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IMDbPro

Lansky

  • 2021
  • R
  • 1h 59min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
11 k
MA NOTE
Harvey Keitel in Lansky (2021)
David Stone (Sam Worthington), a renowned but down-on-his-luck writer, has the opportunity of a lifetime when he receives a surprise call from Meyer Lansky (Academy Award nominee Harvey Keitel).  For decades, authorities have been trying to locate Lansky's alleged nine-figure fortune and this is their last chance to capture the aging gangster before he dies. With the FBI close behind, the Godfather of organized crime reveals the untold truth about his life as the notorious boss of Murder Inc. and the National Crime Syndicate.
Lire trailer2:18
3 Videos
28 photos
BiographieCriminalitéDrameL'histoireThrillerCrime véritableGangster

Lorsque le vieux Meyer Lansky fait l'objet d'une dernière enquête du FBI qui le soupçonne d'avoir caché des millions de dollars pendant plus de 50 ans, le gangster retraité raconte la vérité... Tout lireLorsque le vieux Meyer Lansky fait l'objet d'une dernière enquête du FBI qui le soupçonne d'avoir caché des millions de dollars pendant plus de 50 ans, le gangster retraité raconte la vérité sur sa vie de boss de la pègre.Lorsque le vieux Meyer Lansky fait l'objet d'une dernière enquête du FBI qui le soupçonne d'avoir caché des millions de dollars pendant plus de 50 ans, le gangster retraité raconte la vérité sur sa vie de boss de la pègre.

  • Réalisation
    • Eytan Rockaway
  • Scénario
    • Eytan Rockaway
    • Robert Rockaway
  • Casting principal
    • Harvey Keitel
    • Sam Worthington
    • John Magaro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    11 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Eytan Rockaway
    • Scénario
      • Eytan Rockaway
      • Robert Rockaway
    • Casting principal
      • Harvey Keitel
      • Sam Worthington
      • John Magaro
    • 114avis d'utilisateurs
    • 36avis des critiques
    • 45Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer
    Lansky
    Trailer 2:17
    Lansky
    Lansky
    Trailer 2:17
    Lansky
    Lansky: How Did You Evade The Feds?
    Clip 1:01
    Lansky: How Did You Evade The Feds?

    Photos27

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    Rôles principaux75

    Modifier
    Harvey Keitel
    Harvey Keitel
    • Meyer Lansky
    Sam Worthington
    Sam Worthington
    • David Stone
    John Magaro
    John Magaro
    • Young Meyer Lansky
    Minka Kelly
    Minka Kelly
    • Maureen Duffy
    David James Elliott
    David James Elliott
    • Frank Rivers
    • (as David Elliott)
    Danny A. Abeckaser
    Danny A. Abeckaser
    • Greg Kunz
    David Cade
    David Cade
    • Ben 'Bugsy' Siegel
    AnnaSophia Robb
    AnnaSophia Robb
    • Anne Lansky
    Shane McRae
    Shane McRae
    • Charlie 'Lucky' Luciano
    Jackie Cruz
    Jackie Cruz
    • Dafne
    Steve Alderfer
    Steve Alderfer
    • Marco
    Stacey Hinnen
    Stacey Hinnen
    • Sasha Klein
    Dylan Flashner
    Dylan Flashner
    • Com. Charles Haffenden
    Robert Walker Branchaud
    Robert Walker Branchaud
    • Al Capone
    • (as Robert Walker-Branchaud)
    Jay Giannone
    Jay Giannone
    • Salvatore Maranzano
    Dodge Prince
    Dodge Prince
    • Young Buddy Lansky
    Vincent Minutella
    Vincent Minutella
    • Albert Anastasia
    Claudio Bellante
    Claudio Bellante
    • Joe Bonnano
    • Réalisation
      • Eytan Rockaway
    • Scénario
      • Eytan Rockaway
      • Robert Rockaway
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs114

    6,210.9K
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    Avis à la une

    5Nate-48

    You get what you pay for

    I am not saying you need a $100 million budget to tell the story of Meyer Lansky, or you must have Tarantino, Spielberg, or Coppola but it would help a lot.

    Trying to make a biopic on one of the most consequential figures of the 20th century underworld is a massive undertaking.

    First things first - Harvey Keitel is really great. Not just great. He is perfect for the part. It is one of his five best roles.

    He is from new york, jewish, tough, pretty much the same age as Lansky was at the time the movie is supposed to take place and is old enough with the nyc street background and wise enough to understand the Lansky character.

    The actor playing the younger Lansky is not bad but is not the man for the job - few could be.

    The Bugsy siegel character works fine for the early crime scenes but in the vegas scenes he does his best vince vaughn in Swingers Impression and he is about 10 years too young for siegels vegas years though it could have been pulled off with some better acting and directing. A scene of Siegel falling asleep at the bar is not something he would have done. Siegel also wouldnt have showboated in the manner the director depicts. The director ends up making a cartoonish impression of siegel.

    The filmmaker also loses a lot of credibility with the Millers Crossing stolen execution scene which is not just a scene lacking any believability but shows a real sloppiness of filmmaking.

    This movie was shot in 20 days and it shows. It was rushed together.

    A love triangle and hotel story involving the author is a completely unnecessary distraction which turns the film from a biopic of a monumental figure to a late night soap drama on the oxygen channel.

    The movie somewhat recovers from its pitfalls through the power of Lanskys story. Much of the general storyline is true though the amount of liberties taken such as the millers crossing execution scene are too big of a distraction.

    The maranzano showdown also takes liberties with what is known. The director also fails to detail the importance of the moment or that Maranzano was the biggest boss of the time.

    Many of the scenes in the film are just made up though others are credible.

    One great part of the movie is the jewish attacks on the nazis which is little known today but was factual.

    The movie also does a good job in explaining lanskys assistance to the us government in rooting out nazi spies which is very important to the story.

    This movie is a more realistic depiction of lansky then some other movies and shows have done.

    While Keitel does a great job in his portrayal, it feels too much at times like the younger version is too much Hymen roth. Roths version of the Lansky character had too many elements which were not accurate. For example he had a tough Rugged baritone voice which instilled fear and demanded respect not the squeakiness that the younger lansky version shown here and in the roth version and other versions.

    There are two great supporting acting performances in this film - david james elliot who is the government agent hounding lansky and anna sophia robb who plays lanskys wife.

    Robb is a real revelation here and is an actress to look out for if you are unfamiliar.

    My Other main criticism is most of the violent scenes are just not believable and were more interested in gore.

    The depiction of murder inc as an afterthought is a fatal flaw as it is integral to the lansky story. This should have been central to the story. Instead it is treated like the orks in lord of the rings with a saturday afterrnoon cartoon feel.

    The prohibition era is essentially glossed over. Except for a card room scene and the meeting of his wife and luciano.

    What we have here is a major error of trying to combine a story about a reporter who interviewed lansky and whose stories may or may not be partially fictional and a story of one of the most impactful gangsters which is given equal treatment to the reporter.

    Consider for a moment all of the time godfather 2 spent on the cuba scenes when our story is supposed to be about the man who made those cuba scenes happen and instead we get about two minutes of cuba - which is where lansky made his great fortune and lost it.

    Basically this film tries to do too much with too little and falls short by rushing through each item as if it were a checklist.

    The greatness of Keitel makes this worth watching. As for the story of Lansky, it is a teaspoon mixed with some accuracy, some false tales and some folly but ultimately there is an honest attempt by the director to show the general character of lansky in the manner in which he is believed to have acted. The ending is perfect and that is a big part of the lansky story.

    The problem lies in the parts of the film which stray too far from the truth.

    Like having a guy in cowboy hat in nyc or visiting an alabama jail to find a magical clue from some southern convict turn the film into a version of con air.
    5Groverdox

    Lacklustre and forgettable mob bio-pic

    Here is a pretty run-of-the-mill, lacklustre mob flick. It's a biopic, but it fails to show us anything we haven't already seen in other movies, even if we know nothing about Meyer Lansky.

    Harvey Keitel does exactly what you'd expect from a great actor in the twilight of his life - he's in his eighties now - playing an iconic crime figure right before he checked out. Perhaps they were inspired by "The Irishman", also about crime figures contemplating mortality. But in that movie Keitel was surrounded by other acting heavyweights. Here it's Sam Worthington and a bunch of no-names who aren't about to become known any time soon.

    Basing your movie on a real-world figure should enable you to find some spark of originality. No two lives are the same. The best I can say about "Lansky" is that it's not as bad as "Capone".
    7valleyjohn

    Harvey Keitel carries this movie on his ageing back

    Harvey Keitel is looking all of his 82 years and more but one thing is for sure , his acting hasn't diminished one little bit , which is a good thing for this film because if it wasn't for him , this would have been dull as dish water .

    When the aging Meyer Lansky is investigated by the Feds, who suspect he has stashed away millions of dollars over half a century, the retired gangster reveals the untold truth about his life as the boss of the National Crime Syndicate.

    I love a gangster film but they have to have something a little different about them for me to really enjoy them . This does and doesn't.

    The scenes with Keitel and to a certain extent Sam Worthington are really watchable ( even though there are too many words of wisdom ) but the problem is , because Lansky is telling his life story to David Stone , the film is interspersed with flashback scenes of when he was a young man and to be brutally honest they aren't any good . The Director makes the mistake of doing the gangster scenes like painting by numbers . Every cliche in book is used and it's just dull .

    Thankfully Harvey Keitel turns a sows ear into a silk purse and makes the film enjoyable although I couldn't stop looking at the prosthetic nose they gave him which was very distracting.

    To confuse people for some weird reason the the movie company changed the name from lansky to A Righteous man - a much duller title . Why do they do things like that ?
    6ferguson-6

    No knowledge

    Greetings again from the darkness. If asked, the vast majority of movie lovers would name THE GODFATHER (1972), THE GODFATHER II (1974), and GOODFELLAS (1990) as the quintessential mafia movies. Sure, there are dozens of others, but that mob triumvirate has ruled the roost for many years. It's doubtful writer-director Eytan Rockaway ever gave one moment of thought that his second feature, written from a story by his father, author Robert Rockaway, might join the ranks of those top three, but that doesn't prevent it from being a quite interesting tale based on true events.

    Sam Worthington (AVATAR, 2009) stars as David Stone, a writer who had some success a few years back with his Kennedy biography. Since then, he's struggled in both his personal and professional life. In 1981 when an elderly Meyer Lansky (Harvey Keitel) contacts him to write the true Lansky story, David jumps at the opportunity, seeing it as a solution to his many problems. The two men meet at a Miami diner that Lansky frequents. These diner meetings form the structure of the story, and director Rockaway uses flashbacks to the 1940's to "show" us what Lansky is telling his biographer from the booth.

    John Magaro plays the younger Lansky, a man who is remarkably good with numbers and calm, yet forceful, in his demeanor. Lansky has partnered with Ben "Bugsy" Siegel (David Cade), who provides some muscle and flamboyance that Lansky lacks. We see the development of their business, and how Lansky's shrewd business acumen leads to a connection with Lucky Luciano, as well as providing the government with intelligence during the war. Lansky's story to David glosses over the bootlegging and other revenue streams to concentrate on gaming, which of course, is now legal in many states.

    The supporting cast includes Minka Kelly as David's fling at the motel, AnnaSophia Robb as Lansky's wife Anne, Shane McRae as Lucky Luciano, and David James Elliott as the FBI Agent obsessed with solving the long-dead Lansky case and locating the $350 million supposedly hidden away. As you might expect, the story bounces from Miami to New York City to Cuba (a stunning Colonial Hotel in Havana) to Vegas to Geneva and even Israel, where Lansky attempted, unsuccessfully, to live out his life.

    Lansky's biggest impact was facilitating the connection between the Italian, Irish, and Jewish mafia at a time when so such bond existed. We twice hear him answer, "I have no knowledge on the subject", when questioned about organized crime. On his death in 1983, Lansky had no convictions - all charges had been dropped. A doctor's diagnosis of terminal lung cancer led him to reach out to an author so that his story could be told. We don't learn much about "Murder, Inc." but we do understand Lansky's commitment to "control the game". Rockaway has delivered an intriguing profile of an enigma from inside the mafia ... and screen vet Keitel makes it all believable.

    In Select Theaters & On Demand June 25, 2021.
    4reelreviewsandrecommendations

    An Offer You Can Refuse

    Few genres are as seductive or as enduringly popular as the gangster movie. Since the earliest days of cinema- with 1906's 'The Black Hand' often cited as the first- audiences have been enthralled by the suave thuggery of characters like Fat Tony and Joey Two Fingers. From the explosive fury of 'White Heat' to the operatic grandeur of 'The Godfather', we've watched countless mobsters rise and fall in clouds of cigar smoke, drawn in by the glint of power and the promise that crime can sometimes pay- for a while, at least.

    The best gangster movies crackle with energy. They're fast-talking, blood-soaked morality plays. 'Goodfellas' doesn't just show you a life of crime- it sweeps you up in it, dazzles with its rhythm, then punches you in the gut. The camera moves like it's in on the scam. The characters are magnetic, dangerous, deeply flawed. The dialogue crackles with razor-blade wit. There's urgency, chaos, consequence.

    Sadly, Eytan Rockaway's 'Lansky' is no 'Goodfellas.' A tired, cliched slog, the film takes one of the most intriguing figures in organized crime and renders him about as exciting as a tax audit. It follows an aging Meyer Lansky in the twilight of his life, doing a series of interviews with a struggling journalist under the pretence of telling his side of the story (a narrative device strikingly similar to the one used in John McNaughton's 1999 'Lansky').

    In theory, it's a chance to peel back the layers of a mythologised figure, to explore the man behind the headlines. In practice, it's a lot of talking, not much showing and a distinct lack of bite. For a film about a man with blood on his hands and the FBI breathing down his neck, 'Lansky' feels oddly low-stakes and low-energy. Rockaway's screenplay- written alongside his father Robert- brings nothing new to the table of gangster fiction, relying on overly familiar tropes, ticking boxes; sketching the outline of a legend without ever colouring in the man.

    The film could be the poster child for 'generic gangster movie'. However, while some, like 'Black Mass', may be generic, at least they're a bit of fun. For the most part, 'Lansky' is dull. Flashbacks to his glory days are flat, drained of urgency or danger. The dialogue plods. Even the violence, when it arrives, feels perfunctory- as if included out of obligation rather than narrative necessity. There's no momentum, no grit; no spark. It's a film that mistakes solemnity for substance and slow pacing for depth.

    There are brief moments that hint at what could have been. Some scenes involving Lansky and the journalist crackle with, if not quite excitement, at least life. The character of the older Lansky is believable, with some good dialogue. Throughout, there are glimpses of a more engaging film- one properly exploring Lansky's morally ambiguous character. Sadly, these moments are fleeting, overshadowed by the narrative's relentless stagnation.

    Moreover, Peter Flinckenberg's cinematography ticks every box on the generic gangster movie checklist- moody lighting, smoky rooms, endless slow zooms- but forgets to add any actual atmosphere. It isn't by any means a bad looking picture, but it feels like style without soul. Although it contains all the visual hallmarks of a gangster drama, it has none of the menace, energy or allure that makes a film in the genre stand out.

    Although April Lasky's production design is serviceable, it suffers from the same sense of checkbox filmmaking. The sets dutifully hit all the expected notes- dingy offices, smoke-filled bars, opulent hotels- but they rarely feel lived-in or evocative. Like much of the film, they look the part without ever truly selling the world they're meant to create. The same can be said for Laura Cristina Ortiz's costume design; forgettable and generic.

    Really, there's only one reason to watch 'Lansky': Harvey Keitel. As the titular mafioso, Keitel is far and away the film's most compelling aspect. Nuanced and credible, he injects the film with a certain quiet gravitas. While the script does him no favours, Keitel brings layers to a character who could've easily been a one-dimensional gangster archetype. He's a man at the crossroads of a legendary life; Keitel captures the weariness, the wisdom and the dubious morality of someone who has outlived the thrill of his own story.

    Sam Worthington does steady work as the journalist, though there isn't much for him to work with in the face of the Rockaways's scant, cliched characterisation. John Magaro's performance as the younger Lansky is so over-the-top and hammy he might as well be hanging in a butcher's shop window, and the same can be said for David Cade's Bugsy Siegel. Additionally, as an FBI man, David James Elliott fades into the background completely, while the talents of AnnaSophia Robb are wasted entirely in the criminally underwritten part of Lansky's long-suffering wife.

    Eytan Rockaway's 'Lansky' is a far cry from the best gangster films. Generic, cliched and frequently dull, it really doesn't have much to offer. While Harvey Keitel manages to breathe some life into a character who deserves better, the rest of the film stumbles through checkboxes without ever finding its own pulse. If you're looking for a glimpse into the complex mind of the mob legend, you'd be better off reading his Wikipedia page- at least there, your interest won't get lost in a haze of smoke and missed opportunities. In short, 'Lansky' is an offer you can refuse.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This is the second biographical portrayal of Meyer Lansky--the first being Lansky (1998), played by Richard Dreyfuss. In it, he also tells a tale of his life to a journalist.
    • Gaffes
      Aharon Yariv, who later went on to be head of the IDF Intelligence Directorate and a cabinet minister, shows Lansky a concentration camp tattoo. Yariv served in the Haganah and the British Army and was never an inmate.
    • Citations

      Meyer Lansky: When you lose your money, you lose nothing. When you lose your health, you lose something. When you lose your character, you lose everything.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Late Show with Stephen Colbert: Harvey Keitel/Randall Otis (2021)
    • Bandes originales
      Keep This Going
      Written by Jonathan Murrill, Lee Richardson, Tom Ford, James Cocozza (as James Carlo Giorgio Cocozza), Sarah Jane Norman

      Courtesy of Extreme Music

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Lansky?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 juin 2021 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Hébreu
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • A Righteous Man
    • Sociétés de production
      • 120dB Films
      • Above the Clouds
      • CaliWood Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 5 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 61 030 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 27 474 $US
      • 27 juin 2021
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 136 579 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 59min(119 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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