Reply
  • May 15, 2021
    Antidote
    https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1393045015841103880

    Damn

    :ohno:

  • May 15, 2021
    ·
    2 replies
    Antidote
    https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1393045015841103880

    Damn

  • Antidote
    https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1393045015841103880

    Damn

    hope he's good

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    2 replies

    I was in on the movie because Scorsese + De Niro

    But, surprisingly, its when i googled the name of the main actor that i got even more excited

    This dude don't miss, ever since Fargo the run has been legendary. He might top 5 male actors rn

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    Mac Wit Da Cheese

    The most embarrassing piece of cinema in history

  • Bo Ceephus

    The most embarrassing piece of cinema in history

    LOLOL

  • May 16, 2021
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    3 replies
    Mac Wit Da Cheese

    Lmao is that take really in the movie? Never noticed how terrible this looks.

    How Marty

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    4 replies
    Wayne

    Lmao is that take really in the movie? Never noticed how terrible this looks.

    How Marty

    I've always seen it as an old mans recollection from a very distant memory and thats part of why I feel the scene is depicted in that way

    its telling too with how a lot of the film focuses on his life when he is middle aged and the stuff in his youth is relatively pretty short (its telling how he skips through most of his life in the military besides one scene where he takes another mans life). You also can tell from his references and confusion at how people have never heard of certain popular politicians/celebs in the 40s and 50s that he is very out of touch and delusional about his own worth as an individual, which is pretty clearly exploited throughout the film by others he works with.

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    Reformed

    I've always seen it as an old mans recollection from a very distant memory and thats part of why I feel the scene is depicted in that way

    its telling too with how a lot of the film focuses on his life when he is middle aged and the stuff in his youth is relatively pretty short (its telling how he skips through most of his life in the military besides one scene where he takes another mans life). You also can tell from his references and confusion at how people have never heard of certain popular politicians/celebs in the 40s and 50s that he is very out of touch and delusional about his own worth as an individual, which is pretty clearly exploited throughout the film by others he works with.

    This makes a lot of sense. No way Scorsese would not shoot close up if it was intended to be a young De Niro knocking someone out.

    They also had a bunch of people on set specifically monitoring how the actors moved in relation to their age.

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    CLB PRADA

    This makes a lot of sense. No way Scorsese would not shoot close up if it was intended to be a young De Niro knocking someone out.

    They also had a bunch of people on set specifically monitoring how the actors moved in relation to their age.

    yeah, one thing you really start to find interesting in Scorsese's filmography is how often the characters in his films massively overstate the importance of their work (Mean Streets and the Irishman have that similarity where in Mean Streets you see these guys in suits meeting up in clubs or restaurants and talking about these big deals or gigs, yet one of the overlying plots in that film is about guys struggling to pay their rent or just a small loan to a friend. Same applies with the Irishman where De Niro consistently talks about providing for his family and about doing "the right thing" with doing his work, when hes ultimately just a glorified hit man for guys using him and trying to convince him hes important and at the end he alienates his entire family.)

    Its funny I guess to look at this beat down scene out of context, but I think its always been a great insight into what the soul of this movie really is as well as Scorsese's filmography and what he has tried to do in every film.

  • May 16, 2021
    Reformed

    yeah, one thing you really start to find interesting in Scorsese's filmography is how often the characters in his films massively overstate the importance of their work (Mean Streets and the Irishman have that similarity where in Mean Streets you see these guys in suits meeting up in clubs or restaurants and talking about these big deals or gigs, yet one of the overlying plots in that film is about guys struggling to pay their rent or just a small loan to a friend. Same applies with the Irishman where De Niro consistently talks about providing for his family and about doing "the right thing" with doing his work, when hes ultimately just a glorified hit man for guys using him and trying to convince him hes important and at the end he alienates his entire family.)

    Its funny I guess to look at this beat down scene out of context, but I think its always been a great insight into what the soul of this movie really is as well as Scorsese's filmography and what he has tried to do in every film.

    yeah having characters contradict themselves is pretty important for creating dynamic/layered characters

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    Reformed

    I've always seen it as an old mans recollection from a very distant memory and thats part of why I feel the scene is depicted in that way

    its telling too with how a lot of the film focuses on his life when he is middle aged and the stuff in his youth is relatively pretty short (its telling how he skips through most of his life in the military besides one scene where he takes another mans life). You also can tell from his references and confusion at how people have never heard of certain popular politicians/celebs in the 40s and 50s that he is very out of touch and delusional about his own worth as an individual, which is pretty clearly exploited throughout the film by others he works with.

    What? Im talking about how s***ty unrealistic this looks. Not the way he moves but him clearly not hitting the guy at all and just kicking the air.

  • May 16, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    Wayne

    What? Im talking about how s***ty unrealistic this looks. Not the way he moves but him clearly not hitting the guy at all and just kicking the air.

    yeah its meant to look unrealistic lmao. The way he moves literally adds to it looking unrealistic because he is moving like an old man. The point is that it comes from his recollection and he can't think that far back to how his body worked when he was younger.

  • May 16, 2021
    Reformed

    yeah its meant to look unrealistic lmao. The way he moves literally adds to it looking unrealistic because he is moving like an old man. The point is that it comes from his recollection and he can't think that far back to how his body worked when he was younger.

    I doubt it.

  • May 19, 2021
    Reformed

    I've always seen it as an old mans recollection from a very distant memory and thats part of why I feel the scene is depicted in that way

    its telling too with how a lot of the film focuses on his life when he is middle aged and the stuff in his youth is relatively pretty short (its telling how he skips through most of his life in the military besides one scene where he takes another mans life). You also can tell from his references and confusion at how people have never heard of certain popular politicians/celebs in the 40s and 50s that he is very out of touch and delusional about his own worth as an individual, which is pretty clearly exploited throughout the film by others he works with.

    Yeah I thought it fit perfectly as how an old man sees things in his last years

  • May 19, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    Wayne

    Lmao is that take really in the movie? Never noticed how terrible this looks.

    How Marty

    It looks exactly how a 77 y/o man would kick a man when he's down.

  • May 19, 2021
    ·
    1 reply
    JaeRell

    It looks exactly how a 77 y/o man would kick a man when he's down.

    But he's not kicking a man, he's kicking air

  • May 19, 2021
    Wayne

    But he's not kicking a man, he's kicking air

    Lmaooooo

  • May 27, 2021
    ·
    2 replies
  • ayo this s*** finna be goat

  • kiddash3r
    https://twitter.com/LostInFilm/status/1397882484214448132

  • May 27, 2021
    kiddash3r
    https://twitter.com/LostInFilm/status/1397882484214448132

    I’m just glad we’re not seeing no f***in 4K ARRI set ups man

  • Jun 4, 2021

    Oscar winning Sound Mixer Mark Ulano (Titanic, Inglourious Basterds) joined Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon

  • Jun 4, 2021

    some BTS/Rehearsal photos and more filming info from this month (June)!


  • Jun 4, 2021
    ·
    1 reply

    also heads up in case no one heard the plan is for De Niro to be back on set in 2 weeks time, he says the injury shouldn't impact any of his scenes

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