Are Mafia movies getting whacked by Hollywood?

While slogging through the new crime film “The Alto Knights” this week, a depressing thought came up. Has Father Time put a hit on Mafia movies?The limping genre’s best stars and directors are all in their 80s.Its New York stories, once bracing and violent, feel exhausted, like they’re contemplating a move to Boca Raton. And fans, not gung-ho for the new ones, are content to just re-watch and quote the classics. Back in the day, seismic films like Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather” in 1972 were able to masterfully bridge prestige (the Oscar for Best Picture) and mainstream taste ($250 million at the box office; $711 million when adjusted for inflation). “Knights” is projected to bomb with a nothing $3 million this weekend.

And if we somehow see it at the Academy Awards next March, that means everybody’s gone on strike again.“Knights” stars — who else? — 81-year-old Robert De Niro as both Frank Costello and Vito Genovese of the Luciano crime family (later to be known as the Genovese crime family).The actor is so identified with Mafioso parts they didn’t even bother giving him a co-star.

He actually talks to himself in scenes.The movie itself, written by “Goodfellas” (De Niro, Joe Pesci) and “Casino” (De Niro, Al Pacino) scribe Nicholas Pileggi, 92, is terrible; a not-so-greatest hits collection of mob cliches.Most gangster films these days are.The last exceptional one (and some of you might take exception to this) was 2019’s “The Irishman” starring — who else? — De Niro, Pacino and Pesci.Yet in order to plop those stalwart actors in a plot that spans decades, director Martin Scorsese, 82, had to use CGI to de-age them back to their 20s.In 1990, “Goodfellas” had a different person play young Henry Hill before the late Ray Liotta took over for the rest of the run time.

And De Niro himself starred as a spry Vito Corleone in “The Godfather Part II” after Marlon Brando was so brilliant as the older version...

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Publisher: New York Post

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