Can Martin Scorsese save Robert De Niro?
First thing first: Last night’s “Pushing Daisies,” after a rather disastrously lengthy bit of opening exposition to catch everyone up, was just as funny and whimsical as ever, and will hopefully lead ABC to announce later today that the show has received a full season-two order (so far it just has 13 new episodes coming.)
And, in reference to my headline question, does Robert De Niro really need saving? Well, I’m certain his life in NYC is still a whole lot more fabulous than mine down here in Macon, GA, but whether its from mediocre movies I’d say the reply is surely an emphatic yes.
I had to go back to 2006’s “The Good Shepherd” to find a De Niro movie I really liked unconditionally and much further back to 2000’s “Meet the Parents” to find another one (and the second one gets an asterisk in the “like” column considering Mr. De Niro isn’t nearly as funny as he seems to think he is nowadays).
So, what could bring that previously great man back to his glory days, to roles in movies such as “Raging Bull” or “Goodfellas,” or even in John Frankenheimer’s rather severely underrated “Ronin”? Well, either reteaming with Martin Scorses or doing a great movie about the mob would probably do the trick, so throw in both and you’d seem to have just about the perfect project.
Indeed, word comes today that Mr. Scorsese is attached to direct and Mr. De Niro to star in “I Heard You Paint Houses,” based on the
De Niro will play Frank “the Irishman” Sheeran, who is reputed to have carried out more than 25 mob murders and confessed to “Paint Houses” author Charles Brandt that he additionally carried out the killing and dismemberment of Hoffa on orders from mob boss Russell Bufalino. On top of my love for mob movies, I additionally like flicks like “Confession of a Dangerous Mind” in which our “protagonist” makes an outlandish claim that stays in doubt all through the entire movie, so that should be ideal.
Steven Zaillian, who crafted the crisp script for “American Gangster” but plus the rather uneven screenplay for Scorsese’s “Gangs of New York” too, will adapt Brandt’s book for the big screen.
And Scorsese, I predict, will have one of both the biggest critical and box office successes next year with “Shutter Island,” starring Leo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo in his take on Dennis Lehane’s novel about the mysterious happenings at a mental hospital on the titular remote island.
And now, since I have no other news to report, I have to get ready for the job that still somehow pays my rent. Peace out.
Original post by Reel Fanatic
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