival hunters, and mobsters. Released on July 20, 1988, it had a $30 million budget and grossed $38.4 million domestically alongside $81.6 million worldwide, yielding solid returns through its mix of chases, banter, and character development.[20] Brest cast De Niro—known for dramatic roles—for comedic potential, auditioning extensively to pair him with Grodin for authentic micro-chemistry in the two-hander structure, emphasizing improvisation amid real-location shoots.[3] Filming spanned nearly 100 days across 14 cities on six-day weeks, imposing a grueling pace that exhausted the crew and required Brest's hospitalization post-production, though earlier crew quits on prior projects were avoided here.[21] The film's profitability stemmed from its efficient execution of genre tropes, grossing over 2.7 times its budget despite competition in the action-comedy market.[20]Acclaimed dramas: Scent of a Woman and beyond
Following the commercial successes of his action-comedies, Martin Brest shifted toward more dramatic storytelling with Scent of a Woman (1992), an adaptation of the 1975 novel and play by Giovanni Arpino and Dario Fo, respectively. The film stars Al Pacino as Lieutenant Colonel Frank Slade, a blind, acerbic retired Army officer, and Chris O'Donnell as Charlie Simms, a prep school student hired to assist him over Thanksgiving weekend. Brest's direction emphasized character-driven tension and moral dilemmas, culminating in Slade's iconic monologue defending Simms' integrity, which contributed to the film's emotional resonance.[22] With a budget of $31 million, it grossed $63.1 million domestically and $134.1 million worldwide, marking a strong box office performance.[22] Critically, Scent of a Woman earned widespread acclaim for its performances and Brest's handling of themes like honor, disability, and redemption, securing an 82% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 50 reviews.[23] At the 65th Academy Awards in 1993, the film received nominations for Best Picture, Best Director for Brest, and Best Adapted Screenplay, while Pacino won the Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role—his first competitive Academy Award after prior nominations.[24] It also won Golden Globe Awards for Best Motion Picture – Drama and Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama for Pacino, with Brest earning a nomination for Best Director – Motion Picture.[25] These honors solidified Brest's reputation for eliciting career-defining performances, though some critics noted the narrative's reliance on sentimental tropes. Brest's next project, Meet Joe Black (1998), further explored dramatic territory with a fantastical element, centering on Death (Brad Pitt) incarnate who assumes human form to experience life before claiming the soul of media mogul William Parrish (Anthony Hopkins). Produced and directed by Brest, the film delves into mortality, family dynamics, and existential choice over a sprawling three-hour runtime, drawing loose inspiration from the 1934 film Death Takes a Holiday. Despite a reported budget exceeding $90 million and grossing approximately $140 million worldwide, its deliberate pacing drew mixed responses, with critics praising the cinematography and acting but faulting the verbosity and languid tempo.[26] Roger Ebert awarded it three out of four stars, appreciating its philosophical undertones, yet aggregated reviews reflect a 48% Rotten Tomatoes score from 52 critics, often citing the film's self-indulgent length as a detriment to engagement.[27][26] This phase of Brest's career highlighted his preference for expansive, introspective dramas over the tighter genre constraints of his earlier hits, though the critical reception waned compared to Scent of a Woman. Gigli (2003), Brest's subsequent effort—a crime-romance hybrid starring Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez as mismatched criminals—aimed to blend drama with quirky interpersonal dynamics but instead became notorious for production turmoil and tonal inconsistency. With a budget around $75 million, it earned just $7.3 million domestically amid scathing reviews, holding a 6% Rotten Tomatoes rating and prompting Brest himself to later describe it as "a bloody mess that deserved its excoriation."[28][29] The film's failure underscored challenges in sustaining acclaim within dramatic ventures, as external hype around its stars overshadowed substantive narrative flaws like underdeveloped characters and contrived plotting.Post-2003 hiatus and reflections
Following the release of Gigli on August 1, 2003, which grossed $7.3 million domestically against a $75–$90 million budget and received a 6% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, Brest directed no further feature films.[29] The project's failure stemmed from Brest's loss of creative control after disputes with Revolution Studios and Sony Pictures, halting post-production for eight months amid battles over reshoots and rewrites.[3][30] Brest has described his decision to continue despite these conflicts as an "eternal regret," viewing it as complicity in the film's mangled state rather than quitting outright.[31][32] In a July 2023 Variety interview—his first major public reflection in two decades—he acknowledged that Gigli marked a "fiery end" to his directing career, foreseeing diminished opportunities afterward due to studio reluctance and personal disillusionment with Hollywood's production dynamics.[3] As of 2025, Brest has no announced feature projects in development, effectively retiring from directing after a 30-year run of six films that collectively earned over $1.2 billion worldwide. He has expressed peace with this hiatus, prioritizing personal fulfillment over resuming work under prevailing industry constraints, though he occasionally engages in interviews revisiting past triumphs like Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and Midnight Run (1988).[3][33]Directorial style and techniques
Perfectionism in production
Martin Brest has earned a reputation as a perfectionist director, often employing meticulous preparation, extensive rehearsals, and repeated takes to refine performances and visuals during production.[34][35] This approach, likened to Stanley Kubrick's in its insistence on countless takes, prioritized capturing nuanced authenticity but occasionally strained collaborations with actors and crews.[35] On Midnight Run (1988), Brest's production spanned nearly 100 days across 14 locations, operating on six-day weeks that demanded physical endurance from the cast and crew to achieve the film's blend of action, comedy, and character depth.[3] Actor Yaphet Kotto reportedly grew frustrated with the director's demands for multiple takes per scene, reflecting Brest's commitment to precision amid improvisational elements.[36] This method yielded a tightly paced final cut, but it exemplified how Brest's rigor could extend shoots beyond typical schedules. In Meet Joe Black (1998), Brest's perfectionism drove production costs to approximately $90 million—unprecedented for a romance—through labor-intensive filming in New York and Rhode Island, resulting in an initial three-hour runtime later trimmed.[37] Universal Pictures chairman Casey Silver attributed the overruns, estimated at $30 million over budget, to Brest's exacting standards, which included exhaustive takes; Anthony Hopkins, for instance, refused additional heart attack simulations to prevent exhaustion or genuine health risks.[37][38] Despite such challenges, this process aimed to infuse the film with layered emotional subtlety.[3] Brest's style fostered a nurturing environment for actors to experiment, as seen in allowing improvisations on Beverly Hills Cop (1984), yet his insistence on perfection often prioritized quality over efficiency, contributing to both acclaimed results and industry tensions.[3][34]Recurring themes and influences
Brest's films frequently explore the redemption of flawed, often abrasive protagonists, a motif he traces to childhood viewings of The Honeymooners, where characters like Ralph Kramden embodied relatable human imperfection leading to growth.[3] This theme recurs in works such as Midnight Run (1988), where bounty hunter Jack Walsh (Robert De Niro) evolves through his reluctant partnership with fugitive Jonathan Mardukas (Charles Grodin), and Scent of a Woman (1992), featuring the transformation of the cynical, blind veteran Frank Slade (Al Pacino).[3] Brest describes this "redemption of the asshole" as a universal thread, emphasizing character purity amid moral ambiguity.[3] Mortality and the value of life emerge as persistent concerns, evident from Brest's debut Going in Style (1979), which centers elderly men's defiant heist against existential decline, to Meet Joe Black (1998), a meditation on love and loss inspired by impending death.[3] He has noted that even in his twenties, mortality struck him as "the biggest possible issue," influencing narratives that blend introspection with action or comedy.[3] Interpersonal dynamics, particularly in two-hander formats, drive these stories, as seen in the sparring rapport between leads that fosters mutual revelation and change.[3] [39] Brest integrates humor into dramatic contexts, approaching both with equivalent rigor to uncover authentic responses, as in Beverly Hills Cop (1984), where comedic beats arose organically from character clashes rather than scripted intent.[3] This stylistic choice reflects a preference for micro-scale storytelling, reducing scenarios to essential human interactions while allowing improvisation to enhance realism.[3] [39] Influences include Charlie Chaplin's silent-era innovations, which Brest credits for teaching emotional bonding between character and audience through non-verbal cues and poignant humor, elements echoed in scenes like the revelatory ending of Meet Joe Black and character-driven comedy in Beverly Hills Cop.[40] Early exposure to ensemble comedies such as It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) instilled a sense of "ecstatic religious experience" in comedic chaos, informing his balance of structure and spontaneity.[39] Additionally, foreign cinema shaped specific projects, with Scent of a Woman drawing from the 1974 Italian film Profumo di Donna.[3] These sources underscore Brest's emphasis on character regard and visual storytelling over overt dialogue.[40]Controversies and setbacks
Production disputes on Gigli
The production of Gigli encountered major conflicts between director Martin Brest and Revolution Studios, escalating primarily in post-production over creative control and the film's direction. Brest, who also wrote the screenplay, initially envisioned a distinct narrative with different themes, but studio demands for alterations, including a new ending, prompted extensive reshoots that fundamentally changed characters, scenes, story elements, and overall tone in efforts to address perceived flaws.[28][3] These disagreements intensified to the point where post-production was halted for eight months as Brest and studio executives battled over revisions, resulting in key scenes being excised and leaving the final product disjointed, which Brest later likened to "a joke with its punchline removed."[3] The film's original budget agreement hovered around $70 million, but reshoots and delays contributed to a final cost of approximately $75.6 million, exacerbating tensions with distributor Sony Pictures.[3] Brest retained final cut privileges provided the runtime stayed under two hours and ten minutes, yet the impasse forced compromises that deviated sharply from his intent. In retrospect, he has acknowledged his role, stating, "Extensive disagreements between the studio and myself got to the point where post-production was shut down for eight months while we battled it out," and expressing eternal regret over not withdrawing: "I take full responsibility… I should’ve walked away," rather than remaining complicit in what he described as a "ghastly cadaver of a movie" and "bloody mess."[28][3]Impact on career trajectory
The commercial and critical failure of Gigli, which earned just $7.3 million domestically against a $75 million budget and received a 6% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, severely damaged Brest's professional standing in Hollywood.[29] Following the film's release in July 2003, Brest entered an extended hiatus from directing feature films, with no subsequent projects reaching production despite his prior track record of successes like Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and Scent of a Woman (1992).[3] The debacle, compounded by studio interference that stripped him of creative control during post-production—including an eight-month shutdown amid disputes with Revolution Studios—left Brest disillusioned and effectively sidelined him from major studio opportunities.[32] In reflections two decades later, Brest described the experience as a pivotal rupture, stating that the loss of autonomy and the resulting "mangled" final cut made him complicit in a project he no longer recognized, leading him to withdraw rather than pursue compromised work.[32] This self-imposed exile persisted through the 2010s, during which Brest avoided the industry spotlight and had no films in active development, a stark contrast to his earlier prolific output from 1979 to 2003.[3] Industry observers and collaborators, including Ben Affleck, have noted that Gigli's toxicity—fueled by its association with the Affleck-Lopez media frenzy—amplified reputational harm, placing Brest in informal "director's jail" where financiers deemed him a high-risk proposition despite his history of delivering hits that grossed over $1 billion combined worldwide.[41] As of 2025, Brest's hiatus exceeds 22 years without a completed feature, though unverified listings for a project titled The Gospel of Jack appeared on industry databases around 2023, suggesting exploratory efforts that have not materialized into production or release.[42] This prolonged absence underscores a broader pattern in Hollywood where a single high-profile flop, particularly one marred by public ridicule and internal conflicts, can eclipse prior achievements and deter future backing, even for directors with Academy Award nominations and box-office proven talent.[43] Brest's case illustrates the precarious causality between studio meddling, audience backlash, and career longevity in an industry prioritizing short-term metrics over artistic redemption.[3]Legacy and recognition
Box office and critical analysis
Martin Brest's directorial efforts yielded significant commercial successes in the 1980s and early 1990s, particularly with action-comedies that capitalized on charismatic leads and efficient storytelling, before encountering substantial setbacks. Beverly Hills Cop (1984), produced on a $13 million budget, grossed $234 million domestically and approximately $316 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing R-rated film of its era and Paramount Pictures' top earner until Titanic.[18][44] This performance was driven by strong word-of-mouth and Eddie Murphy's breakout appeal, with the film achieving legs of over 11 times its opening weekend. Similarly, Midnight Run (1988) earned $38 million domestically on a modest budget, praised for its buddy-comedy dynamics and road-trip pacing that sustained audience interest across a 7:1 multiplier on its debut.[20] In contrast, later projects like Meet Joe Black (1998) underperformed relative to its $90 million-plus costs, netting $119 million worldwide amid criticisms of narrative bloat, resulting in an estimated $68 million net loss.[45] Gigli (2003) marked a catastrophic failure, grossing just $7.3 million globally against a $75 million budget, exacerbated by pre-release hype around its stars and reshoots that inflated expenses without recouping investment. Critically, Brest's early works received solid approval for blending genre tropes with character depth, earning Beverly Hills Cop an 82% Rotten Tomatoes score based on contemporaneous reviews highlighting its energetic direction and cultural clash humor.[46] Scent of a Woman (1992) garnered comparable acclaim at 82% on Rotten Tomatoes and a 3.5/4 from Roger Ebert, who lauded Al Pacino's transformative portrayal of a blind veteran, though some noted the script's sentimental excesses; the film grossed $134 million worldwide on $31 million, buoyed by Oscar wins for Pacino.[23][47][48] Midnight Run similarly impressed with its improvisational banter and tension-release rhythm, fostering cult status despite modest initial awards traction. However, Gigli faced near-universal derision, holding a 6% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 187 reviews and a Metacritic score of 18, with critics decrying its tonal inconsistencies, underdeveloped romance, and perceived exploitation of off-screen celebrity drama between leads Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez.[49]| Film | Year | Budget (est.) | Domestic Gross | Worldwide Gross | Rotten Tomatoes Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beverly Hills Cop | 1984 | $13M | $234M | ~$316M | 82% |
| Midnight Run | 1988 | ~$15M | $38M | ~$81M | 96% |
| Scent of a Woman | 1992 | $31M | $63M | $134M | 82% |
| Meet Joe Black | 1998 | $90M+ | $44M | $119M | 31% |
| Gigli | 2003 | $75M | $6M | $7.3M | 6% |
Cultural influence and recent honors
Brest's direction of Beverly Hills Cop (1984) significantly influenced the action-comedy genre by establishing the fish-out-of-water buddy cop template, with Axel Foley's street-smart Detroit detective clashing against Beverly Hills' affluent culture, a dynamic that inspired subsequent films such as Lethal Weapon (1987) and Rush Hour (1998).[52] The film also marked a milestone as the first top-grossing 1980s release led by a Black protagonist not defined primarily by race, challenging Hollywood's casting norms and contributing to broader acceptance of diverse leads in mainstream blockbusters.[52][53] Brest's allowance for Eddie Murphy's improvisation amplified the character's cultural resonance, embedding phrases like "I'm Axel Foley from Detroit" into pop culture lexicon.[52] Midnight Run (1988) endures as a cult benchmark for reluctant-partner road comedies, blending high-stakes pursuit with character-driven humor through the chemistry between Robert De Niro's bounty hunter and Charles Grodin's accountant, influencing portrayals of comedic tension in action narratives.[54] The film's cross-country odyssey highlighted themes of redemption and unlikely alliances, cementing De Niro's viability in lighter roles and maintaining rewatchability via its precise pacing and improvised banter.[55] In Scent of a Woman (1992), Brest crafted a drama whose legacy rests on Al Pacino's Academy Award-winning portrayal of a blind, cynical lieutenant, with the "Hoo-ah!" courtroom speech becoming an emblem of defiant integrity referenced in media and motivational contexts.[56] The film's exploration of honor amid moral compromise has sustained its appeal as a character study, evidenced by its 2025 4K restoration release underscoring ongoing critical regard.[57] Recent recognition includes Brest's 2023 Variety interview reflecting on his film's enduring triumphs amid career setbacks, and a 2024 oral history for Scent of a Woman's 32nd anniversary, highlighting its status as a crowd-pleasing classic.[3][56] The 2024 Netflix sequel Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F revived interest in Brest's original, amplifying its cultural footprint without new directorial honors for him. Earlier accolades, such as the 1994 American Film Institute Franklin J. Schaffner Alumni Medal for creative talents, affirm his foundational impact.[58]Works
Feature films as director
Martin Brest directed six feature films between 1979 and 2003.[1]| Year | Title |
|---|---|
| 1979 | Going in Style |
| 1984 | Beverly Hills Cop |
| 1988 | Midnight Run |
| 1992 | Scent of a Woman |
| 1998 | Meet Joe Black |
| 2003 | Gigli |
Beverly Hills Cop (1984) features Eddie Murphy as a Detroit detective pursuing criminals in Los Angeles.[46]
Midnight Run (1988) follows a bounty hunter (Robert De Niro) transporting a fugitive accountant (Charles Grodin) cross-country.[59]
Scent of a Woman (1992) depicts a prep school student (Chris O'Donnell) assisting a blind retired lieutenant colonel (Al Pacino) over a weekend.
Meet Joe Black (1998) centers on Death (Brad Pitt) incarnate intervening in a media mogul's life (Anthony Hopkins).[26]
Gigli (2003) involves a mob enforcer (Ben Affleck) and a rival criminal (Jennifer Lopez) in a kidnapping plot.[29]
Awards and nominations
Martin Brest received two Academy Award nominations for his work on Scent of a Woman (1992), including Best Director and Best Picture as producer, at the 65th Academy Awards held on March 29, 1993.[4] He did not win in either category. Brest's films have earned additional nominations from the Golden Globe Awards in the Best Motion Picture categories: Beverly Hills Cop (1984) was nominated for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy in 1985; Midnight Run (1988) received the same nomination in 1989; and Scent of a Woman was nominated for Best Motion Picture – Drama in 1993.[60][61] His debut feature Going in Style (1979) earned a nomination for the Golden Lion at the 1980 Venice Film Festival.[62] For Gigli (2003), Brest received the Razzie Award for Worst Director at the 24th Golden Raspberry Awards in 2004, reflecting the film's critical and commercial failure.[63] He also won a Razzie for Worst Screenplay for the same film.[63]| Award Ceremony | Year | Category | Film | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards | 1993 | Best Director | Scent of a Woman | Nomination[4] |
| Academy Awards | 1993 | Best Picture (Producer) | Scent of a Woman | Nomination[4] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1985 | Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy | Beverly Hills Cop | Nomination[60] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1989 | Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy | Midnight Run | Nomination[61] |
| Golden Globe Awards | 1993 | Best Motion Picture – Drama | Scent of a Woman | Nomination |
| Venice Film Festival | 1980 | Golden Lion | Going in Style | Nomination[62] |
| Golden Raspberry Awards | 2004 | Worst Director | Gigli | Win[63] |
| Golden Raspberry Awards | 2004 | Worst Screenplay | Gigli | Win[63] |