The Departed (2006)

Released: 2006-10-04 Recommended age: 17+ IMDb 8.5 IMDb Top 250 #39
The Departed

Movie details

  • Genres: Drama, Thriller, Crime
  • Director: Martin Scorsese
  • Main cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson, Mark Wahlberg, Martin Sheen
  • Country / region: Hong Kong, United States of America
  • Original language: en
  • Premiere: 2006-10-04

Story overview

The Departed is a tense crime thriller about undercover operations on both sides of the law. An undercover police officer infiltrates a powerful criminal organization while a criminal mole rises through police ranks. As both sides realize there are traitors in their midst, the situation becomes increasingly dangerous and complex. The film explores themes of loyalty, identity, and moral ambiguity in high-stakes situations.

Parent Guide

A mature crime thriller with intense violence, strong language, and complex moral themes suitable for older teens and adults.

Content breakdown

Violence & peril
Strong

Frequent graphic violence including shootings, beatings, and injuries; characters are in constant danger

Scary / disturbing
Moderate

Psychological tension and suspense throughout; themes of betrayal and deception may be unsettling

Language
Strong

Pervasive strong profanity including frequent use of extreme language

Sexual content & nudity
Mild

Brief sexual references and situations; no explicit nudity shown

Substance use
Moderate

Characters shown drinking alcohol and using drugs in social and criminal contexts

Emotional intensity
Strong

High-stakes situations create constant tension; characters face moral dilemmas and betrayal

Parent tips

This film contains intense violence including shootings, beatings, and graphic injuries that are central to the plot. Strong profanity is used frequently throughout the dialogue, and there are scenes depicting drug use and criminal activities. The psychological tension and moral complexity may be difficult for younger viewers to process.

Parents should be aware that the film's R rating reflects mature content including brutal violence, pervasive strong language, and criminal behavior. The 151-minute runtime and complex plot require sustained attention that may challenge younger viewers. The film's exploration of deception and betrayal creates a consistently tense atmosphere.

Parent chat guide

Before watching, discuss how movies can portray crime and law enforcement differently from reality. Explain that this film shows fictional characters making difficult choices in dangerous situations. During viewing, be available to answer questions about why characters behave as they do.

After watching, talk about the consequences of deception and the importance of integrity. Discuss how the characters' choices affect themselves and others. Help children process the moral dilemmas presented in the film by asking open-ended questions about what they observed.

Parent follow-up questions

  • What did you notice about how the police officers worked?
  • How did the characters show they were friends or not friends?
  • What made you feel safe or worried during the movie?
  • Why do you think the characters had to keep secrets?
  • How did the characters know who to trust?
  • What were some consequences of the characters' choices?
  • What makes someone a good leader in difficult situations?
  • How does the movie show the difference between right and wrong?
  • What pressures might make someone act against their values?
  • How does the film explore themes of identity and loyalty?
  • What commentary does the movie make about institutional corruption?
  • How do the characters' moral compromises affect their relationships and self-perception?
⚠️ Deep Film Analysis (Contains Spoilers) · Click to Expand
A rat race where everyone's identity is a costume they can't take off.

🎭 Story Kernel

The Departed is fundamentally about the corrosive nature of duplicity and the impossibility of maintaining a true self when living a lie. Every character is defined by their role—cop, criminal, informant—and their struggle isn't about good versus evil, but about the psychological disintegration that occurs when your life becomes a performance. Billy Costigan and Colin Sullivan are mirror images, both trapped in identities they didn't choose, both seeking paternal approval from flawed father figures (Costigan from Queenan, Sullivan from Costello). The film argues that in this world of institutional and criminal corruption, authenticity is a fatal liability. The driving force isn't justice or power, but the desperate, often pathetic, need to belong somewhere, to be someone real, which ultimately proves impossible for nearly everyone.

🎬 Visual Aesthetics

Scorsese employs a gritty, handheld aesthetic with a desaturated, often gray and brown color palette, mirroring the moral murkiness of Boston. The camera is restless, frequently using quick zooms and tight close-ups that trap characters in the frame, visually echoing their claustrophobic lives. Action is brutal and chaotic, devoid of glamour—the elevator shootout is a masterclass in sudden, shocking violence. Key symbolism includes the recurring rat imagery, most blatantly in the final shot, representing betrayal and the vermin-like nature of the characters' existences. The use of cross-cutting between Billy and Colin emphasizes their parallel, doomed journeys, while the Boston skyline often looms in the background as an indifferent, institutional presence.

🔍 Details & Easter Eggs

1
The film opens with Jack Nicholson's Frank Costello stating 'I don't want to be a product of my environment. I want my environment to be a product of me.' This perfectly foreshadows his ultimate failure; he becomes a product of his environment (the FBI investigation) and is killed by his own protégé, a product he created.
2
In the scene where Costello buys the microprocessors, he is reading a newspaper with the headline 'FBI's Most Wanted.' This is a subtle, ironic nod to his own status and the fact that the very institution hunting him has his mole at its heart.
3
When Billy first meets Costello's crew at the bar, the song playing is 'Gimme Shelter' by The Rolling Stones. The lyric 'rape, murder, it's just a shot away' foreshadows the pervasive violence and betrayal that will define Billy's entire undercover experience.

💡 Behind the Scenes

The film is a remake of the 2002 Hong Kong film 'Infernal Affairs.' Jack Nicholson improvised many of his most memorable lines and actions, including the infamous scene where he casually reveals a severed hand in a bag to a terrified store clerk. The Boston accents were a major focus; Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon worked extensively with dialect coaches, while Mark Wahlberg, a native Bostonian, reportedly helped keep others' accents in check. Martin Scorsese finally won his long-awaited Best Director Oscar for this film, after several previous nominations.

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