The film opens up with the camera panning down the hallways of a nursing home, past orderlies, patients sat in wheelchairs or hobbling around on zimmer frames, eventually settling on an ageing white haired man sat in a wheelchair and holding a walking stick. This is Frank Sheeran (Robert De Niro), a WWII veteran who saw active duty in Italy (where he learned to speak Italian), France and Germany serving 411 days in total. He begins recounting his life post his discharge from the 45th Infantry Division, as a mafia hitman.
In Pennsylvania in the 1950's, Sheeran aged in his early 30's begins his civilian career by driving meat delivery trucks and starts selling off some of the sides of beef to a local gangster, who has a liking for quality cuts of steak. After getting accused by his company of theft, lawyer Bill Bufalino (Ray Romano) gets him off a conviction against all the odds after Sheeran refuses to give the judge any names of who he was selling to. That evening the pair go to a local club hangout to celebrate and there Bufalino introduces Sheeran to his cousin Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci), the head of the northeast Pennsylvania crime family, and Angelo Bruno (Harvey Keitel) the head of the Philadelphia crime family. Sheeran and Russell hit it off instantly, and consequently Sheeran begins to do odd jobs for Russell, including the occasional murder.
In time Russell introduces Sheeran to Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino), the head of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, who has financial ties with the Bufalino crime family and is at odds with fellow rising Teamster Anthony Provenzano (Stephen Graham), as well as increasing pressure from the federal government. Hoffa forms a close bond with Sheeran and his family, and Sheeran becomes Hoffa's main bodyguard while he is out on the road travelling the country, visiting the local Teamster branches, and speaking at rallies.
In 1960 John F. Kennedy is elected into the Whitehouse. Bufalino is thrilled with this news but Hoffa sits on the other side of the fence and is none too pleased to say the least at this latest turn of political events. Conversely, when JFK is assassinated in late 1963 Bufalino is distraught with the news, while Hoffa can hardly conceal his joy - to the point that above the Teamsters offices where he sees the US flag is waving at half mast, he instantly has it raised to its full height.
Kennedy's brother Robert F. Kennedy, is named Attorney General, and forms a 'Get Hoffa' campaign in an attempt to discredit Hoffa, who is eventually arrested in 1964 for the attempted bribery of a grand juror, jury tampering and fraud in two separate convictions and was sentenced to thirteen years in prison in 1967. While in prison, his replacement as the head of the Teamsters Frank Fitzsimmons (Gary Basaraba) begins overspending the groups' accumulated pension funds and making loans out to the mafia. Hoffa's relationship with Provenzano, who was himself arrested for extortion, and winds up serving his sentence in the same facility as Hoffa at the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary in Pennsylvania deteriorates beyond repair while they are inside. Hoffa is eventually released via a Presidential pardon from Richard Nixon in 1971 just four years into his sentence, although he is forbidden from taking part in any Teamsters business until 1980.
Despite the terms of his early release, Hoffa begins his plans to resume power as the head of the organised unions. With Sheeran he travels down to Florida to seek Provenzano's endorsement, but that meeting goes far from well, with the two getting into a brawl. In turn, Hoffa's growing disrespect for other Teamster leaders and related crime family interests begins to concern Russell Bufalino.
Despite the terms of his early release, Hoffa begins his plans to resume power as the head of the organised unions. With Sheeran he travels down to Florida to seek Provenzano's endorsement, but that meeting goes far from well, with the two getting into a brawl. In turn, Hoffa's growing disrespect for other Teamster leaders and related crime family interests begins to concern Russell Bufalino.
During a testimonial dinner held to honour Sheeran, Bufalino tells Sheeran to confront Hoffa and warn him that the heads of the crime families have deep concerns with his behaviour. Sheeran has already attempted such conversations in the recent past, and believes that Hoffa is too head strong and too determined to heed his warnings, despite their close bond. Hoffa then discloses to Sheeran that he knows what Bufalino and the other dons don't know, and further claims that he is untouchable because if anything ever happened to him, they would all end up in prison.
In the fullness of time, Sheeran, Russell, Provenzano and various others are eventually convicted on various charges not related to Hoffa's murder, and one by one their lives all succumb to life behind bars, expect for Sheeran who is eventually released and placed in a Philadelphia nursing home. He tries to make peace with his alienated daughters, but Peggy (Anna Paquin) never forgives him for Hoffa's disappearance, who of all Sheeran's associates and friends, Peggy was the closest too and most at ease with. Sheeran died of cancer on December 14, 2003, aged 83, in that nursing home.
'The Irishman' is an epic mob gangster film in terms of its run time, its fine ensemble casting especially from the three principle leads who are all in their mid to late 70's (as is the Director), its storytelling narrative, its production values and of course its Direction from the master of his craft, Martin Scorsese. Make no mistake, this is not as hard hitting as 'Goodfellas', or 'Casino', but is a reflection on one mans rise through the ranks of a Pennsylvania crime family and the Teamsters Union and for whom no job, no crime was too much. It's the story of a man who struggles to verbalise his inner feelings or his emotions, but is not afraid to let those feelings manifest themselves in acts of extreme violence, without showing any remorse or regret for his actions. It's the story of how age creeps up on all of us, with a telling line by Sheeran as he sits in his nursing home contemplating his end of days 'you don't know how fast time goes by 'til you get there'. And it's the story of how this man in particular counts the painful costs of a life of crime - not through remorse but regret in dying alone in a nondescript nursing home having alienated his daughters. And its a history lesson (some or all or none of it may be true) involving Presidents, the second most powerful man in America at the time, the mafia, those on the periphery and how they are all intertwined. There are some carefully placed one liners that will make you laugh out loud, there is plenty of blood letting, random acts of violence, and the dialogue is straight out of the mobsters playbook. De Niro, Pacino and Pesci are all on fine form here, as is the strong supporting cast who all give 100%. The one negative about this story is how a more meaty role wasn't included for a female lead - Anna Paquin as the disapproving daughter who ultimately turns her back on her father is the only female character who shines in her all too brief on screen appearances. Certainly worth the price of entry is you can catch it on the big screen somewhere, and failing that be sure to catch it from the comfort of your own sofa at home when it streams on Netflix from the 27th of this month.
'The Irishman' merits four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a potential five.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
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