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The Irishman

His story changed history.
2019 | 209m | English

(458827 votes)

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Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

Pennsylvania, 1956. Frank Sheeran, a war veteran of Irish origin who works as a truck driver, accidentally meets mobster Russell Bufalino. Once Frank becomes his trusted man, Bufalino sends him to Chicago with the task of helping Jimmy Hoffa, a powerful union leader related to organized crime, with whom Frank will maintain a close friendship for nearly twenty years.
Release Date: Nov 01, 2019
Director: Martin Scorsese
Writer: Steven Zaillian, Charles Brandt
Genres: Drama, Crime, History
Keywords based on novel or book, gangster, aging, mafia, nonlinear timeline, 1960s, father daughter relationship, chicago, illinois, war veteran, irish-american, murder, detroit, michigan, labor union, jimmy hoffa, philadelphia, pennsylvania, hitman, pennsylvania, usa, 1970s, male friendship, family relationships, organized crime, religion, sicilian mafia, character study, 1950s, mob family, voiceover
Production Companies Winkler Films, Tribeca Productions, Sikelia Productions
Box Office Revenue: $968,853
Budget: $159,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 13, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Robert De Niro Frank Sheeran
Al Pacino Jimmy Hoffa
Joe Pesci Russell Bufalino
Harvey Keitel Angelo Bruno
Ray Romano Bill Bufalino
Bobby Cannavale Skinny Razor
Anna Paquin Older Peggy Sheeran
Stephen Graham Anthony 'Tony Pro' Provenzano
Stephanie Kurtzuba Irene Sheeran
Jack Huston Robert Kennedy / RFK
Kathrine Narducci Carrie Bufalino
Jesse Plemons Chuckie O'Brien
Domenick Lombardozzi Fat Tony Salerno
Paul Herman Whispers DiTullio
Gary Basaraba Frank 'Fitz' Fitzsimmons
Marin Ireland Older Dolores Sheeran
Lucy Gallina Young Peggy Sheeran
Jonathan Morris Assisted Living Priest
Dascha Polanco Nurse
Welker White Josephine 'Jo' Hoffa
Louis Cancelmi Sally Bugs
Bo Dietl Joe Glimco
Sebastian Maniscalco Crazy Joe Gallo
Aleksa Palladino Mary Sheeran
Steven Van Zandt Jerry Vale
Jim Norton Don Rickles
Daniel H. Jenkins E. Howard 'Big Ears' Hunt
Billy Smith FBI Agent #1
Kevin O'Rourke John McCullough
Action Bronson Casket Salesman
Glenn Cunningham Investigator
Paul Ben-Victor Jake Gottlieb
Patrick Gallo Anthony 'Tony Jack' Giacalone
James Martin Mother of Sorrows Priest
Jake Hoffman Allen Dorfman
Barry Primus Ewing King
Danny A. Abeckaser Deadbeat
Anthony J. Gallo Food Fair Manager
J.C. MacKenzie Prosecutor Jim Neal
Joseph Bono Frank Sindone
Jamil Antonio Stefan Phil Testa
Louis Vanaria Dave Ferrie
Craig Vincent Ed Partin
John Polce Joe Colombo
Joseph Riccobene Jimmy 'The Weasel' Fratianno
Vinny Vella Meat Company Yard Manager
Thomas E. Sullivan Warren Swanson
John Cenatiempo Anthony 'Tony 3 Fingers' Castellito
Robert Mladinich Anastasia Bodyguard
Rich Reilly Phil The Bartender
Robert Funaro Johnny - Friendly Lounge
Tess Price Young Maryanne Sheeran
Jennifer Mudge Older Maryanne Sheeran
India Ennenga Young Dolores
Jordyn DiNatale Young Connie Sheeran
Kate Arrington Older Connie Sheeran
Bernie Martin Teamster
Philip Suriano Silver Shop Owner
Tony Suriano Silver Shop Owner's Son
Jason A. Iannacone German Prisoner #1
Michael C. Brennan German Prisoner #2
James P. Harkins John The Redhead
Al Linea Sam 'Momo' Giancana
Garry Pastore Albert Anastasia
Frank Pietrangolare Bartender - Friendly Lounge
Frank Aquilino Friendly Lounge Guy 'Butchie'
Johnny T. Sollitto Friendly Lounge Patron
Patrick Murney Peggy's Godfather
Samantha Soule Peggy's Godmother
Richard V. Licata Judge - Frank's First Trial
Vito Picone Villa Roma Manager
Larry Mazza Anastasia's Hitman #1
Craig DiFrancia Anastasia's Hitman #2
Ira Drukier Motel Manager
Jon Bruno Russell's Bodyguard
Paul Borghese Mobster #1 - Curtain Shop
Steven Maglio Mobster #2 - Curtain Shop / Copa Guest #1
James Licata Mobster #3 - Curtain Shop
Veronica Alicino Curtain Shop Staff #1
Mike Massimino Curtain Shop Staff #2
James Ciccone Anastasia Mobster in Car #1
Ron Castellano Anastasia Mobster in Car #2
Marco Greco Grocer
Meghan Rafferty Bill Bufalino's Wife
Aldo Sergi Aldo
James Lorinz Hoffa Rally Teamster #1
Jeffrey Paul Hoffa Rally Teamster #2
Robert C. Kirk Hoffa Rally Teamster #3
Vince Maritato Bathhouse Teamster
Lawrence Smith Louis
Rebecca Faulkenberry Barbara Hoffa
Ken Wulf Clark James P. Hoffa
John Rue Senator McClellan
Steve Routman Hoffa Attorney - George Fitzgerald
Fernando Vera Castellito's Driver
Peter Claymore Tough Teamster - Hoffa's Office
Charles DelGatto Phil - Milestone Hauling
Michael Gongora Cuban Worker
Eugene Bunge Joseph Kennedy
Matthew F. O'Connor Pro Rally Teamster #1
Cliff Moylan Pro Rally Teamster #2
Vincenzo DelRiccio Pro Rally Teamster #3
Steve Beauchamp Pro Rally Teamster #4
Alfred Sauchelli, Jr. Trucking Company Owner
Joe Giorgio Local 326 Truck Driver
Diana Agostini Ice Cream Shop Patron #1
Lauren Aparicio Ice Cream Shop Patron #2
Kelley Rae O'Donnell Ice Cream Shop Staff #1
John Garrett Greer Ice Cream Shop Staff #2
Jack Caruso Swanson's Booking Detective
John Scurti Bertram B. Beveridge
Thomas J. Jenkins Nashville Court Clerk
Steve Witting Judge William Miller
Luke Smith Reporter
Brent Langdon Judge Frank Wilson
James D. Forsha Tony Pro FBI Agent #1
Giacomino J. Matra Tony Pro Guy #1
Paul Pearlman Tony Pro Guy #2
Frank L. Messina Tony Pro Guy #3
Cilda Shaur Colombo's Wife
Dominick LaRuffa Jr. Colombo's Son #1
Erick Zamora Colombo's Son #2
Joe Caniano Copa Guest #2
Lou Martini Jr. Copa Guest #3
Michael Bottari Copa Guest #4
John Bianco Copa Guest #5
Margaret Anne Florence Gallo's Wife Sina
Siena Marino Gallo's Daughter Lisa
Lori Arkin Gallo's Sister Carmella Fiorello
Nicholas Chrysan Pete The Greek
Samantha Coppola Pete The Greek's Girlfriend
Logan Crawford Reporter at Prison
Jeff DeHart President Nixon
Mark Fairchild Attorney General Mitchell
Blaise Corrigan Dave Johnson
Jill Brown Dave Johnson's Wife
Tim Neff Little Fitz
Matt Walton TV Host / Moderator
Peter Jay Fernandez NAACP President Cecil Moore
Stephen Mailer District Attorney Emmett Fitzpatrick
Gino Cafarelli Mayor Frank Rizzo
Robin Kerbis Angelo Bruno's Wife
Lucia Giannetta Tony Pro's Wife
Michael Romeo Ruocco Casino Photographer
Amanda Kloots Golddigger Dancer
Anne Horak Golddigger Dancer
Brittany Bigelow Golddigger Dancer
Vanessa Mitchell Golddigger Dancer
Madison Eastman Golddigger Dancer
Purdie Baumann Golddigger Dancer
Jesse Wildman Golddigger Dancer
Nina Lafarga Golddigger Dancer
Neil Posner Jerry Vale Band
Michael Leviton Jerry Vale Band
Bridget Barkan Jerry Vale Band
Andrea Weinzierl Jerry Vale Band
Richard V. Pagano Jerry Vale Band
Nicholas Wight Jerry Vale Band
Clark Carmichael Pilot
Joseph Russo Bruno Denzetta
Jeremy Luke Marco Rossi
Barbara Eyland Guest Dancing at Casino #1
Tracy J. Everitt Guest Dancing at Casino #2
Saint Marino Wedding Wise Guy #1
Mario Corry Wedding Wise Guy #2
Johnny Potenza Wedding Wise Guy #3
Joe Passaro Wedding Wise Guy #4
Patrick Borriello Wedding Wise Guy #5
Alfred Nittoli Inmate Alfredo
David Aaron Baker Assistant US Attorney
Stanley Burns Colonoscopy Doctor
Bill Timoney Prosecutor - Frank's 2nd Trial
Thomas J. McDonald Deputy Clerk - Frank's 2nd Trial
Virl Andrick Judge - Frank's 2nd Trial
Ernest L. Sanders Jr. Frank's Orderly
Bill McHugh Funeral Priest
Kevin Kane FBI Agent #2
Amelia Brain Sales Girl at Crypt
Craig 'Radio Man' Castaldo Man in Wheelchair
Michael Iacono Bowler (uncredited)
Dean Ciallella Italian Rally Supporter (uncredited)
Tommy Bayiokos Truck Driver (uncredited)
Michael Cullum Juror (uncredited)
Rick Bolander Lewisburg Guard (uncredited)
Shade Rupe Teamster (uncredited)
Ian Zelbo Brother in Ice Cream Parlor (uncredited)
Jacqueline Kennedy Self (archive footage)(uncredited)
John F. Kennedy Self (archive footage)(uncredited)
Leonard Zimmerman Supervisor - Cadillac Linen (uncredited)
Laura Mazziotti Italian Rally Supporter (uncredited)
Norman Aaronson Government Attorney (uncredited)
Name Job
Kevin Michael Murphy Stunts
Steven Zaillian Screenplay
Rodrigo Prieto Director of Photography
Thelma Schoonmaker Editor
Sean Flanigan Hair Department Head
Nicki Ledermann Makeup Department Head
Robbie Robertson Original Music Composer, Executive Music Producer
Victor Paguia Stunt Coordinator
Tom Prate Key Grip
Charles Brandt Book
P. Scott Sakamoto Steadicam Operator, "A" Camera Operator
Trevor Loomis First Assistant "A" Camera
Sandy Powell Costume Design
Chris Cenatiempo Stunts
Peter Epstein Stunt Coordinator
Ben Shepherd CG Supervisor
Blaise Corrigan Stunt Coordinator
G.A. Aguilar Second Unit Director, Stunt Coordinator
Tina McKissick Stunts
Ellen Lewis Casting
Regina Graves Set Decoration
Laura Ballinger Supervising Art Director
David Davenport Costume Supervisor
Bob Shaw Production Design
Christopher Peterson Costume Designer
Randall Poster Music Supervisor
John A. Machione Unit Production Manager
Carla Raij Unit Production Manager
David Webb First Assistant Director
Jeremy Marks Second Assistant Director
Mitchell Ferm Visual Effects Producer
Joel Weaver Property Master
Tod A. Maitland Sound Mixer
Jessica Lichtner Script Supervisor
William O'Leary Gaffer
Tom Fleischman Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Eugene Gearty Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Supervising Sound Editor
Philip Stockton Supervising Sound Editor
Mike Marino Prosthetic Designer
Jeff Brink Special Effects Supervisor
Niko Tavernise Still Photographer
Lukasz Jogalla Second Unit Director of Photography
Marko Costanzo Foley Artist
Leandro Estebecorena Visual Effects Supervisor
Stephane Grabli Visual Effects Supervisor
Ivan Busquets Visual Effects Supervisor
John DeSimone Production Office Coordinator
Joan Altman Production Controller
Anthony Coan Second Assistant "A" Camera
Ethan Borsuk First Assistant "B" Camera
Brendan K. Russell Second Assistant "B" Camera
Matthew Selkirk Digital Imaging Technician
Carolyn Wills Clapper Loader
Ross Citrin Clapper Loader
Michael Sime Playback Coordinator
Devin Donegan Video Assist Operator
Alexander J. Nobbs Video Assist Operator
Andrew Cavagnet Video Assist Operator
Jerry Yuen Boom Operator
Terence McCormack Maitland Utility Sound
Robert Vuolo Best Boy Electric
Louis Petraglia Rigging Gaffer
Todd Giresi Best Boy Grip
Shahen Guiragossian Dolly Grip
Benjamin K. Cox Assistant Art Director
Aaron Vexler Stunt Double
Francisco Ortiz Second Assistant Director
Andrew Hudson Production Assistant
Randall Balsmeyer Title Designer
Stephanie Abbaspour Art Department Coordinator
Stephanie Armstrong Props
JoAnn Atwood Set Dresser
Lisa Barnstone Scenic Artist
Ann Bartek Assistant Art Director
William Bianchi Scenic Artist
Katya Blumenberg Assistant Art Director
Michelle Burnworth Carpenter
Bobbie Byrnes Carpenter
Kenneth Caggiano Carpenter
Gabu Camilo Props
Micaela Carolan Scenic Artist
Jayne Clark Art Department Assistant
Julia Colicchio Scenic Artist
George Couri Set Dresser
Clara Cuffe Scenic Artist
Philippa Culpepper Assistant Set Decoration
Nara DeMuro Art Department Assistant
Gerald DeTitta Leadman
Martin Scorsese Director
Matthew DeTitta Set Dresser
Gordon Dukes Set Dresser
Eric Fehlberg Conceptual Illustrator
Tony Gamiello Set Dresser
Grant M Guilliams Props
Glen A. Gregory Construction Foreman
Amanda Hagy Scenic Artist
Damon Hahn Set Dresser
Ryan Heck Assistant Art Director
Arlo Hoffman Props
Justin Horowitz Scenic Artist
Karen Hudson Set Dresser
Brian Kontz Scenic Artist
James H. McDonnell Props
Ramona Messina Props
Nick Miller Construction Coordinator
Christopher J. Morris Assistant Art Director
Sean Murray Graphic Designer
Mario Nila Set Dresser
Michael Lee Nirenberg Scenic Artist
Tanicia Osuch Scenic Artist
Tricia Peck Set Decoration Buyer
Maite Pérez-Nievas Assistant Art Director
Johann Poschung Set Dresser
Lauren Rockman Assistant Art Director
Joseph Sacco Props
Kyle Salvatore Assistant Property Master
Lisa Scoppa Assistant Set Decoration
Nithya Shrinivasan Assistant Art Director
Patricia Sprott Scenic Artist
Gordon Tanner Set Dresser
Gregor Telfer Set Dresser
Holly Watson Graphic Designer
Johanna Waldron Props
Ashley Wellbrock Assistant Set Decoration
Bentley Wood Props
Travis Wright On Set Dresser
Lewis Zucker Props
Kate Sprance Casting Associate
Dann Fink ADR Voice Casting
Allison Hall Extras Casting
Sarah Konishi Extras Casting
Melanie Moreno Extras Casting
Jennifer Sabel Extras Casting
Heather Washburn Casting Assistant
Grant Wilfley Extras Casting
Bruce Winant ADR Voice Casting
Vin Arfuso Camera Operator
Chris Hayes Camera Operator
Kenneth Ortiz "C" Camera Operator
John Pirozzi "B" Camera Operator
Fernando Reyes Allendes Camera Operator
Dave Flynch Foley Editor
George A. Lara Foley Mixer
Bill Sweeney Foley Editor
Ted Goodwin Lighting Technician
Rachael Saltzman Lighting Technician
Pablo Helman Visual Effects Supervisor
Nelson Sepulveda-Fauser Compositing Supervisor
Yvan Lucas Digital Intermediate Colorist
Bryan DeFilippis Set Dresser
George B. Colucci Jr. Stunt Double
Joseph Winterbotham Assistant Sound Editor
Chris Barnes Stunts
Name Title
Robert De Niro Producer
Randall Emmett Producer
Jane Rosenthal Producer
Jai Stefan Executive Producer
Emma Tillinger Koskoff Producer
Irwin Winkler Producer
George Furla Executive Producer
Chad A. Verdi Executive Producer
Nicholas Pileggi Executive Producer
Gerald Chamales Producer
Tyler Zacharia Executive Producer
Troy Allen Producer
Richard Baratta Executive Producer
Niels Juul Executive Producer
Berry Welsh Executive Producer
Gabriele Israilovici Producer
Marianne Bower Co-Producer
David Webb Co-Producer
Gastón Pavlovich Producer
Rick Yorn Executive Producer
Martin Scorsese Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Actor Robert De Niro Nominated
Academy Awards Best Director Martin Scorsese Nominated
Academy Awards Best Actress Charlize Theron Nominated
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Sal Pacino Nominated
Golden Globes Best Picture N/A Nominated
Golden Globes Best Director Martin Scorsese Nominated
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Sal Pacino Nominated
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Joe Pesci Nominated
Golden Globes Best Actor Robert De Niro Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Director Martin Scorsese Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actor Sal Pacino Nominated
SAG Awards Best Actor Adam Driver Nominated
SAG Awards Best Actress Anna Paquin Won
SAG Awards Best Director Martin Scorsese Won
Venice Film Festival Best Actor Robert De Niro Sr. Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 78 191 49
2024 5 221 300 174
2024 6 141 243 43
2024 7 64 86 34
2024 8 41 70 26
2024 9 36 49 23
2024 10 37 78 21
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2024 12 40 53 31
2025 1 47 73 35
2025 2 34 59 9
2025 3 13 44 3
2025 4 9 12 6
2025 5 9 17 6
2025 6 7 12 5
2025 7 5 6 4
2025 8 5 7 5

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Year Month High Avg
2025 8 277 651
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2025 5 424 820
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2024 12 418 788
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2024 9 684 778
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2024 8 524 825

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Reviews

maketheSWITCH
8.0

It would almost be wrong to call ‘The Irishman’ a film; rather, it acts more like a tapestry. This isn’t telling one story, but a number of stories spanning decades that just so happen to involve the same group of dangerous gangsters, sharing the same threads of beautiful cinematography, great visua ... l effects and patient editing. With his increasingly lengthy run times, Scorsese seems to be realising that a life cannot be condensed down into a clean 100-minute arc, and audiences should get excited by the opportunity to experience the art of film in this way. It’s a sight to behold. - Ashley Teresa Read Ashley's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-the-irishman-kissing-scorseses-ring-again

Jun 23, 2021
Bertaut
7.0

**_Far too long, but arguably Scorsese's most thematically complex_** >_Don't let any man into your cab, your home, or your heart, unless he's a friend of labour._ - Jimmy Hoffa >_When Jimmy saw that the house was empty, that nobody came out of any of the rooms to greet him, he knew right a ... way what it was. If Jimmy had taken his piece with him he would have gone for it. Jimmy was a fighter. He turned fast, still thinking we were together on the thing, that I was his backup. Jimmy bumped into me hard. If he saw the piece in my hand he had to think I had it out to protect him. He took a_ _quick step to go around me and get to the door. He reached for the knob and Jimmy Hoffa got shot twice at a decent range – not too close or the paint splatters back at you – in the back of the head behind his right ear. My friend didn't suffer._ - Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran, with Charles Brandt; _"I Heard You Paint Houses": Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran and the Inside Story of the Mafia, the Teamsters, and the Last Ride of Jimmy Hoffa_ (2004) >_In 2004, a small publishing house in Hanover, New Hampshire, unleashed a shocker titled I Heard You Paint Houses. It was written by Charles Brandt, a medical malpractice lawyer who had helped Sheeran win early parole from prison, due to poor health, at age 71. Starting not long after that, Brandt wrote, Sheeran, nearing the end of his life, began confessing incredible secrets he had kept for decades, revealing that – far from being a bit player – he was actually the unseen figure behind some of the biggest mafia murders of all time._ >_Frank Sheeran said he killed Jimmy Hoffa._ >_He said he killed Joey Gallo, too._ >_And he said he did some other really bad things nearly as incredible._ >_Most amazingly, Sheeran did all that without ever being arrested, charged, or even suspected of those crimes by any law enforcement agency, even though officials were presumably watching him for most of his adult life. To call him the Forrest Gump of organised crime scarcely does him justice. In all the history of the mafia in America or anywhere else, really, nobody even comes close._ - Bill Tonelli; "The Lies of the Irishman"; _Slate_ (August 7, 2019) >_I'm telling you, he's full of shit! Frank Sheeran never killed a fly. The only things he ever killed were countless jugs of red wine._ - John Carlyle Berkery; Quoted in "The Lies of the Irishman" >_I haven't read the script of The Irishman, but the book on which it is based is the most fabricated mafia tale since the fake autobiography of Lucky Luciano 40 years ago._ - Nicholas Gage; Quoted in "The Lies of the Irishman" _The Irishman_ is 209 minutes long and spans 60 years (1944 to 2004), taking in such events as the end of World War II in 1945; the 1957-1964 feud between Senator (later Attorney General) Robert F. Kennedy and Jimmy Hoffa, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters; the election of John F. Kennedy as President in 1960; the Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961; the assassination of JFK in 1963; the election of Richard Nixon as President in 1968; the Watergate scandal from 1972 to 1974; and Nixon's resignation in 1974. All of this historical context, however, is mere window dressing, and at no time is it where the film's focus lies. Instead, _The Irishman_ is about aging, loss, taking stock, regret. To a certain extent, it is to the gangster genre what John Ford's _The Searchers_ (1956) was to the classic western. Based on the 2004 book by Charles Brandt, _"I Heard You Paint Houses": Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran and the Inside Story of the Mafia, the Teamsters, and the Last Ride of Jimmy Hoffa_, _The Irishman_ was written for the screen by Steven Zaillian (_Schindler's List_; _A Civil Action_; _American Gangster_) and directed by Martin Scorsese (_Taxi Driver_; _The Last Temptation of Christ_; _The Aviator_), whose _GoodFellas_ (1990) and _Casino_ (1995) are two of the most celebrated gangster movies ever made (although, I think I'm the only person on the planet who dislikes _GoodFellas_; I love _Casino_ though). An old-school auteur in the mould of filmmakers such as Francis Ford Coppola, Brian De Palma, Michael Mann, Terrence Malick, and Oliver Stone, Scorsese, Malick, and Mann are three of the very few such filmmakers who remain as relevant today as they were when they first broke into the business. I personally haven't really liked much of what he's done in the last couple of decades, but there's no denying Scorsese is a filmmaker who still seems to have a lot to say. _The Irishman_ has received a rapturous reception, with critics and audiences proclaiming it as one of Scorsese's best movies. And although I certainly don't disagree that it has (many) masterful elements, but it's just too blooming long, taking far too much time to get to the last act (which is superb). Shorten it by 20 minutes in the mid-section, and you have a masterpiece. Now, don't get me wrong, I have no problem with long films – Coppola's _The Godfather Part II_ (202 minutes) is one of the finest films ever made; three of my all-time favourite movies are the Director's Cuts of Sergio Leone's _Once Upon a Time in America_ (250), Kevin Costner's _Dances with Wolves_ (236), and Malick's _The Tree of Life_ (190); I adore Kenneth Branagh's _Hamlet_ (242), and I'm a big fan of films such as Jerzy Hoffman's _Potop_ (315), Bernardo Bertolucci's _1900_ (317) and Béla Tarr's _Sátántangó_ (442...yep, 442). However, such length has to be narratively justified, and I just felt that in _The Irishman_, it wasn't. A runtime of around 170-180 minutes would have been perfect, but as it stands, the film's 206 minutes occasionally feel padded and (dare I say it) self-indulgent. Nevertheless, the acting is universally superb, the directing is more contemplative than we've seen from Scorsese in a while, Thelma Schoonmaker's editing is predictably awesome, and Rodrigo Prieto's cinematography is flawless. If only it was 20 minutes shorter. The film opens in 2003 as we meet an elderly Frank Sheeran (Robert De Niro). A World War II veteran who was stationed in Italy, Sheeran now lives in a nursing home and is close to death. Wanting to die with something of a clear conscience, he decides to speak about his time as the go-to hitman for the Northeastern Pennsylvania-based Bufalino crime family. We then cut to 1975 as Sheeran, family patriarch Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci), and their wives are embarking on a three-day drive to attend a wedding. As they pass by the spot where Sheeran and Bufalino first met, we cut to 1954, with Sheeran working as a truck driver for a slaughterhouse. Although, he has a reputation for reliability, on the side, he's selling more than a little of the meat to Felix "Skinny Razor" DiTullio (Bobby Cannavale), a wiseguy working for the Philadelphia and New Jersey-based Bruno crime family led by Angelo Bruno (Harvey Keitel), an ally and friend of Russell. When Sheeran sells the entire contents of his truck, however, turning up at the delivery location with an empty storage, the company charge him with theft, but he's successfully represented by Bill Bufalino (Ray Romano), Russell's cousin. Sheeran and Russell become good friends, and soon, Russell has Sheeran carrying out various hits. Loyal to the Bruno and Bufalino families, and adept at his job, Sheeran quickly moves up the underworld ladder, and Bufalino introduces him to Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino). The president of the Mob-funded Teamsters union, Hoffa is facing investigation by the United States Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in Labor and Management and is struggling to deal with rising teamster Anthony "Pro" Provenzano (Stephen Graham). Hoffa is volatile, unpredictable, confrontational, and believes himself untouchable, so Bufalino wants Sheeran to babysit him and try to keep him out of trouble. Hoffa and Sheeran hit it off, and soon Sheeran is Hoffa's unofficial bodyguard. However, despite Sheeran's best efforts, as the years go by, Hoffa continues to antagonise his Mob backers, and some of them soon come to see him as more of a liability than an asset. Originally set at Paramount, when _The Irishman_'s budget started pushing $150m before shooting had even begun, the studio deemed the project too expensive and dropped it. Then came Netflix, who not only put up the money, but they also offered Scorsese a near unheard-of degree of creative control – the kind of control that almost no one person has been given over a project this big since Michael Cimino pissed away $44m ($115m in today's money) of United Artists' money on Heaven's Gate (1980), a film originally budgeted at $11.6m, and which earned back only $3m at the box office, ending the _auteur_-driven New Hollywood era, nearly bankrupting UA, and fundamentally altering the way movie studios did business. Netflix's involvement with _The Irishman_ is an interesting situation because here you have a film that simply could not have been made through the modern studio system (at least not in its current form). Netflix is usually derided for their purchase of movies originally intended for theatrical release, which are then packaged as "Netflix Originals", with many predicting that streaming services will ultimately destroy the cinema industry entirely. As with many such films, _The Irishman_ was given a limited theatrical release to ensure it qualified for Oscar consideration (Netflix _really_ to have a Best Picture winner in their catalogue). However, disgruntled about there being only a three week gap between theatrical release and streaming debut, major cinema chains such as AMC, Cinemark, Regal, and Cineplex all refused to carry it, with AMC's Adam Aron stating they would only be open to showing the film if Netflix "_respects the decades-old theatrical window, that suggests that movies come to theatres first for a couple of months, and then go to the home._" For all that, however, it's hard for a lover of cinema not to celebrate Netflix stepping in to save such an ambitious and artistic film, to say nothing of the unprecedented control they gave Scorsese. It was a great PR move, sure, but it was also a massive financial risk, so you really can't condemn their involvement. Looking very briefly at the real-life background of the film's narrative, most historians today dismiss Sheeran's account of how important he was to the Bufalino family, and several of his claims have been proven as fabrications (for more information on this, see Bill Tonelli's August 2019 article "The Lies of the Irishman" for _Slate_ and Jack Goldsmith's September 2019 article "Jimmy Hoffa and The Irishman: A True Crime Story?" for _The New York Review_). Nevertheless, the film uses Sheeran's book as the main source for the story, so it's best just to put the many historical embellishments to the back of your mind. Aside from killing Hoffa, some of Sheeran's most flamboyant claims include killing Joe Gallo, delivering a truckload of weaponry to soldiers preparing for the Bay of Pigs Invasion (handing the truck over to E. Howard Hunt, no less), giving a bag containing three rifles to a pilot days before Lee Harvey Oswald killed Kennedy, and delivering a suitcase containing a $500,000 bribe to Attorney General John N. Mitchell to pass on to Nixon. Historians, however, tell us he did none of these things, maintaining that he was a low-level goon with a drinking problem who was never assigned to any important task. This has been corroborated by several former Mob bosses who knew Sheeran. According to Tonelli, >_not a single person I spoke with who knew Sheeran from Philly – and I interviewed cops and criminals and prosecutors and reporters – could remember even a suspicion that he had ever killed anyone._ So, either he was the greatest and most clandestine Mob hitman of all time, or he was full of shit. Irrespective of this, however, _The Irishman_ is a film written in regret. Scorsese has often been accused of making Mob recruitment films, and it's well-known that real-life gangsters love _GoodFellas_ and _Casino_. In _The Irishman_, however, there's a thematic maturity not present in those films – the violence is presented with a degree more solemnity, the emotional fallout of such a life with a degree more finality. Much of this is tied up in Sheeran's daughter Peggy (played by Lucy Gallina as a child and Anna Paquin as an adult). An almost completely wordless role, Peggy is introduced in a scene in which she watches her father viciously beat the grocer for whom she works because he pushed her. The impression of him which this gives her is something Sheeran spends much of the rest of the film trying to ameliorate. Another important element in the film's thematic complexity, particularly the theme of death, is that as each gangster appears for the first time, a subtitle tells us who they are, but also lists the date of their deaths and how they were murdered (which almost all were). There's no better illustration of just how concerned the film is with the nature of transience – every single one of these guys is a colossus in their own mind, and each deems themselves invincible (as do we all when young). Yet none of them make it out of life alive. In the film's last act, this theme is distilled down to its very essence, essentially positing that the only important thing you leave behind is your relationships with other people, and Sheeran has badly mismanaged his, resulting in him sitting alone in a nursing home at Christmas, waiting to die. In _GoodFellas_ and _Casino_, the protagonists lose their wealth, possessions, status, and so on, but in _The Irishman_, the loss is more existential – Sheeran loses his soul. Telling himself for much of the film that he's an inherently decent person insofar as he loves his family and is loyal to his friends, it's only at the very end that he comes to realise he was a monster. Scorsese is here showing us that men like Sheeran and Bufalino must erase their humanity to function effectively in this world (or conversely, that they can function effectively because they have no humanity to begin with), suggesting that men with no conscience are not only not men, they're not even alive. This issue comes to a head in a remarkably well-acted scene towards the end of the film in which Sheeran calls the widow of a man he has recently murdered (all the man's wife knows at the time of the call is that her husband is missing). Assuring her that he's there for her should she need anything, Sheeran urges her to try to think positive, explaining that he believes the man will turn up eventually. It clearly causes him a degree of pain, but the fact that he can do it at all speaks to his sociopathy if not necessarily his psychopathology. The last act, as the violence settles and the zingers and insults dry up, is remarkably bleak in a way that the last acts of _GoodFellas_ and _Casino_ aren't, and as we watch Sheeran sitting in that nursing home, taking stock, spelling out his regrets, reminiscing about his actions as a young man, it's impossible not to see the meta dimension – Scorsese himself looking back on his career, remembering the classics of yesteryear, keenly aware that old-age is beginning to creep up on him. In terms of the acting, the closest we get to a poor performance is Pacino, who portrays Hoffa as if he was playing, well, Al Pacino. This is arguably the biggest he's gone since Taylor Hackford's _Devil's Advocate_ (1997), a film in which he quite literally played Satan. But in terms of portraying Hoffa, look at footage of the real Hoffa, then watch both The Irishman and Danny DeVito's _Hoffa_ (1992) in which Jack Nicholson plays the character, and tell me who gives the more authentic performance. Don't get me wrong, Pacino is fun to watch (I would gladly see an entire film composed of nothing but him and Stephen Graham insulting one another), and most of the laughs come from his over-the-top antics, but it's not an especially accurate depiction of the real man. As for De Niro, this is his first not-phoned-in performance in decades, possibly since _Casino_ and Mann's _Heat_ (1995), and he imbues the character with real interiority and complex psychology, without diluting Sheeran's inherent inhumanity. However, the real standout performance is Pesci. Nine years since his last live-action film, Pesci falls back into the groove without missing a beat. However, those looking for the fireworks of Tommy DeVito or Nicky Santoro will be disappointed – this is literally the inverse of such performances. Pesci's Bufalino is quiet, calm, considered, highly intelligent, but cold and sociopathic, the kind of man who wouldn't so much beat your head in, but would order someone else to do so without giving it a second thought. If the film has a single problem, it's the runtime. Depending on your perspective, 206 minutes is either too long or, ironically, not long enough. I could certainly see this story working well as a six-hour miniseries, but as a film, it needs trimming. As mentioned above, the last act is devastating; there's little tension as such, but there sure is pathos. However, by the time we got to this point, I was starting to feel the film had outstayed its welcome, when I should have been the most heavily invested in the story. This has been a recurrent problem in recent Scorsese films, most notably _The Aviator_ (2004), _The Wolf of Wallstreet_ (2013), and the horrendous _Silence_ (2016), but this is the first time he's strayed from over-long into self-indulgence. The film simply doesn't warrant this length; whole scenes could easily be removed without compromising the story, the character beats, or the emotion. This is mostly felt in the long middle section in which Scorsese broadens the story to take in the Kennedy and Nixon presidencies, without ever really tying the historical material to Sheeran's narration. Presumably, he's trying to show the interconnectedness between the underworld and politics, but given the time he spends on it, that isn't especially clear. Another problem, albeit a smaller one, is the digital de-aging. Apart from a scene showing a 20-something Sheeran, in which De Niro looks like he's made of (cheap) wax, I thought the technology was deployed pretty successfully; it's a little jolting at first, but easy to get used to. What stood out, however, was the tired bodies beneath those de-aged faces. This is most notable in the scene where Sheeran beats up Peggy's boss – a pivotal moment that drives a permanent wedge between the two as she witnesses for the first time his savagery. Except the beating is pathetic – the kicks are about five miles away from the man's face and De Niro's exhausted stomps wouldn't flatten a wet cardboard box. It's a shame as, it's a good scene, but the lack of correlation between face and body is undeniably jarring. Another issue is one that has cropped up in all of Scorsese's Mob films – glorification. Obviously, _The Irishman_ is about the toxic masculinity of this world and the lonely endgame (if one even gets to the endgame), but much as was the case with his (frankly stomach-churning) softening of Jordan Belfort in _Wolf of Wall Street_, Scorsese runs a very real risk of glamorising what he claims to be condemning. With 20 minutes shaved off, this could have been one of the best films of the century thus far. For me, _The Irishman_ was a very good movie, but certainly not the masterpiece many others have felt it to be. But that's just me, and I can certainly recognise and celebrate such ambitious and _auteur_-driven filmmaking, especially coming, as it does, at a time when more and more it feels like films are being made by committees rather than by artists. Arguably Scorsese's most eschatological film, certainly since _Kundun_ (1997), _The Irishman_ is essentially a story of how one man lost his soul, and, by extension how the world for which he lost it dehumanises and degrades those who participate in its rites. Although brought down by old-age, abandonment, and the merciless nature of human existence, Scorsese refuses to afford these men an easy out – they made their choices, and they must now live, and die, with the consequences.

Jun 23, 2021
Ruuz
6.0

This being nominated for SAG's "Best Acting Ensemble" is basically like when _Bohemian Rhapsody_ won "Best Editing" at the Oscars. This uh... This movie's better though. _Final rating:★★★ - I liked it. Would personally recommend you give it a go._ ...

Jun 23, 2021
msbreviews
10.0

It might not be Martin Scorsese’s best film yet, but it’s one more proof that he’s one of the most talented filmmakers ever. With Robert De Niro delivering his best performance of the decade, Al Pacino going crazy and Joe Pesci brilliantly coming out of retirement, The Irishman is a wonderfully-writ ... ten, (very) long story about friendship and life. The best editing (Thelma Schoonmaker) of the year makes the runtime smoother, but it still drags on for too long. I also feel that Anna Paquin’s character should have had more impact. The de-aging VFX is mind-blowing, even if it takes a few minutes to get used to it. Rating: A-

Jun 23, 2021
JPV852
7.0

Wanted to love this but there were moments where I sort of lost interest. And while I don't at all mind lengthy movies (Godfather Part II and Apocalypse Now are two of my favorite movies), this one was probably a good 20-minutes too long IMO. That said, nice to see De Niro at least trying to act rat ... her than sleepwalk through a role and seeing Joe Pesci was great. Pacino however I never 100% bought into playing Hoffa. Guess it's worth checking out but doesn't hold a candle to other Scorsese's films. **3.5/5**

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
10.0

A fascinating watch - totally worth the 209 minute run time. There's so much to like about <em>'The Irishman'</em>. From the top class performances, the ace cinematography, the excellent music and, most importantly, the captivating plot. I enjoyed this more than (the great) <em>'Goodfellas'</em>, ... which is my only previous experience of a Martin Scorsese film. Robert De Niro is always a fantastic watch and here he is no different, I absolutely loved every scene of him as Frank. Al Pacino (Jimmy) and Joe Pesci (Russell) are also superb, Pacino particularly. Away from those three, you also have Ray Romano, Bobby Cannavale, Stephen Graham and Harvey Keitel involved. Awesome cast. No idea how true to life it is, all I care is if it delivers a fantastic film - and it undoubtedly does. I felt entertained for every second. The de-aging effects are cool to see, also. I understand why some may fault this. Me? Loved it!

Jun 23, 2021