Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, and Al Pacino settle around a table. The camera captures not rehearsed statements, but a living dialogue—sudden flashes of memory, inside jokes, moments of silent understanding. The conversation orbits *The Irishman*, yet consistently spirals outward: the director and actors share thoughts on the nature of cinematic time, the long road to this project, the intricacies of working with digital de-aging. This is more than a promotional interview; it’s a rare glimpse into masters of cinema reflecting on their own legacy and artistic choices.
| Year | 2019 |
| Country | United States of America |
| Genre | Documentary |
| Runtime | 23 min. |
| Rating | TMDB: 7.5/10 (114 votes) |
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This documentary companion strips away all gloss and pretense. The camera becomes an invisible guest in a room where titans speak not for the press, but for themselves and each other. Every sigh, every pause, every exchanged glance here speaks volumes.
What lingers after the credits is the profound sense of witnessing a private conversation that reframes *The Irishman* not as a sprawling epic, but as a deeply personal project among old friends. It adds a rich, human layer to the original film. — MovieFinder Editorial
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The muted light of a studio, warm wood tones, the feeling of a trusted conversation over coffee.
Martin Scorsese
Self
Robert De Niro
Self
Joe Pesci
Self
Al Pacino
Self
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