Robert De Niro has defended co-star Anna Paquin's small speaking role in The Irishman.
Oscar-winner Paquin stars as the daughter of De Niro's character, Frank Sheeran, a real-life mafia hitman and war veteran who worked for infamous Teamsters union leader Jimmy Hoffa and the Bufalino crime family.
Critics were quickto take to social media to express their outrage when they learned that Paquin had only seven words of dialogue and spent only ten minutes on screen, throughout the three-hour-and-29-minute epic.
Martin Scorcese's film tells the true story of Hoffa's murder, after which Paquin's character, Peggy Sheeran, finally speaks to her father.
Having finally seen The Irishman, I’ve been checking out the takes. It must take a certain mind to see that laconic, wounded, incredible Anna Paquin performance and go: “OMG, she has no lines, lol.”
When people interpret Anna Paquin's silence in The Irishman as an artistic misstep and not a scathing indictment on the type of man who raised her pic.twitter.com/0b9nfUNvWi
The takes on Anna Paquin's silence in THE IRISHMAN are so bad. For Scorsese, whose characters can't stop talking, her silence is the ultimate rebuke. She refuses to give her father a blowout -- there's no catharsis at all. There is no peace, no rest, no absolution. pic.twitter.com/r1Dr81122e
De Niro has praised Paquin's performance and contribution to the film in an interview with USA Today.
"She was very powerful and that's what it was," he said.
"Maybe in other scenes there could've been some interaction between Frank and her possibly, but that's how it was done. She's terrific and it resonates."
De Niro's comments come after Paquin herself took to Twitter to address rumours she was forced to appear in the film.
"Nope, nobody was doing any 'ordering,'" she said. "I auditioned for the privilege of joining the incredible cast of @TheIrishmanFilm and I'm incredibly proud to get to be a part of this film."
Nope, nobody was doing any “ordering”. I auditioned for the privilege of joining the incredible cast of .@TheIrishmanFilm and I’m incredibly proud to get to be a part of this film. https://t.co/yx54jE4ugy
Paquin previously responded to the outrage over her small speaking role, in an earlier interview with the MailOnline.
"I think a lot can be said without words. I think sometimes a look is worth a thousand words and the internalised judgement that [Peggy] has passed on her father is not something that she would be able to verbalise, not at that stage of her life," she said.
"She'd need 20 years of therapy to be able to explain to him why he was a problematic parent. But it was really interesting, it was a bit of a challenge but one that was incredibly exciting for me."