Windsor Star

The ‘dazzling decline’ of De Niro

Aging gracefully onscreen does not seem like a priority for once-great actor

- JAMIE PORTMAN

Judi Dench, now 82, with macular degenerati­on, has signed for an all-star remake of Agatha Christie’s Murder On The Orient Express, while 86-year-old Clint Eastwood recently unveiled his newest movie, Sully. Meanwhile, 76-year-old Patrick Stewart and 77-year-old Ian McKellen appear in an acclaimed stage revival of Harold Pinter’s No Man’s Land. Add people like Robert Duvall, Woody Allen and Maggie Smith to the roster of artists who continue to thrive in the autumn of their careers.

Then there’s the depressing example of Robert De Niro, twotime Oscar winner and the man once hailed as the greatest actor of his generation.

De Niro is only 73, and recently appeared onscreen in The Comedian — playing an aging standup comic who figures he can get laughs by making incest jokes and reworking comedy legend Eddie Cantor’s signature song, Making Whoopee, into a dirty ditty called Making Poopee.

To be sure, the perilous art of creating comedy can be worthy of pungent examinatio­n on film. That’s why De Niro’s 1982 movie, The King of Comedy, in which he brilliantl­y portrayed a demented wannabe comic who kidnaps Jerry Lewis, was such an unsettling experience.

But there’s a huge gulf between that film, directed by Martin Scorsese, and the travesty of De Niro’s latest. And what’s truly dismaying is the seeming indifferen­ce this legendary actor shows as he continues to shred his once lustrous reputation.

Well, perhaps, not totally indifferen­t. During an interview in Britain a couple of years ago, De Niro blew up when asked how he avoided being on “autopilot” when doing a scene. Complainin­g of a “negative inference,” an angry De Niro stormed off.

Daily Telegraph columnist Ed Power said his tantrum merely “called attention to one of the most dazzling declines in modern cinema history.”

The question obviously touched a nerve. This is an actor who was once so meticulous that in order to understand the mind of Al Capone during filming The Untouchabl­es, he wore silk underwear from the same store that once served the gangster’s needs.

Long gone are the glory days of Godfather ll and Raging Bull (the two movies that earned De Niro his Oscars), Taxi Driver, Mean Streets, Goodfellas and The Untouchabl­es. Power accused De Niro of “devoting the sunset of his working years to films that seem to have existed only to taint his legacy.” Powers added, the closing phase of De Niro’s career is strewn with “more smoking clinkers than a Volkswagen emissions lab.”

De Niro’s decline is a saddening spectacle. In 2012, he received his first Oscar nomination in more than 20 years — a supporting-actor citation for his performanc­e in Silver Linings Playbook. But immediatel­y afterward, there was a return to dreck: Big Wedding, Killing Season, The Family, Las Vegas, The Bag Man — and, most notoriousl­y, Grudge Match, in which De Niro and Sylvester Stallone attempted a geriatric send-up of their Raging Bull and Rocky images, and the execrable Dirty Grandpa, which offered up an aging De Niro masturbati­ng while watching porn.

In 1993, film historian Douglas Brode described De Niro “as our greatest screen actor, on the level of a Guinness or Olivier.” And the verdict today? “One of our greatest working actors has lost himself in crummy, mindless comedy,” says Los Angeles Times film critic Betsy Sharkey.

There are those who relish De Niro’s lowest-common-denominato­r excursions into the world of the Focker family, or the send-ups of his gangster image in the overrated Analyze This and Analyze That. But it could be argued that his last significan­t acting work came in 1995. That was the year he and Al Pacino finally worked together in Michael Mann’s Heat. It was also the year of the brilliant Casino, De Niro’s last involvemen­t with director Martin Scorsese.

There may be some truth in critic David Thomson’s suggestion that as De Niro has grown older, he’s become more difficult to cast. But there’s also evidence that he needs a strong director to guide him to the right material. In general, his most distinguis­hed work has been done under major filmmakers like Mann, Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola and Brian De Palma. It could be argued that De Niro’s real decline began when he stopped working with Scorsese, the most important figure in his career developmen­t.

Still, there’s hope. In May, HBO will unveil The Wizard of Lies, in which De Niro reportedly gives a sizzling performanc­e as Bernie Madoff. The movie has A-list credential­s, with Michelle Pfeiffer as co-star and Barry Levinson as director. It’s on cable because the industry concluded there was no audience for it in movie houses, because it’s not a Dirty Grandpa.

That’s Hollywood for you.

One of our greatest working actors has lost himself in crummy, mindless comedy.

 ?? ALISON COHEN ROSA/SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? Robert De Niro, shown with Leslie Mann in a scene from The Comedian, was once hailed as the greatest actor of his generation. But the two-time Oscar winner has been in decline, making poor film choices for several years.
ALISON COHEN ROSA/SONY PICTURES CLASSICS Robert De Niro, shown with Leslie Mann in a scene from The Comedian, was once hailed as the greatest actor of his generation. But the two-time Oscar winner has been in decline, making poor film choices for several years.

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