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Past recipients of the AFI honor include Elizabeth Taylor, Kirk Douglas, Eastwood, Spielberg, Lucas and Martin Scorsese, who presented Brooks with his award. Scorsese put the Oscar- and Tony-winning talent in the same category as the Marx Brothers, Laurel & Hardy and Abbott & Costello. "Mel has made his own tradition of greatness, and it's that tradition -- drawing from the past, honoring it, toying with it, vamping on it, extending it to places wise men, very funny men previously feared to go -- that's what we're celebrating here and honoring tonight," Scorsese said. "Mel has always made his own way, and he brought us all along for the joyride." Brooks was almost all comedy as he claimed his prize. He directed an expletive at Kimmel, declaring, "I'm not gonna die." But he dropped the funny stuff to thank the institute for recognizing him and to share his lifelong love of film. "Movies saved my life," he said. "They rescued my soul. No matter what was bad or wrong, it could be wiped out on Saturday morning." TNT will broadcast highlights from the ceremony as a TV special on June 15. ___ Online:
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