‘About My Father’ Review: De Niro in Dad Mode Again

Published: May 26, 2023

The humorist Sebastian Maniscalco first labored with Robert De Niro in Martin Scorsese’s 2019 crime drama “The Irishman.” Maniscalco performed the erratic real-life gangster Joey Gallo; De Niro’s character, Frank Sheeran, kills him within the film. Scorsese has a near-uncanny knack for successfully utilizing skilled funnymen in critical roles — Jerry Lewis in “The King of Comedy” and Don Rickles in “Casino” to quote however two — and Maniscalco acquitted himself properly in his small half.

The level we’re obliged to get to is that this: Maniscalco has now enlisted De Niro to behave in “About My Father,” a romantic comedy largely derived from the comic’s personal life. How largely? Well, Maniscalco performs a personality named Sebastian Maniscalco. He’s engaged to his best girl, Ellie (Leslie Bibb, who’s charming right here), and has lastly been invited to her very wealthy household’s Fourth of July weekend. In brief order, Sebastian’s father, Salvo, is invited too. Salvo is an Italian immigrant from Sicily who runs a magnificence salon, has a fierce work ethic, is useless low-cost and severely opinionated, and has a number of different traits that make for partaking stand-up comedy and cinematic character work.

De Niro is dependable in his comedic mode. Here, along with his hand gestures and the frequent monosyllabic exclamations of exasperation, the actor’s Salvo generally resembles a kinder, gentler model of his Jake LaMotta in “Raging Bull.” The supporting gamers David Rasche and Kim Cattrall as the long run in-laws present good comedian foils for De Niro.

Alas, in lower than an hour and a half of operating time (the director Laura Terruso does orchestrate the proceedings with a palpable sense of dispatch), the film demonstrates how shortly “amiable and inconsequential” can shift to “hackneyed and labored.” A sickly poultry improvisation gag involving a peacock falls flat, and the velocity bump to the comfortable ending is correct out of the Hallmark Movie Scriptwriter’s Handbook.

About My Father
In theaters. Rated PG-13 for language, partial nudity, improvised-poultry humor. Running time: 1 hour 29 minutes. In theaters.

Source web site: www.nytimes.com