#robert de niro

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Joker (2019)

Joker centers around the iconic arch nemesis and is an original, standalone story not seen before on the big screen. Oscar-nominee filmmaker Todd Phillips’ exploration of Arthur Fleck (Oscar-nominee Joaquin Phoenix), a man disregarded by society, is not only a gritty character study, but also a broader cautionary tale.

Directed by:   Todd Phillips

Starring:   Joaquin Phoenix, Zazie Beetz, Robert De Niro, Frances Conroy, Brett Cullen, Marc Maron, Douglas Hodge, Bryan Callen, Bill Camp, Shea Whigham, Glenn Fleshler, Josh Pais, Dante Pereira-Olson

Release date:   October 4, 2019

Stardust (2007 Film), Various Characters

They have returned! It only took me six months to finish the redesign of this set.

Charlie Cox as Tristan Thorn; Claire Danes as Yvaine; Michelle Pfeiffer as Lamia; and Robert De Niro as Captain Shakespeare. All available now at my Etsy Shop.

Today marks the 5th anniversary of Everybody’s Fine. Robert De Niro gives a heartfelt performaToday marks the 5th anniversary of Everybody’s Fine. Robert De Niro gives a heartfelt performa

Today marks the 5th anniversary of Everybody’s Fine

Robert De Niro gives a heartfelt performance as the patriarch of the Goode family who wants to reconnect with his children played by Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, and Sam Rockwell.

Read more here.

Photo Cred: Heid Slimane


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Al Pacino and Robert De Niro on the set of ‘The Godfather - Part II’, 1974.

acerothstein:

Robert De Niro, Parma, 1975.


Angelo Deligio

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Heat (1995)
Lag Time: 21 years
Dir. Michael Mann
Starring: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer

Heat is arguably the crown jewel of crime cinema. Rarely are crime dramas executed with such care and precision. And rarely do they ascend to the category of “important.” This one has the cinematic and narrative chops to earn that title. Heatcan really be viewed as a crime epic, for a variety of reasons not the least of which is its run-time and sheer sense of scope. At the immediate center of the story: a thrilling face-off between two equally-matched and fearsome forces – cop and criminal – that feels incredibly human. The media certainly leaned on the Pacino-De Niro dynamic to sell the film, and rightly so. However, the film’s brilliance and power stems from the fact that this showdown means so much more. The story evolves from the deadlock between two men on opposite sides of the law, but the point of the story is that the ensuing battle engulfs all that they carry with them. Spoilers follow.

For a film and plot driven by violence,Heat is refreshingly critical of the violence it depicts. This is where the film’s heart lies, and where it stands out against lesser films. It refuses to trivialize the violence it relies upon at every turn, and this is where it becomes apparent that this film is really about the collateral damage incurred by a conflict that seems to be between two men. It condemns the violence in how it handles character deaths. It is a very patient film in that it takes great pains to make the deaths in the film mean something, to let them be felt, and it does this with a couple of devices: one of them more narrative and one of them more structural.

The primary force behind the film’s awakening to collateral damage is the dominant themes of family and relationships. Like I said, the conflict between Pacino’s and De Niro’s characters consumes everything about their lives, including the other lives connected to them. They bring networks of souls with them to the literal table when they sit down face to face over coffee in a tiny diner. This is one reason this film is really a drama first and thena crime genre film. The family lives of not just these characters but of so many of their associates are brought front and center. Heatspends ample time exploring the personal lives of these families so that when Lieutenant Hanna (Pacino) and McCauley (De Niro) butt heads, you truly feel all that is at stake. It builds up care both ways. You know that family members will be in the line of fire, something that begs for the violence to stop. But it also makes the deaths of combatants much more powerful. A secondary cop character gets shot down, the camera lingers, and the death resonates because you came to know that character by seeing his family life, and you know by name the family he is leaving behind.

Operating with the family theme is how the movie structurally elevates what we could call “periphery deaths” to true moments. This goes beyond how the family element makes the death of a cop carry impact. This is about the film giving story to characters who seem on the surface not to matter. The most important character here, for me, is Dennis Haysbert’s. His first scene shows him applying for his first job out of prison, as a fry cook. We can tell the scene is setting something up, but we’re not sure what. A second scene shows his wife supporting him through his transition back to society as he questions his own value; at this point, we are officially questioning his character’s relevance to the Hanna/McCauley drama which is already stretching on quite long. Finally, we get the relevance. McCauley knows him. He comes in to the diner to recruit him as their getaway driver, because the cops are onto their usual driver. Haysbert’s character quits his terrible fry cook job on the spot and steps back into a life of crime. Then, the getaway. At the start of the climactic shoot-out scene, they begin to speed off from the scene of the crime with Haysbert behind the wheel, and he very quickly becomes the first casualty of the action. Four scenes, two of them unconnected to the main conflict, to set up a character who dies almost immediately upon his entry into that main conflict, when there was already a getaway driver introduced in the story. They did not need to set the heat upon the first driver. They could have made him entirely available. So why did they add onto the long runtime to set up a seemingly unnecessary character who would be slaughtered on the spot? Whatever the original intention, you have to admit: you feel something when that driver dies. You get to know his wife, you come to care for the two of them through the care they show for each other, you cheer for this “peripheral” character as he works his way back to a normal life, and as soon as the main conflict draws him in, his life and all its newfound hope comes to an end. Much ado about a minor character whose usefulness in the plot is questionable. But it makes you hate the violence.

A similar moment occurs when one of the wild card criminal characters kills a young prostitute he encounters. You don’t see the death on screen. But you see a prelude to it between the two of them, and you see the crime scene afterwards. Yes the scene itself serves to reintroduce us to the criminal character. But the post-crime scene quickly escalates when, as with the other characters, the young woman’s family arrives on the scene. Family comes into play once again, but the most notable device at work here is the score. Most of the film’s score so far has been very electronic and minimal, and music for similar procedural-type scenes might even be absent. Here, composer Elliot Goldenthal develops a searing string threnody as Hanna comforts the grieving mother. A character who received less than a minute of screen-time in a scene which, again, feels entirely accessory to the main drama, earns the most impassioned musical statement of the film. Why? Because death matters.

Periphery character deaths are turned into cinematic moments because death matters. Death happens. It consumes bystanders, people who have nothing to do with the main drama at hand. Even characters who get caught up in the drama, as with Haysbert’s, matter when they die. The film focuses not just on the families of the central characters, but on those of characters who seem at first like dead-weight in the plot. The film very painstakingly shows us that violent crimes all too often claim more victims than is “fair,” and that those victims are more than just bodies that drop when the climax gears up. The film’s many very intentional choices regarding narrative, structure, and even music give lives to those who die. This is how the film indicts the violence it makes a spectacle out of, as a crime film. I could not help but feel some resonance with Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. While the two central characters can hardly be said to be in love, although another critic is welcome to look at this film through that lens, the story reveals a greater conflict between two houses where senseless violence takes a great toll. The point is that the body count grows higher than it has any right to be, and by making the viewer painfully aware of that, the film holds its mirror up to nature.

License to hack.

License to hack.


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Robert de Niro - Hotel “Metropol”, Beograd 1976

Screvvface Heat TeeMan the fucking rawness of the main gun battle in this film! Screvvface Heat TeeMan the fucking rawness of the main gun battle in this film! 

ScrevvfaceHeat Tee

Man the fucking rawness of the main gun battle in this film! 


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