Box office The Departed grossed $132.4 million in the United States and Canada, and $159 million in other territories for a total gross of $291.5 million, against a production budget of $90 million. It is the latest Best Picture winner to debut atop the box office. In the following three weeks, the film grossed $19 million, $13.5 million and $9.8 million, finishing second at the box office each time before grossing $7.7 million and dropping to 5th in its fifth week.
Critical response As per the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, 91% of critics have given
The Departed a positive review, based on 285 reviews, with an average rating of 8.30/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "Featuring outstanding work from an excellent cast,
The Departed is a thoroughly engrossing gangster drama with the gritty authenticity and soupy morality we have come to expect from Martin Scorsese." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 85 out of 100, with 92% positive reviews based on 39 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on a scale of A+ to F.
Entertainment Weekly ranked it on its end-of-the-decade "Best of" list, saying, "If they're lucky, directors make one classic film in their career. Martin Scorsese has one per decade (
Taxi Driver in the '70s,
Raging Bull in the '80s,
Goodfellas in the '90s). His 2006 Irish Mafia masterpiece kept the streak alive."
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four, praising Scorsese for thematically differentiating his film from the original.
Andrew Lau, co-director of
Infernal Affairs, in an interview with Hong Kong newspaper
Apple Daily, said, "Of course I think the version I made is better, but the Hollywood version is pretty good too. [Scorsese] made the Hollywood version more attuned to American culture."
Andy Lau, one of the main actors in
Infernal Affairs, when asked how the movie compares to the original, said, "
The Departed was too long and it felt as if Hollywood had combined all three
Infernal Affairs movies together." Although Lau said the script of the remake had some "golden quotes", he also felt it had a bit too much profanity. He ultimately rated
The Departed eight out of ten and said the Hollywood remake is worth a view, although according to Lau's spokeswoman Alice Tam, he felt the combination of the two female characters into one in
The Departed was not as good as the original storyline. A few critics were disappointed in the film, including
J. Hoberman of the
Village Voice, who wrote, "
Infernal Affairs was surprisingly cool and effectively restrained for HK action, but Scorsese raises the temperature with every ultraviolent interaction. The surplus of belligerence and slur reach near-
Tarantinian levels—appropriate as he's staking a claim to QT's turf."
Top ten lists The film appeared on many critics' top-ten lists of the best films of 2006.
Carrie Rickey of
The Philadelphia Inquirer,
Joe Morgenstern of
The Wall Street Journal, Ruthe Stein of the
San Francisco Chronicle, and
Steven Rea of
The Philadelphia Inquirer named it one of the top-ten films of 2006. • 1st – Richard Roeper,
Ebert and Roeper • 1st –
Peter Travers,
Rolling Stone • 1st – Rene Rodriguez,
The Miami Herald • 1st – Scott Tobias,
The A.V. Club • 1st – Joshua Rothkopf,
Time Out New York • 1st – Philip Martin,
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette • 1st –
James Berardinelli, ReelViews • 2nd – Chris Kaltenbach,
The Baltimore Sun • 2nd – Adam Kempenaar,
Filmspotting • 2nd – Keith Phipps,
The A.V. Club • 2nd – Mike Russell,
The Oregonian • 2nd – Richard James Havis,
The Hollywood Reporter • 2nd –
Richard Schickel,
TIME • 3rd –
Frank Scheck,
The Hollywood Reporter • 4th – Glenn Kenny,
Premiere • 4th – Marc Savlov,
The Austin Chronicle • 4th – Michael Wilmington,
Chicago Tribune • 4th –
Roger Ebert,
Chicago Sun-Times • 5th –
Empire • 5th –
David Ansen,
Newsweek • 5th – Kevin Crust,
Los Angeles Times • 5th –
Lisa Schwarzbaum,
Entertainment Weekly • 5th –
Stephen Hunter,
The Washington Post • 6th – Ann Hornaday,
The Washington Post • 6th – Jack Mathews,
Daily News • 6th – Nathan Rabin,
The A.V. Club • 6th – Ty Burr,
The Boston Globe • 7th – Nathan Lee,
The Village Voice • 7th – Noel Murray,
The A.V. Club • 7th – Peter Hartlaub,
San Francisco Chronicle • 8th –
Michael Sragow,
The Baltimore Sun • 9th –
Claudia Puig,
USA Today • 9th –
Lou Lumenick,
New York Post • 9th – Desson Thomson,
The Washington Post • 9th – Michael Rechtshaffen,
The Hollywood Reporter Accolades At the
64th Golden Globe Awards on January 15, 2007,
The Departed won one award for
Best Director (
Martin Scorsese), while being nominated for five other awards including Best Picture,
Best Actor (
Leonardo DiCaprio),
Best Supporting Actor (
Jack Nicholson,
Mark Wahlberg) and
Best Screenplay (
William Monahan). At the
79th Academy Awards on February 25, 2007,
The Departed won four
Academy Awards:
Best Picture (
Graham King),
Best Director (Martin Scorsese),
Best Film Editing (
Thelma Schoonmaker), and
Best Adapted Screenplay Writing (William Monahan). Mark Wahlberg was also nominated for the
Best Supporting Actor award for his performance, but he lost to
Alan Arkin for his role in
Little Miss Sunshine. The film marked the first time Scorsese won an Oscar after five previous losses. Many felt he deserved it years earlier for prior efforts. Some felt he deserved it for his prior nominations, and the win was described as a "Lifetime Achievement Award for a lesser film". Scorsese joked he won because "this is the first movie I've done with a plot". At the
11th Satellite Awards on December 18, 2006,
The Departed won awards for
Best Ensemble, Motion Picture,
Best Motion Picture, Drama,
Best Screenplay – Adapted (William Monahan) and
Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Leonardo DiCaprio). In 2008, it was nominated for the
American Film Institute Top 10 Gangster Films list. In 2021, members of
Writers Guild of America West (WGAW) and
Writers Guild of America, East (WGAE) ranked its screenplay 30th in WGA's "101 Greatest Screenplays of the 21st Century (so far)". In 2025, the film ranked number 31 on
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century" and number 25 on the "Readers' Choice" edition of the list. ==Home media==