CLASSIC FILM REVIEW: THE DEPARTED (2006)
Directed by: Martin Scorsese
Produced by: Brad Pitt, Brad Grey, Graham King
Screenplay: William Monahan
Based on: Infernal Affairs (2002) by Alan Mak and Felix Chong
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Mark Wahlberg, Martin Sheen, Vera Farmiga, Ray Winstone, Anthony Anderson, Alec Baldwin etc.
Cinematography: Michael Ballhaus
**CONTAINS MASSIVE SPOILERS**

“In my day you had two choices – be a criminal or a cop! When you’ve got a gun pointed at you – what’s the difference?” Frank Costello
Oscar-winning gangster film, The Departed (2006), is a vicious, double-crossing, paranoiac remake of the equally brilliant thriller, Infernal Affairs (2002). With a cast that reeks of testosterone and star quality, the incendiary William Monahan script is ferociously directed by filmmaking genius, Martin Scorsese. The legendary director and his production team, plus the terrific ensemble cast including Ray Winstone, Vera Farmiga, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Martin Sheen and Leonardo DiCaprio, lift this story above the run-of-the-mill cops and robbers genre movie.
The Departed (2006) moves at a heady pace from the start, establishing Sullivan (Damon) and Costigan (DiCaprio) as”Staties” in the Massachusetts force. They both have deep secrets; both go deep undercover unknowingly trying to catch the other. Sullivan is a criminal masquerading as a brilliant cop in order to further gangland boss, Costello’s (Nicholson) power games. The edgy, streetwise Costigan, on the other hand, joins Costello’s gang in order to bring him down from the inside.

The film is shot and edited, as expected, with immaculate precision; crammed with unrelenting and bone-crushing thrills and violence. Thematically, it’s powerful too. Throughout, honesty and truth are obliterated by lies and death. Costigan and Sullivan are no more than pawns at the hands of a corrupt system that lets people down from a great height. This is literally the case where Martin Sheen’s Captain Queenan is concerned. His death is probably the most brutal demise of all. At times, I must admit, my head was spinning because of the twisting plot as Sullivan, in a Kafkaesque turn, ends up chasing himself as part of a serious crime investigation.
The screenplay by William Monahan is a ballsy joy, full of despicable protagonists and biting dialogue. While many of the characters are difficult to like, the plot. thrusting soundtrack, incredible performances and narrative suspense really get the heart racing. Nicholson and Wahlberg take special glee in spouting their offensive dialogue. DiCaprio too is brilliant as the paranoid cop, dragged into the mix through some screwy sense of righteousness. Lastly, Matt Damon’s portrayal of Sullivan is particularly astute, as he plays against that all-American good guy he is often cast as.

Amidst the cat-and-mouse shenanigans, merciless tragedy pervades throughout. Virtually everyone is a rat or cheating on someone as the film deconstructs the notion of loyalty. Consequently, most scenes blur the lines between good and bad, as characters attempt to out-wit and out-kill one other. By the end there is no good or bad in the traditional sense, just a bunch of wasted lives in an ultimately nihilistic pursuit of money and power. The characters exist in a rodent-infested Boston setting, distorting the distinction between truth and lies. Is there a difference? The Departed (2006), doesn’t discriminate; and there lies the truth.

Great review 🙂 I am a huge Martin Scorsese fan and The Departed is one of his many great ones 🙂 Sure, he has directed ones that I would rank higher, but this is still a ferociously entertaining gangster thriller. You are also right about how it is shot and edited. In case you are interested, I did a blog entry last year (I have since updated it) regarding my favorite Scorsese films 🙂 Here is the link below and keep up the great work as always 🙂
https://cinematiccoffee.com/2018/07/24/my-favorite-martin-scorsese-films/
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Thanks for reading John. I’ll definitely give your post a read later. Scorsese is one of my favourite directors and I can’t wait for his new film The Irishmen to be released.
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Great review! It somehow odd to see the word classic alongside The Departed, though I completely agree with this, of course. It just feels like yesterday it was 2006. The cast was just brilliant in this film, but I think that Leonardo DiCaprio injected into this movie much needed “emotion”, like he does in all the films he is in, and that was also important. Matt Damon or Mark Wahlberg especially would never have done it (alone). Over the years I have grown to appreciate The Departed’s ending more. I now think it is great.
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Hey, thanks for reading. Yes, it’s on the edge of being too contemporary for a classic reading, but I watched it again recently and just jumps out as a brilliant genre film. Scorsese probably won the Oscar for the “wrong” film here, but as I say, his and the cast rarely put a foot wrong in one of the great remakes ever!
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The Departed is indeed a classic, and horrifyingly real.
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Thanks for reading, Lara. I agree it’s a painful study of the evil and corruption of humanity.
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It is Paul. It is so real.
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