
best of mafia cinema
@TheMafiaPoint • 65,949 subscribers
Your daily dose of mob cinema. Cold looks, quiet threats, bad decisions. In collab with @bestofsopranos
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The Godfather never shows you a single victim. No women trapped into prostitution. No lives destroyed by gambling. No one ruined by theft or fraud. The only cop with real lines is corrupt. For almost three hours this lifelong criminal does nothing you can bring yourself to disapprove of. Coppola shows you the Mafia from the inside, on its own terms. The outside world just disappears. What's left is a closed world where one man is both the power and the law, and the only real sin is betraying the family. So when Vito finally falls dead among his tomato plants, an old man playing with his grandson, you don't feel like a criminal died. You feel like a giant passed
best of mafia cinema1,342,313 Aufrufe • vor 5 Tagen

I love how Sonny could’ve sent men to beat Carlo up, but he went and did it himself. A real one.
best of mafia cinema302,711 Aufrufe • vor 15 Tagen

I love how when Mo Green brought up talking to Barzini, Michael immediately changed the subject and focused on Fredo. He didn’t want Mo to realize he made a costly mistake. He sided with the enemy and conspired against the Corleone Family. Beautiful way to utilize smokescreens to throw your enemy off the scent.
best of mafia cinema341,193 Aufrufe • vor 17 Tagen

Nobody dies in this scene. Nobody negotiates anything. There's no Vito Corleone speech. And yet the Sonny and Tom Hagen argument, with Michael quietly watching from the corner, might be one of the best scenes in the entire Godfather. In just a few minutes, it shows three completely different versions of Corleone leadership sitting in the same room. Sonny is all fire. He wants revenge immediately, and every line out of his mouth already sounds halfway to war. Funny, childish, loyal, furious, impulsive, dangerous - all at once. James Caan gives you the entire character in a single scene: the love, the rage, the ego, the total inability to slow down. Tom is the opposite. Calm, controlled, almost painfully rational. Sonny insults him, pushes him, cranks up the temperature of the room, and Tom never breaks. He doesn't need to raise his voice because he understands the situation better than anyone in it. War is exactly what their enemies are hoping for. That's why Sonny's silence after Tom scolds him actually matters. He doesn't fire back. He might explode at everyone else in his life, but not at Tom. Blood or not, Tom is family. And then there's Michael. He barely says a word, and the scene still works because of him. He's the younger brother watching two forms of power collide in real time - Sonny's emotion against Tom's calculation. In that room, Michael quietly clocks why Sonny is too volatile to ever lead, and why Tom, brilliant as he is, could never fully command the family the way Vito does. That's the real genius of the scene. It's not just two brothers arguing. It's the future of the entire Corleone family being decided, quietly, before Michael even realizes he's watching it happen.
best of mafia cinema129,309 Aufrufe • vor 9 Tagen

Everyone calls Fredo the weak one. Watch that scene again. His father gets shot in the street and Fredo freezes. He fumbles his gun, drops it, ends up on the curb crying like a kid. For most people that settles it: he's useless, he's not built for this life. But that's the point. Fredo was never meant to be strong, or smart. He wasn't Sonny. He wasn't Michael. He was an ordinary man who happened to have the Godfather for a father. So when the shooting starts, he does what most of us would do. He panics. He breaks. The same softness that made him a bad gangster was the one thing the family had no room for. Michael runs the business better than any of them ever could. But the day he loses Fredo, he loses the last soft thing left in him. A family can't run on business alone. Fredo was the proof. Nobody saw it until he was gone
best of mafia cinema96,650 Aufrufe • vor 8 Tagen

There's a moment in Once Upon a Time in America (1984) that hits harder than almost anything else in the film, and nothing dramatic even happens. Noodles returns to New York after decades away, and the movie refuses to treat it like a triumphant comeback. No big entrance, no gangster swagger, no sense that time rewarded him for anything. Instead, he just looks like a ghost walking through a city that kept living without him. That's why "Yesterday" works so perfectly here. It's not just there because it's famous or nostalgic - it turns the whole scene into an open wound. Noodles is physically surrounded by the future, but emotionally he's still trapped in the past: in friendship, betrayal, guilt, and a version of himself that simply doesn't exist anymore. Leone understood something most directors miss: nostalgia isn't always warm. Sometimes it's punishment. The scene barely needs dialogue. Robert De Niro carries all of it in his face - the exhaustion, the distance, the confusion of walking through a place that's somehow familiar and completely foreign at the same time. And that's what separates Once Upon a Time in America from most gangster movies. It was never really about power. It's about what's left over after power, friendship, love, youth, and ambition have all been quietly destroyed by time. By the time "Yesterday" plays, even the title starts to feel cruel. Once upon a time, there was a boy from New York. Now there's just an old man, walking through the ruins of his own memory.
best of mafia cinema82,527 Aufrufe • vor 10 Tagen

"I'm your older brother, Mike, and I was stepped over." It might be the most devastating line in The Godfather Part II. Fredo isn't defending the betrayal there. He's showing where it came from. Fredo has always been the weak Corleone. Sonny had the temper, Michael the calculation, Tom the ledgers. Fredo got nightclubs, errands, a car to drive — work you could hand him without risk. He was managed, not trusted. So when he says "I'm smart," his voice cracks, because he already knows nobody in that room is buying it. That's what makes Cazale hard to watch. Fredo aims for anger and lands on fear. He straightens up and the chair swallows him anyway. Every gesture meant to make him bigger takes something off him. Michael doesn't rage back. Rage would have been warmer. He lets Fredo finish, and the second Fredo says something useful he stops being a brother and becomes a source — Michael goes straight to the investigation. Not the lake. Not the gunshot. This is where it ends. Fredo is asking to finally be seen. Michael stopped looking a long time ago. Which is why "You're nothing to me now" doesn't need volume. It isn't shouted. It isn't theatrical. It's a sentence, in the legal sense of the word. Fredo betrayed his brother to be treated like somebody. That's what made him nobody.
best of mafia cinema55,348 Aufrufe • vor 8 Tagen

Never try to intimidate a man who’s in the intimidation business.
best of mafia cinema90,784 Aufrufe • vor 15 Tagen

Clemenza laughed, not because the idea is funny, but because he saw the young Vito to Mike.
best of mafia cinema154,179 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

In Mario Puzo’s original novel, Apollonia was pregnant when she died. Coppola left that detail out of The Godfather (1972), and I still think it was a mistake. It would have made this scene even more tragic and Michael’s transformation much easier to understand.
best of mafia cinema91,750 Aufrufe • vor 23 Tagen