Rent The Irishman (2019)

3.6 of 5 from 506 ratings
3h 29min
Rent The Irishman (aka I Heard You Paint Houses) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Left behind by the world, former hit man and union truck driver Frank Sheeran (Robert De Niro) looks back from a nursing home on his life's journey through the ranks of organized crime: from his involvement with Philadelphia mob boss Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci) to his association with Teamsters union head Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino) to the rift that forced him to choose between the two. An intimate story of loyalty and betrayal writ large across the epic canvas of mid-twentieth-century American history...
Actors:
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Directors:
Producers:
Gerald Chamales, Robert De Niro, Randall Emmett, Gabriele Israilovici, Gastón Pavlovich, Jane Rosenthal, Martin Scorsese, Emma Tillinger Koskoff
Writers:
Steven Zaillian, Charles Brandt
Others:
Sandy Powell, Jane Rosenthal, Thelma Schoonmaker, Bob Shaw, Emma Tillinger Koskoff, Pablo Helman, Rodrigo Prieto, Christopher Peterson, Leandro Estebecorena, Stephane Grabli, Regina Graves, Nelson Sepulveda-Fauser
Aka:
I Heard You Paint Houses
Studio:
Criterion Collection
Genres:
Drama, Thrillers
Collections:
2021, A Brief History of Old Age on Screen: Part 1, A Brief History of Old Age on Screen: Part 2, BAFTA Nominations Competition 2023, BAFTA Nominations Competition 2024, CinemaParadiso.co.uk Through Time, Films by Genre, Gangster films & Trilogies, Getting to Know..., Getting to Know: Al Pacino, Getting to Know: Joe Pesci, Ireland At the Oscars, Oscar Nominations Competition 2023, Oscar Nominations Competition 2024, Pig Power: Animal Farm At 70, A Brief History of Film..., The Instant Expert's Guide, The Instant Expert's Guide to Martin Scorsese, Top 10 Award Winners at the London Film Festival, Top Films
BBFC:
Release Date:
30/11/2020
Run Time:
209 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing
DVD Regions:
Region 0 (All)
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.85:1
Colour:
Colour
BBFC:
Release Date:
30/11/2020
Run Time:
209 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Atmos
Subtitles:
English Hard of Hearing
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.85:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
B

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Reviews (9) of The Irishman

"It Is What It Is" - The Irishman review by JJ

Spoiler Alert
11/12/2020

A magnificent late work from the master of a certain type of American crime film. In a way, it's not difficult to see Robert de Niro's character, sitting in the old people's home reminiscing about a life in crime, as Scorsese reflecting on his life spent documenting that lifestyle from the director's chair.

The film presents the increasingly-visible conflation of big business, big politics and big crime burgeoning in the years after WW2 and in which American life - and by implication Western life - can be seen as ongoing, never ending crime, where everything is shot through from top to bottom with a corruption of people, morality, family, neighbourhoods, industries, societies, nations, going on for generation after generation and unchallengeable all the while because that is just too dangerous to do, as as the dead-eyed, saurian Joe Pesci's bland line "It's what it is" makes clear to the initiated, at least, in one of the film's most chilling and revealing moments.

Technically the ageing processes worked well; there may have been one or two moments when pausing and examining a certain facial expression here or there might have shown things to look a little odd, but who does that? Film is after all an artificial process from start to finish and questions as to ageing are soon forgotten as we get pulled into the quiet, narrative build of the drama. I was watching this in Blu-ray on an HD screen and there were no obvious wrong visual notes.

I hope it isn't Scorsese's last work but if it is, what a way to go out.

7 out of 7 members found this review helpful.

An overlong crime movie that is nevertheless worth watching - The Irishman review by Philip in Paradiso

Spoiler Alert
27/12/2020

This is a crime movie of epic proportions in many respects. It is, ostensibly, about the American Mafia and the truck drivers' trade union, the Teamsters, which was run by Jimmy Hoffa at the time. (The story spans the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.) The central figure is Frank Sheeran (De Niro), an Irishman who is hired by the Mafia as a hitman, and who is somehow seconded to J Hoffa's office. From then on, the focus shifts and the central character is, without a doubt, J Hoffa (Al Pacino). The story is, therefore, that of the downfall of J Hoffa, who disappeared in unexplained circumstances in 1975.

The central thesis of the film is that the Mafia had helped him take control of the Teamsters. When J Hoffa started having delusions of grandeur and wanting to run the union his way, loosening the grip of organized crime, the Mafia decided to get rid of him. Similarly, the Mafia would have helped John Kennedy win the presidential election. In return, it expected to be given the Cuban market back (prostitution and gambling having been key industries controlled by American organized crime in Cuba before the Castro regime) and to be left alone. When neither one nor the other happened, the Mafia bosses felt betrayed and took revenge on J Kennedy.

The film is, really, about loyalty and betrayal among gangsters. Violence is not glamorized as it used to be in 1970s films, but it is normalized, which is also problematical: it is part of the job. Presumably, that is how such gangsters feel, in fact.

All of this is interesting and Al Pacino plays the part of J Hoffa in a convincing, dramatic, and captivating way. But the film has 3 main problems. First of all, it is too long (3 hrs 20 mins). It is never boring and I enjoyed watching it, but the story could have been told in less. Second, the IT wizardry cannot hide the fact that both Al Pacino and De Niro are geriatrics (they are in their 80s, or close). So is Joe Pesci (the Mafia boss). So, you have actors who look like they are in their 50s or early 60s, when they are supposed to be in their 40s, and they move in the stiff way that elderly men move (something no amount of high tech can hide). At any rate, that is how it felt to me. It works, but only up to a point. Third, the lead characters, apart from J Hoffa, lack depth. They do what they do, without qualms, and without regrets. That is fine, but it can leave the viewer indifferent.

In conclusion, it is a good film and I would recommend it, but it has been hyped up beyond the praise it deserves. If you like this kind of crime saga, you will certainly enjoy it.

5 out of 5 members found this review helpful.

It's decent but... - The Irishman review by WA

Spoiler Alert
11/02/2021

More of a contemplation on the inevitability of getting old and death rather than an out and out gangster flick, I thought it kind of dragged towards the end. Some bloody violence and a lengthy development of what was a well telegraphed moral dilemma, but production values were sky high; the period recreation on a par with QT's Once Upon A Time in Hollywood. The young versions of the main protagonists were a bit like watching characters from a console game, kind of off in an odd sort of way - why not just get younger actors to play these roles. I like Scorsese movies but this one is just a bit meh for my tastes.

3 out of 3 members found this review helpful.

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