De Palma - He turns 82 this year and really could have retired when he was 70 or so with little loss:
The Black Dahlia (2006) - Not terribly well received. A lot of it doesn't work, or is just tacky, and it suffers from the miscasting bug that periodically screws up De Palma films (Bonfire Of The Vanities was very notorious for this, but Josh Hartnett, Hilary Swank and Scarlett Johansson were all kinda weak here), but some of the sequences mix effective gruesome stuff with De Palma's usual technical skill and given that he's a glorified trashmeister (I say that with affection) making a movie from a decent book written by a total dick (James Ellroy) I think this could have been quite a bit worse, actually. Watch at your own risk, though--I'm guessing you probably wouldn't like it.
Redacted (2007) - This got pretty much ignored, just like every other Second Iraq War movie that wasn't The Hurt Locker, and I think De Palma felt like giving up Oliver Stone-style after awhile. It loosely (and deliberately) remakes Casualties Of War in places and uses various POVs--social media, Youtube, shaky-cam, etc. as a way of getting with the times, but in the end it's fairly simplistic, and oh yeah, De Palma has his soldiers in Iraq waiting around for the fighting to start while reading Appointment In Samarra...uhh....yeah, right, Brian. Sure. I'm not really recommending it, it's pretty minor in his filmography.
Passion (2012, was it?) - He got Rachel McAdams and Noomi Rapace to star in this, and I didn't know until I looked up just now that it's a remake of a French movie from 2010. The reason I looked it up was because I've completely forgotten what happened in this movie--it does some sort of Vertigo thing, duh, with one female lead switching hair color to be a different person, oh, THAT old saw!!! I was basically just happy this didn't suck complete bung, but all I really remember aside from what I told you is that one review compared De Palma's technique here to an alcoholic giving up and lapsing back into his old habits, which in this case meant we get a goofy ballet split screen sequence somewhere in there. Watch if you feel like it, I won't stop you, but it's no classic. It just didn't blow.
Domino (2019) - This gets a zero because I can't think of anything good in it. It's just a crappy terrorism thriller where two cast members from Game of Thrones have to stop some psychos from blowing up a football game. The title doesn't seem to refer to anything in the movie and it was direct to video and it's like 75 minutes long and nobody cared about it and De Palma had a bad time filming it and it has his dumbest "set piece" ever, the attack on the football game. Retire, Brian. You're no Clint Eastwood!
Honestly, the last time I heard anyone say anything REALLY nice about a new BDP movie was when Ebert shamelessly handed Femme Fatale a 4 star rating.
The rest of those directors--go watch The Irishman if you like but be advised like an hour could have been cut from its latter parts IMO, with little to no loss. Most of it's good though
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