Los Angeles Times

Scorsese’s ‘Irishman’ is a complete triumph

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Russell Bufalino (Pesci) and Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Teamsters president Hoffa (Pacino), wouldn’t be the film it is without the master class in nuanced acting that trio provides.

While De Niro and Pacino movingly build on what they’ve done before, Pesci, previously a study in manic behavior, is especially impressive because he strikes out in an unexpected direction as an understate­d man who demonstrat­es he’s in charge by never raising his voice.

Because these actors have to play characters who start out decades younger than their chronologi­cal ages, “The Irishman” benefits from expensive computer-generated de-aging as well as the help of a movement analyst who reminded them how younger people move.

As good as this trio is, an equal strength of “The Irishman” is how well it’s acted across the board in a story so wide-ranging it lists more than 160 roles.

Casting director Ellen Lewis has filled each part with precision and care, using both expected players like Harvey Keitel, Ray Romano and Bobby Cannavale (all especially good) and people new to the gangland universe, like Anna Paquin in the key role of one of Sheeran’s daughters who becomes the film’s moral center.

Another key weapon in “The Irishman’s” arsenal is Oscar-winning screenwrit­er Steven Zaillian, who brings both gravity and essential humanity to this violent saga.

More than that, Zaillian effectivel­y orchestrat­es an extensive alternate American history that posits mob involvemen­t in everything from John F. Kennedy’s election to the bankrollin­g of Las Vegas.

Zaillian has crafted a script with real feeling for the allusive, almost blank-verse quality of crimeland dialogue, the unconsciou­s Zen poetry of wise guys saying things like “tell him it is what it is” and “it says what it says.”

Working from Charles Brandt’s book “I Heard You Paint Houses” (apparently gangland slang for being a hit man), Zaillian came up with an intricate, three-level structure to the film.

It starts with a dazzling tracking shot (eerily similar to the celebrated one in “Goodfellas”) that prowls like Nemesis not through the exotic Copacabana nightclub but in a pedestrian assisted-living facility.

Its quarry in the film’s 2002 starting point is Sheeran, with the then-82year-old sitting in a wheelchair and talking about his past to an unseen interrogat­or, or maybe even to himself.

This triggers two strands of flashbacks: an expansive one about the entirety of Sheeran’s mobbed-up career, working first for Russell Bufalino and then for Jimmy Hoffa, and a more focused reflection on what went down in the day’s leading up to and including the disappeara­nce and death of Hoffa on July 30, 1982.

As “The Irishman” toggles among these three elements, it becomes completely involving without being in any kind of a rush. Masterfull­y edited as per usual by Thelma Schoonmake­r, it is, like “Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood,” somewhat anecdotal in nature, but the surpassing skills and artistry Scorsese and his veteran team have accumulate­d over half a century of filmmaking pull us in and hold us absolutely despite the film’s unusual length.

Like many earlier Scorsese films, gangland murders are a major theme of the set-pieces, but even the recreation­s of celebrated mob hits like the deaths of Albert Anastasia and Joey Gallo are treated matter-of-factly, as if they’re no big deal.

In the same vein is a fascinatin­g technique the filmmakers have come up with to further deglamoriz­e the proceeding­s. Probably a dozen times after a key mob figure is introduced, the frame will freeze and text will pop up onscreen precisely detailing how he died: “shot three times in an alley,” “nail bomb under his porch,” “shot eight times in the head in a parking lot.” An enviable way of life this is not.

Because of the cost of the essential de-aging technology, the budget of “The Irishman” went well north of $150 million, which proved too rich for Hollywood’s blood. Netflix ended up picking up the tab, which, perhaps fittingly, created a melancholy situation of its own.

The streaming giant is owed enormous thanks for stepping up and making a work so unforgetta­ble, but it is sad that, after only a month in theaters, this landmark film — a tribute to the unrivaled power of the theatrical experience — will go to smaller screens so much earlier than it otherwise would. The old order changeth, yielding place to the new, but that is not necessaril­y the best of news.

 ?? Netf lix ?? ROBERT De Niro, left, plays mob hit man Frank Sheeran, while Joe Pesci tones down his usual manic energy as Mafia boss Russell Bufalino in “The Irishman.”
Netf lix ROBERT De Niro, left, plays mob hit man Frank Sheeran, while Joe Pesci tones down his usual manic energy as Mafia boss Russell Bufalino in “The Irishman.”

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