Irishman now 86 on lbxd, first Parasite and now this
lotta things wrong with lb but considering your ratings you should probably pipe down lol
Man I just realized on my rewatch how much the relation with his daughter is the core line that drives everything, the way she snubs Russ right off the bat from the Bowling scene to the Christmas scene (damn that also makes the last scene with Frank talking about Christmas even more sad, he lost the one he was loyal to his whole life, sacrificed everything for and no one else wants to be around him in the end, again like I said before all for nothing)
In such contrast to the way Hoffa clicks with Franks family when he gets in the picture, it really speaks volume of where Frank took things at
I know it sounds obvious lol but I didn’t focus on that whole thing at first and like how from there you can really tell ones bad and ones good influence on the personal life
You must have some comprehension problems since I clearly said that the plot was forced, which is definitely relevant to the content.
What part of that has anything to do with what I said?
Yeah that phonecall scene is powerful as s***, De Niro showing us he's still got the magic.
When Russ tells him Hoffa is going too, the way DeNiro keeps looking in the distance and back into Russ’s eyes, damn
lotta things wrong with lb but considering your ratings you should probably pipe down lol
Tbh
Man I just realized on my rewatch how much the relation with his daughter is the core line that drives everything, the way she snubs Russ right off the bat from the Bowling scene to the Christmas scene (damn that also makes the last scene with Frank talking about Christmas even more sad, he lost the one he was loyal to his whole life, sacrificed everything for and no one else wants to be around him in the end, again like I said before all for nothing)
In such contrast to the way Hoffa clicks with Franks family when he gets in the picture, it really speaks volume of where Frank took things at
I know it sounds obvious lol but I didn’t focus on that whole thing at first and like how from there you can really tell ones bad and ones good influence on the personal life
Explain what you mean by “volume”
This is the longest movie that I’ve ever wanted to rewatch so soon after viewing... bout to kill 7 hours of my life on this s***.
Already rewatched the Florida meeting scene 4 times. My god is that gold
This is the longest movie that I’ve ever wanted to rewatch so soon after viewing... bout to kill 7 hours of my life on this s***.
Already rewatched the Florida meeting scene 4 times. My god is that gold
WHY HAS NO ONE MENTIONED THE GRAHAM/PACINO DYNAMIC?
“you people”
“you *** motherfucker”
Yeah one of the best scenes, lol there’s lot of standout scenes actually
Explain what you mean by “volume”
Well, it says a lot about like how even tho Hoffa was better with him and his family’s Frank kept it professional and stick to Russ even tho his family didn’t like being around Russ, and so he ends up like Russ? Russ talked about not having kids at the Bowling scene and in the end, Frank lost his kids too in a way
I thought there was a lot to take away from that layer on rewatch
WHY HAS NO ONE MENTIONED THE GRAHAM/PACINO DYNAMIC?
Dude every scene with them was great and hilarious. I’m in disbelief that LITERALLY EVERYONE’S performance was 10/10.
Dude every scene with them was great and hilarious. I’m in disbelief that LITERALLY EVERYONE’S performance was 10/10.
Even the comics brought their A game
I love how this film really shows the connection between politics and crime back then.
"Big Ears" was subtle
WHY HAS NO ONE MENTIONED THE GRAHAM/PACINO DYNAMIC?
Stephen Graham bringing his Capone A-game here, great to see him going toe-to-toe with Pacino.
Got me planning a Boardwalk rewatch out here, and let's not forget the boy CANNAVALE, and of course Dom Lombardozzi and the absolute goat Jack Huston.
Marty really brought the whole gang
ppl really watching these 70 year old f***s, wow
Aren’t you the one screaming sexual harassment when a girl sits next to you
I love how this film really shows the connection between politics and crime back then.
"Big Ears" was subtle
Don’t remember what that means