
The Alto Knights
Two of New York City's most notorious organized crime bosses vie for control of the city's streets. Once best friends, petty jealousies and a series of betrayals set them on a deadly collision course.
Directed by
Barry Levinson
Written by
Nicholas Pileggi
Studio
Warner Bros. Pictures
Genre
Biography, Crime, Drama, História
Video
1080p
Audio
English (TRUEHD 7.1)
Subtitles
English
Cast

Robert De Niro
Vito Genovese / Frank Costello

Debra Messing
Bobbie Costello

Cosmo Jarvis
Vincent Gigante

Kathrine Narducci
Anna Genovese

Michael Rispoli
Albert Anastasia

Michael Adler
Senator Tobey

Ed Amatrudo
Rudolph Halley

Joe Bacino
Joe Profaci

Anthony J. Gallo
Tommy Lucchese

Wallace Langham
Senator Estes Kefauver

Louis Mustillo
Joe Bonanno
Frank Piccirillo
Richie Boiardo

Matt Servitto
George Wolf

Robert Uricola
Tony Bender

Belmont Cameli
Frankie Boy

Carrie Lazar
LT. Trooper

James Ciccone
Carlo Gambino

Bob Glouberman
Victor Riesel

Jeffrey Grover
Judge Liebowitz
Jean Zarzour
Elsa Anastasia

Derek Polen
Politician

Abi Van Andel
Judge Peggy Cooper

Zach Meiser
Trooper Vasisko
Dennis Craig Hensley
The Majestic Doorman
Gary Chinn
Doorman
Greg Siewny
Politician

D.J. Stroud
Push Cart Vendor

Sydney Miles
Young Bobby Costello

Joseph Moreland
Juror

Antonio Cipriano
Young Vito

Brian Scolaro
Paul Castellano

Noah Bain Garret
Abe Telvi

Bryant Carroll
Local Reporter #1 Divorce
Jean Claude Leuyer
Assassin

Robert Arce
Keith Norval

Luke Stanton Eddy
Young Frank
Steven Terry Walker
Judge (Angry)
Ashton Wolf
Emcee (Copa)

J. Barrett Cooper
Doctor #2

Wynn Reichert
Doctor #1
Seve Esposito
Joe Bonano Jr.

Rich Williams
Walter Hawley

Christine McBurney
Trish Hawley
Todd Mason Covert
Edwin Barry - Defense Attorney

Mike Seely
Sheriff Crosswell
Robert Gerding
Judge

Amadeo Fusca
Lucky Luciano

Jennie Malone
Copa Nightclub Patron

Robert DiDonato
Edward Guinan

John Dinello
Joe Barbara

Bret Aaron Knower
Driver

James P. Harkins
Detective Jim Mullins

Louie Lawless
Joe the Boss
Wilson Conkwright
Busboy
Curtis Murphy
Shoe Shine Boy
Apollo Bacala
Mover
David Vegh
Warden
Tony Scott Griffith
Shoe Shine Customer
Damian Tanenbaum
Bailiff
Ed Formica
Judge Bentley Morris

Mark Tierno
Juror #1
Jen Ryan
Spectator
Michael T. Davis
Local News Reporter

Mark Axelowitz
Asst District Attorney Kamen
Carl Centofanti
Federal Agent
David Pittinger
Radio Staff
William Cross
Federal Agent
Seth Adair
Driver
Richard Doone
Juror
Shantel Routt
Bessie Smith
Brian D. Schroeder
Nightclub Patron
Frank Cervone
Shopkeeper #1
Sammy Geroulis
Driver
Mark Angel
Senate Probe Hearing
Kevin W. Shiveley
Police Officer
Andy Knode
TV Anchor
Sam Armentrout
Police Officer
Glenn Cunningham
Sgt. Ralph Salerno
Logan Moore
Politician's Wife
Jerry Pope
Bodyguard
Taylor Scott Knight
Baker
Richie Root
Photographer
Kalub James Mills
Journalist
Bill Bower
Spectator
John V. Catalano
Self - Vito Dinner Party Guest
Vincent P. Catalano
Vito (Party Guest)
James M. Daria
Copa Nightclub Patron

Andrew Philpot
Pedestrian
Todd Wallrauch
Paralegal
Jimmy Petrolla
Mob Boss
Mike Schenke
Police Officer
Joshua Innerst
Reporter #1
Charlie Powers
Senator's Aide
Shawn Peavie
Doctor
Chris Borghese
Photographer
Michael Moses
Roof Murder Victim
Corey Daria
Mover
Steve Molla
Reporter
Jerome Agean
Mob Boss (uncredited)
Melissa McDermott Currin
Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Max Daniels
Anna's Ex Husband (uncredited)
Annie Elliott
Copa Cigarette Girl (uncredited)
Ron Gorley
Copa Nightclub Patron (uncredited)
Karen Koester
Copa Nightclub Patron (uncredited)
Bobby Leigh
Man on Street (uncredited)
Nabeel Mulla
Mob Driver (uncredited)
Roger Petan
Radio Staffer #1 (uncredited)
David C. Phillippi
Courtroom Lawyer (uncredited)
Jarrod Robbins
Bartender (uncredited)
Peyton Stockdale
Joe Barbara Jr.
Richie Verito
Undercover Federal Agent (uncredited)
Reviews
Katie Walsh
More interesting in the context of Robert De Niro's filmography than it is necessarily as a standalone picture.
Christy Lemire
I don't know why this movie exists. It breathes no new new life into the mobster movie genre at all and will only serve to remind you of better movies.
Tim Cogshell
Broadly speaking, I like this as a piece of classical gangster theater.
Mark Kermode
It's solid. Seen it all before, but I kind of enjoy this gangster fare.
Jesse Hassenger
Anything that comes across like a deleted scene from Scorsese provides welcome jolts of laughter to the otherwise dry proceedings.
Bilge Ebiri
On paper, The Alto Knights feels like the kind of serious, genre-inflected drama we could use more of. But it's totally inert.
Justin Chang
Unfair as it would be to compare "The Alto Knights" to "The Irishman," some of Scorsese's mournful grandeur does cling to Levinson's film by association. In both films, it's De Niro's Frankness that keeps you watching.
Johnny Oleksinski
The plot goes nowhere glacially. Underdeveloped side characters are so far to the side, they're out of frame.
Michael O'Sullivan
The film's climax nevertheless fails to raise much of a heartbeat in this boglike slog through a momentous moment in murderous mob history.
Robert Daniels
The unimaginative rendering of "The Alto Knights" plays less like an ode to a genre than a wheezing retread.
Peter Travers
Even a double dose of the great Robert De Niro taking on the grandpa roles of feuding mob bosses Vito Genovese and Frank Costello, can't lift this gimmicky, grating, draggy attempt to join the pantheon of classic gangster cinema. It's a losing battle.
Kyle Smith
Mr. Pileggi, who co-wrote "Goodfellas" and "Casino," knows how to tell a thrilling crime story, but this script is merely a collection of gangster anecdotes and clichés.
David Fear
Take away the "De Niro Con: The Movie" bona fides, and you've got nothing but a fancy "Discovery" special. Forget about it.
Glenn Kenny
While it's inevitable that some, maybe many, viewers will find the dual role a distraction, those who hunger for De Niro in mobster mode will get more than their fill.
Jocelyn Noveck
The Alto Knights, despite its pedigree, doesn't rise anywhere near the heights of its glorious predecessors. It is, rather, an enjoyable if choppily paced look at a relationship between two men, where unfortunately we're arriving pretty late in the game.
Mick LaSalle
Levinson might secretly wonder if the bizarre casting was the right move after all. But at least he got strong performances from his lead actor, and he took a good script by Pileggi ("Goodfellas") and made a good movie out of it.
Randy Myers
"The Alto Knights" doesn't trust its own true story or its characters, resorting to filling in blanks by having De Niro's Frank jarringly speak into the camera.
Maxwell Rabb
Though clearly aimed at mob movie fans, The Alto Knights ends up recycling too many of the same familiar stories.
Odie Henderson
When we're not being fed warmed-over narration and editing tricks that remind us of the Scorsese-directed examples, we're trapped with a visibly disinterested De Niro. He barely gives one performance, let alone two.
William Bibbiani
It's not 'so bad it's good.' It's 'so bad it's bad.' It's the boring, sloppy, meandering kind of bad, not the kind that makes headlines, not the kind that gets turned into memes.