
The Irishman 5 stars
Much has been written about Martin Scorsese’s newest gangster movie, The Irishman, about the relationship between Teamster union president, Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino) and mobster hitman Frank Sheeran (Robert De Niro). It is quite a masterpiece and at nearly three and a half hours in length, a challenge to last through in a single sitting. There are plenty of brutal murder scenes as one would expect in a mobster movie and strained relationships between family members especially the women involved. The special language used by the gangsters is always present as the characters have a certain way with words that sanitizes their true intent. We hear Frank talk about how he is sorry about his life when we all know he doesn’t really mean it. The movie was especially expensive to make which is partially due to the special effects used to “deage” the main characters to allow us to see them over a span of fifty plus years. Never before have we seen what aging mobsters are like. (Since they typically don’t live to see their later years.) Here we see Frank in a nursing home after all his associates are long gone and his family will no longer see him. I especially want to take note of the performance of Joe Pesci as Russell Bufalino, the Italian mob boss in an understated role different from how we are accustomed to seeing him. He deserves his Academy Award nomination. The film earned ten nominations altogether and deserves its standing as one of the best films of the year.