can be yours — for $2.29 million. The Oyster Bay, NY, estate, at 26 Serenite Lane in Muttontown, sits on 2.17 acres, with lots of entertaining spaces and a sprawling lawn.
21.06.2021 - 08:51 / deadline.com
The Tribeca Festival wrapped Sunday night, its last event a retrospective screening of Raging Bull with a video (pre-recorded) of Leonardo DiCaprio interviewing Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro about the iconic 1980 film. The director called it, “the culmination of everything I had desired it to be.”
“I didn’t care what happened to it, or if I made another movie,” Scorsese said. He did, including with De Niro. The duo has a 50-plus year collaboration running from Mean Streets and Taxi Driver in
can be yours — for $2.29 million. The Oyster Bay, NY, estate, at 26 Serenite Lane in Muttontown, sits on 2.17 acres, with lots of entertaining spaces and a sprawling lawn.
Just ask Martin Scorsese. But Dorff defended his eclectic filmography and the choices he’s made throughout his career dating back to the ’90s, including his new film “Embattled” in which he plays an MMA fighter.
Robert De Niro has won key community support to open a new $400 million film studio complex in Astoria, Queens.Community Board 1 gave overwhelming approval for Wildflower Studios LTD to open on 19th Avenue near Luyster Creek as part of the city’s legally required land use review.Queens Borough President Donovan Richards also told The Post he backs the De Niro-influenced studio.“It’s a job producer.
Space Jam, Jackie Brown and more.A number of acclaimed blockbusters will see their scores pressed onto vinyl in a new series, including three Quentin Tarantino films, due for reissues on September 3 and 17.The original Space Jam film will receive a special vinyl release to mark the film’s 25th anniversary this year, as will Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas – which hasn’t been produced on vinyl since the film was first released in 1990.Jackie Brown, Inglourious Basterds and Death Proof – all directed
Unlike some of the other anniversary reunions at this year’s Tribeca Festival, which had to go virtual out of an abundance of (almost) post-pandemic safety, Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro couldn’t attend their Sunday night “Raging Bull” screening because they were out of town – in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, shooting their adaptation of David Grann’s book “Killers of the Flower Moon.” But Scorsese also wasn’t going to settle for some glitchy Zoom recording, so on Saturday night, in front of a
Gary Basaraba has a busy few months ahead. The Irishman alum is reuniting with Martin Scorsese on the Scorsese-directed Apple Original Films thriller Flowers of the Killer Moon, the adaptation of David Grann’s book, in a supporting role. Basaraba also has booked a key role on ABC’s limited series Women of the Movement.
Taxi Driver, Fran Lebowitz has said.Lebowitz, who was the central focus of Scorsese’s latest Netflix docuseries Pretend It’s A City, told the LA Times about the filmmaker’s regrets about his 1976 feature.Describing the filming schedule for the series, Lebowitz explained that the release was postponed due to Scorsese’s edit on The Irishman, and teased that the veteran filmmaker favours a longer editing process.“I guarantee you if they had not taken it away from him, he would still be editing Taxi
If bon mots were bonbons, Fran Lebowitz would be Willie Wonka.
Quavo talks Takeoff, Robert De Niro and more while chowing down on some seriously spicy wings on “Hot Ones”.
On Monday, Robert De Niro Zoomed into The Tonight Show, where he was grilled by Jimmy Fallon, regarding a number of interesting “myths” that surround his career.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaAfter a COVID hiatus, the Tribeca Festival is back, hosting panels and film premieres in the heart of New York City. At the same time, it is demonstrating that the city’s arteries stretch far beyond a radius of a few blocks.This edition, which runs from June 9 through June 20, will look a little different from previous iterations, and that’s not just because Gotham is slowly reemerging from months of social distancing and lockdowns.