Al Pacino Explains How He Managed to Play a 39-Year-Old Mobster in Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman
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Oscar winner Al Pacino will play ex-Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa in Martin Scorsese’s long-anticipated The Irishman. In reality, though, Pacino, who is 77, will spend parts of the film playing the infamous gangster at 39, as well as at various other ages throughout his life. (This is very similar to what Brad Pitt did in David Fincher’s Oscar-winning The Curious Case of Benjamin Button in 2008.) Pacino discussed the challenges of this age transformation in an interview on The Ringer‘s Bill Simmons Podcast (as IndieWire points out).
Pacino said of the high-tech cameras and magical lighting techniques employed by Industrial Light & Magic, “I was playing Jimmy Hoffa at the age of 39, they’re doing that on a computer,” adding, “We went through all these tests and things.” Pacino explained that the camera process involved “computers mounted on the sides of cameras” that “were programmed to capture the actors at various ages, making them appear physically transformed in every frame.”
What’s truly incredible is how expensive this project, which will stream on Netflix, has become. Originally its budget was $100 million, which later increased to $125 million, but now it’s confirmed to be at $140 million. This has been a passion project for Scorsese for a long time, so he is clearly sparing no expense.