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The Departed
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Directed by Martin Scorsese.
Legendary director Martin Scorsese takes the helm for this tale of questionable loyalties and blurring identities set in the South Boston organized crime scene and inspired by the wildly popular 2002 Hong Kong crime film Infernal Affairs. As the police force attempts to reign in the increasingly powerful Irish mafia, authorities are faced with the prospect of sending in an undercover agent or seeing their already frail grip on the criminal underworld slip even further. Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio) is a young cop looking to make a name for himself in the world of law enforcement. Collin Sullivan (Matt Damon) is a street-smart criminal who has successfully infiltrated the police department with the sole intention of reporting their every move to ruthless syndicate head Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson). When Costigan is assigned the task of working his way into Costello's tightly guarded inner circle, Sullivan is faced with the responsibility of rooting out the informer before things get out of hand. With the stakes constantly rising and time quickly running out for the undercover cop and his criminal counterpart, each man must work feverishly to reveal his counterpart before his identity is exposed by the other. Martin Sheen, Alec Baldwin, and Ray Winstone co-star, and writer William Monahan adapts a screenplay originally penned by Alan Mak and Felix Chong. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian The Departed (2006, USA, Martin ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"You guys! You guys! You guys! I've just seen the most amazing move! It's called The Departed, and I'm telling you, it's almost as cool as Snatch! I never thought that a seasoned vetran like Martin Scorsese would follow the trend and make a movie that is all plot and says absoutley nothing, but whatdaya know? I was wrong. Since the whole movie is about plot and coincidence, I will (and maybe cannot) reveal much of the plot here. But the central Earth-shattering premise revolves around Leonard DiCaprio as an undercover policeman trying to infiltrate Jack Nicholson's crime orginzation. Unbeknowst to him, Nicholson has placed a mole of his own in the police department (Matt Damon) and the rest of the film consists of a cat-and-mouse game the two plays as they try to figure out who they are. Probably the best thing that I can say about the movie is that it's two hours long and never boring, and is generally well acted, even though Leo still seems fake at times. But what is the p ... " [More]
Smooth_JSmooth_J Part dos
by Smooth_J in Smooth_J Blog
loved it.
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"…of my list. I’m keeping the blurbs short on this one. 11. The Godfather Part 1 & 2 As close to perfect as films get. There is not much to be said about these films that hasn’t already been said. Completely timeless classics. 12. The Fisher King Another great Gilliam film. Robin William’s performance is amazing, as are Jeff Bridge’s and Mercedes Ruehl’s. The emotional power of this movie is phenomenal. 13. Children of Men Cuaron’s bleak vision of the future is excellently original. It is a poignant, provocative, and disturbing masterpiece. 14. The Departed I know it’s a little bit sloppy, but it’s just so fricken cool. The superb performances by the entire cast perfectly portray Monahan’s razor sharp script. 15. The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Peter Jackson perfectly adapted Tolkien’s classic series and created a few of the most breathtaking movies ever put on film. 16. The Proposition Easily my ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada movie year countdown - round #2 ...
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown round #2”. Read more about that here.Mou gaan dou (Infernal Affairs)This is a solid Hong Konk police vs. crime boss action movie, but I think the only reason it has reached such acclaim and praise (it's on the IMDB top 250!!) is due to it's being remade into The Departed (which I still haven't seen).I'm not surprised that it was remade though. I kept thinking about all of the actors that I knew were in The Departed while watching this movie and thinking that it's probably something really amazing. Well I should probably stop talking about a movie I haven't seen.I'm not sure why I'm nitpicking this movie that actually has some quite good acting, but I was rather confused at first by the fact that multiple actors play the main characters. Both of the moles are portrayed by "younger" actors as younger versions of themselves. The actors playing them are only slightly younger, ... " [More]
WindbreakerWindbreaker INFERNAL AFFAIRS
by Windbreaker in Windbreaker!
loved it.
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"Ok, I'm probably the only retard who forgot Infernal Affairs 1-3 was the basis for the Departed. That aside, this movie was fantastic. I've seen Departed - enjoyed it. But Andy Lau and Tony Leung Chiu-Wai have acting chops galore. Actually, the entire cast is 100% believable. It's an amazing crime drama exploring moral shades of gray in the context of undercover police work. Michael Mann's Miami Vice did that very effectively, also. But Infernal Affairs is the best undercover drama I recall seeing on DVD -- ever. (I will admit that I'm still a sucker for the undercover action flicks like Bad Boys).If you haven't had the priviledge of picking up this DVD, don't watch the trailer yet!!! I haven't seen parts 2 & 3 (which I assume won't be as good as 1), but I can't pass up buying the 3-pack DVD box from Amazon for $30. " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Trade Roughage 1/23/08
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"The combo of last week’s DGA contract agreement and yesterday’s announcement of the Oscar noms may have set the WGA in a new direction towards ending the writer’s strike. Yesterday afternoon the WGA announced it had withdrawn demands for jurisdiction over reality and animation, which the AMTPT was dead against recognizing. The two sides are reportedly meeting together today. Even if the strike is not over in a month, let alone today, there will still definitely be an Oscar telecast. It will be heavy on clips honoring the past 80s years of cinema, according to Gil Cates, who compared the strike to the presidential race. As far as the Oscar-nominee responses go, the most noteworthy are those of Julian Schnabel, who is sorry The Diving Bell and the Butterfly didn’t get a Best Picture nod but who feels he could one day have his Departed moment, and Jason Reitman, who points out that if he can be nominated for directing Juno then his father, Ivan, should have been nominated three or fou ... " [More]
chrismorrellchrismorrell An Oscar for the wrong film
by chrismorrell in chrismorrell Blog
lost interest.
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"Oh dear..i enjoyed this hugely through the first three quarters,,especially Leonardo DiCaprio..but it left me (Bourne)Ultimat(um)ely exasperated! Because,of course,i knew it to be a "re-make" of a favourite of mine,"Infernal Affairs" , i tried hard not to compare the two films.. However ,as the Jack Nicholson character,( "the Joker" was it?),meets a James Cagney-like demise,and the body count starts to mount, i just started to laugh my socks off..Head shot after head shot,who's next?..what about that woman who kept smiling at Matt Damon, okay she takes out Mark Walburgh , then, Alec Baldwin is waiting round the corner for her.. talk about spelling it out for us. The amazing tensions set up in the first third or so are just squandered,and become totally risible ,sacrificed for the sake of explaining the plot... We all know that Scorsese should have had an Oscar before now, maybe two ,"Taxi Driver", "Goodfellas",throw in another ... " [More]
BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski To The Academy: Educate, Don't ...
by BigJeffLebowski in BigJeffLebowski Blog
liked it.
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"In the January 14th issue of Time, film critic Richard Corliss eschews reviewing the week's releases (it is January, after all) to instead pontificate on the state of the Oscars ("How to Save the Awards Shows"). As many are wont to do, Corliss offers his suggestion on how to improve the Oscars. He throws out the notions usually bandied about in bids for cheap audience thrills, and suggests something that he considers self-evidently simple: give the awards to popular movies.Now, with all respect to Mr. Corliss, I agree that the Oscars don't have the finest track record for nominations, let alone for awards. But if I may be granted my say, the problem with the list is that it usually slants too commercial. Does anyone really think The Departed was the best picture of 2006? Or Crash the best picture of 2005? Or Million Dollar Baby the best picture of 2004? Or... well, you get the idea.Granted, these are not bad films. (Okay, Crash is a bad film.) But they ar ... " [More]
Ryan123Ryan123 2006's best
by Ryan123 in Ryan123 Blog
liked it.
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"The Departed may well have one of the best casts in movie history, and every one of them brings their game. Jack Nicholson is one of the greatest character actors of all time, and ofr thier generation, Damon and DiCaprio are about as good as it gets. Marty sheen and Mark Wahlberg are also great here. The star of this movie, however, is Scorsese. He is undoubtably on of the 3 greatest filmmakers of all time, and thist film marks his return to greatness. The reason this film isn't one of the greatest of all time is the script. Te story is exalent and so are the characters. The problem is the dialoge. Every other line in this movie is some brilliant quote dripping with unrealisticality. Everything that comes out of Nicholsons mouth is so well thought out that it actually comes off as very unreal and very condecending. The script screams "I'm Will Monyhan! Look how smart i am!!!!" " [More]
stanjan1stanjan1 The Departed
by stanjan1 in stanjan1 Blog
loved it.
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"One of the best movies that I have seen recently. Very exciting, well acted and scripted. The only thing I found disapointing is that the wrong characters ended up as the departed. I won't spoil it for those who haven't seen by naming who I was routhing for to be the victors. An excellent cast and director. Definetly an Oscar Winner! Don't miss it! " [More]
TenenbaumsTenenbaums One Trick French Pony
by Tenenbaums in Tenenbaums Blog
loved it.
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"Note: If you're really interested in seeing the film, don't read any reviews. Just watch it and then read the reviews. The game is Russian Roulette spliced with Telephone. In a circle, hold a gun to the player's head in front of you after spinning your barrel a good ten seconds. Wait for the single dangling light bulb in the circle's center to light up, and fire. Losers die, winners play on. Everyone starts with one bullet and increases the ammunition to match each subsequent round to three. The final round is a duel where two players with four slugs each point a spun barreled pistol at each other's forehead and squeeze the trigger. Survive, and you walk away with a load of cash. Oh yeah, and your life.Sound intriguing? For Sébastien, a poor Mr. Fix-It struggling to support his family, the money is enough to lure him without any knowledge of the game. The winnings are also plenty for the crowd of high stakes gamblers, many of whom travel the c ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The Departed has all the earmarks of a standard undercover cop film. William Monahan's flawless script manages to juggle half a dozen major characters and another half-dozen important minor ones. We get the backstory for each of these characters, and we understand what draws them together so that their interactions feel motivated by behavior and psychology rather than just plot mechanics. With remarkable clarity, Monahan depicts the chain of command for competing police units as well as for the crime ring they are investigating. Based on the finished film, it would be hard to imagine that any decent filmmaker wound not be able to make a good film out of this solid material. The gifted Martin Scorsese turns it into arguably the greatest undercover cop film ever made. Most of the great Scorsese movies are, at their core, genre films. GoodFellas and Mean Streets are both gangster films, the former structured almost exactly like the classic Warner Bros. crime films of the '30s like Scarface and The Public Enemy. Raging Bull is, plot point for plot point, a boxing melodrama from the '40s and '50s. Scorsese elevates these films above the realm of simple genre exercises by infusing them with a unique synthesis of influences, and with an unrivaled ability to mix formal compositions with naturalistic acting. Scorsese saves his "Directed By" credit for the end of the film, but from the opening shot onward there is never a doubt about the identity of the man behind the camera. A great director is sometimes referred to as an image-maker, and this film offers numerous examples of his visual skills. Scorsese and cinematographer Michael Ballhaus masterfully play light and dark against each other, obscuring and revealing actors' faces in ways that express the shifting power struggles between them. Scorsese and longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker throw heaps of plot at the audience with such command and authority that he is never forced to let the story lag in order for the audience to catch up. Scenes are interwoven in such a way that they come alive for the viewer in unexpected and rewarding ways. There are also a handful of allusions to other great films like M and Psycho -- the best of these is an emotionally powerful shot that directly references The Third Man. The shot works perfectly even if a viewer has never seen the Carol Reed classic, but if they have, it infuses the scene with added poignancy. In Reservoir Dogs, Quentin Tarantino explained why undercover cop stories always make good movies: a good undercover cop has to be the most naturalistic actor in the room. The Departed offers two such characters to set this dynamic into motion; Matt Damon plays Colin Sullivan, a corrupt detective on crime boss Frank Costello's payroll, and Leonardo DiCaprio portrays William Costigan, a cop with the personal history to help him pass as a typical Southie tough guy. Damon's boy-next-door charm shines through during his early scenes with love interest Vera Farmiga, a police psychiatrist. They are both so at ease in front of the camera that they often make the audience feel as if they are eavesdropping. Damon achieves this same naturalism during his more forceful scenes, most memorably when playing against Mark Wahlberg. Wahlberg's no-BS staff sergeant has only a few scenes, but they are memorable both for their quotable dialogue and Wahlberg's commanding performance. Martin Sheen plays wisdom and weariness in equal measure as Wahlberg's boss, subtly reminding everybody that although he never achieved the fame of Pacino, De Niro, or Hoffman, he is certainly among his generation's most compelling screen performers. Alec Baldwin does a hilarious riff on his Glengarry Glen Ross character, mixing it with the quirky, funny bosses he's played in films like Fun With Dick and Jane and Along Came Polly. Leonardo DiCaprio deserves much praise for his excellent work in the film. He broods, and goes for the big emotions when it is appropriate, but for the most part serves as the quiet center of this film. He delivers a monologue in the middle of the movie where he explains that no matter what tension surrounds him, no matter how fast his heart beats, his hands remains still. That remains true throughout the picture, but DiCaprio compensates for this control by letting his eyes do much of the work. During moments of openness, his bearing and his posture don't change, but his eyes convey just enough vulnerability for the audience to register his inner experiences, both with regard to the specific scene and to the double-life that is slowly eating him alive. If DiCaprio is the solid center of the film, and Damon is the most naturalistic, then Jack Nicholson gets to be the life of the party. As outrageous as Costello's behavior often is, and as remarkable as some of the pearls of wisdom that come from his mouth are, he never once makes this unhinged criminal too big to be real. Unlike the mad-dog performances in films such as Batman, The Shining, or The Witches of Eastwick, every element of The Departed helps keep Jack Nicholson frighteningly and realistically monstrous. From the rigid chain of command that exists in both the cop and the criminal worlds to the ways the various characters play out their power dynamics, the movie returns to the subject of authority time and again. Even the images and the music act as governances of power, demanding attention so deftly that the audience gives it over without question. There is an author responsible for all that authority. His name is Martin Scorsese, and The Departed stands alongside his other masterpieces -- GoodFellas, Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, Mean Streets -- as a testament to his prodigious talent. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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