The most recent movie from Martin Scorsese is a powerful meditation on life and legacy, as well as the price of shoddy commitment.
Scorsese is indeed one of the legends of the gangster category, and the worst idea that can come up to your mind about his 1995 movie Casino is that it isn’t as fantastic as Goodfellas (1990), one of the greatest movies ever created. It’s appropriate that the filmmaker’s most recent movie, The Irishman (2019), comes back to the genre as Martin Scorsese examines not just a post-war America, but also the legacy of The Greatest Generation. The director has acquired the genre as his own asset the moment he digs deep into it. While Scorsese, who is currently almost 80 years old, is already aware that he is approaching his last years, The Irishman still thrives since its subject matter is so much broader than merely a retired author. Scorsese would rather focus on the traumas that WWII inflicted on a generation of men who absorbed a legacy of brutality and referred to it as labor. Brotherhood is inexpensive for the stern, stoic sorts who are so cut off from their individual feelings that the only thing they truly comprehend is cold, hard things, as demonstrated in this film. The Irishman, led by three superb Hollywood stars’ performances, is more than glad to tell you the reason they are simply legends. The movie itself is also a profound insight into the 2nd half of the 20th century U.S. with Scorsese lacking none of his spark.
In the opening scene of the movie, an old Robert De Niro’s Frank Sheeran recalls how he met mob boss Joe Pesci’s Russell Bufalino and how they became close to each other. Frank is a teamster, or a truck driver who doesn’t hesitate to commit situational crime, placing him on Bufalino and other organized crime figures’ radars. As a result of their connection, Al Pacino’s Jimmy Hoffa, the teamsters president, who has an excellent relationship with crime bosses, ultimately becomes familiar with Frank. During this time, crime bosses want to construct casinos, yet banks refuse to lend them the money. Meanwhile, as the union’s leader, Hoffa is permitted to invest union dues and pension funds in casinos. However, as the years pass, the friendship between the mafia and Hoffa deteriorates, and Sheeran, the close friend of both Hoffa and Bufalino, finds himself amidst two sides.
The Irishman never seems to be sluggish regardless of its lengthy runtime: three and half an hour. In order to maintain the movie’s steady pace, Scorsese and his veteran editor Thelma Schoonmaker made it humorous and dryly comical. We prefer spending time with these matter-of-fact folks and their peculiar worldview instead of the gangster excesses depicted in Goodfellas and Casino. As Sheeran enters the scene and begins informing us about some wiseguys, the film will merrily whiz by prior to text flashing on the screen, revealing the way in which this or that individual perished inexplicably. In fact, the Irishman remains violent, yet in a heartless, impersonal way. There isn’t a montage in “Layla” where the scope of the savagery is shown. Scorsese, on the other hand, makes it working class, just as Frank, and he doesn’t have to present us with violent strikes since “It is what it is.”
Even when we learn about Sheeran’s background, from the period he served in Italy during WWII, to his twilight years in a nursing institution, Scorsese is able to observe the calamity of the unreflective life here. Sheeran, Bufalino and Hoffa are all from the “Greatest Generation,” men who are admired for their diligence and reserved demeanor, and Scorsese explains what it actually means. If we honor WWII veterans such as Frank, then we must also confront the brutality they carried back within them. If we honor these individuals for the things they’ve established, we must equally be aware of the things they have stolen and the mechanisms that shielded them from punishment. If we honor these guys for their stoicism, we must also take into account the emotional distance that makes relationships readily breakable.
In fact, Sheeran, Bufalino and Hoffa ain’t no “good guys.” Even if Sheeran tries to cover himself with the best optimistic light (it must be emphasized that the true Sheeran was probably full of it, but it’s not truly important for the sake of The Irishman), and this isn’t a film in which you’re supporting any individual. Rather, the complicated conflict happening when Sheeran’s allegiances to both Bufalino and Hoffa collide, and the way the actions of the trios represent the U.S. they helped create, for better or worse (often worse), is what makes this story intriguing. The stuff about women and people of color are purposefully left out of the movie since those relaxed white gentlemen were truly just enthusiastic in their own interests.
This brings up the film’s issue of legacy and the things you may create when your deepest concern is your own self-enrichment, rather than your family, friends or other people. The true shocker is that Sheeran isn’t truly after fame or fortune. He doesn’t fantasize about becoming a gangster like Henry Hill; instead, he only wishes to be a good soldier, which is exactly what the mafia needs. Beyond earning more than the average salary and possessing the freedom to indulge his aggressive tendencies, Sheeran doesn’t have any lofty goal or ambition. “Isn’t this the kind of American we celebrate?” Scorsese questions. Frank Sheeran silently performs his duties, provides for his beloved, and complies with instructions. That surely makes for a good American, right?
Everybody has performed at their best, even if De Niro, Pesci and Pacino have all given dubious performances, particularly in the latter stages of their careers. The austere stoicism of De Niro’s performance is evocative of his work in Casino; Bufalino is played by Pesci with a surprise and grandfatherly softness that contrasts well with the brutality he supervises; and Hoffa is played by Pacino with the bombastic aggression of his later work. These Hollywood stars complement one another well, not merely due to the fact that we have observed them in films such as Goodfellas, or Hear, but also thanks to them being ideal for these particular characters, specifically while working under the supervision of the legendary Martin Scorsese.
The Irishman is, taking into all account, not Scorsese at his finest, which would mean that the director hasn’t been constantly hitting home runs for a very long time. We might argue about which of his films are better than others, yet in my opinion, The Wolf of Wall Street and Silence are equally powerful as his most recent picture. One of Scorsese’s talents, which eludes a number of his peers, is his ability to keep his films feeling intimate and exciting while also taking a wider view of more profound issues. The Irishman simply isn’t another crime film by Scorsese. It appears to be a movie that Scorsese could have only done at this time in his career and is completely different from Goodfellas and Casino. Even though The Irishman is a gentler film than those two gangster flicks, Scorsese isn’t resting on his laurels.