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The Departed on DVD (2006)

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Average rating: 77%
111127820711
4.0
from 54,530 members
 
Starring: Jack Nicholson, Matt Damon, Leonardo DiCaprio, Vera Farmiga, Martin Sheen, Mark Wahlberg, Alec Baldwin, Ray Winstone
Director: Martin Scorsese
Studio: ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO
Run time: 145 mins
Certificate: 18
Collections: 100 Hot Hits
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Genres: Drama, Thriller
Languages: English
Released: 12/06/2007
Also Available on:  Also Available on: BLU-RAY

Brief synopsis of The Departed

Director Martin Scorsese returns to his trademark style with the violent, bruised, and bloody feature THE DEPARTED. Scorsese filched the basic storyline from Wai Keung Lau and Siu Fai Mak's masterful 2002 Hong Kong action film, INFERNAL AFFAIRS, which saw a policeman going undercover as a mob member and a mob member infiltrating the police force. Scorsese transfers the action to Boston, positioning Leonardo DiCaprio as undercover cop William Costigan and Matt Damon as undercover mobster Colin Sullivan. While Costigan and Sullivan get into plenty of nail-biting situations that almost reveal their true identities, Scorsese gradually unravels his strong supporting cast, including Jack Nicholson as Sullivan's mob boss, Frank Costello; Ray Winstone as Costello's meat-headed muscle; Mark Wahlberg as a hot-headed police sergeant; and Vera Farmiga as a love interest for both Damon and Di Caprio's characters.

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Critics Reviews

Ben Walters, Time Out

Infernal Affairs, the 2002 Hong Kong crime thriller that pitched a Triad mole in the police force against an... Read more on www.timeout.com

Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsMust see Movie

Julia Davison from Southend on Sea , 12/10/2006

Brace yourself for this film.... it's a fast-paced, tense, action packed movie which doesnt let up for a minute. My body actually ached afterwards from being tense throughout.

Yes its a remake of Infernal Affairs but the acting and action here are outstanding. I would advise all to see it - one of the best films I've seen in a while, and believe me, I've watched a lot.

Will be better the first time you see this so make sure you're comfortable and definitely try and see it on the big screen before renting/buying.

Wish more people would talk like Dignam (Mark Wahlberg).

  60 out of 67 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsExcellence has departed.

StoneT StoneT from Totnes, England [Highly rated reviewer] , 12/03/2007

In case you didn’t know (as I didn’t) this film is a remake of Infernal Affairs, A 2002 Chinese film. It’s ok… but the original was a Masterpiece. I find it difficult to say anything about the film other than how it is a bad copy. It seems that Scorsese has taken the original and fitted it to the American audience. Unfortunately this means removing any complexity from the characters or plot and generally dumbing everything down a bit. It’s not even done very well. Some of the original character complexity was intrinsic to the plot so without this, parts of the new plot don’t make any sense. It is hard to explain this without giving spoilers though.

The original was also a very detailed film with lots of little bits and pieces which mostly didn’t mean anything but some of them turned out to affect the entire plot. Again, this detail has been stripped from The Departed to leave room for Blockbuster action and spoon fed explanations, leaving a bland film for one thing, but worse, every time you are shown any detail (such as the miss spelling on the envelope) it’s so in your face that it will obviously be highly important. And how many times did we really need to see the envelope to make sure we remembered it?! These things are all due to the US audience apparently requiring less complexity, more explanation of what’s left over, and a less controversial ending.

I can see why people who haven’t seen Infernal Affairs would think this is a good film. In fact, for Hollywood it is quite a good film (it must be, it has won several awards don't you know). But that just goes to show that in global terms Hollywood is severely lacking at the moment.

  49 out of 56 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 2 starsDisappointing

A customer from Guildford, Surrey , 11/06/2007

As a big fan of both Martin Scorsese and the Hong Kong movie Infernal Affairs that The Departed is based on, I was looking forwards to this film. Sadly I've come away somewhat disappointed.

Taking it on its own strengths, it's a decent thriller with a good premise, but it really needed another pass on the script to tighten it up and (sad to say) stronger direction. I love Goodfellas, Casino, Taxi Driver, even The Last Temptation Of Christ. The Departed can't match the narrative or visual flair of those films.

The script is full of dead ends and wasted potential, and it doesn't help that the editing is choppy at best, downright sloppy at worst. It's almost as if (despite the two and a half hour running time) half the story and character development has been left on the cutting room floor.

The FBI connection never really goes anywhere, the pregnancy comes out of nowhere and goes straight back there, the love triangle never gives the pay-off you expect at the end (such as the identity of the baby's father), Costello's wife is a waste of space who doesn't add anything to the story, the envelope Billy gives Colin's wife is never used for anything, the mainland Chinese gang with their corrupt official in tow seem to have wandered in from Infernal Affairs 3 and are totally irrelevant to the plot, and when they get arrested (off-screen) a couple of scenes later, the target of the bust on Costello's gang just switches from the stolen micro-processors (which vanish into McGuffin Land almost without comment) to a drugs shipment (which appears from much the same place).

On the other hand, while Monahan and Scorsese find time for all these narrative cul de sacs, the characters and core storyline are poorly developed. Only Leonardo di Caprio's Billy is really fleshed out, and it's no coincidence that he comes out of the film with one of the strongest performances. The supporting cast in particular is woefully wasted, with actors of the calibre of Martin Sheen, Ray Winstone, Alec Baldwin and Mark Wahlberg reduced to virtual cameos.

Where the film really suffers though is in comparison to Infernal Affairs. For example -

- Matt Damon's Colin is one dimensional and uninteresting compared to the equivalent character that Andy Lau plays in IA.

- Martin Sheen's Queenan doesn't have the same close relationship with Billy that Anthony Wong has with Tony Leung in IA (or the screen time to develop it), making his death far less moving and Billy's extreme emotional reaction to it somewhat bizarre.

- Making Matt's girlfriend and Billy's shrink the same person was a good idea, but the relationship between Billy and the psychiatrist isn't given as much time to develop as it was in IA.

- The numerous scenes that The Departed lifts almost verbatim from IA (from Queenan's death and the elevator shoot-out to the encounter at the movie theatre and the smashing of the cast on Billy's arm) mostly come across as pale imitations, lacking the emotion, tension and visual flair that cinematographer Christopher Doyle and directors Alan Mak and Andrew Lau brought to IA. It doesn't help that some of these scenes have been lifted entirely out of context and inserted into a different place in the story.

- IA's intro is flashy and concise, getting you straight to the heart of the story in double quick time without leaving any room for confusion. By comparison, The Departed takes far too long to set up all the pieces at the start of the film and does it in a rather clunky manner, making the opening a little muddled and long-winded.

- The constant texting and mobile phone calls in The Departed lack the tension of Tony Leung's morse code messages in IA.

- And so on and so forth...

It's no surprise to me that fans of IA found The Departed a bit of a let down by comparison. It does surprise me to see so many Scorsese fans here waving the flag for what is in my opinion one of his weaker movies.

Is The Departed a bad movie? No. Is it a great movie? No. Is it one of Scorsese's best? Definitely not. Is it as good as Infernal Affairs? Not even close

  39 out of 51 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsFabulously Brutal

Pointer from London , 09/11/2006

Good Points

• It’s a Scorsese

• Excellent performances

• Intricate & engrossing plot

• Intelligent & visceral

Bad Points

• 150 minutes long

• Occasionally confusing plot elements

• It’s a re-make

• Not everyone’s idea of a happy ending

Watch: if you are looking for Pulp Fiction without the humour

  33 out of 43 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsAbsolute rubbish

A customer from worcester , 19/12/2007

Not a patch on the Hong Kong original , 2 lead actors who cannot act, clearly believing 100 swear words are necessary when one word would do if combined with some actual acting ability. Frankly I stopped watching before the end it was so atrocious.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsNot bad: but not Scorcese's best

AdyBassMan from Exeter [Highly rated reviewer] , 04/03/2007

I really enjoyed the movie and I'd definitely recommend you rent this dvd. Let's face it, anything by Scorcese isn't going to disappoint! But I can't help thinking that he won a 'token' best director Oscar for his latest offering. Yes, it's very good......... But it's not up there with, let's say, Goodfellas, Raging Bull or Taxi Driver - which are all uniformly excellent.

However, I must say, my opinion of Leonardo Di Caprio has changed dramatically over the last few years - he has become a fine, fine actor and is on top form here. His performance is compelling and is complimented by a fine array of heavyweight A-listers.

Recommended.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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