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Kill the Irishman

  • 2011
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
53K
YOUR RATING
Val Kilmer, Vincent D'Onofrio, Christopher Walken, and Ray Stevenson in Kill the Irishman (2011)
 	The true story of Danny Greene, a tough Irish thug working for mobsters in Cleveland during the 1970's.
Play trailer2:09
6 Videos
99+ Photos
True CrimeActionBiographyCrimeDrama

The true story of Danny Greene, a tough Irish thug working for mobsters in Cleveland during the 1970's.The true story of Danny Greene, a tough Irish thug working for mobsters in Cleveland during the 1970's.The true story of Danny Greene, a tough Irish thug working for mobsters in Cleveland during the 1970's.

  • Director
    • Jonathan Hensleigh
  • Writers
    • Jonathan Hensleigh
    • Jeremy Walters
    • Rick Porrello
  • Stars
    • Ray Stevenson
    • Christopher Walken
    • Vincent D'Onofrio
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    53K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jonathan Hensleigh
    • Writers
      • Jonathan Hensleigh
      • Jeremy Walters
      • Rick Porrello
    • Stars
      • Ray Stevenson
      • Christopher Walken
      • Vincent D'Onofrio
    • 120User reviews
    • 81Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos6

    Kill the Irishman
    Trailer 2:09
    Kill the Irishman
    "Bring Me the Head of Danny Green" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 1:01
    "Bring Me the Head of Danny Green" from Kill the Irishman
    "Bring Me the Head of Danny Green" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 1:01
    "Bring Me the Head of Danny Green" from Kill the Irishman
    "No Way to Sugar Coat It" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 0:58
    "No Way to Sugar Coat It" from Kill the Irishman
    "Businessman" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 0:22
    "Businessman" from Kill the Irishman
    "Don't Disappoint" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 0:38
    "Don't Disappoint" from Kill the Irishman
    "All You Got" from Kill the Irishman
    Clip 0:49
    "All You Got" from Kill the Irishman

    Photos240

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    Top cast77

    Edit
    Ray Stevenson
    Ray Stevenson
    • Danny Greene
    Christopher Walken
    Christopher Walken
    • Shondor Birns
    Vincent D'Onofrio
    Vincent D'Onofrio
    • John Nardi
    Val Kilmer
    Val Kilmer
    • Joe Manditski
    Linda Cardellini
    Linda Cardellini
    • Joan Madigan
    Tony Darrow
    Tony Darrow
    • Mikey Mendarolo
    Robert Davi
    Robert Davi
    • Ray Ferritto
    Fionnula Flanagan
    Fionnula Flanagan
    • Grace O'Keefe
    Bob Gunton
    Bob Gunton
    • Jerry Merke
    Jason Butler Harner
    Jason Butler Harner
    • Art Sneperger
    Vinnie Jones
    Vinnie Jones
    • Keith Ritson
    Tony Lo Bianco
    Tony Lo Bianco
    • Jack Licavoli
    Laura Ramsey
    Laura Ramsey
    • Ellie O'Hara
    Steve Schirripa
    Steve Schirripa
    • Mike Frato
    • (as Steven R. Schirripa)
    Paul Sorvino
    Paul Sorvino
    • Tony Salerno
    Mike Starr
    Mike Starr
    • Leo 'Lips' Moceri
    Marcus Thomas
    Marcus Thomas
    • William 'Billy' McComber
    Vinny Vella
    Vinny Vella
    • Frank Brancato
    • (as Vinny Vella Sr.)
    • Director
      • Jonathan Hensleigh
    • Writers
      • Jonathan Hensleigh
      • Jeremy Walters
      • Rick Porrello
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews120

    7.053.3K
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    Featured reviews

    DanLives1980

    True story of famous '70's Cleveland based Irish mobster Danny Greene

    I've been pretty excited about getting my hands on this film for some time now without knowing very much about it. But watch the trailer and if you're a fan of your 'Goodfellas,' 'Donnie Brasco's and 'Casino's then you'll probably relate.

    'Kill The Irishman' has been called the best film since 'Goodfellas' as was stated on the DVD box that came in the mail today. Now all that tells a man to begin with is that the film is the best imitation of 'Goodfellas' there's been since 'Goodfellas' was introduced to cinemas and VHS tapes. Fear not, it is actually good enough to compare to the many times already aforementioned gangster classic and what comes as a surprise is pretty much everything about the film.

    Firstly, a synopsis. Danny Greene's story - narrated by Val Kilmer (who lends some heavy support throughout the film) - tells of a tough Irishman working the grain silos at the Cleveland Docks whose rise to infamy begins when he goes to work for the mafia after a jail term for larceny makes headlines due to his muscling in on his former factory boss's business.

    Greene is an old fashioned street fighting man who will stand up to anybody and although readily willing to commit crimes to make money, he is an honest and caring man by nature and this quickly endears us to the complex character so easily portrayed by Irish-born up and coming actor Ray Stevenson. I say up and coming but if you're British you'll already know him for television and minor film roles. If you're American you may know him for 'King Arthur', 'Outpost', 'Book of Eli' and 'Punisher: War Zone'.

    As events unfold and just as Greene became unhappy with his factory boss, he sees the mafia acting unfairly, abusively and little involved. He declares that he will go into business for himself, meaning that he will inevitably have to declare war on the Italian mafia.

    Naturally, what follows is the titular plot; the mafia attempting and failing over the duration of many years to hit the unflappable Irishman as he goes to great lengths to rub it in their faces and get revenge where necessary.

    The film, based mostly in Cleveland throughout post-war '70's America, looks and feels authentic but it is the strong, earthy Irish charm that sets it apart from all those old classic I-tallian-American gangster films and a style of film-making that sometimes takes you back even as far as the forties for its occasionally rich film-noir texture.

    What I find amazing because this is actually no huge Hollywood film is that 'Kill The Irishman' boasts a hugely classic cast including Val Kilmer (Heat), Christopher Walken (explanation???), Vincent D'Onofrio (Law & Order), Paul Sorvino (Goodfellas) and Robert Davi (Die Hard and The Goonies) to name a few. They're all very admirably cast in familiar roles, some unfamiliar which works in favour of plot tiwsts, and help to endear us towards a film that is actually very down to earth and sometimes even hilarious for a such a darkly toned crime drama.

    What surprised me the most is the link I made earlier on as I looked over the cast and crew of the film. Ray Stevenson (the last man to portray killer ex-military vigilante Frank Castle AKA The Punisher) being directed as the film's lead by Jonathan Hensleigh, director of the 2004 Thomas Jane version of The Punisher. And the team works brilliantly. Hensleigh who I associated with slow and simplistic storytelling since the latter has really thrown a curveball with this one and I can't help but wonder; what if Hensleigh had directed Stevenson as the Punisher instead, what kind of comic crime caper would we have gotten then? Kill The Irishman boasts some hilariously offensive dialogue that cannot be mistaken for anything but Irish, the film to me at first glance was authentic and quite realistic and I recommend it to everyone with a fully functioning brain and heart. 'Kill The Irishman' is one of the best dramas on offer at this moment!
    9NemedyNM

    Very underrated.

    I'm not often writing critics on IMDb, but when i checked the page of this movie I was really surprised that there were so few reviews.

    I must confess that I haven't heard anything about this movie before I read that there will be free theater screenings of "Kill the Irishman" in my hometown. As far as i know, the film also had a very limited theater release in the USA, which is a sad thing because this movie was surprisingly good and well-crafted and was one of the best films I've seen in the last months.

    The film tells the true story of Danny Greene, a tough irish gangster - and let me tell you, it is definitely a story worth telling.

    I guess many of you are informed about the story of Danny Greene, so i won't go further into the story.

    The movie features an impressive cast including Ray Stevenson, Val Kilmer, Christopher Walken and many other familiar faces known from other mob movies. Ray Stevenson gives an incredibly good performance as Danny Greene and manages to keep his character really violent, but also likable. This movie could give him a career boost for bigger roles.

    The direction and the cinematography are very nice and i'm hoping this movie will enable Jonathan Hensleigh more work soon, because he's definitely a talented craftsman.

    In some reviews i read that other people complained that this movie is just a ripoff of Goodfellas. That isn't true. The movie stands well on his own, despite featuring some actors known from Goodfellas, and wasn't that also the case in Shows like The Sopranos? Why complain about that? And last but not least, it IS a true story and who grows sick of seeing good mobster movies? Definitely not me.
    6jamfitz001

    Failed Potential

    It doesn't take much research into the real story of Danny Greene and the Cleveland mob war to recognize that there was potentially a great Mobster movie waiting to be made. This film misses the mark, which is sad, because the players were there to craft something special.

    The downfall of this film is the script and the way it rushes through time and space without ever focusing enough on the characters and their relationship with each other (and in the case of Greene with society) to really get us connected into the world they inhabit. We see scene after scene that remind us of gangster movie staples. Greene beaten by Italian kids as a boy, Greene standing up to the crooked Union leadership, Greene making deals with the mafia, Greene gets a girl and they wind up married, Greene beats up bikers, Greene gets a partner out of hot water and tells him never to gamble again...and duh..he gambles again. Unfortunately, we always stay on the surface of people's motivations as these scenes fly by, we never stop and get a sense of why with the characters. And we never connect with them.

    The acting is fine, Ray Stevenson's Greene is tough and smart and world-worn, everyone else is fine but they just stay on the periphery and play stock characters who come and go for the most part.

    If the script had made a choice to either be the story through the eyes of Val Kilmer's Cleveland police detective, or the story through the eyes of Irish Danny Greene, instead of just a linear montage of standard gangster film clichés, we all could have been treated to a top-notch tale.

    The movie just proves you need a great script to make a great movie, and it didn't have one.
    7Matt_Layden

    Deserved a bigger budget

    Kill the Irishman tells the story of Danny Greene and his rise from rags to riches through the mob and their many attempts at killing him. Being of Irish decent, the aspect of this one Irish guy who kept getting on the Italian mob's nerves, it peaked my interest.

    The film has a great story to tell and I can only imagine how amazing the film would have been if they had a director like Martin Scorsese behind the camera. That's what I kept feeling while I watched this film, that it was a Scorsese wannabe. That's not exactly a bad thing, because I did enjoy the film, but I wanted to enjoy it so much more.

    There are aspects of the film that are great and if a masterful craftsman were behind the camera than I can honestly see this film being one of the best of the year. The film feels short on a lot of things, mainly the small things that would have made this film great. The relationship between him and his wife was nonexistent. The smaller characters played by Christopher Walken, Val Kilmer and Vinnie Jones deserved more screen time. There was a relationship between Stevenson and Kilmer that was interesting, as one was a cop and the other a known mobster, but the film decided not to dive any further than two scenes. I hate to throw Goodfellas into the mix, but had the story been crafted more like that film, then this could have been great.

    The story is based on true events, with some liberties of course. Some of the special effects, like the car bombings are incredibly poor. A story like this deserves a bit more attention to detail from the writer and director. It felt like they loved the story, but didn't know exactly how to tell it. Again, if they had proper backing in the budget department, then this film would have been really great. The car bombing scenes are really poorly done and this is such an integral part of the film. Some of them are actual explosions, others aren't. It's poor production values, stick with the real thing.

    Kill the Irishman is a good movie when it should be a great movie. In terms of gangster flicks, it's one of the better ones. It's nowhere near the calibre of Goodfellas or Donnie Brasco. It feels like the odd film that wants to be apart of the family. It just falls short of admittance. A good film is good film though.
    8djderka

    Irishman is iconic tour de force

    I was surprised at how this was a really well told story.

    It was made in 2011, but took place in the mid 70s. It is the story of Danny Greene an Irish mobster who would not sell out to the Italian mafia as they fought over turf in Cleveland.

    And the Director, Jonathan Hensleigh did a great job on the direction and script. Too many who knew him, Danny had a 'good' side and a bad side and it was represented in the movie. Danny served Turkeys at holidays, saved an old lady from an explosion, yet easily planted a bomb to eliminate adversaries.

    Jonathan told the story in 70's film language which has a lot of natural lighting, some hand held camera, realistic scenes, and sort of a cinema-verite feel to the movie. This made the film seem like a documentary but without the ponderous narrator and constant talking heads. Hensleigh told the story with action and character. The lighting, film stock, and camera work was reminiscent of The French Connection, a gritty 70's film.

    Ray Stevenson was almost a look alike for the real Danny Greene and added to the realism of the story.

    Even the fights were very realistic. There was no whack, thwack of a bamboo rod on leather as is typically overdone in movies. Those fights are a realism unmatched in cinema. a) they did not go on forever, with high kicks and constant up and down moments for the hero. b) sound of fist heating a chin was very real. Fights aren't an array of sound effects. c) most real fights end pretty quickly as in the movie, a few punches and the guy is down and you beat him up, he doesn't keep popping up like a whack a mole after being knocked out. Thank goodness the fights didn't go on forever with 'artsy' camera angles.

    The feel of this movie was gritty, and matched the grittiness of the story and labor (garbage and longshoreman activities) and you didn't feel the supporting cast was acting but that you were watching a mafia spy cam on their activities. See the extra features and the movie is pretty much the real story. The supporting cast of name actors had them nicely blended into the background and not upstaging the main character. Nicely done.

    I liked the incorporated newsreel footage, and forgot about all those explosions in the 70s in Cleveland. Funny how bombs are the "weapon"of choice for criminal types.

    Thank goodness Scorsese did not direct this movie as it would have been over lit and much more hyped up and with those whack fist effects and other posed scenes.

    And people died in these explosions, they didn't run ahead of them like Tom Cruise and Harrison Ford to "beat" the blast.

    If want to learn about the historic story of mobster vs. mobster in the 70s and an icon of resistance...this is the movie.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Due to budget limits and to add to the realism to the movie, the director and producers chose to use real news clips from the Cleveland area from the actual events that took place in the movie.
    • Goofs
      St. Malachi's Church in Cleveland is spelled with an 'i,' not a "y" as shown in the movie.
    • Quotes

      Reporter: This is about the fourth time someone's tried to kill you. How do you account for the fact that you survive each time?

      Danny Greene: I'm an Irish Catholic with the grace of God on my shoulder. I'm not going anywhere until he says so. You see the trailer behind me? It's where I work. See the bar at the end of the street there? Get a shot of that. I live on the top floor. Let me tell you something. If any of these maggots from the so-called Mafia wanna come after me, I'm not a hard man to find.

    • Connections
      Featured in Youngstown: Still Standing (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      I'm Gonna Keep on Loving You
      Written by Norman Whiteside, DJ Will Gill (as William Gilbert) and John Primm

      Performed by Kool Blues

      Courtesy of Numero Group

      By arrangement with Bank Robber Music

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Kill the Irishman?Powered by Alexa
    • Why wasn't Danny Aiello in this film ?
    • Soundtrack question

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 11, 2012 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Anchor Bay Films (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Maten al irlandés
    • Filming locations
      • Tiger Stadium - 2121 Trumbull Avenue, Detroit, Michigan, USA
    • Production companies
      • Anchor Bay Films
      • Code Entertainment
      • Dundee Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,188,194
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $145,430
      • Mar 13, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,188,194
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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