The Godfather: Part 3 (4/10) Movie CLIP - Joey Zasa Gets No Respect (1990) HD
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- Опубліковано 26 жов 2011
- The Godfather: Part III movie clips: j.mp/15vKJyv
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
At a meeting of the bosses, Joey Zasa (Joe Mantegna) creates an enemy in Michael (Al Pacino).
FILM DESCRIPTION:
After a break of more than 15 years, director Francis Ford Coppola and writer Mario Puzo returned to the well for this third and final story of the fictional Corleone crime family. Two decades have passed, and crime kingpin Michael Corleone (Al Pacino), now divorced from his wife Kay (Diane Keaton), has nearly succeeded in keeping his promise that his family would one day be "completely legitimate." A philanthropist devoted to public service, Michael is in the news as the recipient of a special award from the Pope for his good works, a controversial move given his checkered past. Determined to buy redemption, Michael and his lawyer B.J. (George Hamilton) are working on a complicated but legal deal to bail the Vatican out of looming financial troubles that will ultimately reap billions and put Michael on the world stage as a major financial player. However, trouble looms in several forms: The press is hostile to his intentions. Michael is in failing health and suffers a mild diabetic stroke. Stylish mob underling Joey Zaza (Joe Mantegna) is muscling into the Corleone turf. "The Commission" of Mafia families, represented by patriarch Altobello (Eli Wallach) doesn't want to let their cash cow Corleone out of the Mafia, though he has made a generous financial offer in exchange for his release from la cosa nostra. And then there's Vincent Mancini (Andy Garcia), the illegitimate and equally temperamental son of Michael's long-dead brother Sonny. Vincent desperately wants in to the family (both literally and figuratively), and at the urging of his sister Connie (Talia Shire), Michael welcomes the young man and allows him to adopt the Corleone name. However, a flirtatious attraction between Vincent and his cousin, Michael's naïve daughter Mary (Sofia Coppola) develops, and threatens to develop into a full-fledged romance and undo the godfather's future plans.
CREDITS:
TM & © Paramount (1990)
Cast: Andy Garcia, Joe Mantegna, Al Pacino, Eli Wallach
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Gray Frederickson, Fred Fuchs, Nicholas Gage, Marina Gefter, Charles Mulvehill, Fred Roos
Screenwriters: Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo
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Michael Corleone from parts 1 & 2, was really scary.
Part 3 is just Al Pacino being himself.
He's a guilt-ridden, weary old man. He isn't supposed to be scary.
He doesn't look "weary" or "guilt ridden". Al Pacino just looks like he's walking around waiting for his dry cleaning in this film.
Hooah!
Yea he turned into a typical New Yorker caricature of the 1990s.
It's Al Pacino who ruined the movie for me. When people ragged on Sofia as the main acting problem in part 3, I always came back to pacino. It was like he never played the part before. I know the story of repentance and all that, but you don't lose all of your personality and traits, and he did.
"Maybe one day he will make all you popular". Pure genius by Michael. Last thing mobster bosses want is attention. the one time it was tried with Gotti it failed miserably
He threw that in there nice.
Classic Michael line. He was so shrewd. Dude was born to be Don.
That was a very sophisticated insult: Being popular for a mobster is equal to jail time and being murdered!!!
"the one time it was tried"
it was done by many and they all fell
first Al Capone
Joe Colombo
Nicky Scarfo
Gotti etcetcetc
Colombo did it way before gotta
Imagine Pacino saying "hoo-ha...!" at the end of his speech.
Scent of the Corleone
Just when I thought I was out with UA-cam these comments pull me back in.😂
@@yuletide1281 😁
Imagine if another actor was replacing Pacino in this movie.
but she was a hooha, tony.
Zasa was unintentional comic relief 😂😂
Joey Zasa is right. No one treats him with respect.
Not even a helpless toddler, on a city sight-seeing tour.
I see what you did there.
@@whitewolf6081 Steve Rogers also saw what he did there...
Can’t forget the gorilla
"Baby's Day Out is about as interesting as my taint..."
- Mr. Plinkett
Baby Bink!
I don't blame him, i never could give the guy from baby's day out respect either
Lmao !!! 😂
Ah so that's where I've seen him.
Lmao 🤣😂😂😂🤣😂😂
"Are you always this stupid? Or do you do this just to annoy me?" 😊😄😄😄
One of my favourite childhood movies lol
Honestly I don't see Michael Corleone in it only Al Pacino.
That's because you expect Michael to remain the cold blooded killer he was in part 2.
This movie was made with the intention of portraying the costs of living such a life.
It's just poor.
sevach Yeah the whole point was to show the evolution of Michael, I truly believe he was set on going 100% legitimate and cutting his ties with the underworld but the rest including Vincent couldn’t bare to see him accomplish that and their mind was stuck in their way of life so they were hell bent in holding him back regardless if he would’ve offered to bring them along
So basically Michael evolved into...Al Pacino.
@@hakshustletv that may have been the intention, but a lot of people agree that his acting was subpar in this one. I love Pacino but this was a lackluster performance.
The look Vincent gives Altobello when he calls for Joey was priceless, he knew from there something wasn't right. Vincent and Al Neri are exactly what what Micheal need during this time because his game was off while they are still gangster through and through.
True, but after what happened next Michael quickly put two and two together. The first thing he asks from Tommassino is what he thinks of Altobello. Then he sends Vincent to spy on him.
@@3hutp ''Thunder can't hurt... just harmless noise.... Ohhhhh Altobello you deceitful f..k'... Loved that scene.Pacino shouting & the rage he had when he caught on that Altobello was the true 'unseen enemy that hadn't shown his face' just yet was biblical.
Vincent still had a lot to learn here as he still had that Sonny mindset cuz he believes it to be Joey who sets it up. Michael who thinks a lot like Don Vito immediately puts it together that Don Altobello is the one.
Altobello lived like a rat, died like a rat.
@@istvantoth7431poisoned cannoli
So this is what Rossi was doing before he joined the BAU. I'm glad he turned his life around
lol
I just died laughing! This is great!
XraxkillerX Lol!!!
I see where he gets his profiling skills from. 😂😂
But before becoming Agent David Rossi he first had to work his way up as detective Will Girardi on Joan of Arcadia 🤣🤣🤣
1:46 - The look in Michaels eyes said it all. He looked very weary, like: ‘Here we go again...this is getting old...Every time I try to get out they pull me back in..”
And he was very sick with diabetes. His blood sugar must have been through the roof.
Rodney Dangerfield gets more respect than Joey Zasa.
Lol..👍👍🤣
Damn....
Ronald McDonald gets more respect than Joey Zasa.
Ahahahahaha this is epic
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
I love the dynamic between Michael Corleone who represents the old guard against drugs vs Zasa who was the era of mobsters fully embracing the drug trade
that was, in essence the underlying theme in the whole GF series of movies. One power family that was against selling drugs. Makes me think about our reality...
@@lkgstudios yeah was always the old guard vs the new generation
Unfortunately it's not that accurate. They sold drugs going way back. Smuggling heroin in olive oil cans. It's mostly just a myth they avoided it. A film embellishment. They were all selling drugs it's too much money.
@@johnshilacky2728 yeah I know that lol Joe profaci was linked to a heroin ring that smuggled heroin in fake oranges or whatever lmao it’s to much money and relatively easy since so many people want it, but for the film yeah the Corleone family was against it. But not totally since in one of the many books that came after the movie in I think the godfather returns or revenge whatever Michael actually set up a secret regime that specialized in smuggling in and selling drugs but it’s not canon technically but yeah the movies mostly show the mob against drugs but others show them fully embracing it. The real code is don’t get caught by the cops or the feds selling drugs, but long as you don’t get caught you can sell tons of it just as long as the boss gets his cut
Its a bit of a myth. The original sicilians never had an issue with drugs and were the ones shipping them in (along with corsicans)
Joey Zaza's charisma, violence and hunger for fame is based on John Gotti. His willingness to work with non-italians is based on Joe Gallo. His youth and willingness to traffic drugs is based on Joseph Colombo.
And his entire reason for being in the movie is based on Francis Ford Coppola's need to make a buck.
@@frankbenjamin4116 I'm glad he made it
He is based on criminal archetypes... Baddabing has nothing to do with entertainment
Puertoricanpapi how long did it take for you to make this up
Crazy Joe Gallo
If Michaels hair wasn't like this maybe this would of been an even better film haha
carlos medina because he’s changed over the years and realized how tough he was with age
His hair was strange..
I'm with you on this one
mikem987 his hair made him look sharp! Older cappo in style, nice suits even his glasses look sharp when he wears them
He should have worn a hat.
Just when i thought i was out of youtube to sleep these videos pulled me back me in.
Admit it. We all felt like Joey Zaza at least once in our lives.
Must have been a nano second in a dream I forgot
Maybe haha
This was an underrated performance by Pacino. He did an amazing job as an aging Don, who wanted out, yet still was an effective Don. It was also realistic of how Michael Corleone would be as he got older, as he had mellowed and he experienced a brokenness from the guilt of killing Fredo. You could see it in his eyes. His eyes alone in this movie should have won an academy award.
It was a bad film - I find it hard to watch.
Opinions and all that, but Pacino's performance is one of the things I hate most about this film. I simply don't see Michael Corleone at all. It's just Al Pacino giving his standard Al Pacino performance. He's a step away from full on "hoo-ah" mode much of the time. Sure, there are some decent individual scenes (more like moments within scenes actually), but overall I think he missed the mark by a mile. And that stupid haircut really doesn't help matters. Of course, the script really isn't much good to begin with, so perhaps to a degree he was working down to the material he was given.
@@CaptainKenway - His haircut is the same attempt at his old combed back look. Its spikey because his hair has thinned over the years and doesn't stay down as good anymore.
@@markshirley01 It had good moments, but the first two were strong films overall.
@aretak
Completely agree. Even his accent is pure pacino no trace whatsoever of michael. He still has good performances in other films after this point but he just plays pacino in them all. The difference in his performance here compared to 1 and 2 is stark.
Makes a change to see it mentioned here rather than just endless (justified) complaints about coppola's daughter. Everyone knows she was crap but usually people disregard pacino. To be honest I was even iffy over his big grief stricken scene on the steps - it was very close to inadvertantly making me laugh.
I love the subtle cues towards the end of Joey's rant as he quickly looks in the direction of Don Altobello before turning for the door as if to say 'Now it's your turn' and Vincent instantly has the 'What the hell' quizzical look on his face.He could instantly smell something was off.
Also that he told Don Corleane that he would talk go the Zasa and that they could, 'reason' together. Michael was obsessed with using the word, "resonable", to confuse the people around him into accepting his choices or doing his bidding. Don Altobello knew this and used Michaels own values against him all by appearing to be a neutral person when he really was betraying him behind his back. He just needed to get out of the room, misdirection.
When you buy the godfather trilogy you get 2 movies to watch and 1 dvd to use as a coaster.
I hear wat ur saying but I like how the story comes full circle
Just like how your parents used you as a coaster when you were in a petri dish.
@Mike Marlowe still to watch the story as a whole is amazing when u c how Michael rose and fell from grace
@@miloesalazar underrated comeback
Come on now, yes by Godfather standards it doesn't hold a candle to parts I and II, but it still isn't bad. People just want to jump the bandwagon and hate the movie.
Michael face is like I’ve took on Sollozo the 5 families hayman Roth but Zaza you make really scared 😂😂😂
It's almost as though pacino wasn't even in the first two movies. The character is played like he's never even seen them
Eli Wallach a fantastic actor.
He steals every scene he's in, no matter how short his appearance. So much talent!
I only saw this movie when it first came out and really remembered almost none of it and actually forgot Eli Wallach was in it but wow yeah he was so cool
Completely understand how you could forget this and I ❤️ 1 & 2
2:01 I love Vincent's face expression: "what the hell is going on here?"
"I make more of a bella figura. That is my nature. And it gets me shot dead in the street like a dog."
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
He never had the makings of a varsity athlete. Small hands, you see. It’s why he dropped that fly ball.
I love how Michael is now the old Don corleone and has to deal with ambitious Youngsters.
Joe Mantegna was much more convincing playing Fat Tony in the Simpsons than he was at playing a mobster in the Godfather.
They tried to base his character on John Gotti, who knows maybe they should've gone to Gotti himself and asked him to help with Mantegna's personality that would've fed the guys ego
Chucky Masciano Gotti? The movie was set years before then.
Tommy Udo he surprisingly did a great performance in the movie thinner. It's the only movie, where a mob boss shoots up a gypsy camp to get them to reverse a curse put upon his lawyer friend.
Yeah I found his performance here embarrassingly bad. Honestly it seemed like he was in an SNL skit caricaturing a mobster.
A shame too. He did an audiobook narration of the Godfather book and he was quite good.
1:23 when my friends keep roasting me
All the dislikes are from the Barzini family, Tartaglia family, Moe Greene, Solozzo, Hyman Roth, Joey Zassa , Don Altobello., Captain McCluskey, Rossato Brothers,Don Claricuzzio, Don Santadio, Archbishop Gilday, Don Ciccio, Johnny Ola, Tessio , Paul , Senator Geary, Don Fanucci, and of course the headless horse… !!
the horse xD
😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂this comment made my day
Worst mistake the mafia ever made was getting involved with drugs.
The dialogue between this one and the first 2 films are ridiculously different!
Joey zaza is straight out of baby's day out. Even as a gangster
@1:07 I hear Fat Tony from the "Simpsons"
"Chief, what's a truck?"
Same actor
That was quite a performance by Joe Mantegna. The dialogue was stellar, too. It's almost as good as a scene from Showgirls or an Ed Wood movie.
Thank you Ebert for your useless commentary 😂
@@Boygonebad And thank you for your equally useless commentary on my useless commentary.
You don't call yourself meatwad just for kicks, obviously. That's all there is packed between your ears
Pacino's acting style has changed along with his voice. You can clearly see in this movie compared to 1&2 he does that constant lip movement and his eyebrows are raised most of the time, along with his voice being rough from all the chain smoking. In GF 1&2 his resting/emotionless face and his calm piercing low tone voice made him truly frightening. Al Pacino is an amazing actor but I feel like his style of acting in later years was more comical.
He is a great actor troughout his entire career, unfortunately his supra intense roles in Heat and Scent of a Woman in the 90s turned him into some sort of caricature. Michael in Godfather 3 is a tired soul full of regrets and he plays it perfectly, but we see this Pacino and we relate him more to his later works which are not as powerful as those he gave us during the 70s.
Say hello to my chocolate blend
Scarface was the start of his transition.
@@senortittywiggles8713"chocolate blend"? What is that, some kind of gourmet coffee?
Concuerdo absolutamente contigo. Cuando vi este película por primera vez, no podía soportar la diferencia de estilo de actuación con respecto a las otras dos películas. Me parecía que,mientras en la primeras, uno veía a Michael,en esta última uno veía a Pacino. Sin embargo y a pesar de eso, después de verla muchas veces también llegó a gustarme, aunque de otra forma. Su actuación en la 1 y 2 es insuperable, sin embargo aquí se entiende que él ya cambió. Además,ese final, uf. Ese final es una de las escenas más desgarradoras que existen. Saludos.
There are so many problems with this movie. One of them is waiting for Michael Corleone to sound like Michael Coreleone.
Right
People change with age and he really wanted to change. He simply had to be ruthless when he was young, but here he was trying to get past that life. Sadly, just when he thought he was out, they pulled him back in
@@me6271 I think it was much more than just the excuse of him being a changed man. Everything about this performance just sounded alien to me. It was as if I was just watching Pacino during this film or Pacino in 90% of his other roles during this early 90s period.
When Joey left the room he was going to get his shine box.
Plot twist: Joey Zasa is an undercover agent fakes his death goes back to BAU to work as David Rossi
Hahah lol XD
Joey Zaza is the Donny Brasko of the godfather^^
😂
Who would have ever known that the cute little old adorable man was responsible for that helicopter heist? 🙈🚁💣🔫
To be honest i never knew until later in the film.
Both the old man and Joey Zasa.
The old man was in on it but it was Joey Zasa's hitmen that carried out the helicopter attack.
Zasa was like put Respek on my name
1:24 - Joey was sort of the ‘Rodney Dangerfield’ of bad gangsters in the GF series...He got no respect...😂
When the people at the party accuse me of clogging the toilet.
They always show fresh oranges in the all the Godfather movies when some one is about going to get wacked.
Salute to those guys who could actually take this joey zasa actor seriously
Sounded like a hack Shakespearen performance
Damn Tuco made it, sitting with gangsters and being a Don.
😂😂
"Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in. - Michael Corleone" - Silvio Dante
The good: Don corleone The bad: Joey Zazza The ugly: Don Tuco Pacifico Altobello
Don Altobello couldn't refuse the pastry at the opera, that's for sure....
@@cellpat7392 Haha, lol yes!
Who can refuse such an equisitely packaged cannoli?
@@SL92018mostly from a god daughter.
He's greddy, blondie pointed that
When he saw how much Connie enjoyed her bite he trusted too much
Joey Zasa is basically a supervillain. He speaks with all the subtlety of Stan Lee's Dr Doom.
“You will not give, I’ll TAKE!”
He's playing it up on purpose. Storm out in a fuss, and then let the assassins clean up after him.
"Black Lives Matter." - Joey Zasa
“klu klux klan”
Wtf that's supposed to u bih??
@@PJ-po6xyWtf you got worked up for punk?
Black farts matter
That’s hilarious 😂
For those that don’t know: The guy who plays Joey Zasa also does the voice of Fat Tony in The Simpsons.
And Rossi from Criminal Minds.
Got the trilogy after reading the book, loved the first two and the third one I was like "Look what they did to my boy"
Altabello is dangerous....very dangerous
just something off about Walach in this movie
Sergeant Sargeras I sensed that about him like I did Hyman Roth. However, Altobello never reveals his true, Cold-blooded self in this
Dude it took me song long he left the room in this scene cause he knew they were all gonna get shot up
Altabello was just a pawn for Licio Gelli.
Altobello*
Al Pacino do not acting as Michael Corleone in part3. He is just being himself.
Can’t believe that the old man speaking in the end, is the one from the movie “the good,the bad and the ugly” what a trip.
It's been awhile since I've seen this, but Pacino really sounds alot more like Frank Slade from Scent of a Woman than he does Michael Corleone from the end of Godfather II. I know several years had past, but I watch him here waiting for a Who-ah!
Tuco trying to do some reasoning. If you're gonna shoot, shoot, don't talk. Brilliant actor.
1:26 Wait until you get inside the movie Baby's day out! 😅
"I guarantee I'll kill anybody who does..."
He sounded like Fat Tony in that one
Vincent thinking it was Zaza, while Michael was silently putting it together that it was in fact Altobello, shows that Michael, even being out of his game, still thinks about everything, like his father. Vincent thinking it was Zaza was like Tom thinking it was Tattaglia. But, after all, “men can’t be careless” and, well, “it was Altobello all along”.
Could never take the Joey Zaza character seriously. The guy looks like a clown.
True, but he got the Esquire Magazine Award for the best dressed clown.
he looks like fredo
He looked about as threatening as a plate of spaghetti.
But say it to his face, one time. ONE TIME!
@@matthewtuckey hey, His Face, you look as threatening as a plate of spaghetti !
He later moved to Springfield, and set up a very successful operation there.
1:05 I just love that line.
2:01 Vincent looks like he could be related to Robert DeNiro in this scene, it’s something about the general face shape and the mannerisms. Definitely a good choice to look like part of the family. IMO Vincent was one of the few things in this movie that hit the mark spot-on. His only bad scenes are the ones that are dragged down by Michael’s daughter and their weird romance. (I do actually like the movie overall, it just doesn’t hold a candle to the other two).
As a comedy this scores high!
@lar har idk dude
Don Cuneo's last line cracked me up though^^
😂😆
The Al Pacino from Heat doing half a throwback to when he used to act
Pacino in The Irishman was the best performance anyones given since Joaquin Phoenix in The Master. IMO...
@@wesleyjohndelaney106 agree to disagree - the Irishman was a misfire IMO. They boys were too old for those roles, period. Who the hell is going to play Jimmy Hoffa when they're 80? Sorry, they should have cast Pacino and De Niro into elder type roles and gotten some younger actors to play the main characters. Have them be the backroom mafia types that were in Casino. It just looked weird.
It's like Michael Corleone became a Jewish stereotype in between movies.
All the acting was atrocious in this movie
LOLOL true
@@el34glo59 I mean Al Pacino stands out as the best but you can expect no less from him.
I wish they made a sequel to GF2, not a story of its own
@@el34glo59 Which was the fault of the director for the film's lack of direction.
I say to you all this day...that I cannot act!!!
+pjg19751 yep. this time he couldn't use david mamet's direction as an excuse.
I disagree. He nailed it
I think you've missed the point. He was playing the part of an inept mobster.
@@greedokenobi3855 I agree, but what are you reasons?
Tomas Matiev I think the acting was good.
I was always in two minds about this movie and I have finally figured out why. For me, this should never have been Godfather Part 3 but Godfather part 4. I want to see the journey Michael took from the man who callously lost everything due to his paranoia at the end of Part 2 and this man who is seen as legitimate, who is charasmatic and witty but weighed down, that we see in this film. The lack of that journey, meant I found it very difficult to connect the Michael of Part 1 & 2 with Part 3.
Is that down to Pacino's performance? In part I think but like any actor, he can only work with what he is given and this film felt less like a proper extension than it was a more shameless cash in for Copolla. It lacks the emotional depth of the first 2 films, as if the director, the writers and the actors are going through the motions, playing it scene by scene with very little connective tissue apart from constant call backs from previous characters that seemed to serve no purpose other than to try and lazily tie the movie to its predecessors.
Ultimately the failing of the film is that it lacked depth, it lacked focus from the film makers and cast, and was left too long so that the momentum of the first 2 films was lost.
As I recall a serious problem was the death of a main actor early in filming, which meant the film had to be completely rewritten at the last moment.
The movie was fine. The issue was the casting of Sofia Coppola. That was a major disaster, it completely ruined the movie because it was very distracting. However if Sofia was replaced by a real actress, it wouldn’t have been so bad and it would have just been an underrated movie. It holds up on its own compared to the previous and it has a very powerful ending.
@@essel23fly He says in the comment section to a movie scene where the daughter isn't even present. The OPs analysis hits the nail on the head: It is the way Michael is written together with Al Pacino acting out a role he hasn't seen in ages.
They say the Don is 'guilt-ridden', lost his edge - but then in this very scene he sharply attacks Zaza. The problem really lies in the writing: They didn't decide who's supposed to be the main character here: Vincent would have made sense if the film was to show the rise of a new Don. Michael would have made sense if they wanted to focus on the loneliness, isolation, if they had committed to the deconstruction of his power, this also could've worked.
Let's not forget: Vito Corleone was never the protagonist! He was a looming shadow from the beginning. A veteran, an important influence on Michael even after death - but not the protagonist - that was always Michael (as Vito points out himself in the beginning of pt.1: "Where is Michael?" The Don draws Michael into the spotlight for us).
@@JosephSchneider26 ok so by your logic the whole movie can only be analyzed only by what’s shown on this UA-cam clip? Also I really don’t agree with the rest of your opinion. The 3rd part isn’t really about Vincent because they had no intention of doing other movies about him. It was really about Michael still and his end. I was ok with the dynamics of the two. I loved how Andy Garcia had a huge performance. Of course he has so many scenes with Sofia and that completely ruined the scenes.
@Ronnie Bradley yes, what you have written is somewhat similar to how i viewed this movie. the third part never really sat too well with me and probably because the first two were so good. the third part being made nearly 20 years after the first two movies. i find your analysis spot on with the motivations and synopsis of the film and it seems that the movie is incomplete or rushed in many places. andy garcia was superb in his role as well as joe mantegna. however the movie lacked depth and without tom hagen it does not flow well. also, the introduction of sofia coppola into the movie was absolutely HORRIBLE. the other big distraction is george hamilton as the PENCIL NECKED LAWYER b j harrison.
The old man at the table was like Neil delacroce and saza was like gotti lol
Joe Mantegna was not that bad its just we are we so used to seeing him in comedic roles its hard to take him seriously.
Joey Zaza is not supposed to be a serious character^^ but more of a schmuck who thinks to high of himself, tries to plot schemes against the rest
and fails miserably 😌
I don't understand people who see Michael's change as unrealistic. People change with age and he really wanted to change. He simply had to be ruthless when he was young, but here he was trying to get past that life. Sadly, just when he thought he was out, they pulled him back in.
If anyone wants to know, the director did a reedit of this movie and it is much better! So some of you saying that Al Pacino phoned his performance in Chapter 3 might want to check it out. You just might change your mind.
What a performance by Eli Wallach. Pretends to be a bumbling old man.
Herzogian, always one of my faves going back to The Magnificent 7.
i didnt even realize it was him!!!
Wow never knew that was him. TGTBATU is one of my 5 favourite films.
he was a great actor rest in peace
Great actor, with an extremely wide range. He can do comedy, drama, thriller, family films. A sad loss to the industry
You will not give, I'll take !!
"I have been treated this day, with NO RESPECT"
Oddly enough, that's what most of us said after paying to see this movie...
I know that bits meant to sound like a cool quote but he just sounds like Yoda
Notice he goes running out the door as a ploy to get out of the room
Joey’s problem was he never had the makings of a varsity athlete
Not everyone was sitting at the table.They remember Al Capone with the bat, just in case.
Young Pacino is so unrecognizable compared to old Pacino
The God father lll is so underrated because of the original and sequel . It never received the reviews that it deserved if there wasn't the other two critics would considered this one of the Greatest Mob Movies Of All Time ..
Rodney Dangerfield: “I tell ya, life’s tough, I get no respect! (Tie shift) No respect at all! I tell ya”
02:01 man Vincent is underrated his Sonny in terms of anger but his cleverness is like Micheal. You can tell by his face something is not right.
true
it shows Micheal got old and Vincent got strength to survive in underworld
I will always love Michael Corleone
”You will not give, I will take!” ”He is my enemy”
The actor who played Vincent looks like Robert de Niro in this scene, and when his hair's puffed up he looks like James Caan. Good casting...appearance-wise.
Andy Garcia
Michael in Godfather 3 is a strategist, very smart, Vincent takes a lot after his father, uncles Fredo & Michael who Micheal trains him to take over as the Godfather.
Can we take a moment to appreciate how GORGEOUS ANDY GARCIA IS❤️
Person Panda He's beautiful ❤️🌹
No
Poor Joey, so little respect. It’s a good thing they didn’t tell him to go get his shine box.
Zaza introduces mike: say jello to my lil freng
She was in this film. Her character changed quite a bit from part II to this one. She was downright evil here, which was a nice change of pace from her getting slapped around by Carlo in part 1.
Altobello's a snake
That's what happens when you look like Biden.
I actually know what it's like to help people financially and connect them to others, than get screwed it hurts 😕 😢 I understand Joey's grievances, but than again he's in a more powerful position to make his own way
"Don Altabello you slippery fuck!"
Joe Montegna is a great actor, underrated in most of his roles.
Have you seen him in Thinner he's so bad a-- in that one!
He chose to be in dumb movies and play dumb characters
If this was real life Joey would get clipped right there
With a model Hack Wilson baseball bat
"Right when I thought I was OUT, they pulled me back."
Great scene!
hey Joe.............. Zaza!!
This was when fat Tony became the boss of Springfield
I love that Joe Mantagna did Baby's Day Out AFTER he played Joey Zasa.
I love Eli Wallac as Don Altobelli! Another sad reason why this movie should’ve been so much better than it was.