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Pics:68th Golden Globes: Winners
Pics:68th Golden Globes: The Red Carpet
Take a look:As It Happened
With numerous exceptions, Robert De Niro's filmography has generally been divided between early drama and late comedy. In accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement, De Niro leaned heavily on the latter.
Sunday at the Golden Globes, De Niro - never one for self-congratulation - declined to play up his iconography, and instead was happy to parody it.
Rather than tout accomplishments such as his performances in Taxi Driver or The Godfather, Part II or Goodfellas, De Niro joked that some of his less acclaimed films - Frankenstein or Jacknife or Stone - were missing from the introductory reel.
"All of them are like my children," he said of his films, using the old cliche. After a beat, he added that the exception was his children can't be remade in 3-D to increase grosses.
De Niro even guessed that the Hollywood Foreign Press Association might not have chosen him for the award had they first had the opportunity to screen his widely panned Little Fockers. Those Meet the Parents movies - along with 1999's Analyze That - revealed De Niro's comedy chops, which frequently leaned on satirizing his serious, intimidating presence.
But, of course, even if the HFPA had first seen Little Fockers, De Niro was an easy, unquestionable choice for the honor, which has previously gone to Al Pacino, Michael Douglas, Steven Spielberg and Barbra Streisand.
After all, such awards have become somewhat old hat for De Niro.
Just last year, he was on the same podium presenting Martin Scorsese with the Cecil B. DeMille Award. He joked that after 20 years making movies together, the two had spent the last decade presenting each other with awards.
Like Scorsese, the 67-year-old De Niro is still thoroughly involved in moviemaking. In 2010, the same year that celebrated the 20th anniversary of Goodfellas, De Niro starred in Little Fockers, Stone and Robert Rodriguez's Machete. Among his many projects awaiting release is an action film, The Killer Elite, a thriller, The Dark Fields, and a planned biography of the great football coach Vince Lombardi.
"I plan to be around for a long time, hopefully," De Niro said Sunday.
De Niro has become increasingly prominent behind-the-scenes, too. Aside from occasionally directing and frequently producing, the media company Tribeca Enterprises, which he co-founded, runs the Tribeca Film Festival. The company's forward-looking distribution initiative, Tribeca Film, since last year has sought to get independent films to viewers by way of video-on-demand and other platforms.
The Tribeca Film Festival - established 10 years ago to revitalize De Niro's New York neighborhood in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, World Trade Center attacks - won't be his only festival this year, either. He's set to head the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in May.
It's a remarkable arc for De Niro, who began by playing roguish, violent outsiders in classic films, and yet has established himself as a savvy insider and entrepreneur, with ventures including upscale restaurants and the luxurious Greenwich Hotel.
The New York-born De Niro studied at the Stella Adler Conservatory and Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio, a schooling that trained him in method acting. His film career began briskly, and he quickly fell in with Scorsese, beginning with 1973's Mean Streets.
It was the start of one of the most famous director-actor combos in movie history, leading to films including Raging Bull, Goodfellas, Cape Fear, The King of Comedy and New York, New York.
After Mean Streets, Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather, Part II, soon followed, for which De Niro won the first of his two Academy Awards. He again won for his performance as boxer Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull, which also accounts for his lone Golden Globe Award out of eight nominations.
De Niro's influence on many of the actors present Sunday night was widespread. Earlier in the broadcast, supporting actor winner Christian Bale, shouted his admiration of De Niro while the band played him off the stage.
Presenter Matt Damon, who co-starred in De Niro's The Good Shepherd (one of the two movies De Niro has directed) didn't even try to laud him with esteem or fawning praise, instead settling for parodying the idea of anyone being unfamiliar with him.
Damon confused De Niro's roles and credits before finally giving in with the simple, matter-of-fact introduction of "one of the greatest careers an actor has ever had."
De Niro, though, got the last laugh.
Having quickly silenced the standing ovation like an extravagant overreaction, he turned to Damon and said: "And I loved you in The Fighter."
Pics:68th Golden Globes: The Red Carpet
Take a look:As It Happened
With numerous exceptions, Robert De Niro's filmography has generally been divided between early drama and late comedy. In accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement, De Niro leaned heavily on the latter.
Sunday at the Golden Globes, De Niro - never one for self-congratulation - declined to play up his iconography, and instead was happy to parody it.
Rather than tout accomplishments such as his performances in Taxi Driver or The Godfather, Part II or Goodfellas, De Niro joked that some of his less acclaimed films - Frankenstein or Jacknife or Stone - were missing from the introductory reel.
"All of them are like my children," he said of his films, using the old cliche. After a beat, he added that the exception was his children can't be remade in 3-D to increase grosses.
De Niro even guessed that the Hollywood Foreign Press Association might not have chosen him for the award had they first had the opportunity to screen his widely panned Little Fockers. Those Meet the Parents movies - along with 1999's Analyze That - revealed De Niro's comedy chops, which frequently leaned on satirizing his serious, intimidating presence.
But, of course, even if the HFPA had first seen Little Fockers, De Niro was an easy, unquestionable choice for the honor, which has previously gone to Al Pacino, Michael Douglas, Steven Spielberg and Barbra Streisand.
After all, such awards have become somewhat old hat for De Niro.
Just last year, he was on the same podium presenting Martin Scorsese with the Cecil B. DeMille Award. He joked that after 20 years making movies together, the two had spent the last decade presenting each other with awards.
Like Scorsese, the 67-year-old De Niro is still thoroughly involved in moviemaking. In 2010, the same year that celebrated the 20th anniversary of Goodfellas, De Niro starred in Little Fockers, Stone and Robert Rodriguez's Machete. Among his many projects awaiting release is an action film, The Killer Elite, a thriller, The Dark Fields, and a planned biography of the great football coach Vince Lombardi.
"I plan to be around for a long time, hopefully," De Niro said Sunday.
De Niro has become increasingly prominent behind-the-scenes, too. Aside from occasionally directing and frequently producing, the media company Tribeca Enterprises, which he co-founded, runs the Tribeca Film Festival. The company's forward-looking distribution initiative, Tribeca Film, since last year has sought to get independent films to viewers by way of video-on-demand and other platforms.
The Tribeca Film Festival - established 10 years ago to revitalize De Niro's New York neighborhood in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, World Trade Center attacks - won't be his only festival this year, either. He's set to head the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in May.
It's a remarkable arc for De Niro, who began by playing roguish, violent outsiders in classic films, and yet has established himself as a savvy insider and entrepreneur, with ventures including upscale restaurants and the luxurious Greenwich Hotel.
The New York-born De Niro studied at the Stella Adler Conservatory and Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio, a schooling that trained him in method acting. His film career began briskly, and he quickly fell in with Scorsese, beginning with 1973's Mean Streets.
It was the start of one of the most famous director-actor combos in movie history, leading to films including Raging Bull, Goodfellas, Cape Fear, The King of Comedy and New York, New York.
After Mean Streets, Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather, Part II, soon followed, for which De Niro won the first of his two Academy Awards. He again won for his performance as boxer Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull, which also accounts for his lone Golden Globe Award out of eight nominations.
De Niro's influence on many of the actors present Sunday night was widespread. Earlier in the broadcast, supporting actor winner Christian Bale, shouted his admiration of De Niro while the band played him off the stage.
Presenter Matt Damon, who co-starred in De Niro's The Good Shepherd (one of the two movies De Niro has directed) didn't even try to laud him with esteem or fawning praise, instead settling for parodying the idea of anyone being unfamiliar with him.
Damon confused De Niro's roles and credits before finally giving in with the simple, matter-of-fact introduction of "one of the greatest careers an actor has ever had."
De Niro, though, got the last laugh.
Having quickly silenced the standing ovation like an extravagant overreaction, he turned to Damon and said: "And I loved you in The Fighter."