Fact-Checking 10 Moments From The Irishman


When making a movie based on real life events,
the studio often uses some poetic license to make the narrative more
compelling. This often includes leaving out key people, cramming several events
into a shorter time frame in order to keep the story moving, or flat out making
things up for the sake of making the movie more dramatic. For the Netflix movie
“The Irishman,” Martin Scorsese does a pretty good job of keeping it accurate,
although for the sake of simplicity it leaves out a few factual points. Here are
10 moments in the movie, although with whether they are true or not.

Frank
Sheeran was a WWII veteran

Sheeran served an unusually long tour in
Europe – 411 days to be exact – taking part in various battles in Sicily and
Anzio. Sheeran stated that witnessing and taking part in war crimes – including
the summary executions of German war prisoners – influenced his decision to
enter the violent world of organized crime.

“I
heard you paint houses” is an actual mob expression

When Hoffa talks on the phone with Sheeran for
the first time, he really did make this statement, although it’s not because
Sheeran had a reputation for making houses look bright and colorful. It’s
actually a reference to the blood that gets splattered all over the walls and
floor during a mafia-style murder. It also happens to be the name of the book
in which the movie is based on.

Jimmy
Hoffa was last seen at the Machus Red Fox restaurant in Detroit

Who precisely made Hoffa disappear and where
he ended up has been disputed. Some claim he was buried under Giants Stadium in
East Rutherford, New Jersey. Another says he crushed Hoffa up in a car and
subsequently sold it to Japan as scrap metal. But one thing is certain: the
last place that he was known to be alive was at the Machus Red Fox restaurant
in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Heights.

Sheeran
confesses to murdering Hoffa

It is true that Sheeran confessed to the
murder and even laid out the details regarding how it happened. On the other
hand, prior to the publication of “I Heard You Paint Houses” in 1995, he had
denied any knowledge about how Hoffa’s fate.

Sheeran
probably killed “Crazy Joe” Gallo

In 1971, Mob boss Joseph Colombo was paralized
following an assassination attempt, with the Colombo family leadership being
convinced that Gallo had ordered the hit. A year later, while having dinner at
Umberto’s Clam House in New York, Gallo was shot to death out of revenge.
Although there are varying accounts over who was responsible, Sheeran insisted that
he was the one who pulled the trigger.

Hoffa
wasn’t a fan of the Kennedys

In the movie, when Hoffa finds out that
President Kennedy has been assassinated, he pauses from eating his ice cream
before returning to finish it. In real life, it is said that he stood on a
chair and cheered the assassination. Once elected president, Kennedy had made
it a mission to bring Hoffa and his guys to justice, with the help of the
Attorney General, who just so happened to be the president’s brother Robert.
Hoffa was indeed convicted of bribery, but was subsequently pardoned by
President Nixon a few years later.

The
movie leaves out Charles Brandt’s important role

As noted, the movie is based on the book “I
Heard You Paint Houses” which was written by Charles Brandt. Brandt just so
happened to be the lawyer who successfully argued that Sheeran should be
released from prison early due to his health. Once out, Sheeran shared his life
story with Brandt, who then turned it into a book. Given this, it does seem a
bit odd that Brandt isn’t in the movie at all.

The
movie ignores that Sheeran wasn’t the only one to confess to Hoffa’s murder

The movie leaves the viewer with the
impression that Sheeran was the only person who confessed to Hoffa’s murder.
But, in fact, more than a dozen have done so, including a serial killer named
Richard Kuklinski, and mobster Jimmy Coonan.

Sheeran
really did beat up a shop owner who yelled at his daughter Peggy

According to Sheeran’s other daughter Dolores,
when Peggy was a child she accidentally knocked something over at a shop. After
the owner proceeded to berate her, Sheeran beats the man bloody, even breaking
his hands.

Sheeran
may have indeed killed Hoffa

However, the only thing the FBI has to go on is the confession itself, not any other concrete evidence. The fact that he made the claim decades after it happened wasn’t helpful. In addition, while the house where Sheeran claims Hoffa died contained blood, it wasn’t a match for Hoffa’s.

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