Robert De Niro and Al Pacino – David Letterman Top 10
Robert De Niro and Al Pacino tell the “Top 10 Reasons I Like Being an Actor” on the Late Show with David Letterman, including why they decided to take their roles in “RIGHTEOUS KILL”! Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Late Show with David Letterman, Top 10, Righteous Kill, movie, entertainment |
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![]() Bang The Drum Slowly starred a pre-Taxi Driver Robert De Niro as catcher Bruce Pearson (#15) who strikes up an unlikely friendship with pitcher Henry Author Wiggen. The cast wore the final flannels of the New York Yankees with the emblem changed. From ‘Bang The Drum Slowly’ Reproduction of the New York Mammoths’ home jersey Authentic white with navy pin wool flannel #15 (Bruce Pearson, played by Robert De Niro) on back Made in USA Robert De Niro 1972 New York Mammoths Home Throwback Baseball Jersey (Sizes 3XL – 5XL) from Ebbets Field Flannels |
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Righteous Kill ![]() Follows two NYC police officers as they investigate a string of murders believed to be caused by a serial killer. &… |
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Robert de Niro,Mick Hucknall,Marc Jacobs-UK Magazine 08
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Extras – Robert De Niro
Darren makes a new friend. Robert De Niro makes a surprise guest appearance in the series 2 finale of Extras |
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Songs Written by Siobhan Fahey: Stay, Cruel Summer, Hello, Young at Heart, I Heard a Rumour, Robert de Niro’s Waiting…, I Want You Back Songs Written by Siobhan Fahey: Stay, Cruel Summer, Hello, Young at Heart, I Heard a Rumour, Robert de Niro’s Waiting…, I Want You Back |
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Heat ![]() An L.A. cop (Al Pacino) becomes fixated on a deadly thief (Robert Dinero) and his crew ( Val Kilmer & Jon Voight) who are taking L… |
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Robert De Niro - Taxi Driver - SIGNED Photo - Mafia
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Once Upon a Time in America (Two-Disc Special Edition)
![]() Ten years in planning, Sergio Leone’s epic Once upon a Time in America portrays 50 years of riveting underworld history and offers rich roles to a remarkable cast. Robert De Niro and James Woods play lifelong Lower East Side pals whose wary partnership unravels in death and mystery. Strong support comes from Tuesday Weld, Joe Pesci, Jennifer Connelly, Elizabeth McGovern and the young actors playing the central characters as ghetto kids. To see this film (offered for the first time in the full version 1984 Cannes Film Festival audiences cheered) is “to be swept away by the assurance and vitality of a great director making his final statement in a medium he adored” (Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times).This movie has a checkered history, having been chopped from its original 227-minute director’s cut to 139 minutes for its U.S. release. This longer edition benefits from having the complete story (the short version has huge gaps) about turn-of-the-century Jewish immigrants in America finding their way into lives of crime, as told in flashback by an aging Jewish gangster named Noodles (Robert De Niro). On the other hand, it’s almost four hours long, and this sometimes-indulgent Sergio Leone film is no Godfather. Still, it is notable for the contrast between Leone’s elegiac take on the gangster film and his occasional explosive action, as well as for the mix of the stoic, inexpressive De Niro and the hyperactive James Woods as his lifelong friend and rival. –Marshall Fine
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Taxi Driver 1976 Robert De Niro Movie Poster Postcard 2
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Bananarama – Robert De Niro’s Waiting
Video Rating: 4 / 5 |
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Mean Streets (Special Edition) ![]() Harvey Keitel plays Charlie, working his way up the ranks of a local mob. Amy Robinson is Teresa, the girlfriend his family deems … |
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Taxi Driver Robert De Niro Jodie Foster Movie Postcard
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American Express – My Life. My Card. (Deniro)
For Tribeca Film Festival in 2004. Directed by Martin Scorsese. |
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![]() Robert De Niro: Untouchable Robert De Niro: Untouchable |
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The Mission [VHS] ![]() Roland Joffé (The Killing Fields) directs this fuzzy effort at a David Lean-like epic without David Lean’s sense of emotional pro… |
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Taxi Driver Robert De Niro Movie Postcard #1
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The Mission (Two-Disc Special Edition)
![]() Rodrigo Mendoza (ROBERT DE NIRO) was a violent soldier-for-hire in 1750s South America. Now he is a man of peace serving the Rain Forest Indians he once enslaved. But armies of Spain and Portugal threaten the lifestyle and safety of the native peoples. Now Rodrigo may have to pick up his sword and musket once again. From the producer of Chariots of Fire and the director of The Killing Fields comes a powerful epic co-starring JEREMY IRONS and graced with dazzling Academy Award-winning cinematography, set to a memorable music score and scripted by the Oscar-winning screenwriter of A Man for All Seasons and Doctor Zhivago. Roland Joffé (The Killing Fields) directs this fuzzy effort at a David Lean-like epic without David Lean’s sense of emotional proportion. Lean’s most important screenwriting collaborator, Robert Bolt, in fact wrote The Mission, which concerns a Jesuit missionary (Jeremy Irons) who establishes a church in the hostile jungles of Brazil and then finds his work threatened by greed and political forces among his superiors. Robert De Niro is briefly effective as a callous soldier who kills his own brother and then turns to Irons’s character to oversee his penance and conversion to the clergy. The narrative and dramatic forces at work in this movie should be more stirring and powerful than they are–the problem being that Joffé is too removed from them to allow us in. –Tom Keogh
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![]() Film expert Douglas Brode offers a complete, up-to-the-minute examination of Robert De Niro’s entire life and career, including such memorable movies as Copland, Cape Fear, The Deer Hunter, The Godfather Part II, and Taxi Driver. Color and b&w illustrations. The Films Of Robert De Niro |
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Taxi Driver Robert De Niro Movie Postcard #2
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Robert DeNiro imagines he’s elmo!
Here’s the original video for de niro’s appearance on sesame street.

Robert De Niro
Robert De Niro
Mean Streets (Special Edition) 
Harvey Keitel plays Charlie, working his way up the ranks of a local mob. Amy Robinson is Teresa, the girlfriend his family deems …
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Taxi Driver Robert De Niro Movie Postcard #5
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Frankenstein
Product Description
or, “The Modern Prometheus”
“Frankenstein” begins on a ship sailing north of the Arctic Circle, where the captain spots a figure traveling across the ice on a dog sled. The figure turns out to be Victor Frankenstein’s creature, and close behind is Dr. Frankenstein himself.
Invited onto the boat, the weak and ill Doctor tells the story of his alchemical studies and eventual construction of a man from inanimate matter.
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Frankenstein – @ Amazon
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Cape Fear – Robert De Niro – Movie Poster Photo Print – 8 x 10
- Movie Photo Print
- New and Unused
- Great For Framing Or As A Keepsake
- Ideal As A Gift Or Collectible
Product Description
Color Photo Print
Measures 8″ x 10″ (inches)
New and unused and will be shipped to you packed in plastic and then shipped with cardboard for maximum protection.
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Cape Fear – Robert De Niro – Movie Poster Photo Print – 8 x 10 $7.99 – @ Amazon
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The Godfather – The Coppola Restoration Giftset
Amazon.com
THE GODFATHER: Popularly viewed as one of the best American films ever made, the multi-generational crime saga The Godfather (1972) is a touchstone of cinema: one of the most widely imitated, quoted, and lampooned movies of all time. Marlon Brando and Al Pacino star as Vito Corleone and his youngest son, Michael, respectively. It is the late 1940s in New York and Corleone is, in the parlance of organized crime, a “godfather” or “don,” the head of a Mafia family. Michael, a free thinker who defied his father by enlisting in the Marines to fight in World War II, has returned a captain and a war hero. Having long ago rejected the family business, Michael shows up at the wedding of his sister, Connie (Talia Shire), with his non-Italian girlfriend, Kay (Diane Keaton), who learns for the first time about the family “business.” A few months later at Christmas time, the don barely survives being shot by gunmen in the employ of a drug-trafficking rival whose request for aid from the Corleones’ political connections was rejected. After saving his father from a second assassination attempt, Michael persuades his hotheaded eldest brother, Sonny (James Caan), and family advisors Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall) and Sal Tessio (Abe Vigoda) that he should be the one to exact revenge on the men responsible. After murdering a corrupt police captain and the drug trafficker, Michael hides out in Sicily while a gang war erupts at home. Falling in love with a local girl, Michael marries her, but she is later slain by Corleone enemies in an attempt on Michael’s life. Sonny is also butchered, having been betrayed by Connie’s husband. As Michael returns home and convinces Kay to marry him, his father recovers and makes peace with his rivals, realizing that another powerful don was pulling the strings behind the narcotics endeavor that began the gang warfare. Once Michael has been groomed as the new don, he leads the family to a new era of prosperity, then launches a campaign of murderous revenge against those who once tried to wipe out the Corleones, consolidating his family’s power and completing his own moral downfall. Nominated for 11 Academy Awards and winning for Best Picture, Best Actor (Marlon Brando), and Best Adapted Screenplay, The Godfather was followed by a pair of sequels.
THE GODFATHER PART II: This brilliant companion piece to the original The Godfather continues the saga of two generations of successive power within the Corleone family. Coppola tells two stories in Part II: the roots and rise of a young Don Vito, played with uncanny ability by Robert De Niro, and the ascension of Michael (Al Pacino) as the new Don. Reassembling many of the talents who helped make The Godfather, Coppola has produced a movie of staggering magnitude and vision, and undeniably the best sequel ever made. Robert De Niro won an Oscar®; the film received six Academy Awards, including Best Picture of 1974.
THE GODFATHER PART III: One of the greatest sagas in movie history continues! In this third film in the epic Corleone trilogy, Al Pacino reprises the role of powerful family leader Michael Corleone. Now in his 60′s, Michael is dominated by two passions: freeing his family from crime and finding a suitable successor. That successor could be fiery Vincent (Andy Garcia)… but he may also be the spark that turns Michael’s hope of business legitimacy into an inferno of mob violence. Francis Ford Coppola directs Pacino, Garcia, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire, Eli Wallach, Sofia Coppola, Joe Montegna and others in this exciting, long-awaited film that masterfully explores the themes of power, tradition, revenge and love. Seven Academy Award® nominations, including Best Picture.Amazon.com
On the DVD People used to say this was Frank Sinatra’s world, and the rest of us just lived in it. After watching the multiple special features in the box set The Godfather – Coppola Restoration, one might conclude it’s actually time for a cultural and historical revision: This is the Corleone family’s world. The rest of us better tread lightly. Actually, the point of the half-dozen or so features crammed onto a disc accompanying the beautifully restored The Godfather, The Godfather II and The Godfather III, is that The Godfather movies have penetrated popular culture in such a deep and meaningful way that they are second-nature to everything. David Chase, creator of and writer on The Sopranos, for example, describes in the featurette “Godfather World” that his hit HBO series was intended to be the story of the first generation of mobsters actually influenced by Francis Ford Coppola’s hit trilogy. Joe Mantegna calls the three films “the Italian Star Wars.” (Mantegna co-stars in The Godfather III.) Alec Baldwin says no matter what one is doing, one is compelled to stop and watch the films if they’re on television. Richard Belzer calls the films “a religion.” And so on. A number of people similarly testify in “Godfather World” to the importance and ubiquitousness of The Godfather and its sequels in American life. There’s no point in arguing, so its best to move on to the other featurettes, including “The Masterpiece That Almost Wasn’t,” reviewing in detail much of what has been said about Paramount’s mistreatment of Coppola, about casting fights (Steve McQueen as Michael?), about the studio’s assumption they were getting a quick-and-dirty B-movie, and about producer Robert Evans’ determination to keep his choice of director and unlikely actors under his wing. Fresh information within the special features, however, begins with “… When the Shooting Stopped,” a fine study of post-production on The Godfather, with several surprising and fascinating facts. Among emerging details is an explanation of why Michael Corleone’s scream toward the end of The Godfather III is silenced out. (Hint: it was meant to be the inverse of a sound effect in the first movie.) “Emulsional Rescue: Revealing The Godfather” talks about the painstaking work of restoring the first two films, beginning with a phone call from Coppola to Steven Spielberg (after the latter’s DreamWorks studio became part of the Viacom family) asking if he’d request money from Paramount for restoration work. “The Godfather On the Red Carpet is a negligible series of fawning statements about the movie from hot young actors, while “Four Short Films” are brief and enjoyable takes on different aspects of The Godfather’s impact on modern living. –Tom Keogh
Stills from The Godfather – The Coppola Restoration Giftset (Click for larger image)
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The Godfather – The Coppola Restoration Giftset $43.49 – @ Amazon
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