The Iceman - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "The Iceman"
The Iceman (2012)
Timing: 1:45 (105 min)
The Iceman - TMDB rating
6.521/10
981
The Iceman - Kinopoisk rating
6.604/10
18393
The Iceman - IMDB rating
6.8/10
84000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Photo Ehud Bleiberg #9458
Ehud Bleiberg
Producer

Executive Producer

Photo Boaz Davidson #3344

Boaz Davidson

Boaz Davidson
Executive Producer
Trevor Short
Executive Producer
Danny Dimbort
Executive Producer
Photo Lati Grobman #3350

Lati Grobman

Lati Grobman
Executive Producer
Photo Mark Gill #12052
Mark Gill
Executive Producer
René Besson
Executive Producer
Photo Laura Rister #87225Photo Laura Rister #87226
Laura Rister
Executive Producer

Casting

Kerry Barden
Casting
Paul Schnee
Casting

Editor

Danny Rafic
Editor

Art Direction

William Budge
Art Direction

Costume Design

Donna Zakowska
Costume Design

Stunts

Photo Mark De Alessandro #11578
Mark De Alessandro
Stunts
Photo Russell Towery #17791
Russell Towery
Stunts

Production Design

Nathan Amondson
Production Design

Set Decoration

Teresa Visinare
Set Decoration

Director of Photography

Bobby Bukowski
Director of Photography

Screenplay

Morgan Land
Screenplay

Book

Anthony Bruno
Book

Makeup Supervisor

Photo Todd Tucker #22991

Todd Tucker

Todd Tucker
Makeup Supervisor

Music

Haim Mazar
Music

Digital Intermediate

What's left behind the scenes

  • James Franco and Benicio del Toro were initially cast in the leading roles. But in the end, Franco's role went to Chris Evans, and he himself played Marty Freeman, while Ray Liotta replaced del Toro.
  • The role of Deborah Cooklinski could have gone to Maggie Gyllenhaal, but she declined due to pregnancy. Ultimately, the role went to Winona Ryder.
  • Before filming began, director Ariel Vromen shot a test scene with Michael Shannon as Richard Kuklinski and with Michael Winckott as Robert Prongay. Ultimately, the role of Richard remained with Shannon, and Chris Evans was cast instead of Winckott.
  • Although Richard Kuklinski is referred to as Polish throughout the film, his mother was the daughter of Irish immigrants from Dublin.
  • While in prison, Richard Kuklinski claimed that, along with four other men, he was responsible for the kidnapping and murder of former truck drivers' union boss Jimmy Hoffa, which took place on July 30, 1975, in a restaurant parking lot in Detroit. Their team was allegedly commissioned by Hoffa by a man named Tony Provenzano, the leader of the Genovese crime family. Kuklinski was paid $40,000 for the murder. Kuklinski said he knocked Hoffa unconscious with a club and then stabbed him in the back of the head with a hunting knife. Hoffa's body was placed in the trunk of a car, which was then crushed and sold for scrap metal to Japanese car manufacturers. The facts surfaced only after Kuklinski's death in March 2006 in a book by Philip Carlo and will likely never be confirmed.
  • Many of the cars driving down the street in 1976 only appeared after 1977. These include a Chevrolet Malibu (1978), a Chevrolet Impala taxi (1977), and a parked Oldsmobile Delta 88 station wagon (1977). The parked Ford Econoline's rectangular headlights only appeared after 1979.
  • The hospital has visual fire alarms in the corridors. Such alarms only appeared after 1990.
  • When Ice goes to shoot Marty Freeman, his gloves appear and disappear on his hands with each shot change.
  • Before filming began, director Ariel Vromen shot a test scene with Michael Shannon as Richard Kuklinski and Michael Wincott as Robert Prongay. Ultimately, Shannon retained the role of Richard, and Chris Evans replaced Wincott.
  • Although Richard Kuklinski is referred to as Polish throughout the film, his mother was the daughter of Irish immigrants from Dublin.
  • Winona Ryder deliberately familiarized herself only with the pages of the script involving her character. She believed this would better allow her to portray the main character's wife, who is completely unaware of his true activities.
  • While in prison, Richard Kuklinski claimed that, along with four other men, he was responsible for the kidnapping and murder of former Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa, which occurred on July 30, 1975, in a Detroit restaurant parking lot. Their team was allegedly commissioned by Hoffa by Tony Provenzano, the leader of the Genovese crime family. Kuklinski was paid $40,000 for the murder. Kuklinski said he knocked Hoffa unconscious with a club and then stabbed him in the back of the head with a hunting knife. Hoffa's body was placed in a car trunk, which was then crushed and sold to Japanese auto manufacturers for scrap metal. The facts surfaced only after Kuklinski's death in March 2006 in a book by Philip Carlo and will likely never be confirmed.
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