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Hoffa

 
Movies:

Hoffa

  • Director: Danny DeVito
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Biopic, Docudrama
  • Themes: Rise and Fall Stories, Labor Unions
  • Main Cast: Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito, Armand Assante, J.T. Walsh, John C. Reilly
  • Release Year: 1992
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 140 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The life of powerful union leader Jimmy Hoffa is the subject of this biographical drama. The focus is strongly on Hoffa's public and political life, from his early days as a labor organizer to his later conflicts with the Federal government -- and, eventually, his mysterious disappearance. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

Review

Danny DeVito tries hard to give his biopic Hoffa an epic scope, yet he just misses the mark. Starring Jack Nicholson as Jimmy Hoffa, the film traces the life, career and mysterious disappearance of the labor leader. Hoffa follows the rise of the controversial figure through his early work during the Great Depression as founder of the Teamsters Union, his later tenure as president of the Teamsters, his public fights with the Kennedys, and through the baffling mystery of his demise. The film may leave the question of what happened to Hoffa hanging, yet it dramatizes many of his most public battles --including his late '60s imprisonment and Presidential pardon by Richard Nixon--quite effectively. However, the film is brought down by a slightly convoluted narration by Bobby Ciaro (Danny DeVito), a composite character who is allegedly Hoffa's aid, and the fact that David Mamet's screenplay doesn't detail Hoffa's public life; fortunately, Nicholson's stunning performance brings depth to the movie. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Movie Guide

Cast

Frank Whaley - Young Kid; Kevin Anderson - Robert Kennedy; John Ryan - Red Bennett; Robert Prosky - Billy Flynn; Natalia Nogulich - Jo Hoffa; Nicholas Pryor - Hoffa's Attorney; Paul Guilfoyle - Ted Harmon; Karen Young - Young Woman at RTA; Cliff Gorman - Solly Stein; Kirk Palmer Anderson - Driver with Fiat; Chet Badalato - Hoffa's Driver; Tomasino Baratta - D'Allesandro's Man; Samson Barkhordarian - Official at Hall; Gerry Becker - Business Negotiator; Sean P. Bello - Party Crasher; David Calvin Berg - Committee Chairman; Angela Block - Hoffa's Daughter; Alton Bouchard - Airplane Pilot; Don Brockett - Police Captain; William Cameron - State Trooper; Anthony Cannata - Organizer; Jillian Alyse Cardillo - Granddaughter; Valentino Cimo - Assailant #1; Kevin Crowley - Reporter; Joey Dal Santo - "Joey" Boy at RTA; Bill Dalzell III - 2nd Convict; Annette de Petris - Newspaper Secretary; Joanne Deak - Woman in Penthouse; James "Ike" Eichling - Prison Guard; Robin Eurich - Reporter; Robert Feist - Bouncer; Tom Finnegan - Teamster President; Tim Gamble - Prosecutor; Louis Giambalvo - RTA Representative; Nicholas Giordano - Cop; Steven E. Goldsmith - Bailiff; Joe V. Greco - Loading Foreman; Kathy Hartsell - Dancer with Cigarette; Gary Houston - Government Agent in Bar; Jeff Howell - Senate Reporter; Anna Marie Knierim - Teamster Widow; Alex A. Kvassay - Airplane Pilot; Dinah Lynch - Barbara Hoffa; Robert Maffia - Reporter #2; John Malloy - Counterman at Roadhouse; Staci Marie Marcum - Woman in Cabin; Sherri Mazie - Reporter; Larry John Meyers - Newsman; Rudy E. Morrison - Copa Thug; Joanne Neer - Soignee Woman; Jennifer Nicholson - Nurse Nun in White; Sam Nicotero - Counterman at Laundry; Jim Ochs - Kreger Worker; Christopher Otto - Young Reporter; Philip Perlman - Maitre d'; Marty Perlov - Bartender; Shirley Prestia - Hoffa's Secretary; Joe Quasarano - Dock Worker; David Regal - Newsman; Peter J. Reinemann - Working Man; Willy Rizzo - Scialla; Allison Robinson - Ciaro's Secretary; Richard Schiff - Government Attorney; Fred Scialla - Castratore; David Sconduto - Social Club Waiter; Dave Shemo - Young Reporter; Peter Spellos - Man in Crowd; Dennis Tolkach - Airplane Pilot; Don Vargo - Driver with Pistol; Dean E. Wells - 1st Convict; Paul White - Young Driver; Steve Witting - Eliot Cookson; Dale Young - Father Doyle; Debra Zane; Johnny "Cha-Cha" Ciarcia - D'ally's Financial Adviser; Jonathan Hackett - Bladesdale; John Judd - Senate Policeman

Credit

Gary Wissner - Art Director, David Mamet - Associate Producer, Debra Zane - Casting, David Rubin - Casting, Harold Schneider - Co-producer, Deborah L. Scott - Costume Designer, Danny DeVito - Director, Lynzee Klingman - Editor, Ronald Roose - Editor, David Newman - Composer (Music Score), John Blake - Makeup, Greg Cannon - Makeup, Ve Neill - Makeup, Dustin Blauvelt - Camera Operator, Ida Random - Production Designer, Harold Schneider - Production Designer, Grace Gilroy - Production Designer, Stephen H. Burum - Cinematographer, Danny DeVito - Producer, Caldecot "Cotty" Chubb - Producer, Edward R. Pressman - Producer, Danny Aiello III - Stunts, Andy Armstrong - Stunts, Peter Bucossi - Stunts, Erik Cord - Stunts, Tanner Gill - Stunts, Edward Lynch - Stunts, Bob Terhune - Stunts, Jerry Wills - Stunts, Gary Baxley - Stunts, Eddie Braun - Stunts, Leon Delaney - Stunts, Frank Ferrara - Stunts, Jery Hewitt - Stunts, Jeff Jensen - Stunts, Steve Lambert - Stunts, Rick LeFevour - Stunts, Mike McGaughy - Stunts, Donna Evans - Stunts, Richard E. Butler - Stunts, Hank Calia - Stunts, James Fierro - Stunts, Michael M. Vendrell - Stunts, Simone Boisseree - Stunts, Robert Jauregui - Stunts, Stacy Logan - Stunts, George Fisher - Stunts, George Aguilar - Stunts, Sean Kelly - Stunts, David Mamet - Screenwriter, Richard L. Anderson - Supervising Sound Editor, Robert "Bobby Z" Zajonc - Pilot

Similar Movies

Matewan; Teamster Boss: The Jackie Presser Story; Tucker: The Man and His Dream; Joe Hill; Biography: Jimmy Hoffa - The Man Behind the Mystery; Blood Feud; The Amazing Howard Hughes; All the King's Men
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WordNet: Hoffa
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: United States labor leader who was president of the Teamsters Union; he was jailed for trying to bribe a judge and later disappeared and is assumed to have been murdered (1913-1975)
  Synonyms: Jimmy Hoffa, James Riddle Hoffa


Wikipedia: Hoffa
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Hoffa

Theatrical Release Poster
Directed by Danny DeVito
Produced by Caldecot Chubb
Danny DeVito
Edward R. Pressman
Written by David Mamet
Starring Jack Nicholson
Danny DeVito
Armand Assante
Music by David Newman
Cinematography Stephen H. Burum
Editing by Robert C. Jones
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 25, 1992
Running time 140 min.
Country United States
Language English

Hoffa is a 1992 biographical film based on the life and mysterious death of Teamsters Union leader Jimmy Hoffa. Although it chronicles Hoffa's early years in Michigan to his leadership in New York City and Washington, D.C. and his death in a Detroit suburb, almost all of the film was shot in and around Pittsburgh with the city's landmarks (such as Gateway Center in the "Idlewild Airport" police pullover scene, and the Mellon Institute depicting government buildings) serving as backdrops for the various locales in the film.

Jack Nicholson plays James R. "Jimmy" Hoffa, and Danny DeVito, who directed the movie, plays Hoffa's longtime friend Robert "Bobby" Ciaro. The Ciaro character is actually an amalgamation of several Hoffa associates over the years. The film also stars John C. Reilly, Robert Prosky, Kevin Anderson, Armand Assante, and J. T. Walsh. The screenplay is written by David Mamet. The original music score is composed by David Newman. The film is marketed with the tagline "The man who was willing to pay the price for power."

The movie has an R rating, due to violence and strong language (the expletive "fuck" is used exactly 153 times).[1]

Contents

Plot summary

Most of the story is told as a series of flashbacks, starting with Hoffa first meeting Ciaro and ending with one version of Hoffa's mysterious disappearance.

At the beginning of the movie, Ciaro is impatiently waiting in the parking lot of a diner in 1975. He then gets into the back seat of a car, where Hoffa is seated. The pair have been waiting for others to arrive for a meeting. Ciaro asks Hoffa if he wants to leave, since the time set for the meeting has long since passed. Hoffa gives Ciaro a scornful glance, indicating he prefers to wait a bit longer. The first flashback to 1935 then occurs:

A young Jimmy Hoffa gets out of his car and approaches a parked truck, inside of which driver Ciaro is taking a nap. Hoffa wakes Ciaro and insists that he give him a ride while he talks to Ciaro about the benefits of joining the Teamsters. Hoffa later gets out at a truck stop after giving Ciaro his business card, upon the back of which he had written "Give this man whatever he needs." A few days later, Ciaro reports to work to find Hoffa attempting to organize the workers. When Ciaro's boss overhears that Hoffa rode with him, Ciaro is fired. Ciaro later accosts Hoffa with a knife, but is persuaded at gunpoint by Hoffa's associate Billy Flynn not to kill Hoffa. Ciaro agrees, then joins the pair in the arson bombing of a laundry whose owner has refused to cooperate with the Teamsters. Flynn is badly burned in the explosion; later, Hoffa and Ciaro both claim to the police that Flynn was injured while trying to save the life of someone in the laundry while it was burning. Flynn dies a few moments later, and a transformed Ciaro soon becomes Hoffa's lifelong friend and business associate.

The movie shifts back to Hoffa and Ciaro waiting in the car. They talk for a few moments about the old days when the two first met. Another flashback then takes the viewer to a Teamsters strike of long ago. While the strikers are fighting with non-union workers and the police, Hoffa is taken by a pair of mobsters to meet with the local Mafia boss. Ciaro, who speaks Italian, accompanies the group. At the meeting, the first alliance between the Teamsters and the mob is formed. At this gathering, Hoffa meets the young mobster Carol ("Dally") D'Allesandro, who would become his mob ally until Hoffa's disappearance many years later.

The rest of the movie deals with the rise of Jimmy Hoffa to the Presidency of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The story examines Hoffa's illegal activities, including his use of Teamster funds to provide loans to the mob. Also included is a Congressional hearing, in which Hoffa is questioned by future Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy regarding his many suspicious union activities (many of the lines used in this hearing re-enactment were taken directly from official transcripts of the event). During the hearing, the tension between Kennedy and Hoffa is well depicted. Over time, their relations decline even further, especially after Robert Kennedy's brother John F. Kennedy is elected President and Robert becomes Attorney General. The poor relationship between the two culminates in an obscenity-laden shouting match in the Attorney General's office.

The movie continues with Hoffa's conviction and his surrender to Federal officials outside the Roman columns of what is actually the Mellon Institute in Pittsburgh. Hoffa's subsequent time in a Pennsylvania federal prison is also briefly shown. Ciaro, also convicted and imprisoned, is freed before Hoffa and immediately begins working for his boss's release. At a meeting between Ciaro and D'Allesandro, the mobster suggests that the Teamsters endorse Richard M. Nixon for President, with the idea that if Nixon wins, a friendly administration official will arrange for Hoffa's release. The movie then shows Hoffa's release, followed by his explosive anger when he learns that he is forbidden to participate in union activities for ten years. D'Allesandro suggests to Ciaro that they, and Hoffa, meet at a local diner. This brings the movie back to its beginning in the diner's parking lot.

The film ends by showing one possible explanation for Hoffa's disappearance. The book Hoffa was reading at the end of the film is The Enemy Within: The McClellan Committee's Crusade Against Jimmy Hoffa and Corrupt Labor Unions by Robert F. Kennedy.

Inaccuracies

The film's portrayal of Hoffa's demise bears little resemblance to the actual events of July 30, 1975. Rather than traveling to an isolated diner as shown in the movie, Hoffa had in fact gone to the Machus Red Fox, an upscale restaurant next to a shopping center in the Detroit, Michigan suburb of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. No mention is made in the film of mobsters "Tony Jack" and "Tony Pro", who were suspected of being involved in Hoffa's disappearance.

Critical response

Although not particularly well received among film critics, (Rotten Tomatoes Review) Hoffa earned two Oscar nominations for Cinematography and Makeup. Nicholson's performance sharply divided critics, with the actor receiving both a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor and a Razzie nomination for Worst Actor. DeVito also received a Razzie nomination for Worst Director. Ultimately, none of the nominated awards were won.

Cast

Actor Role
Jack Nicholson James R. "Jimmy" Hoffa
Danny DeVito Robert "Bobby" Ciaro
Armand Assante Carol D'Allesandro
J. T. Walsh Frank Fitzsimmons
John C. Reilly Pete Connelly
Frank Whaley Young Trucker
Kevin Anderson Robert F. Kennedy
John P. Ryan Red Bennett
Robert Prosky Billy Flynn
Natalia Nogulich Jo Hoffa
Nicholas Pryor Hoffa's Attorney
Paul Guilfoyle Ted Harmon
Karen Young Young Woman at RTA
Cliff Gorman Solly Stein

References

  1. ^ imdb.com

External links


 
 
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Jimmy Hoffa (Missing Person / Political Figure / Convict)
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