The Departed stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, and Mark Wahlberg, with Martin Sheen, Ray Winstone, Vera Farmiga, Anthony Anderson, and Alec Baldwin in supporting roles. The film takes place in Boston.
The Departed was well received by audiences and critics alike, contributing to it bagging four Oscars that year — including Scorsese's first win for Best Director. Like the best of Scorsese's masterworks, The Departed weaves a layered story that will stick with you long after the credits roll.
It also helped that The Departed's source material, Infernal Affairs, spawned several sequels, which could provide creative inspiration for any potential Departed follow-ups. At the start of 2007, it was revealed that Warner Bros. was interested in developing not just a sequel but an entire trilogy for The Departed.
The Departed grossed $132.4 million in the United States and Canada and $159 million in other territories for a total gross of $291.5 million, against a production budget of $90 million.
He became the boss of his own mafia organization, with predominantly Irish-American members, the Costello crime family, in which French was also a leader, under Costello. He was also an FBI informant, who denounced mobsters including his men, those who "wasn't going down anyway."
Colin kills Frank Costello, to prevent his relationship with him from being discovered, since Costello is an FBI informant and when he kills him he takes credit from his colleagues.
You could as well see it as Dignam was a rat even though it's not mentioned, NOTE: there is no connection to Dignam or to anything that happens after he is putt on administrative leave, and now after all this went down, he has come to clean up the mess.
SPOILERS AHOY, obviously. At the end of "The Departed," Sullivan is killed by Dignam. The general consensus seems to be that it was a revenge kill: Dignam was mad about being fired, Queenan being killed, Sullivan being successful, etc.
He called over Costigan and revealed that he knew Billy was the rat because he knew to go to 344 Wash even though Delahunt mistakenly told him to 314 Wash.
2 Sullivan's Impotence Though treated suitably, it is implied that Matt Damon's character, Colin Sullivan, suffers from impotency. This aspect of the character is hinted at with an awkward relationship between Sullivan and his girlfriend, Madolyn (Vera Farmiga).
It wasn't her apartment it was his. She knew the baby was leos. She was going to say something about it, and also that she wanted to be with him. The envelope contained the whole truth which she gave to marky mark by instruction from leo contained in the envelope which is why mark kills him in the end.
Guys tend to make a big deal out of it. It's actually quite common." Later, when Madden tells Sullivan that she is pregnant, she doesn't reveal the identity of the father. The allusion is that the father is Billy Costigan (DiCaprio), with whom she had an affair, and not Sullivan, who is impotent.
Boston, MassachusettsDignam is a fictional police staff sergeant featured in the 2006 crime drama film The Departed, directed by Martin Scorsese....DignamNotability:Supporting characterType:Law enforcement A-HoleGender:MaleLocation:Boston, Massachusetts6 more rows
Colin SullivanColin Sullivan (played by Matt Damon) is a protégé of Irish American crime boss Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson), and he joins the state police force as a mole for Costello.
In "The Departed," Costigan was a rat to the mob because he was informing the police. Sullivan was a rat to the South Boston police, giving vital information to Costello, who was also a rat to the mob through his reports to the FBI. The literal rat is just a little joke — look ma, a rat in a story about rats!
“The Departed” scooped up four Academy Awards and countless accolades when it hit theaters in 2006. But despite the tendency of Hollywood to milk the success of its greatest films, a sequel just wasn't in the cards for the Martin Scorsese thriller — and that may be in part star Mark Wahlberg's fault.
The Departed is set in Boston. Colin Sullivan (played by Matt Damon) is a protégé of Irish American crime boss Frank Costello ( Jack Nicholson ), and he joins the state police force as a mole for Costello.
DiCaprio and Matt Damon starred as doppelgängers who live on opposite sides of the law—Billy (DiCaprio) as an undercover cop assigned the highly perilous task of penetrating…
He returns to his home, only to be ambushed and killed by Dignam. The Departed was a remake of the popular Hong Kong film Mou gaan dou (2002; Infernal Affairs ). It was the first movie for which Scorsese, one of the industry’s most respected directors, won a best director Oscar.
Upon learning of this, Sullivan kills Costello. Costigan then attempts to give up his undercover role, thus revealing himself to Sullivan, but he discovers that Sullivan was Costello’s mole. In a violent climax, Costigan is killed by a second dirty cop, and Sullivan kills that cop and walks away free.
with a double major in Spanish and in theatre arts from Ripon College. She previously worked on the Britannica Book of... The Departed, American crime film, released in 2006, that was directed by Martin Scorsese and won four Academy Awards, ...
Nicholson continued his success in comedic roles when he starred as an over-the-top psychiatrist in Anger Management (2003) and as an aging playboy who falls in love with a playwright (played by Diane Keaton) in Something’s Gotta Give (2004).
She previously worked on the Britannica Book of... See Article History. The Departed, American crime film , released in 2006, that was directed by Martin Scorsese and won four Academy Awards, including best picture. A tense action thriller with an all-star cast, it was one of Scorsese’s biggest hits at the box office.
Even a film like his 1990 masterpiece Goodfellas made just $46.8 million, a sum that put it behind long-forgotten 1990 titles like Look Who's Talking Too. Despite Scorsese being responsible for some of the greatest movies of all time, it's not surprising his works aren't regular box office smashes. With their grim tones and frequently challenging subject matter, Scorsese's works haven't always been the kind of crowdpleasers that bring in moviegoers. The Last Temptation of Christ and Silence would never become box office sensations no matter who was directing them.
Though it's been nearly 15 years since it first hit theaters, it's no surprise that a work as detailed as The Departed is still revealing new aspects about itself, from hidden visual motifs to real-life people who inspired pivotal parts of its story to the ways it hit new landmarks for Scorsese in his esteemed career.
The Departed is a movie that isn't afraid to use overt symbolism to make a point. Just look at that divisive ending shot involving a rat scurrying across a balcony. A more subtle example of symbolism in The Departed comes through a visual motif in the form of the letter X, which appears in various forms throughout the movie. These X's are always in the background and never shoved into the audience's faces. One site reports at least 15 different instances of X's emerging throughout the runtime, including X's on the windows during a death sequence for the character of Queenan and in the architecture of an airport walkway.
The 2002 film Infernal Affairs isn't the only place The Departed takes creative inspiration from. While Jack Nicholson's gangster character Frank Costello takes his name from a New York mafia boss, the character's position as a prolific crime figure in Boston, Massachusetts can't help but conjure up visions of real-life Boston crime legend Whitey Bulger. Bulger's real-life relationship to the FBI is evoked by having multiple members of the Massachusetts State Police be a part of Costello's gang. Just as Bulger kept his enemies in law enforcement close, so too does The Departed's Costello.
From his acclaimed directorial efforts to his extensive efforts in preserving old films with his Film Foundation, Martin Scorsese's positive impact on the medium of cinema is immeasurable.
The Departed is influenced by post-9/11 America. The horrors of the September 11, 2001 attacks left such a massive impact on American culture that it was inevitable that the country's filmmakers would respond to the new status quo through their work.
Bulger's real-life relationship to the FBI is evoked by having multiple members of the Massachusetts State Police be a part of Costello's gang. Just as Bulger kept his enemies in law enforcement close, so too does The Departed's Costello.
Given that Sullivan's cover was blown by Billy Costigan ( Leonardo DiCaprio) shortly beforehand, it makes sense that Dignam would be prepared to take him out of commission. He and his boss, Frank Costello ( Jack Nicholson ), may have played the Massachusetts State Police like a fiddle, but he couldn't quite get away with it.
The movie opened on October 6, 2006, and was an instant hit. Throughout its theatrical run, it grossed over $291 million and held steady at the box office all the way there. The Departed was well received by audiences and critics alike, contributing to it bagging four Oscars that year — including Scorsese's first win for Best Director. ...
By proxy, he's responsible for the deaths of both Costigan and Cpt. Queenan (Martin Sheen), prompting Dignam to go out and avenge his fallen friends.
Andrew Butler, a highly respected constutitonal law expert , left the firm to join Thorndon Chambers. Dr Butler had worked as a senior lecturer at Victoria University before joining Crown Law in 1999 and then joining Russell McVeagh in 2005.
The firm recently announced the appointment of a new CEO, Jo Avenell, to continue its ‘transformation’. *Michael Stephens is a contributing writer to LawFuel.
A senior commercial partner at Webb Henderson, Graeme Quigley has handled some of the country’s largest deals, joining the Auckland firm after leaving Russell McVeagh in early 2017 to bolster Webb Henderson’s commercial practice.