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GoodFellas
(1990)
In Martin Scorsese's crime mob-underworld classic
- a true mobster story - about three violent "wiseguys"
[Mafia slang for 'gangsters'], one of whom ultimately broke the gangster's
code of 'never ratting on your friends':
- the early scene of young Henry Hill (Christopher
Serrone as youngster) delivering a monologue as a teenaged boy
in East New York (Brooklyn) 1955 he intensely watched his glamorous
idols - the 'gangsters' who used the nearby taxi stand as their
front, across the street from his family's tenement apartment:
"As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a gangster.
To me, being a gangster was better than being President of the United
States. Even before I first wandered into the cabstand for an after-school
job, I knew I wanted to be a part of them. It was there that I knew that
I belonged. To me, it meant being somebody in a neighborhood that
was full of nobodies"
- the sequence of young Henry's grooming to become a
'goodfella' gangster - he loved the respect and notoriety the gang
members received: ("People looked at me differently and they
knew I was with somebody...At thirteen, I was making more money than
most of the grown-ups in the neighborhood. I mean, I had more money
than I could spend. I had it all"); he was advised by Jimmy
'the Gent' Conway (Robert De Niro) about two strict rules - "the
two greatest things in life...Never rat on your friends and always
keep your mouth shut"
- the tense/comical scene in Sonny Bunz' (Tony Darrow)
restaurant - the Bamboo Lounge where criminals regularly congregated,
in which the loud-mouthed, volatile gangster Tommy DeVito (Joe Pesci)
pranked the laughing, wise-guy Henry Hill (Ray Liotta as adult),
by pretending to take offense and menacingly asking: "What do
you mean, I'm funny? Funny how? How'm I funny?"
Bamboo Lounge Scene:
"What do you mean, I'm funny? Funny how? How'm I funny?
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- the scene of Karen's (Lorraine Bracco) first date
with Henry at the Villa Capri restaurant when she was stood up
- she narrated, in voice-over, her impressions of her rude, insensitive
date: "I couldn't stand him. I thought he was really obnoxious.
He kept fidgeting around" - and then she confronted him face
to face out on the street with feisty distaste: "You've got
some nerve standing me up. Nobody does that to me. Who the hell
do you think you are, Frankie Vallie or some kind of big shot?" -
he became even more attracted to her: "I remember, she screaming
on the street and I mean loud, but she looked good. She had these
great eyes. Just like Liz Taylor's. At least that's what I thought"
- the long, 3-minute, unedited, Steadicam tracking
shot of an overwhelmed Karen and Henry entering the Copacabana nightclub
through the back entrance
- the scene of Henry beating a guy's face with the
butt of his gun after an unwelcome attempted rape assault toward
Karen by his neighbor Bruce (Mark Evan Jacobs) - and Karen's voice-over
turned-on response to his chivalrous, violent defense of her ("I
got to admit the truth. It turned me on") - as she also began
to lose her moral perspective and innocence
- the gory sequence (in the film's opening and later)
set in 1970 when old-time Gambino mafioso Billy Batts (Frank Vincent)
was held in the trunk of Henry's car for a trip to some Connecticut
woods; during their trip, they stopped over at Tommy's house for
a full pasta dinner at midnight - an opportunity for Tommy to request
a long butcher knife and shovel (and his mother's acceptance of his
ludicrous explanation for his bloody shirt); later, both Tommy and
Jimmy sadistically stabbed and shot Batts (multiple times)
- during a friendly card game in the basement of the
Suite, Tommy's belligerent intimidation of bar-boy and apprentice
hood Spider (Michael Imperioli) with his gun: "Ya f--kin' varmint,
Dance! Yahoo, ya motherf--ker...Round up those f--king wagons!";
he accidentally hit Spider in the foot; during the next night of
play, the short-fused wiseguy Tommy - without warning, fired six
shots into Spider's chest and killed him
- the scene in which crazed with hurt Karen, feeling
unloved by Henry's infidelities, straddled the awakening Henry with
a pistol pointed at his head - to scare him to come back to her
- in a federal prison in Lewisburg, Mafia boss overlord
Paul Cicero (Paul Sorvino) "was doing a year for contempt" -
and Henry was also serving time (ultimately four years), but both
were given respect by bribed guards and received special privileges;
the convicts prepared Italian pasta dinner meals with prime ingredients
smuggled in (garlic, "veal, beef and pork," even lobsters,
peppers, onions, salami, prosciutto, a lot of cheese, Scotch, red
and white wine, and Italian bread) - they discussed their treatment: "See,
you know when you think of prison, you get pictures in your mind
of all those old movies with rows and rows of guys behind bars...But
it wasn't like that for wiseguys. It really wasn't that bad"
- the famous montage of the murderous elimination of
other conspirators after the successful pre-dawn heist-raid at the
Lufthansa cargo terminal at Kennedy Airport, netting millions - all
accomplices involved in the heist were ordered killed to sever the
links between Jimmy and the Lufthansa robbery
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Johnny Roastbeef (John Williams) and wife (Fran
McGee) in Pink Cadillac Convertible
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Bodies of Air France Cargo worker Frenchy (Mike
Starr) and Joe Buddha (Clem Caserta) in Dumpster
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Frankie Carbone (Frank Sivero) Hanging on Meat
Hook in Truck
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- the scene of Tommy's 'induction' into the Mafia
when he dressed up to "look good" - however, he was suddenly
whacked - revenge for his earlier unauthorized killing of Billy
Batts; after being ushered into an empty room to take a blood oath
into the upper echelons of the family, the camera took his point
of view; he sensed his days were over - he was shot in the back
of the head as he spoke his last words
- the famous "drug bust" sequence (with frenetic
jump-cuts) when Henry obsessively watched the clock and narrated
a paranoid, hyperactive monologue while heavily intoxicated and coked-up
with drugs; he had many things on his mind - he had to sell guns
and ammunition, plan a drug courier trip with his kids' babysitter
Lois (Welker White), and prepare a large Italian dinner for his family
in the kitchen while being surveyed overhead by an FBI helicopter
in the space of a caption-timed 16 frantic hours; the monologue ended
when Henry was arrested by narcotics cops from the DEA when a gun
was held to his head
- the final image of Henry - now suburbanized after
being inducted into the Witness Protection Program after testifying
against his mobster family and breaking the code of honor - he
had been placed in a suburban, midwestern town in a new tract home
development, now suburbanized, homogenized, and normalized; he
appeared at his front door in a blue bathrobe and bent down to
pick up the morning paper; he realized that he would now have to
live a normal, non-gangster life: "I'm an average nobody.
I get to live the rest of my life like a schnook"
- the homage to The Great Train
Robbery (1903) - Tommy took six shots directly into the
camera (presumably at Henry); it was an image in Henry's mind
and a rhetorical flashback to his criminal life
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Henry: "I always wanted to be a gangster"
Jimmy's Advice to Young Henry Hill
Henry's First Date with Karen Who Told Him Off
Henry and Karen's Steadicam Entrance into Copacabana
Tommy Requesting a Knife at His Mother's House Before
Brutally Killing Billy Batts
Tommy's Cold-Blooded Murder of Spider
Karen Pointing a Gun at Henry's Head for Being Unfaithful
Tommy's Execution
Henry: "I'm an average nobody. I get to live the
rest of my life like a schnook"
Tommy Taking Six Shots at the Camera (and at Henry)
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