9 Milestones in the Evolution of Robert De Niro

Raging Bull (1980)

The film that definitively proved De Niro's commitment to his craft was also his first biographical project and his only sports project: Raging Bull. As the self-destructive boxer Jake LaMotta, De Niro trained with the fighter himself for earlier career scenes before gaining 60 pounds to portray the fighter in is his post-competition years. Although the film grossed less than $24 million in the box office, critics called De Niro's Oscar-winning performance the finest of his career and helped the film land on a number of Top 10 lists for its year and its decade alike.

Midnight Run (1988)

Following Brian De Palma's crime drama The Untouchables, Robert De Niro reportedly wanted to try something different. After failing to convince Penny Marshall and Gracie Films that he should star in Big, De Niro signed on to the buddy comedy Midnight Run. Paramount Pictures hoped to pair De Niro with a "big name," considering Cher and Robin Williams for the role that would ultimately go to the drier veteran funnyman Charles Grodin. Playing a former Chicago cop-turned-tough bounty under the direction of Martin Brest (Beverly Hills Cop, Scent of a Woman), De Niro found his first real comedy success at the box office. In addition to ad-libbing many of the lines and coming up with the idea that his character continually check his watch as part of his back story, De Niro spent time with bounty hunters to prepare for the role.

A Bronx Tale (1993)

After about 30 years behind the camera, Robert De Niro decided to try his hand at directing with A Bronx Tale. The drama was familiar territory for the actor -- including familiar themes like New York City mafia and Italian-American working class folks pursuing criminal activity as their only means to success. Chazz Palminteri had written the screenplay (adapted from his one-man show) and refused to sell the rights unless he could star as Sonny. Hearing this, De Niro not only offered to let Palminteri star but offered to direct and additionally star in the film himself. Even though A Bronx Tale was a critical success (Roger Ebert gave it four stars and remarked that De Niro "finds the right notes as he moves from laughter to anger to tears."), the actor did not direct again until 2006's CIA film The Good Shepard.

Analyze This (1999)

The first thirty years of De Niro's film career were mostly filled with solid dramatic work and then in the mid-90's, while filming three movies per year, the actor shifted his focus to lighter fare like this gangster comedy with Billy Crystal, its sequel, the Meet the Parents trilogy and a few children's films including Shark Tale.

Godsend (2004)

Remember that time Robert De Niro tried his Oscar-winning hand at horror opposite Rebecca Romijn? I don't really, either, but it is worth noting as a milestone because the film earned the least favorable reviews of De Niro's career and marked the shift between forgivable bad films (Meet the Fockers) and the unforgivable. The Lionsgate movie -- about a couple who agrees to have their deceased son illegally cloned by a doctor who is a little "off" (De Niro) -- rests at 4 percent on Rotten Tomatoes along with his other career bombs that would follow -- 2005's Hide and Seek (13%) and The Bridge of San Luis Rey (4%), 2008's Righteous Kill (19%), 2010's Little Fockers (10%). To think, this man won an Oscar for The Godfather Part II and was now shilling for The Adventures of Rocky & Bullwinkle.

Killer Elite (2011)

This weekend, De Niro returns to the screen for what IMDB calls his 79th acting project. De Niro doesn't get to flex much actorly muscle, but as Jason Statham's knowledgeable mentor, he doesn't have to. The audience I sat with this week clapped when he first appeared onscreen and cheered when he took down a bad guy in a conveniently empty subway station. Whether he is giving us one of the finest performances we'll see in our lifetimes, or putting in three days worth of lucrative work on a soon-to-be forgotten action thriller, Robert De Niro is still Robert De Niro and even now, post-Godsend, is capable of greatness. Here's to future milestones that take De Niro away from upcoming projects like New Year's Eve and back to his grittier roots.

Pages: 1 2



Comments

  • Zach says:

    Raging Bull was De Niro's only sports movie. He played a baseball player in Bang the Drum Slowly. It was a pretty famous movie. I don't know how you don't know that.

  • Zach says:

    NOT his only sports movie (correction).

  • Mike the Movie Tyke says:

    People are applauding because they'd rather see De Niro stop by a second-rate action thriller than headline yet another "Focker" or "Analyze" movie. It's much less painful.

  • The Cantankerist says:

    Also beautifully understated in Wag The Dog - he keeps it afloat longer than it should be. Travis Bickle is a slam-dunk, but it's a slam-dunk role too - he stayed out of its way, plus it worked seeing him so chillingly contemporary after GF2. I must be one of the few who find Raging Bull way too indulgent, but in contrast I confess it took me a long time to realize how good he was in Midnight Run - so straight that even when it's "here come two words for you" it's totally in character, and so generous that he makes Grodin twice as funny.

  • The Cantankerist says:
  • Andrey Min'kov says:

    All killers finish equally.

  • Tommy Marx says:

    wtf The Cantankerist, your has nothing to do with the damn article

  • Tommy Marx says:

    Okay, I laughed my ass off until I saw didn't show up. I understand Alexa wouldn't get the whole "let's turn off the italics" thing, but stupid me, I didn't realize HTML code wouldn't show up to support the punchline. "wtf tommy, your answer has nothing to do with the damn article" is now officially dead. At least on this website. Perhaps it can live again (with Alexa's blessing, of course) on THR.