Results 51 to 75 of 100
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12-04-2019, 08:26 AM #51
Actually, after watching it and the after discussion, I do want to watch again. More and more it is amazing to have 4 such skilled filmmakers really be the center of the story across the years. It is almost theatrical in that. Out side from the big 3, every other actor is a bit player. It really is a tour de force, even with Pacinos over the top bluster.
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12-05-2019, 11:11 AM #52
I want to watch it again. Thought it was great, slow, deliberate and built everyone up as much as they needed to. The narration of a lonely man in the home, the attempt to see his daughter in the bank, all great.
There are some articles online on how to break it into a mini-series, which I agree with.
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12-05-2019, 12:09 PM #53
New Scorsese movie with Deniro, Pacino, and Pesci, coming soon
Forgettable. Hard to wrap around 80 y/o playing 30y/o. MS directing makes it easy to watch.
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12-05-2019, 03:03 PM #54
I didn't care much for it. I thought it sort of meandered around. I thought it was self-indulgently long. I didn't enjoy Deniro's mumbling, old man narration. I dont think the Sheeran character had much depth. I think having actors pushing 80 years old trying to play men in their 30s and 40s was so unconvincing that it broke the fourth wall. But most of all, I don't understand why Scorsese made a film full of outright lies.
The most egregious...Crazy Joe Gallo was shot at Umberto's Clam House because his crew was in an ongoing war with the rest of the Profaci/Colombo family. Pretty much everyone in the Colombos had assumed that Gallo had orchestrated the assassination of the family boss and Gallo was a marked man. It had NOTHING to do with something he said to Russell Buffalino. Plus, there were witnesses at Umberto's. Gallo was publicly murdered by a squad of Colombo shooters, not an old fat lone gunman. That's just a fact. It's well known mob history. To suggest that Sheeran did it is just fucking stupid unless Scorsese is actually trying to retcon all his mob films as being little more than lies told by aging mobsters looking to cash in. One of the great things about Goodfellas is the more you watch it, the more you understand that Henry Hill is an unreliable narrator. Henry always remembers everything in a light most favorable to himself. But, he is recounting actual events that he experienced as an associate in Paul Vario's Lucchese crew. There's a lot of truth in the story. The Irishman, however, really pushed the limits of having an unreliable narrator and pushed it way too far. I want a mob film that gives you a peek behind the curtains into a secret society. I'm not interested in a bunch of bullshit. This film...wtf...It's like Sheeran is the Forrest Gump of the mob. Bleh.Last edited by neckdeep; 12-05-2019 at 04:30 PM.
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12-05-2019, 03:11 PM #55
Self-indulgently long is a good way to describe it. Kinda sick of Deniro’s and Pacino’s same old same old. Thought Pesci was great.
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12-05-2019, 04:26 PM #56
New Scorsese movie with Deniro, Pacino, and Pesci, coming soon
The scene where Deniro is beating on the grocery keeper, who pushed his daughter, might be one of the worst scenes I’ve ever seen. Took me right of the whole thing. Deniro looked so old and feeble. Movie is just not very good.
crab in my shoe mouth
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12-05-2019, 04:44 PM #57
It was just an unforgettable film. It melded right into many of the other mediocre mobster movies and given the cast, it felt like many of them.
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12-06-2019, 11:51 AM #58
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12-06-2019, 11:55 AM #59
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12-06-2019, 11:58 AM #60
I liked it. We watched The Irishman last weekend, then The Godfather and Godfather Part II this week. The Irishman is far from Scorsese's best work, but to my eye it's a good bit better than those two Oscar Best Picture winners.
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12-06-2019, 07:25 PM #61
What I'm finding interesting is that the bulk of the negative reviews I'm hearing about the film are coming from folks who streamed it at home. I would be interested to know how big everyody's TV screens are at home. I liked the film. But I went out of my way to see it in the theaters on a BIG screen. I felt it flowed pretty well and I was engaged by the acting, but I am 99.9% sure that I wouldn't have been able to sit through the entire film in one sitting had I watched it at home on my 47" screen. I really feel that there is a difference between seeing a film in a theater and seeing it at home. And while The Irishman isn't a grand visual epic like, say, 2001: A Space Oddity or Walkabout or Lawrence of Arabia, I tend to think that it might suffer a bit from being watched at home...
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12-06-2019, 08:10 PM #62
I dunno. I liked it.
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12-06-2019, 09:06 PM #63
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12-06-2019, 09:14 PM #64
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12-06-2019, 09:23 PM #65
Willing to bet that most movie critics more than likely watched it at a theater, which goes to my original point: the bulk of the negative reviews I am seeing are coming from streamers.
This is what I am hearing from quite a few of my friends and co-workers: that it took them several days to watch it. I dunno, but I can't break up a movie into a few days and have the same reaction that I would if I were to watch it in one sitting. But that's me.
There is something immersive about seeing a movie in the theaters.
It's akin to how you hear people talk about picking a designated place to study when you are in college, a place away from your dorm room or house, where all you do is study. Or if you work from home you should have a dedicated office as opposed to working in your bedroom or kitchen; places where other activities occur.
I find that going to a theater puts me in the mind to be fully committed to watching the film.
When I watch a film at home there's too many distractions: getting up to go to the bathroom; "Oh, I want a snack" and then pausing the film to get some food; the phone ringing (I leave my phone in the car when I go to the cinema); friends stopping by; ambient noise from outside; the list goes on...
Now if I had a dedicated theater room in my house, that would be a different story!
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12-06-2019, 10:31 PM #66
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12-07-2019, 07:32 AM #67
Then again I’m a union driver in Michigan...so the subject matter appeals.
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12-08-2019, 12:24 AM #68
Watched it at home. Thought it was great.
Yeah, the de-aging wasn't the best. And yeah, the grocery store beating looked like an 80 year old that looked like a 30 year old trying to move like an 80 year old can't. It's not a perfect movie, but it kept me interested the whole time. The wife even stayed awake for like 2/3 of it, which is impressive.
Pesci was fantastic. Deniro was fine. Pacino left a bit to be desired, but had a few good scenes (mostly where he had to tone it down a bit).
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12-08-2019, 08:34 AM #69
^THIS!
Nicely put Toast. I continually appreciate how you can take an idea which I spent a 1000 words conveying and reduce it into one neat and succinct sentence. I may have to hire you as an editor...
For those interested in reading my 1000 words rambling about The Irishman: https://spencesez.blogspot.com/2019/...lm-review.html
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12-08-2019, 02:54 PM #70
Ha! I like the 1000 word versions. All kinds of notes on stuff that I probably missed, and references to semi obscure stuff that I should watch.
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12-08-2019, 04:41 PM #71
I watched it on a iPhone screen, but it was only 6” from my face so it was like being at an IMAX theater.
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12-08-2019, 09:09 PM #72
So this was a docudrama, but, a really good docudrama.
Pacino will always be Pacino.
How can one movie have so many producers? What do all of those people do? Lunch?
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12-08-2019, 09:15 PM #73
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12-08-2019, 09:20 PM #74
Pesci was awesome. Best supporting actor.
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12-08-2019, 09:45 PM #75
I listened to Louis CK interviewed by Marc Maron a while ago, before Louis's life blew up, and he was basically promoting Harold and Pete, his ten episode web TV series, which is really good, but, super dark. It used to be on CK's website, but, maybe HULU now. Louis asked Pesci to play the bartender role, and of course, he refused. Alan Alda eventually took the role, and he was awesome. But, I would love to be a fly on the wall and watch the encounter between CK and Pesci, because CK just drove out to his house in Jersey and knocked on the door. CK said he was nice, and helped him write the character. So, if you ever watch that series, there's a little Pesci in the Alan Alda character.
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