@@shirleycameron7718 He was brilliant in many movies. The more you watch his movies, the more you’ll get used to his acting by the time. You’ll see then how brilliant he is in all.
Reminds me of a movie called Grudge Match where De Niro was arguing with the Mother of his child at the breakfast table and suddenly his grandson interjected to make peace....
DeNiro's laugh at 5:04 is one of the best reactions to the breakdown of a meeting. Holy shit, it's like a train wreck you can't believe could get any worse, all you can do is laugh at the absurdity of Hoffa's words!
I love watching how that response from Jimmy (Pacino) immediately changes the mood of the scene. Without saying anything directly, it means "f**k you" and Tony's face immediately registers the insult. It's brilliant acting.
As everyone who wants to be treated with dignity and respect, and wants to treat others the same way, should. The other guy was a clown for walking in to a serious meeting with shorts and a Hawaiian shirt unbuttoned. It says that he's not taking the meeting, or the people he's meeting with, seriously.
@@Nopanop Look son. I grew up in TX, where it's 95 degrees on an average day in any season. And people here still have enough sense not to dress sloppy just because of the weather. Sorry, but if you come for an interview, sales pitch, mob meeting, or whatever, why should I take you seriously when you don't take your own appearance with any kind of respect? If people in TX can put on a suit or wear long-sleeved western shirts in 90+ degrees, then the rest of you people have no excuse.
@@stickerz7948 The mob was doing just fine with Fitz in control of the union. Hoffa was their man but he became a liability after he got out of prison. Hoffa knew too much so he had to go. The mob just wanted to use the union. They didn't honestly care about the workers. Hoffa got involved with the mob but he genuinely cared about the working man.
@@stickerz7948 It was never gonna go anywhere, regardless of how he acted, though he was a stubborn prick. And the issues with Hoffa were well before this, it was his stubbornness that they didn't like because they wanted a yes man, he was willing to fight them and back then they needed him, once his usefulness was over his attitude wore thin very quickly, had he let it go the mob likely would have let him live, they probably still had a respect for him beforehand, he could have survived, and it's not like he didn't work with them he helped them a lot, just wasn't willing to roll over. They would have found something for him to do. But disrespecting made members, acting the way he did outright opposing them and threatening to expose them, he had to go. You know he doesn't give an inch, and you know he will be killed in the end, but the scenes where Russ is pleading with him to let it lie, you want him to do it so much, but you know he won't. He fought against the mob at the height of their power, and he lost.
Pacino didn't know they were filming. Martin Scorsese told him this was a meeting to discuss the script and this is his genuine reaction at someone being late.
@@NostGold thats a hefty bit of projecting there pal. especially embarrassing because it has nothing to do with my comment. A lot of people skipped the movie because of it’s runtime, this is a well known fact you mongoloid
I know right. Al Pacino, to my knowledge, was offered two major roles in Scorsese's blockbusters, Jimmy Conway in Goodfellas and Frank Costello in The Departed and he turned them down 😭
2:10 always makes me laugh. "There we go. Right in the middle. Beautiful!" Such an enthusiastically helpless attempt at resolving the tension in the room.
There's nothing worse in a room than that moment of "lets all cool down and be friends and be cool" being cut off by someone going WHAT DID YOU SAY TO ME?! Or something like that.
@MUFC Canada, Ireland, North Ireland, South Africa, Lesotho, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and Fiji. Some of the other ways the sport is referred to around the world include "bola sepak" in Indonesia, "ball-pwe" in Burma and "bóng đá" in Vietnam.
people comparing MCU with Scorsese are either idiots, or have zero idea, which of course makes them...idiots. MCU is like the fast-food of cinematography. They are designed to entertain you and be done with you when you're done with them. You wouldn't call a McDonald's 'fine dinning' would you?! And you wouldn't compare it to a Michelin-Star restaurant. Borth serve different purposes. But people need to feel superior by making idiotic comparisons.
@@ratking5449 I am not that young. What I'm saying is comparing MCU movies to Scorsese movies, is insane. They target very different kind of film consumers.
@@t.hussain921 yeah. I remember his cameo in Taxi Driver where his wife is cheating on him and he is talking about the .44 magnum, it was so crazy that as a teenager it made me laugh
@@enshk79 I was gonna say if all you see is a sniveling little weasel then you can’t even appreciate the acting he’s doing. He expressed multiple emotions in this one scene all of them believable not to mention he’s from the UK and his New York accent is flawless. I’m sure he was somewhat nervous acting with such heavy hitters but still delivered flawlessly after multiple takes. if acting were easy you would be doing it.
I love the way Jimmy Hoffa talks. Al Pacino is a giant. His facial expressions are typically Italian, but with an extra dose of energy coming from the English language that gives rhythm to the way he speaks and expresses himself.
Admittedly, he didn’t entirely expect Frank to be there at all. He asked for him to be there, but he was waiting for the people he was supposed to meet and then Frank pulled up in the car in the backseat
Years of acting as an Italian mobster tends to help you transition it in earlier. People tend to forget that he actually acted as Al Capone for years in Broadwalk Empire.
Im glad Robert and Al still are alive and kicking making movies like these. They're too good and gems from a time that this world is no longer producing.
It honestly feels like Al took the calmness of Micheal Corleone and the aggressiveness of Tony Montana and mixed them in preparation for Jimmy Hoffa. If that's the case then it worked beautifully.
It's a good performance, but--and it's a big "but"--Pacino didn't look, sound, or act like Jimmy Hoffa. Here's the actual Hoffa: th-cam.com/video/b6T-yMls4Sk/w-d-xo.html . If Pacino didn't attempt to play Hoffa, I think that was a bad choice; if he couldn't play him accurately, I would have preferred to see someone who could (Gary Oldman, for example) cast in that part.
@@WithBACON Oh for fuck's sake quit whining. Al took some creative decisions to make the part work for his style of acting and it paid off in spades. In fairness, though, Jack Nicholson's Hoffa was more accurate in terms of looks, voice and mannerisms than Pacino's.
Gort Baringa I think al was perfect for this role. He demonstrates the arrogance and self confidence of Jimmy Hoffa perfectly, a man who thinks he cannot be touched, similar to Tony Montana and Michael Corleone
@@WithBACON The problem with that clip is Hoffa was on a live TV show, so how he would have acted in a meeting about doing some really illegal shit would have been different.
@@Soldier4USA2005 The point is WRT the persona, the character, of Hoffa. The speech cadence. The sound. The accent. The mannerisms. The look. And Hoffa, if you were around at the time, was not exactly someone who tried to appease his audience in some insincere way. Witness his exchanges with Robert Kennedy: th-cam.com/video/LIqPwFvD87o/w-d-xo.html
It's a shame that Hollywood can't break their stereotypes. They've got two old short Italian(American) actors playing Frank Sheeran, a 6'4 Irish/Swede(American) and Jimmy Hoffa, a German (American).
@Chris Rosenberg Lets not forget calling him 'you people', as well as refusing to do him a favour regarding his pension, yet he still shows up 'im here' and is willing to help him out if he just apologises
Both the bodyguards are so great. They have no animosity whatsoever, they want SO BAD for this to end peacefully. Quietly, they are in full agreement with each other that this will NOT end peacefully.
@@ichangedmyself4362 You're so right. They play him off like he's a bodyguard or underling in his scenes but he was a bigger deal that they give him credit for in throughout the whole movie. I love that he's the only one who didn't get a death date in the freeze frames like the others. "Was well liked by all and died of natural causes"
@@ichangedmyself4362Wrong.. Your getting him mixed up. This was "Tony Jack" also know as Big Jack Provenzano who was a soldier in the Genovese mob and cousin of Tony Pro. Your thinking of Detrot boss Anthony "Tony Jack" Giacalone who coincidentally was also involved with Hoffa. But the man in that scene is Tony's Pro cousin Jack Provenzano
People are impatient and lazy, almost everyone I know who said they didn't like it their main complaint was that it was too long. They just are used to 90 minute action thrillers is all.
@TheSkyWhale you are right about the standard of a lot of Netflix stuff designed for short attention spans .I was going to say something' else but I forgot.
This is the reason I never saw or wanted to see the film on Netflix because it loses the nostalgia that it has as a masterpiece. No offense to impatient people out there but sometimes masterpieces like this should be played at movie theatres and then it can go to Netflix say what you want but as longest movies are in theatres I’ll support it.
@@bobbyperu1000 Yes it was, Al was out of the spot light for 2 maybe 3 year's and he was in " Sea of love" Played a new York city detective. I think I was 20 when that one came out. I seen in the same Manhattan movie theater that my mother brought me to see " And Justice for all" some 15 years earlier. He is a extremely versatile actor I would say "Heat" is definitely one of his top 6 movie's. Kind of like the "David Lee Roth " of acting in the sence Diamond Dave was all about the music and performance when you went to a Van Halen or Diamond Dave concert you got entertained David Lee Roth and of course Eddie Van Halen put their heart into it. Very similar to Al Pacino he is a master at work on film or in the Broadway plays he does every now and then.
Have to say he probably said the same line 25 to 50+ times in different ways and the DIRECTOR/EDITOR picked the ersion they thought best. So give some credit all around I think
I love that the shorts bother Jimmy so much that he brings it up again as a major piece of evidence when pleading his case to Russell later in the film.
if the real hoffa acted like this guy i cant see why he wasnt wacked sooner, mob were chaotic hot heads a lot of the time but the higher ups were rather very level headed and able to conduct business first foremost before emotions takes the wheel
Al Pacino does so great as Jimmy Hoffa. Every time he’s on screen in this film, he commands the screen. You watch and watch with a purpose. I don’t know why he didn’t get an Oscar for this role.
@@Blue-ub8ld Yeah he was quite literally the 5th best actor nominated that year, and I didn't see what was so special about his performance in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Hanks, Pacino, Pesci, Hopkins were all better.
@@Blue-ub8ld bradd pitt is monster of an actor . If he was not involved with girlfriends and relationships he would had been in league of pacino a di niro. Among tom cruise, jhonny depp and keanu reeves I rate bradd pitt highly talented in acting
wasn't written. that was completely off script, you can see when al pacino was asking "otto" to endorse him, he was trying not to laugh. this entire scene was their own well being lmao
Him and Pesci were just immaculate. When Frank/de Niro delivers the "It is what it is" message to Hoffa/Pacino, Pacino's "They wouldn't dare!" Starts as indignant, then in a quick glance away and a tremble his second "They wouldn't dare!" Turns to fear, absolutely phenomenal performance, one of those performances that reminds you why Pacino is one of the GOATs.
@@maxxmasson4263 We spent fifty years of hard earned volunteer and political work in MANY industrial countries and we now get "categoried" actors that fill the blanks. They WILL NOT BE REMEMBERED like these guys. No matter the color, colour, or tint.
Could not be happier for Stephen Graham, mixing it up with legends. Seems a far cry from This is England, but he's grown into one of the UK's finest actors. Love him.
@@edercortes1960Yep, Scorcese loves Stephen Graham and he was cast in Gangs of New York, played Al Capone in Boardwalk Empire and Baby Face Nelson in Public Enemies. I also loved his roles as Combo in This is England, and Andy in the film/T.V series Boiling Point. British actors seem to have Hollywood on lock right now: Stephen Graham, Idris Elba, Tom Hollywood, Robert Pattinson etc. Some of Britain's best character actors (Daniel Day Lewis of course being number one) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
We have to appreciate people like Jimmy. He didn't bend up to some scumbags(made guy(s)) even though he knew the consequences, despite that fact, he said, they won't do anything to him, he was a smart guy and he knew how it will end up, but he was ready to die for a good cause. They are criminals and he didn't step over his principals, his pride... More people like Jimmy we have in our system, the more order and justice we will have in the world and mobs will be gone
Honestly, Tony Pro was being civil, and gave Hoffa an easy out. In fact, I was surprised at just how reasonable the Mafia were being in the movie. They gave the guy chance after chance after chance to save himself.
This movie is a true masterpiece. I loved the writing where Peggy asks frank 'Why' while they hear about the hoffa's disappearance news on TV. The way she sees him all through the movie and throws the exact look and asks WHY is truly a great moment to watch👏👏
Al Pacino's rendition of Jimmy Hoffa is brilliant. It's a serious character but he plays it in a way where you never take him seriously, he's a fool who doesn't know he is not too big for "The Guys" to take him out and it resonates all the way through. You take him seriously but at the same time, he's like that endearing crazy uncle who always makes everyone laugh!
@@mariogamefreak1 Same. He looked and sounded far more like Hoffa, in the footage I’ve seen. Pacino probably took some liberties, and played him more like his character in Donnie Branco. The accent and all. I forget how much I love that Nicholson Zhoffa movie. I’ll catch it every 3-4 years and will totally get lost in it. When he gives it to RFK in his office. 😂
A lot of people says that Pacino deserved an Oscar for his role as Jimmy Hoffa, but that doesnt actually matter. Everyone knows he is one of the greatest actors of all time, his reputation, his name alone tells it all.
He was nominated at least. Normally I would say he was robbed, but Brad Pitt was excellent in Once Upon a Time so I can't really fault the academy on that one.
@@TheBerylknight I dont agree, sorry. Pitts performance was excellent indeed, but he had movies in which he was better, and I doubt that his performance was bettee than Pescis, or Pacinos.
@@TheBerylknight He carried that movie? Leo was the best part of it in my opinion. He nailed his character. I like Brad Pitt, but I don't think it can be argued he was the worst actor nominated in that category for that year. He won because everyone else he was up against already has an Oscar or two, lol
@@KS-xk2so We'll have to disagree. I thought Dicrapio was average at best. He's the most overrated actor in Hollywood if you ask me. His scenes were dull and dragged the movie down. Pit however was incredible. Easily his best role ever. Pacino was amazing too though in the Irishman. So I'm not trying to take anything away from him. Both of them were good, and both of them deserved best supporting actor that year.
@@TheBerylknight Easily his best role ever? cmon bro, youre gonna say pitt was better in once upon than he was in fight club? better than in assassination of jesse james? moneyball? seven? 12 monkeys? shall I continue?
Noticed most of this scene Al Pacino body doesn’t move while he’s sitting in that chair. He only use his finger to point at Graham. That’s how great of a actor Pacino is.
@@GoldRevolutions Like in The Godfather, a character projects the amount of power he has by stillness. Go back and look at the great gangster films, past and present. The most powerful person in any room is near completely motionless. Everyone just moves around him, like planets orbiting the sun. The weakest characters you'll notice have a lot of body movements and erratic hand jesters and so on. It's a great observation.
@@austinjackson666 Sorry but this seems like such a stretch. Stillness has always been associated with fear, since the dawn of mankind. Prey literally playing dead to evade predators, people being 'frozen in fear' etc.. Looking back at the video the original comment doesn't even make sense since Al Pacino is moving just as much as the other actors in the scene imo. Maybe in the Godfather that was the intention but not here
My gods this movie still gives me chills, even after watching it at least 5 times. Robert, Joe, Al, and pretty much every single actor in this film did such an amazing job. The end of it where Frank and Russ are growing old together in the joint is so f’in well done. I know they’re both getting up there irl but they pulled off that decrepit old gangster vibe perfectly. I still remember Joe and Robert in GoodFellas back in 1990. The Irishman is one of my favorite Mobflicks of all time. 11/10
I love how Hoffa scorns at the idea of apologizing to him even before he knows what he's supposed to apologize about. He definitely thinks Stephen Graham's character is beneath him
Martin Scorsese: I want a 5 hours movie
-Netflix : This movie should be 2 hours
-De Niro: how about 3.30?
Everybody: beautiful, beautiful great
LOL
LOL
Same people who were bitching about this running time would binge watch a thousand hours of some shitty TV show. Never got that.
5 hours movie? Damn i would definitely watch this movie in cinema.
3h18min? Or did you mean 3,5 hours by saying 3,30
A convo about someone being late has never been so entertaining.
Yes
? "Convo" ?
@@SoapinTrucker conversation
That was improvised by Stephen Graham adding some lines in there
@@DAN-z3u he only improvised the half walkout
The way Al Pacino tenses the whole atmosphere by saying “It’s summer” shows you how much of a brilliant actor he really is
The only movie he was brilliant in are the ' the godfather ' trilogy...tq
@@shirleycameron7718 He was brilliant in many movies. The more you watch his movies, the more you’ll get used to his acting by the time. You’ll see then how brilliant he is in all.
@@shirleycameron7718 u for real?
It's always 8 degrees in New York,so it's always summer in Detroit.
@@shirleycameron7718🤣🤣 nice joke
You know a scene is good when it's impossible to stop watching after it starts no matter how many times you've seen it.
You’ve hit the nail on the head, couldn’t agree more.
God pls Give Al Pacino 20+ more years in health and strength...
@Pappy Van Winkle he should, if not , let's get him one day if we can afford it
Penis man I hope El Pacino doesn’t bother Al Pacino that much
How about 15 years
@@haldundere5865 what about 17.5 years?
Papi, me les tius quanlioj mih oplo bobo
"What am I? Beneath you?"
"Definitely." LMFAOOOO
and the movie doesn't even make a big meal out of that exchange. brilliant.
Who tf are you to apologize to?
That was the hardest line in the entire movie. Epic.
Savage
Furries and Weebs.
De Niro is like a kid at the table when the parents start arguing.
Right in the middle. Beautiful, beautiful.
@@CATDHD 💀
Reminds me of a movie called Grudge Match where De Niro was arguing with the Mother of his child at the breakfast table and suddenly his grandson interjected to make peace....
Lol shit was funny
😂😂
DeNiro's laugh at 5:04 is one of the best reactions to the breakdown of a meeting. Holy shit, it's like a train wreck you can't believe could get any worse, all you can do is laugh at the absurdity of Hoffa's words!
The worst part is that this laugh is coming from a Hitman 😂😂😂
Yeah, that was hilarious and so on point
@@william678910he killed more people as a US soldier 😂
I think De Niro really cracks when he heard that crazy phrase. He was not acting.
I keep rewinding it lmao it's feels like such a genuine reaction
"It's summer". Even at this age, Al Pacino can still deliver the simplest lines with so much gravitas...
And your late
I agree, and the look in his eyes!!!
I love watching how that response from Jimmy (Pacino) immediately changes the mood of the scene. Without saying anything directly, it means "f**k you" and Tony's face immediately registers the insult. It's brilliant acting.
It reminds me of a less threatening version of “you straightened my brother out?” From Godfather 1
"For a meeting" was perfect too
Where will Pacino's Jimmy Hoffa wear a suit?
a) In New York
b) In Florida
c) In Timbuktu
d) anywhere... for a meeting
fo a mee'in
Don't forget Bolivia, las Vegas
As everyone who wants to be treated with dignity and respect, and wants to treat others the same way, should. The other guy was a clown for walking in to a serious meeting with shorts and a Hawaiian shirt unbuttoned. It says that he's not taking the meeting, or the people he's meeting with, seriously.
@@En_Gho its 85 fokin degrees
@@Nopanop Look son. I grew up in TX, where it's 95 degrees on an average day in any season. And people here still have enough sense not to dress sloppy just because of the weather. Sorry, but if you come for an interview, sales pitch, mob meeting, or whatever, why should I take you seriously when you don't take your own appearance with any kind of respect? If people in TX can put on a suit or wear long-sleeved western shirts in 90+ degrees, then the rest of you people have no excuse.
Pacino was mesmerising in this film. Cant believe he was almost 80 when they shot it!
Paconoo was dead in this movie you mook
Beautiful performance.
Extraordinary person
@@YOYO-mx6ie Poor and lonely hater disrespecting a legend to troll sad life you bum
Pacino is a Living Legend
I can watch this a million times and never get bored. True cinema.
Same. I think I’ve watched The Irishman like 50 times since it came out and I have never once gotten bored of it.
savage
"After you apologize... For bein' late."
I love his little grin. He knew this meeting wasn't going anywhere so he just put it all on the table.
It wasn't going anywhere because Hoffa's too stubborn to let it go anywhere.
@@stickerz7948 Hoffa had every right to put these cocksuckers in their place.
@@stickerz7948
It wasnt going anywere because Pro just wanted to screw Jimmy.
@@stickerz7948 The mob was doing just fine with Fitz in control of the union. Hoffa was their man but he became a liability after he got out of prison. Hoffa knew too much so he had to go. The mob just wanted to use the union. They didn't honestly care about the workers. Hoffa got involved with the mob but he genuinely cared about the working man.
@@stickerz7948 It was never gonna go anywhere, regardless of how he acted, though he was a stubborn prick. And the issues with Hoffa were well before this, it was his stubbornness that they didn't like because they wanted a yes man, he was willing to fight them and back then they needed him, once his usefulness was over his attitude wore thin very quickly, had he let it go the mob likely would have let him live, they probably still had a respect for him beforehand, he could have survived, and it's not like he didn't work with them he helped them a lot, just wasn't willing to roll over. They would have found something for him to do. But disrespecting made members, acting the way he did outright opposing them and threatening to expose them, he had to go.
You know he doesn't give an inch, and you know he will be killed in the end, but the scenes where Russ is pleading with him to let it lie, you want him to do it so much, but you know he won't. He fought against the mob at the height of their power, and he lost.
Pacino makes every piece of dialogue feel like a real talk .. he doesnt "act" it, he just physically delivers them
Oh yeah!! Doesn't look like hes acting, that's how great he is. Cannot wait for his new movies to come out
Pacino didn't know they were filming. Martin Scorsese told him this was a meeting to discuss the script and this is his genuine reaction at someone being late.
@@Rattenhoofd Wow, so he improvised the whole scene?
@@Lushy260 He didn't, I was joking. But he's an amazing actor though.
@@Rattenhoofd Can't wait for House Of Gucci in Nov. I really liked him in American Traitor
3:45 "Am i beneath you? - Definitely!" LMAO, that was just gold.
it’s a damn shame so many people missed out on this moment because they’re scared of paying attention to the same thing for more than an hour
@@NostGold thats a hefty bit of projecting there pal. especially embarrassing because it has nothing to do with my comment. A lot of people skipped the movie because of it’s runtime, this is a well known fact you mongoloid
Jesus jimmy c'mon
My favorite part lmao
🤣@@alexnather7614
5:05 Frank nervous laugh is phenomenal. He exactly knew the road Hoffa was taking will lead to his grave
Martin Scorsese and Al Pacino working together shouldn't have been this late.
I know right. Al Pacino, to my knowledge, was offered two major roles in Scorsese's blockbusters, Jimmy Conway in Goodfellas and Frank Costello in The Departed and he turned them down 😭
@Divine_D But it's still regarded as one of the greatest movies ever made, so..
@@rv555ba
Was he really offered the role of Costello? I read a Scorsese interview where he said that he always wanted to work with Jack Nicholson.
You give me traffic
@@t.hussain921 no brother.. heat directed by someone else.. I watched it many times
People who dislike this wear shorts to meetings and show up late
haha exactly man!
precisely
@@Mr.Monta77 how many "real" gangsters have you met?
Kim Caspar there is a thing called maintaining standards, go work in a coffee shop then
and drink oat milk
2:10 always makes me laugh. "There we go. Right in the middle. Beautiful!" Such an enthusiastically helpless attempt at resolving the tension in the room.
I saw in an interview that he ad-libbed that line and they just kept going with it.
A pathetic attempt yet you could imagine anyone in an argument saying it..
There's nothing worse in a room than that moment of "lets all cool down and be friends and be cool" being cut off by someone going WHAT DID YOU SAY TO ME?! Or something like that.
Couldn’t have said it better myself tears
His laught at the end is worse.
Pacino's delivery of "definitively" at 3:48 is perfect
The actor who plays the guy in the sunglasses, Stephen Graham, is British. His accent is amazing, so effortlessly spot on
he was amazing in *This Is England*
He played Al Capone in the HBO series, "Boardwalk Empire" so it comes a little easier for him now.
Ye one of my favorite actors!
Yeah he also played guy named Tommy in Snatch. He is good.
I had no idea ! ...thanks for this information
The dynamic between these two is just another huge high point. Love it.
@MUFC Canada, Ireland, North Ireland, South Africa, Lesotho, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and Fiji. Some of the other ways the sport is referred to around the world include "bola sepak" in Indonesia, "ball-pwe" in Burma and "bóng đá" in Vietnam.
Make a video on Ori and the Will of the Wisps
@@allcapsone7809 damn
@MUFC The Canadian Football league has entered the chat.
Ords just wants credits to me
And my husband please 😔💖
Marvel movies: Am I beneath you?
Scorsese: Definitely.
people comparing MCU with Scorsese are either idiots, or have zero idea, which of course makes them...idiots. MCU is like the fast-food of cinematography. They are designed to entertain you and be done with you when you're done with them. You wouldn't call a McDonald's 'fine dinning' would you?! And you wouldn't compare it to a Michelin-Star restaurant. Borth serve different purposes. But people need to feel superior by making idiotic comparisons.
That was the hardest line in the whole film. Gangsta.
Kenny Zraht wait until your older, you will start to notice these movies are getting worse and worse
@@ratking5449 I am not that young. What I'm saying is comparing MCU movies to Scorsese movies, is insane. They target very different kind of film consumers.
You momo, that made me laugh.
I rewatch this non-stop and inexorably because of top-notch acting and THE ACCENT.
The fact that he is actually an Englishman playing a Italian so convincingly is phenomenal
Watch Boardwalk Empire, he is Capone in that show.
"Tremendous!" - Joey Diaz
Italian-American
Ya its called acting
@@scor440 probably some of the best actors Hollywood ever assembled in one room. It’s a shame that we will probably not see them all together again
This wasn’t supposed to be a comedy film. But Al Pacino was hilarious in this film😂
Scorsese has a dark sense of humor which permeates all his films.
Vous avez une mauvaise observation mes chers
That fish scene with Sally Bugs was funny too. And those buttons with Hoffas face on them also funny.
The de-aging SFX were hilarious.
@@t.hussain921 yeah. I remember his cameo in Taxi Driver where his wife is cheating on him and he is talking about the .44 magnum, it was so crazy that as a teenager it made me laugh
Let’s not ignore Stephen Graham holding his own very well with Pacino and De Niro
It’s not hard to act like a sniveling little weasel onscreen.
No I take that back, I love his delivery at 05:10. Excellent!!!
@@enshk79 I was gonna say if all you see is a sniveling little weasel then you can’t even appreciate the acting he’s doing. He expressed multiple emotions in this one scene all of them believable not to mention he’s from the UK and his New York accent is flawless. I’m sure he was somewhat nervous acting with such heavy hitters but still delivered flawlessly after multiple takes. if acting were easy you would be doing it.
He was definitely great in boardwalk Empire.
Absolutely brilliant.
That duo throughout the years. Created a collection of movies which will never be forgotten
De Niro: Nah, nah, nah, nah, you insulted him a little bit, you got a little out of order yourself... a little bit
I didn’t insult him. Come have the drink with me
Just a smidge...
@@therealmalfunction Drinks are on...The HOUSE.
Lmao awesome reference hahahahaha
Al Pacino: I'LL SHOW YOU OUT OF ORDER!!!!
Hoffa is like that friend who is arguing with the teacher and everyone else is his friends trying to get him to stop before he gets into more trouble
I'm afraid hoffa reminds me of myself
damn it's my best friend with evryone bascily. even his dad friends and shit get tense i wish i wasn't there xd
Bruh this comment hits me in so many levels
@@speedking7224 Hoffa EARNED his way to the top. A lot of these "mob" and Italian guys didn't.
Yeah until it became: It’s what it is.
Al Pacino hated that guy so much he could barely ask for the endorsement..
@@AVcomps1 Perhaps the arrogance was what shined thru the most..point taken..you are correct..it cost him his life..
He was beneath him
@@Yamaguchi2Chris how?
@@AVcomps1 it's his pride MIXED with his hate towards tony. Maybe YOU didn't understand the movie lol
@@Yamaguchi2Chris way beneath him,no, its all about respect,without respect,there no admiration,there's no anything,just arrogance,lots of arrogance
I love the way Jimmy Hoffa talks. Al Pacino is a giant. His facial expressions are typically Italian, but with an extra dose of energy coming from the English language that gives rhythm to the way he speaks and expresses himself.
" Your problem is that you're a piece of shit"
Frank: "Jimmy, CMAAN!"
Always gets me😂
5:01 he stops just for a second and then calls him a cocksucker
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@knivez786 Hahahaha Jimmy are you out of your fuckin mind? 🤣
You a pizza chip!
Tbh I skipped it back to that exact part 3 times 🤭
Nah nah, you insult him a little bit
Jimmy says he doesn't wait more than 10 mins for a meetup... he waited 40 for Frank. Speaks volumes
Man needed Tony Pro badly
I think Jimmy was waiting for Tony Pro not Frank
@@kaungkhantthein5348 hes talking about the end of the movie not this scene
Sad shit
Admittedly, he didn’t entirely expect Frank to be there at all. He asked for him to be there, but he was waiting for the people he was supposed to meet and then Frank pulled up in the car in the backseat
Let's just pause to admire British Stephen Graham's flawless accent.
Indeed! It sounds flawless. Even if a native says he could tell I’d say he’s lying!
It’s really amazing how actors can do this.
Stephen Graham is one fine actor. Every performance is a masterpiece.
Years of acting as an Italian mobster tends to help you transition it in earlier.
People tend to forget that he actually acted as Al Capone for years in Broadwalk Empire.
Disagree. I can hear his English accent all over it.
Im glad Robert and Al still are alive and kicking making movies like these. They're too good and gems from a time that this world is no longer producing.
Jimmy: *blatantly disrespects that guy and won’t apologize*
Also Jimmy: “why won’t he endorse me?”
Sounds like a politician
@@gninja92 Well, Jimmy is a politician. But he is also unnecessarily proud and arrogant towards Anthony, unfortunately.
Dramatic irony at its finest. Respect others the way you want to be respected. That is the moral of this scene.
@@markparkinson6947 for a meeting ?
@@xhamilambo7475 Anywhere!
It honestly feels like Al took the calmness of Micheal Corleone and the aggressiveness of Tony Montana and mixed them in preparation for Jimmy Hoffa. If that's the case then it worked beautifully.
It's a good performance, but--and it's a big "but"--Pacino didn't look, sound, or act like Jimmy Hoffa. Here's the actual Hoffa: th-cam.com/video/b6T-yMls4Sk/w-d-xo.html . If Pacino didn't attempt to play Hoffa, I think that was a bad choice; if he couldn't play him accurately, I would have preferred to see someone who could (Gary Oldman, for example) cast in that part.
@@WithBACON Oh for fuck's sake quit whining. Al took some creative decisions to make the part work for his style of acting and it paid off in spades. In fairness, though, Jack Nicholson's Hoffa was more accurate in terms of looks, voice and mannerisms than Pacino's.
Gort Baringa I think al was perfect for this role. He demonstrates the arrogance and self confidence of Jimmy Hoffa perfectly, a man who thinks he cannot be touched, similar to Tony Montana and Michael Corleone
@@WithBACON The problem with that clip is Hoffa was on a live TV show, so how he would have acted in a meeting about doing some really illegal shit would have been different.
@@Soldier4USA2005 The point is WRT the persona, the character, of Hoffa. The speech cadence. The sound. The accent. The mannerisms. The look. And Hoffa, if you were around at the time, was not exactly someone who tried to appease his audience in some insincere way. Witness his exchanges with Robert Kennedy: th-cam.com/video/LIqPwFvD87o/w-d-xo.html
I love how Frank wants to defuse the situation but at the same time is really amused by Jimmy’s insults
He's not amused. That's the laugh you use when you're embarrassed.
@@JMoruzzi
More like nervous.
He’s genuinely amused but at the same time knows Jimmy is in the wrong! Shows how much of a class actor de Niro is!
What's funny about this is that he's the most dangerous man in the table
It's a shame that Hollywood can't break their stereotypes. They've got two old short Italian(American) actors playing Frank Sheeran, a 6'4 Irish/Swede(American) and Jimmy Hoffa, a German (American).
When Al Pacino called Stephen Graham a WOP! I couldn't stop laughing!
It's amazing how Pacino can fill so much tension to a whole room by just saying 'IT'S SUMMER'. One of the greatest actors of all time.
Oh yes I agree with you!!! Hes so great, Al can play any character. I'm glad hes still acting. He has one coming out in Sept, still no trailer
“Making a point dressing like that”
Ok but this movie was terrible.
He literally said the line and looked at him. Even Al would cringe at this
Pro is doing really well too. Good combo.
''The guy gets me nervous he talks about things. He gets me upset'' Love the way Pacino says that LOL
Me too, I'm glad that Al added sense of humor to his character
Me too.🤣🤣🤣
“I want you… I- hmggrh…” I love how Jimmy sounds like he’s about to throw up trying to ask this guy for a favour.
Jimmy Hoffa meeting with the Tuareg Mafia in Timbuktu would be wild 🔥🤣
When Al Pacino said “you’re late” I apologised
lol
I would've apologized if I was early, and he was late.
Pendejo 😂😂😂
When Al said “you’re late” Chuck Norris apologised
Laughing my butt off
I can’t blame De Niro for laughing. That part got me also
That's amusement with serious frustration! 😂 Jimmy is a very difficult man in this movie SMH
I lost it when de niro laughed
The fact that he shows up late without even acknowledging or apologizing for it is simply rude and disrespectful.
Iwan Egerström I think it was arrogant of Jimmy to complain about this guy’s coming late when he called the meeting to ask for his endorsement
Yes, it was rude and disrespectful but Jimmy needed a favour from Tony, so he needed to live with it.
@@MrAlexkyra I agree 100%
It says what it says.
@Chris Rosenberg Lets not forget calling him 'you people', as well as refusing to do him a favour regarding his pension, yet he still shows up 'im here' and is willing to help him out if he just apologises
This movie is something else...that will never happen again in this world. just pure perfection of emotions. genius work.
Stephen Graham is awesome in this. Brilliant actor and versatile .
He’s always a flamboyant hot headed tough lil shit... definitely a great actor...
He was freaking amazing as Al Capone in Boardwalk Empire, too. Super great actor.
CAMACHO POCKET he wasn’t that much of a hot head in this movie until Jimmy Hoffa insulted him
juveman123 he’s the one playing tony pro
juveman123 the guy who argued with Jimmy Hoffa
“Jimmy c’mon”
“Jesus Jimmy c’mon”
“Jimmy what you doin c’mon”
Same clip too 😂
Jimmy are you out of your fuckin mind hah ha
come onnnnn
OOOHHH, FUGGEDABOUTIT!!
“The hoof”
Both the bodyguards are so great. They have no animosity whatsoever, they want SO BAD for this to end peacefully. Quietly, they are in full agreement with each other that this will NOT end peacefully.
Tony J. He was a boss from Detroit.
Lol I love when they both are like “Jimmy cmon!” When he said he’s below him.
@@ichangedmyself4362 You're so right. They play him off like he's a bodyguard or underling in his scenes but he was a bigger deal that they give him credit for in throughout the whole movie. I love that he's the only one who didn't get a death date in the freeze frames like the others. "Was well liked by all and died of natural causes"
@@ichangedmyself4362Wrong.. Your getting him mixed up. This was "Tony Jack" also know as Big Jack Provenzano who was a soldier in the Genovese mob and cousin of Tony Pro.
Your thinking of Detrot boss Anthony "Tony Jack" Giacalone who coincidentally was also involved with Hoffa.
But the man in that scene is Tony's Pro cousin Jack Provenzano
@@Dennis_Reynolds_Golden_GodThat wasn't him though.
That was Tony pro's cousin, Big Jack Provenzano.
If you don't believe me do you're research mate.
This is how you write a scene. Brilliant Acting. Wonderful direction.
Some people. Not me. But some people think anyone who doesn't like this film may be demonstrating a failure to show appreciation.
People are impatient and lazy, almost everyone I know who said they didn't like it their main complaint was that it was too long. They just are used to 90 minute action thrillers is all.
Lol
@TheSkyWhale you are right about the standard of a lot of Netflix stuff designed for short attention spans .I was going to say something' else but I forgot.
This is the reason I never saw or wanted to see the film on Netflix because it loses the nostalgia that it has as a masterpiece. No offense to impatient people out there but sometimes masterpieces like this should be played at movie theatres and then it can go to Netflix say what you want but as longest movies are in theatres I’ll support it.
@TheSkyWhale Yeah it's not like Scorcese has already made movies about life of criminals over and over and over again.
I just love de Niro's reactions throughout the whole scene
Yeah that second-hand embarassment is so damn well played !
Ikr I also love how everyone in the film respects and has love for him even though hes the best friend of everyones enemy
Its "De Niro". You said "de Niro".....
Hopefully you know what I mean by what I just said.
Completely incredulous lmfao
“hes here“
Al Pacino has been the coolest Guy in the world since his first movie
He's also been the greatest actor since his first movie.
The movie Me,Valerie?
@@chrisbarrett8377 *Me, Natalie
But I'm mostly talking about since The Panic In Needle Park, slick.
sea of love was cool too
@@bobbyperu1000 Yes it was, Al was out of the spot light for 2 maybe 3 year's and he was in " Sea of love" Played a new York city detective. I think I was 20 when that one came out. I seen in the same Manhattan movie theater that my mother brought me to see " And Justice for all" some 15 years earlier. He is a extremely versatile actor I would say "Heat" is definitely one of his top 6 movie's. Kind of like the "David Lee Roth " of acting in the sence Diamond Dave was all about the music and performance when you went to a Van Halen or Diamond Dave concert you got entertained David Lee Roth and of course Eddie Van Halen put their heart into it. Very similar to Al Pacino he is a master at work on film or in the Broadway plays he does every now and then.
Frank laughing when trying to de-escalate the situation gets me every time 😂
Al Pacino: “You’re late”
Ralph: “well tomorrow I can be on time, whereas you’ll be stupid forever”
Tony: Ralphie, give him 12K.
“I can’t believe this, I’m leaving $38,000 on the table!”
@@chrislynch8128 "Last year you believed that flying saucer was over East Rutherford..."
Right in the middle 12 k
I need that money for my long range planning!
The way he says "it's summer" the last time is a master class in how to deliver a line. Master level acting right there folks.
so many insults non-said with that "it's summer"
But it's the chemistry between two great actors that is important as well
Imagine the same dialogue with other actors.
When your names Fart, that's all the credibility you need
Have to say he probably said the same line 25 to 50+ times in different ways and the DIRECTOR/EDITOR picked the ersion they thought best. So give some credit all around I think
I like how De Niro laughs whenever Pacino says something absurd.
He didn’t like Pro so...
It's the nervous laugh
Jimmy c’mon heheheh
I was waiting for that wahhhhhhh
I love that the shorts bother Jimmy so much that he brings it up again as a major piece of evidence when pleading his case to Russell later in the film.
Pacino's delivery is off the charts! The man outclasses guys a quarter his age!
Frank trying to be the middleman but Jimmy's non stop pettiness is so hilarious 🤣🤣
not realy petty the guy he is talking do is a real piece of shit and jimmy doesnt want to pretend otherwise
if the real hoffa acted like this guy i cant see why he wasnt wacked sooner, mob were chaotic hot heads a lot of the time but the higher ups were rather very level headed and able to conduct business first foremost before emotions takes the wheel
@@breadtoast1036 Depends on how much $ you're worth and how much they're benefiting from it. At this time Hoffa was a cash cow for the mob.
@@breadtoast1036Yep, no place for emotions in business, even if someone is deliberate in provocations.
Al Pacino does so great as Jimmy Hoffa. Every time he’s on screen in this film, he commands the screen. You watch and watch with a purpose. I don’t know why he didn’t get an Oscar for this role.
Cause Joaquin Phoenix
Nammar 64 He lost to Brad Pitt actually for this role
@@TheJKJ180 ohhh yee it's supporting, my bad
@@Blue-ub8ld Yeah he was quite literally the 5th best actor nominated that year, and I didn't see what was so special about his performance in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Hanks, Pacino, Pesci, Hopkins were all better.
@@Blue-ub8ld bradd pitt is monster of an actor . If he was not involved with girlfriends and relationships he would had been in league of pacino a di niro. Among tom cruise, jhonny depp and keanu reeves I rate bradd pitt highly talented in acting
2:09 such a great character moment. Frank trying to be a middle-man and keep both sides at peace. It’s kinda he’s trying to do the whole movie
I find it sadly relatable. Granted, I don’t get paid to whack people!
Right in the middle
One of the most well written scenes ever, and Pacino's face when he says "it's summer" is hilarious.
wasn't written. that was completely off script, you can see when al pacino was asking "otto" to endorse him, he was trying not to laugh. this entire scene was their own well being lmao
Completely unscripted. Unscripted brilliance.
People aren’t freezing to death in New York… it’s summer…
@@nickytommymancinelli8066In my mind it’s always eight degrees in New York. I’m makin’ a point.
@@pur1tyl fake
How can you not love Pacino. He will always be the real Godfather.
And there can never be another Tony Montana or Frank Serpico as played by Mr. Pacino. He makes his mark in every role.
Brando was the real Godfather
@Fedor Silva truth is the great mr brando will always be the real godfather, al pacino comes in second
@@jazzjazzy1538 that's really wrong
Mos def
This scene did for The Irishman what "Funny how?" did for Goodfellas.
Oh shit yes it did. Maybe not as "quotable", but just as powerful.
Let's not get too carried away
more like the "get your fuckin shinebox" scene
Uhhhh no.
Great scene but no way
i just LOVE the way Jimmy taps his watch with his finger. "you're late"
How didn’t Pacino win an Oscar for this performance. The more I watch this movie the more I appreciate it.
Him and Pesci were just immaculate. When Frank/de Niro delivers the "It is what it is" message to Hoffa/Pacino, Pacino's "They wouldn't dare!" Starts as indignant, then in a quick glance away and a tremble his second "They wouldn't dare!" Turns to fear, absolutely phenomenal performance, one of those performances that reminds you why Pacino is one of the GOATs.
Now they give oscars to any sht actor
Nowadays the Oscars are a joke its more like a popularity contest where movies about gays and overdue awards are given to actors who never got one
@@maxxmasson4263 We spent fifty years of hard earned volunteer and political work in MANY industrial countries and we now get "categoried" actors that fill the blanks. They WILL NOT BE REMEMBERED like these guys. No matter the color, colour, or tint.
@@maxxmasson4263 Sounds like someone's homophobia is showing....
Could not be happier for Stephen Graham, mixing it up with legends. Seems a far cry from This is England, but he's grown into one of the UK's finest actors. Love him.
Im just happy he was cast in the movie
@@edercortes1960Yep, Scorcese loves Stephen Graham and he was cast in Gangs of New York, played Al Capone in Boardwalk Empire and Baby Face Nelson in Public Enemies. I also loved his roles as Combo in This is England, and Andy in the film/T.V series Boiling Point. British actors seem to have Hollywood on lock right now: Stephen Graham, Idris Elba, Tom Hollywood, Robert Pattinson etc. Some of Britain's best character actors (Daniel Day Lewis of course being number one) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Yep agreed. Already a legend.
Looks like he had the minerals - get it?... Snatch...
He did better than them all. He changed his entire ethnicity and accent.
De Nero: How about twelve and a half minutes?
Tony Jack: right in the middle beautiful beautiful. 😂👌
Even then, Tony was still late.
"Well-liked by all. Died of natural causes."
@@andyhoover8531 oh yeah I forgot about that part... I guess it makes sense with him trying to keep the peace in this scene
@@LeonWick526 right what a jerk lol
We have to appreciate people like Jimmy. He didn't bend up to some scumbags(made guy(s)) even though he knew the consequences, despite that fact, he said, they won't do anything to him, he was a smart guy and he knew how it will end up, but he was ready to die for a good cause.
They are criminals and he didn't step over his principals, his pride... More people like Jimmy we have in our system, the more order and justice we will have in the world and mobs will be gone
I couldn't agree with you more. Jimmy Hoffa was a great man and he gave his members and their families a wonderful existence.
De Niro's reactions to Al's insults are just so natural. Love this scene.
hahaa i love his grandpa giggles.
@@kiaq1153 cracks me up every time!
It's brilliant acting by all in the scene because you can feel the tension.
The irony of Al Pacino using an Italian slur makes this scene even funnier lol
That's not irony
@@DrJ-hx7wv responding to a comment i made a year ago is peak midwit
And you made a comment about a movie that was released in 2019
Let’s say 2 years after the movie and the comment. Right in the middle, beautiful
An Italian actor making an anti-Italian ethnic slur to an English actor playing an Italian. What more could you want?
Al Pacino nails this scene, he's exactly like this one overly difficult friend/family member everyone has
Robert DeNiro always gets the accolades, but this is really Al Pacino's movie. One of his best performances in his long career.
Pacino runs circles around, DeNiro, IMO
3:57
5:02
Frank's reaction to Jimmy cussing Tony is hilarious.
😂 it gets me too
The Deniro Laughing moment
Jimmy cmooon you can't say that.
Please continue Jimmy.
Being the Irishman he was, Frank was enjoying every second of it! 🤣
*I edited this comment so the replies don't make any sense*
*ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA!*
I'M IN THE DARK HERE!
@@edd5657 DO YOU UNDERSTAAAAND?!
@@parsman9914 She's got a...GREAT ASS!!!
@@jimmymeridian5174 SAY HELLO TO MY LITTLE FRIEND!
Pacino's whole force of character is in his eyes.
the eyes, chico. they never lie.
O: INFINITE MOVIES apollonia NOOOO BOOM she ded
O: INFINITE MOVIES mike and Vito
O: INFINITE MOVIES young vito by far
O: INFINITE MOVIES the slap tho mike gives to his wife is out of this world 😂
2:13 right in the middle,beautiful 😅
Beautiful!
“Youre making a point dressing like that?”
"Definitely"
Probably one of the best lines in the movie. So powerful and full of confidence.
Dam is racism confidence now😂
Honestly, Tony Pro was being civil, and gave Hoffa an easy out. In fact, I was surprised at just how reasonable the Mafia were being in the movie. They gave the guy chance after chance after chance to save himself.
They don't kill a guy like Hoffa just because he throws some insults.
Coops well apparently they did, what you gonna do about it
At the end Hoffa realised this fact, but *he was late*.
it wasnt about the insults
@@munawwarshaikh8010 he probably knew it from get go. it's an ego not a logical thinking thing
This movie is a true masterpiece. I loved the writing where Peggy asks frank 'Why' while they hear about the hoffa's disappearance news on TV. The way she sees him all through the movie and throws the exact look and asks WHY is truly a great moment to watch👏👏
De Niro completely in his acting wheelhouse, de-escalating situations.
And instigating them too😂
The same character in every movie...
@@buffythehaterslayer6918 idiot only seen 2 of de niro movies
@@c0zyD No, I've seen about 48 De Niro movies...I want my time back! What a waste!
@@buffythehaterslayer6918 must not have been paying attention to them
Al Pacino's rendition of Jimmy Hoffa is brilliant. It's a serious character but he plays it in a way where you never take him seriously, he's a fool who doesn't know he is not too big for "The Guys" to take him out and it resonates all the way through. You take him seriously but at the same time, he's like that endearing crazy uncle who always makes everyone laugh!
Did the real Hoffa piss off the Italian mob? Is that why he disappeared?
I thought Jack Nicholson did a better job as Jimmy Hoffa.
@@mariogamefreak1 Same. He looked and sounded far more like Hoffa, in the footage I’ve seen. Pacino probably took some liberties, and played him more like his character in Donnie Branco. The accent and all. I forget how much I love that Nicholson Zhoffa movie. I’ll catch it every 3-4 years and will totally get lost in it. When he gives it to RFK in his office. 😂
Scorsese has seemingly endless energy and talent. Wish he could live for another 100 years
He's the best film maker on the planet
“ Just talk about what ya need to talk about” Frank is me 😂😂😂
Al Pacino's characters always come off as one smile away from going ballistic. What a freaking legend.
Isn't it weird that there's two actors in this clip That both played a role of Al Capone lol?
@@CrasterFamily I never said Pacino played Capone
@@animalblundetto1233 Which two are you talking about ?
@@jefverstraete8574 Robert de Niro and Stephen Graham
The Untouchables: DeNiro
Boardwalk Empire: Graham
When did Pacino play Al Capone? Dick Tracy?
"It's summer." And the temperature suddenly drops.
Extremely under appreciated comment
one second they were shaking hands and hugging and the atmosphere just freezes from the line
@@kraken7353 Well thank you Sir.
Golden
The delivery during those 20 secs reminded me of Michael Corleone
this whole conversation is pure gold..... and i swear, Stephen Graham is just amazing
A lot of people says that Pacino deserved an Oscar for his role as Jimmy Hoffa, but that doesnt actually matter. Everyone knows he is one of the greatest actors of all time, his reputation, his name alone tells it all.
He was nominated at least. Normally I would say he was robbed, but Brad Pitt was excellent in Once Upon a Time so I can't really fault the academy on that one.
@@TheBerylknight I dont agree, sorry. Pitts performance was excellent indeed, but he had movies in which he was better, and I doubt that his performance was bettee than Pescis, or Pacinos.
@@TheBerylknight He carried that movie? Leo was the best part of it in my opinion. He nailed his character. I like Brad Pitt, but I don't think it can be argued he was the worst actor nominated in that category for that year. He won because everyone else he was up against already has an Oscar or two, lol
@@KS-xk2so We'll have to disagree. I thought Dicrapio was average at best. He's the most overrated actor in Hollywood if you ask me. His scenes were dull and dragged the movie down. Pit however was incredible. Easily his best role ever. Pacino was amazing too though in the Irishman. So I'm not trying to take anything away from him. Both of them were good, and both of them deserved best supporting actor that year.
@@TheBerylknight Easily his best role ever? cmon bro, youre gonna say pitt was better in once upon than he was in fight club? better than in assassination of jesse james? moneyball? seven? 12 monkeys? shall I continue?
- Am I beneath u ?!?
- Definitely !!
this is the American History
Would rather die than just apologize for a racist slur 😂 while asking for a favor. America sumed up
@@mikecrip Couldn't have said it better myself lmao.
That was the hardest line in the entire film. Epic.
Yup.
@@mikecrip facts
Noticed most of this scene Al Pacino body doesn’t move while he’s sitting in that chair. He only use his finger to point at Graham. That’s how great of a actor Pacino is.
Yeah I've noticed that too, such a great actor!!!
Why does this make him a great actor lol??
@@GoldRevolutions Like in The Godfather, a character projects the amount of power he has by stillness. Go back and look at the great gangster films, past and present. The most powerful person in any room is near completely motionless. Everyone just moves around him, like planets orbiting the sun. The weakest characters you'll notice have a lot of body movements and erratic hand jesters and so on. It's a great observation.
@@austinjackson666 Sorry but this seems like such a stretch. Stillness has always been associated with fear, since the dawn of mankind. Prey literally playing dead to evade predators, people being 'frozen in fear' etc.. Looking back at the video the original comment doesn't even make sense since Al Pacino is moving just as much as the other actors in the scene imo. Maybe in the Godfather that was the intention but not here
He's just so old.
My gods this movie still gives me chills, even after watching it at least 5 times. Robert, Joe, Al, and pretty much every single actor in this film did such an amazing job. The end of it where Frank and Russ are growing old together in the joint is so f’in well done. I know they’re both getting up there irl but they pulled off that decrepit old gangster vibe perfectly. I still remember Joe and Robert in GoodFellas back in 1990. The Irishman is one of my favorite Mobflicks of all time. 11/10
I love how Hoffa scorns at the idea of apologizing to him even before he knows what he's supposed to apologize about. He definitely thinks Stephen Graham's character is beneath him
Let’s be honest
This is not your first time here
You got me.
It is
Ya it is
8th this one and the prison ice cream scene
It is, but not gonna be the last
I’ll apologize when you “ go home and get your shine box”
20 years in the can
Lmfao
I'll apologize when you finally have the makings of a variety athlete...
@@pacampara123 Lmfaoo
You insult him a little bit, a little bit
Al Pacino was hilarious in that scene !😂
Love this Man, hope he lives forever.❤
Only in the movies will he live forever.......