Calgary Herald

De Niro goes for the funny bone

- BRENT LANG

Robert De Niro is working on a sequel to the 1988 hit comedy Midnight Run, the actor revealed at a panel Thursday at the Tribeca Film Festival to honour Universal Studios’ 100th anniversar­y.

The follow-up would see him helping out the son of the embezzling accountant played by Charles Grodin in the first film. The script is still in developmen­t, De Niro said.

Though the thought of returning to Midnight Run after more than two decades might seem like sacrilege to fans of the first film, there are plenty of other reasons for the Criterion Collection set to be feeling antsy.

De Niro said he is even willing to consider reprising his role as Jake Lamotta in a sequel to Raging Bull, provided the “script was good.”

But the talk wasn’t all about milking the legendary actor’s most iconic performanc­es for all they’re worth.

De Niro, who was joined on stage by director Judd Apatow, talked about some of his most famous roles at Universal in films like The Deer Hunter and Casino while dodging questions on why he’s so very good at playing psychos.

“That’s for me and my psychoanal­yst,” De Niro joked about why he was drawn to so many dark characters.

Apatow kept the hourlong panel light, joking that bouncing between examinatio­ns of his bawdy comedies with De Niro’s darker performanc­es in some of the seminal movies of the 1970s was “whiplash of subject matter.”

There were some common threads to the two careers, particular­ly now that De Niro has focused on comedic roles recently in films like Meet the Parents and Analyze This.

Even though the transition to humorous movies was seen as a creative change of direction, the actor said he did not see it as being as much of a stretch as others did.

“Taxi Driver — there are funny things in it,” De Niro said. “Mean Streets, King of Comedy, they weren’t obvious comedies.”

“Goodfellas is hilarious,” Apatow interrupte­d to laughter. It turned out, however, that the Knocked Up director wasn’t joking.

“What people love about Mr. De Niro’s work is there’s always sharp comedy in it,” Apatow said. “Even Cape Fear has some humour in it.”

Just as De Niro expressed disbelief that anybody questioned that he could do comedy, Apatow was similarly surprised by the shock that greeted his associatio­n with the female-centric comedy he produced, Bridesmaid­s.

 ?? Lucas Jackson, Reuters ?? Robert De Niro with his wife, Grace Hightower.
Lucas Jackson, Reuters Robert De Niro with his wife, Grace Hightower.

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