'the irishman' review: the power of the gangster myth

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CHRIS SULLIVAN RATES MARTIN SCORSESE’S LATEST MOVIE AND EXPLAINS THE TIMELESS ATTRACTION OF THE MAFIA FILMS. ------------------------- In his latest mobster film, Martin Scorsese not only


sticks to a tried and trusted Mafioso recipe that has given him both cult status and bums on seats, but also employs the very actors: Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci and Harvey Keitel, who have


played a huge part in helping him create the Mafia as a cult cinema subject. Although it seems to follow a predictable formula, _The Irishman_, is an instant and essential classic.  Taken


from the book, _I Heard You Paint Houses, _by Charles Brandt, it is based on nearly five years of recorded interviews with World War II veteran, ducker, diver and chancer, Frank Sheeran


(played by Robert De Niro). As a GI, Frank often took captured Germans soldiers into the Italian woods and shot them. > I have met many real gangsters. To be successful, you have to be


> really horrible, have little humanity and inspire true fear. After the Second World War, like many returning soldiers, he found difficulty readjusting to civilian life. Being 6ft


4inches tall and well-built, he slipped effortlessly into the gangster world. Frank became a hitman for the renowned crime boss of North Eastern Pennsylvania, Russell Bufalino (real name


Rosario Alberto Bufalino). The film portrays his post-war struggle to acclimatise on Civvy street and eventually to his reflection and eventually regret and sadness as a sick old man who has


outlived all his friends and associates. The film chronicles the mysterious disappearance of legendary Teamsters union boss, Jimmy Hoffa. Scorsese, with help from screenwriter Steve


Zaillian, vividly brings to life his unique insight into the inner machinations of organised crime, its mores, its rules, etiquette, history, rivalries, and links to mainstream politics and


its influence on it. Unquestionably, Scorsese has long mined the rich deposits of organised crime with enough aplomb to become a film brand in his own name: _Mean Streets, The Departed,


Goodfellas, Casino, Gangs of New York_, being fine examples – Scorsese certainly knows his _cipolle_.  Born to Sicilian parents in 1942, he was raised in Manhattan’s Little Italy, an area


controlled by the omnipresent “made men” who held court in the area’s little restaurants and cafes. “I saw my first displays of his kind of power when I was about nine years old”, Scorsese


explained to me in an interview 15 years ago. “One particular guy (who I believe was killed in 1968) was a very powerful Mafia figure, didn’t have to say anything, didn’t have to do


anything. He’d just walk in a room and everything would stop. I’ve never forgotten that.” ------------------------- PUBLIC’S INFATUATION WITH THE MOB – AND THE BACKLASH Just as the film’s


hero Marty Baby is infatuated with the Mob, so are the general public. Francis Ford Coppola’s magnificent epic, _The Godfather_, was the highest-grossing film ever made at the time, taking


an estimated $245–286 million at the box office, as well as hundreds of millions in video and DVD sales. Others followed. And then came one of the greatest and highest-grossing TV series of


all time, _The Sopranos_. Undeniably, the public can’t get enough of Mafia drama. According to Professor James Finckenauer, the author of _Mafia and Organized Crime: A Beginner’s Guide,_ the


romance began with Prohibition. “One of the side effects was to solidify organized crime…Because Prohibition was hugely unpopular, the men who stood up to it were heralded as heroes, not


criminals,” Finckenauer explains. “It was the start of their image as people who can thumb their noses at bad laws and at the establishment.”  The attraction of the gangster myth was further


fuelled by the Great Depression, when wealthy bank owners took advantage of the economic slump and foreclosed on mortgages, leaving many people homeless and unemployed. So when the likes of


John Dillinger came along robbing the hated banks and men from the slums, such as, Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano, hit the front pages, they weren’t regarded as bad guys but freedom


fighters battling the corrupt establishment. In response Hollywood glorified gangsters in films such as _Little Caesar _(1930),_ Public Enemy _(1931) and _Scarface _(1932). However, the


authorities weren’t so enamoured. _Scarface_, directed by Howard Hawks, produced by Howard Hughes, and starring Paul Muni as a ruthless gang lord based on Al Capone, was banned by film


censors in several US cities and stands as “one of the most highly censored films in Hollywood history”.  This backlash led to the creation of the National Legion of Decency in 1936, which


started a campaign for “the purification of the cinema”. This prompted Michael Curtiz to direct _Angels With Dirty Faces _in 1937, which firmly proclaims that crime certainly does not pay.


Consequently, all gangster movies were required to show that all hoodlums came to a rather sticky end and so it continued even employing the likes of Private Dicks, Sam Spade, and Marlowe to


tell us so. ------------------------- _THE GODFATHER _CHANGED BROUGHT BACK GANGSTER GLAMOUR All remained the same until, _The_ _Godfather_, whose hero Don Vito Corleone was a fair man, who


cared for the community and his family, lived by the Mafia’s mutually agreed code of honour and conduct and only hurt those who were in the game. Since then we’ve had countless movies with


similar heroes. Many men (especially the Mafia themselves who love these movies) ape their every nuance and catchphrase. It’s really rather manly to love Mob movies and laugh at the gory


bits. Beats Rom Coms hands down. As for Scorsese, he has been criticised by some for glorifying thieves, murderers, bullies and drug dealing extortionists, while for others by caricaturing


his slick-haired, hedonistic, witty, dangerous, larger than life subjects, who can boast monikers such as Jimmy Whispers, Big Tuna, Joey Clams or Louie Bagels, he is a God who presents this


mythical world in which a smidgen of morality still exists.  “I’m telling the story from my point of view, from what my perception was,” Scorsese reiterates. “For example, the very powerful


point in _Goodfellas _[which like _The Irishman_ is based on a real life memoir] is that these guys are trapped in that system and [The] only way he [Hill] would get out is he’s gonna be


killed. And then he realised [he’d] better talk. And because _Goodfella_s touches on something very dangerous that younger people might admire or emulate, we showed, in the last hour of the


film, that the life is anything but a good life.” Still, the final voiceover from the protagonist, Henry Hill, in _Goodfellas _says: “Anything I wanted was a phone call away…..When I was


broke, I’d go out and rob some more. We ran everything. We paid off cops. We paid off lawyers. We paid off judges. Everybody had his or her hands out. Everything was for the taking. And now


it’s all over. And that’s the hardest part. Today [when he was in witness protection] …… I’m an average nobody…  I get to live the rest of my life like a schnook.” This is the attraction.


Even though Scorsese, for the most part, bases his movies on real-life characters, the life depicted is a glamorous existence outside of society, that many 9 to 5 ‘schnooks’ desire. Many of


us in our Walter Mitty moments would love to cast off the shackles and live the life of a gangster, a buccaneer or a wild west shootist. But we don’t have the cojones or wherewithal or just


have too much common sense to do so.   In truth, I have met many real gangsters. To be successful, you have to be really horrible, have little humanity and inspire true fear amongst those


who have little. The most accurate character Scorsese ever created is Tommy De Vito (Joe Pesci) in _Goodfellas _and no one would ever want to be like him or for that matter – _The Irishman. 


_ Bada bing bada boom! _THE IRISHMAN IS ON AT THE NFT AND MAJOR CINEMAS THROUGHOUT THE UK DEBUTS ON NETFLIX ON NOVEMBER 27TH  _