important note: during the Lufthansa Heist, Tommy took his mask off in front of the hostages and they got a good look at his face, Jimmy could have simply used Tommy for the hits to take out the rest of the crew, and then snitched on Tommy so there would be no more witnesses of the heist
That’s true I read that he removed his mask so he could wipe the sweat off his forehead. He was the only description they had. The robbery took 48 minutes so I bet they were all sweaty and nervous. Tommy may have been killed just because of that. Who knows what really happened w Tommy. Could have been Jimmy or Paulies order of the popular opinion that Johnny boy himself did the work as revenge for his friends William “billy bats” Bentvena and Ronald “Foxy” Jerothe.
In reality, Tommy was killed for various reasons... the killing of billy bats & another man, not mentioned in the movie named foxy. He also had tried to rape karen hill, who was having an affair with Vario at the time.
@@dat3rdsideboy386Wait what??? That completely contradicts shit that happens in the movie. Damn man I gotta look into this. Because Paulie was the one always telling Henry go home to his Wife and kids and always told him family first plus paulie seemed like he was the most honorable out of the crew. Damnit man thats crazy if it’s true
@@PapaLu08Alot of the facts were changed up by Henry to make himself out to be a bigger part of the game than he actually was, I hear that the real crew wasn't as chummy with Hill as the movie depicts, because of his drug habits. Also he apparently physically looked alot worse than his adult depiction in the movie.
Jimmy Burke did really cry when someone told him that Tommy got whacked, did exactly what robert de niro did in the goodfellas, breaking the telephone and the booth too, because Jimmy Burke knew Tommy since he was a teen and was very close to him, and so when heard that he got whacked he cried... this is all according to Henry Hill. There is an ex mafia member who makes videos on youtube, whose father's character was in the introduction scene, his name's Fat Andy. now i dont remember the ex mafia guy's name but he said Tommy Desimone was his best friend, and was Paulie's friend, and he even knew and liked Pete the killer like a friend too. he said Tommy got worse and worse to the point where when Tommy said him to come with him in the car, he refused and said he's busy, that's how crazy he had got...
4:47 Wise Guys actually has a couple connections to Goodfellas. 1. It was directed by Brian DePalma, Scorsese’s good friend and director of Scarface who discovered De Niro and put him in his early films, plus The Untouchables. DePalma similarly changed the title of his movie Carlito’s Way from the original novel, After Hours to avoid confusion with Scorsese’s 1985 film. 2. Both of Scorsese’s parents have cameos in the Wise Guys as party guests, of course they both appear in Goodfellas as Tommy’s mom and Vinnie, the guy who made the sauce in prison and witnessed Tommy’s murder. 3. Both Frank Vincent and Harvey Keitel have roles in Wise Guys. Frank Vincent of course plays Billy Batts in Goodfellas, also appeared in Casino, Raging Bull, and the Sopranos. He and Pesci got their start as singing comedy duo in the 70s. While Harvey Keitel was discovered by Scorsese and appeared in his early films, including Mean Streets and Taxi Driver with De Niro. He used to be with Lorraine Bracco (Karen), and helped get her the role in the film. Their daughter plays Henry’s daughter in the prison scene. He also appeared with De Niro and Pesci in Scorsese’s The Irishman.
@@Elusory Yeah I think it's a look-alike or whatever but it was supposed to be him within the context of the show of course. But it's strange because Marty went on to work with Terrance Winter if I'm not mistaken for boardwalk empire And obviously Steve buscemi was in there too for both shows
i think Henry was directly involved with Batts murder (physically, not just locking the door), the Lufthansa heist and the whacking of acquaintances like Two-Times. He says, 'but it had nothing to do with me'. Why say that? Was he not part of Jimmy and Tommy's crew? He distances himself because of the possibilities of repercussions.
That’s the thing with Scorsese crime dramas. Basically every one of them is based on a true story and all these guys are obviously going to have them being portrayed as better than they actually were. Like Henry never committing a murder, I don’t buy that. No way all these murderers would trust a guy who never ever whacked anybody. Or how in the Irishman, frank sheeran claims that he killed Jimmy Hoffa, like sure pal Edit: not saying they’re bad movies. I think they perfectly capture these guys lifestyles and what it was like and Scorsese is so skilled at making it engaging. But I don’t trust these guys accounts on the stories they’re telling Scorsese and they have influence over the film. Like Jordan belfort literally showing up at the end of the wolf of Wall Street. This man definitely probably made himself out to be better than he was, like basically claiming he only ripped off rich people.
The Batts gay thing is a non starter. A made guy isn’t going to admit that in any context around his crew or others. Turn of phrase to let his crew know that he isn’t afraid of Tommy/Thinks Tommy is a nobody.
Marie Paradox....... "All of the women were named Marie" .... There is actually a scene at a dinner gathering where one of the women is named Marie .... and I am pretty sure she is the same actress that plays Janice Rossi later in the movie.
Scorsese gives me Uncle Jun vibes with him giving the whole “he’s part of a whole generation” argument for not liking The Sopranos. That and the way he looks (i.e. Italian Larry David)
I just remembered something I heard a long time ago with regard to Tommy's death in real life, I think from the Bloodletters And Badmen youtube channel, which is a channel dedicated to cosa nostra. Allegedly, the way the Gambino Family found out that it was Tommy, a Lucchesi associate, who killed Billy Bats, a Gambino soldier, was through Paul Varrio, a Lucchesi captain (Paul Cisaro in the movie). The alleged motive was that Paulie wanted Tommy gone because he (Paulie) was sleeping with Karen Hill while her husband Henry was in prison. Tommy also tried to get with Karen and when she refused Tommy's advances, Tommy tried to rape her but was unsuccessful. She immediately told Paulie, her lover about it so in response Paulie went to the Gambinos and told them that Tommy had killed one of their guys, knowing it was an automatic death sentence for Tommy.
It's interesting how you mention the implausibility of the Goodfellas Melfi theory because we have a very similar situation with Steve Van Zandt and whether Sil is actually the main character in the show Lilyhammer. The Sopranos is referenced twice very directly from what I remember, but at one point seemingly at random another character refers to Van Zandts' character as 'Sil'. Now, this where you have to open your mind a little bit, but I'd say alternate universes within The Sopranos is very much on the table. We already know that there are very subtle supernatural elements within the show through the presence of Lyvia that AJ experiences after her death and the apparitions (Paulie's vision of the virgin Mary or, more relevantly, Pussy showing up in a mirror that one time), take that along with the fact that Melfi and Tony actively discussed the possibility of alt realities following Tony's psychedelic experience on Mescaline. Oh, and yeah, Kevin Finnerty, of course. Overall I'd say there's enough there to speculate about the theory as well as in regards to other characters besides just Melfi. That's why imo Lilyhammer is probably Sil's coma altering his awareness to reality to the point where he literally becomes a different version of himself and I think similar comparisons can be made elsewhere, too. My point is that I suppose Goodfellas and Sopranos aren't a shared universe, but perhaps two entirely distinct and yet connected all the same universes merging. Idk. I'm usually really against contrived speculation about supernatural elements in stuff that's very much not about that but Sopranos managed to do it so well that I really can't help myself
I dont get it. People getting lazy. At 13:12 while stating "...insisted on using real cash" shows an edit of a scene using prop money. You would think that when editing the video, you would make sure that what you present doesnt conflict with your premise. Take the time to find the scene (if there is one) where real currency is used!
uhh… Henry wears the Star of David because his wife, Karen is jewish. Karen’s Mother (Henry’s future In-Law) only wants Karen to marry another Jewish man, so Karen lies and says Henry is half jewish, it’s why when Karen’s mother says “Oh i heard your half jewish” he responds “Just the good half!” the star of david is to trick his in-law, not because he’s jewish. Henry hill was a catholic
Cool video, I would have put Lois's censored airline ticket near the end of the film. I still don't know why that was done since that never happens in the rest of the film. I've also wondered why we've never seen any kind of deleted scene or outtakes for this movie which I guess is common for Scorsese, I've only seen one for Casino.
yes, what a missed opportunity that was. I always wondered that myself too on the censoring of the airline ticket. Might have just been a cheap trick by Scorsese and the editing crew to evoke an extra sense of realism
I totally agree with the unreliable narrator part. The fact that all the big violent scenes, people getting beaten to d, guys talking about violent things and laughing while Hill looks on in quiet disgust. Henry is always apparently "just watching", or "just so happens to be there" when the other members of the crew do these terrible acts of violence, but never seems involves himself in the act. Making himself seem like a victim of the people around him, when he was clearly a part of it too.
I think you got the whole Bronx tale thing exactly right. The characters in Good Fellas are absolutely horrible and we should strive to NOT be them, and not give into their influence. And for all father out there, you gotta be active in your kids life; punishment is needed but so is guidance and love.
I think its a bit much to say that its unforgivable that he doesn't like "The Sopranos", it seems its more a matter of taste and that its a different mafia from the one he grew up with, I also wouldn't be surprised if its because he feels its trying too hard to be like Goodfellas (which makes sense because even Chase regrets making the first season too similar in tone to Goodfellas). And if he's afraid David Chase is eclipsing Goodfellas with The Sopranos, then he shouldn't worry anymore after Many Saints... Lol
Morrie and Jimmy isn’t quite right. Remember that Jimmy was pissed for not getting the money Morrie owed him. Morrie figured he could get back to even and then ahead, but was such a ballbreaker. Morrie probably wouldn’t have lived out to old age, but he probably could have lived longer if he had done like Henry.
Vincent and Pesci should have done one last movie together in which Vincent beats up Pesci. Then he could have gone to the big show business in the sky with the score being 2-2.
As someone who is from Ohio, its a perfect state for witness protection. Really all you have to do to blend in is be an OSU buckeyes fan and drink more than usual.
32:57 Frankie Carbon is based off of Angelo Sepe and Richard Eaton the death scene with him in a meat truck is reference to Richard Eaton death IRL he sold Jimmy some fake coke for 2.5 million dollars
That’s funny, I’ve never seen or heard about this iceberg but I did notice the Crucifix and Star of David and always saw it as Henry cared more about wearing the jewelry than he cared about what they meant in regards to religion. I mean, Henry was no moral man and any religion was superficial. Karen being Jewish to him just meant, “Oh, the wedding is going to be a little different.” 🤷♂️ And I’m speaking strictly about Henry in the movie.
I think the unplanned trilogy was Mean Streets, Italian Americans ( his documentary) and Good Fellas are the trilogy. Raging Bull is a beast of its own in my opinion
I reject the notion that someonr in an interreligous marriage is a hypocrite. There are thousands of interreligous marriages. Are they all hypocrites? I prefer to think of it as love taking precidence. Besides, neither Karen or Henry seemed religous and their necklaces were maybe just jewelry.
I feel the child grooming bit could also apply to something going on between Billy Bats and Tommy. That comment about guys like him in the can and the way Tommy reacts to the comments about "spit shining" has some very disturbing and dark implications about their past relationship
The point-shaving racket was a whole section of the book. I think it was removed because it wouldn’t have really connected with the story that much or been that entertaining, same with Henry enlisting in the army to try and leave the mob early on.
As a catholic, i used to wear 2 Star of David rings in my right hand. I am a full blown hypocrite, but don’t get me wrong, i was wearing because I thought it looked cool lol, but it is not uncommon seing catholics using the Star of David in some way, protestants too
Cop Land is an excellent film. it's one of a handful of movies that I will watch over & over again. The cast is LOADED. Sly, The Wolf Harvey (Pulp Fiction), Ray Lotta, Melfi, I'm tired of typing. It's a much watch and it's fun to watch cops try to evade the cops who investigate cops. I may watch it now for a refresh...:)
15:46 i think it was not Sonny Corleone but his father Vito Corleone. The message was conveyed through his lawyer, Mr. Tom Hagen, which the director rebuked!
There were actually other witnesses besides Jimmy and Henry at the bar when Tommy comes back to kill batts. One guy and girl leaving right when Tommy walks in
You're correct. My brain didn't work here and when I say Sonny Corleone instead of Tom Hagen 🤦🏻♂️ Thanks for pointing that out @dionysoscub. No idea why I said opening credit roll whatsoever. Deserves its own iceberg talking point
The point of that bit was to identify the first time Scorsese (not De Niro) worked with Pacino. It was intended to be Goodfellas where Pacino was asked to play Jimmy, then there was this project called Modigliani that I actually didn't touch on in the video that never came into fruition, so The Irishman was technically the first time. Separately yeah, Heat was indeed the first time De Niro and Pacino worked together
The Sopranos is nigh-inarguably the greatest italian american work in showbiz history and Marty has only publically commented on it ONCE ever and it was negative. How is it a big big (two bigs) stretch, Ryan?
@@Elusory because he only ever talked about it ONCE, it's insane to make up so much bs based on one instance and he didn't even say anything negative. That is a lie on your part. he just made a vague statement about not understanding New Jersey and the modern mafia because thats not the time and place he is from.
@@ryancialone3045 Haha ok, high effort response: Chase has gone on record numerous times stating the profound influence that Goodfellas has had on his creation, not to mention how many were brought on for Sopranos that came from Goodfellas. Imagine you are Chase, and Scorsese has only gone on public record ONCE about your creation: one of your heroes in the genre space, reducing your magnum opus accomplishment to: "I don't get it." Here you are, calling me a schizophrenic for asserting that Scorsese probably hates the show/Chase. Scorsese has gone on record to laud horror movies with monsters in them. So he must "get" that world, but not Sopranos, right? Scorsese partnered with Terrance Winter and others who worked on The Sopranos to produce/direct Boardwalk Empire. I guess that means Scorsese "gets" 1920s prohibition era Atlantic City, but not the italian mafia operating in upstate New Jersey 90s - 00s, right? To say you disagree with my assertion that he "hates" it is fine if you want to play semantics, but you seem to be asserting that he's justified in being totally disinterested and dismissive of it (if this is your position, aka that "art is subjective and he is entitled to his opinion", then you are both a Sopranos Hater and Marty Apologist. If true, thank you for unveiling your true identity) It would be like if Stan Lee (Marvel Comics) only ever made ONE comment on Batman or DC comics, saying that he "didn't get it". If you want to pretend there isn't an enormous sub-text there, then ok, you're entitled to your opinion. Not sure where calling me a scizo came from
You should’ve put Goodfellas Early script in the middle of the iceberg. The original script started during the Billy Batts Party scene. And I believe the death was more accurate. Tommy repeatedly beats him with a shovel before he’s put down, just like in real life. But this was changed to stabbing. Instead Scorsese decided to use En Media Res, only fellow screenwriters know what that is
What an excellent video. Really good points of view. I do think the scene where Jimmy is upset at Tommy being whacked was an act is a stretch, but then again maybe not. I just don't think thsts what Scorse was trying to convey. Any regard excellent thought provoking takes.
After watching this , because of some of your interpretations/opinions on this film.Makes me wonder if you actually understand this film at all.This film has many layers and it seems like you have only watched it at its surface level.
Scorsese is just player hating on Sopranos because now Goodfellas sits in the shadow of Sopranos but without Goodfellas there would be no Sopranos so he feels under-appreciated
In real life jimmy talked Tommy into killing Billy bats because when Billy went away to prison, Jimmy took over Billy‘s racket and now Billy was back, which would cost Jimmy a lot of money Billy was also a friend of John Gotti, who is rumored killed Tommy
7:35 This point is made even stronger when we consider the real-life Hill's efforts (after the film was released) to promote himself. He wasn't a reliable narrator then either. He's basically a pathological liar that blamed everyone else and ignored/minimised his own mistakes. Some of these interviews were actually pretty sad and showed a guy that was basically a living ghost. I get the feeling that the only reason he wasn't "whacked" was due to this. The mafia knew he wasn't a risk anymore, he had no knowledge that wasn't out there, and eeked out an existence by giving interviews where he repeated the same stories like a drunk at a bar.
00:26 Act 1 - Getting Made
08:06 Act 2 - No More Shines
15:56 Act 3 - Batts and Spiders
23:14 Act 4 - Closing the Books
29:22 Act 5 - Jittari i Virmiceddi
As far back as I can remember i always wanted to watch a Goodfellas iceberg video
I can hear Ray's voice speaking this comment
How do you not know what score means? Score means to successfully commit a grand larceny. Nothing more and nothing less.
Scoring is being successful at anything. Picking up a hot girl at the bar. You scored. Finding a big bag of cash in the middle of nowhere. You scored
I had no idea that the term was a source of mystery for anyone who's seen the movie.
And deal where you get over and get cash, drugs or merchandise is a score. These days I call it a lick haha
Obviously true but also in my area of the UK a score can also mean £20.
@@scottjohnstone6204 nobody cares about the UK shut up
important note: during the Lufthansa Heist, Tommy took his mask off in front of the hostages and they got a good look at his face, Jimmy could have simply used Tommy for the hits to take out the rest of the crew, and then snitched on Tommy so there would be no more witnesses of the heist
That’s true I read that he removed his mask so he could wipe the sweat off his forehead. He was the only description they had. The robbery took 48 minutes so I bet they were all sweaty and nervous. Tommy may have been killed just because of that. Who knows what really happened w Tommy. Could have been Jimmy or Paulies order of the popular opinion that Johnny boy himself did the work as revenge for his friends William “billy bats” Bentvena and Ronald “Foxy” Jerothe.
In reality, Tommy was killed for various reasons... the killing of billy bats & another man, not mentioned in the movie named foxy. He also had tried to rape karen hill, who was having an affair with Vario at the time.
@@knoname7778damn paulie was smashing Karen that’s crazy
@@dat3rdsideboy386Wait what??? That completely contradicts shit that happens in the movie. Damn man I gotta look into this. Because Paulie was the one always telling Henry go home to his Wife and kids and always told him family first plus paulie seemed like he was the most honorable out of the crew. Damnit man thats crazy if it’s true
@@PapaLu08Alot of the facts were changed up by Henry to make himself out to be a bigger part of the game than he actually was, I hear that the real crew wasn't as chummy with Hill as the movie depicts, because of his drug habits. Also he apparently physically looked alot worse than his adult depiction in the movie.
Jimmy Burke did really cry when someone told him that Tommy got whacked, did exactly what robert de niro did in the goodfellas, breaking the telephone and the booth too, because Jimmy Burke knew Tommy since he was a teen and was very close to him, and so when heard that he got whacked he cried... this is all according to Henry Hill. There is an ex mafia member who makes videos on youtube, whose father's character was in the introduction scene, his name's Fat Andy. now i dont remember the ex mafia guy's name but he said Tommy Desimone was his best friend, and was Paulie's friend, and he even knew and liked Pete the killer like a friend too. he said Tommy got worse and worse to the point where when Tommy said him to come with him in the car, he refused and said he's busy, that's how crazy he had got...
My stepfather wore a crucifix, Star of David and an ankh. He also wore leisure suits, so...
um congratulations
He’s like that guy from the mummy with all the charms of each religion
Sounds like dude had identity issues.
@@venenomecca858Benny! He was such a little shit.
The 1970s: The Golden Age of Polyester
Martin Scorcese wasn't brought up in a swearing household, Oh poor him.
His mom had a ham under each arm. Crying how she doesn’t have any bread.
4:47 Wise Guys actually has a couple connections to Goodfellas.
1. It was directed by Brian DePalma, Scorsese’s good friend and director of Scarface who discovered De Niro and put him in his early films, plus The Untouchables. DePalma similarly changed the title of his movie Carlito’s Way from the original novel, After Hours to avoid confusion with Scorsese’s 1985 film.
2. Both of Scorsese’s parents have cameos in the Wise Guys as party guests, of course they both appear in Goodfellas as Tommy’s mom and Vinnie, the guy who made the sauce in prison and witnessed Tommy’s murder.
3. Both Frank Vincent and Harvey Keitel have roles in Wise Guys. Frank Vincent of course plays Billy Batts in Goodfellas, also appeared in Casino, Raging Bull, and the Sopranos. He and Pesci got their start as singing comedy duo in the 70s.
While Harvey Keitel was discovered by Scorsese and appeared in his early films, including Mean Streets and Taxi Driver with De Niro. He used to be with Lorraine Bracco (Karen), and helped get her the role in the film. Their daughter plays Henry’s daughter in the prison scene. He also appeared with De Niro and Pesci in Scorsese’s The Irishman.
14:41 he did twenty fucking years in the can!
…in someone’s can.
Not a peep....
He wanted Marigot, but he compromised…..
He was waiting 20 years to tell Tommy to get his fuckin shinebox
@@dakotamartin523 you mean manicotti?
Pesci gets the best of Vincent in Raging Bull and Goodfellas .... but Vincent gets bigtime revenge on Pesci in the film "Casino".
Great iceberg video! I'm very surprised that Scorsese did not like The Sopranos at all. Sounds kind of sus.
He was in it too.
@@NickyMetropolis1313 Haha the guy who plays Scorsese in Sopranos totally had me fooled at first. That's his doppelgänger for sure
That's cap. No way he didn't like the sopranos. Lies 😂😂
@@Elusory? what episode is that?
@@Elusory Yeah I think it's a look-alike or whatever but it was supposed to be him within the context of the show of course. But it's strange because Marty went on to work with Terrance Winter if I'm not mistaken for boardwalk empire And obviously Steve buscemi was in there too for both shows
i think Henry was directly involved with Batts murder (physically, not just locking the door), the Lufthansa heist and the whacking of acquaintances like Two-Times. He says, 'but it had nothing to do with me'. Why say that? Was he not part of Jimmy and Tommy's crew? He distances himself because of the possibilities of repercussions.
I agree!!
That’s the thing with Scorsese crime dramas. Basically every one of them is based on a true story and all these guys are obviously going to have them being portrayed as better than they actually were. Like Henry never committing a murder, I don’t buy that. No way all these murderers would trust a guy who never ever whacked anybody. Or how in the Irishman, frank sheeran claims that he killed Jimmy Hoffa, like sure pal
Edit: not saying they’re bad movies. I think they perfectly capture these guys lifestyles and what it was like and Scorsese is so skilled at making it engaging. But I don’t trust these guys accounts on the stories they’re telling Scorsese and they have influence over the film. Like Jordan belfort literally showing up at the end of the wolf of Wall Street. This man definitely probably made himself out to be better than he was, like basically claiming he only ripped off rich people.
Didn’t Pacino and DeNiro appear together in Heat (1995)?
Yes but that wasn’t Scorsese
@@rickymonfil9236 Yes but the video said 'their first film together', not 'their first film with Scorsese together'
they did godfather 2 as well
@@trainsurfer7593he literally says "do you know what movie was Pacino and Scorcese's first film together?" 🤷🏾♂️🤷🏾♂️🤷🏾♂️🤷🏾♂. 25:31
Def check out Copland, good film & if your into (as you are) Goodfellas & Sopranos there’s even more familiar faces you’ll recognize
Great movie. Bullets Over Broadway was another 90s mob movie with lots of Sopranos and Goodfellas actors sprinkled in
The Batts gay thing is a non starter. A made guy isn’t going to admit that in any context around his crew or others. Turn of phrase to let his crew know that he isn’t afraid of Tommy/Thinks Tommy is a nobody.
There have been gay made men before it wouldn't be so out of the ordinary. Plus, 20 years in the can, he probably had to make compromises
Guys in prison back then doing lengthy sentences, didn’t consider it gay if they were the top
@@gophukyurselvs3621oh boy an expert on prison and Italian American organized crime? Are we sure this isn’t just gay head cannon?
Marie Paradox....... "All of the women were named Marie" .... There is actually a scene at a dinner gathering where one of the women is named Marie .... and I am pretty sure she is the same actress that plays Janice Rossi later in the movie.
I’m so surprised this video doesn’t have as much views as it should. Love these mob film icebergs and ur editing style
Agreed
Scorsese gives me Uncle Jun vibes with him giving the whole “he’s part of a whole generation” argument for not liking The Sopranos. That and the way he looks (i.e. Italian Larry David)
Uncle Jun (while watching CYE): Is that me? And Bobby?
Among the Italians - it was real shinebox shit
Greaseball
A whole bar heard, and saw Tommy arguing with, and threatening, Billy Batts.
I just remembered something I heard a long time ago with regard to Tommy's death in real life, I think from the Bloodletters And Badmen youtube channel, which is a channel dedicated to cosa nostra. Allegedly, the way the Gambino Family found out that it was Tommy, a Lucchesi associate, who killed Billy Bats, a Gambino soldier, was through Paul Varrio, a Lucchesi captain (Paul Cisaro in the movie). The alleged motive was that Paulie wanted Tommy gone because he (Paulie) was sleeping with Karen Hill while her husband Henry was in prison. Tommy also tried to get with Karen and when she refused Tommy's advances, Tommy tried to rape her but was unsuccessful. She immediately told Paulie, her lover about it so in response Paulie went to the Gambinos and told them that Tommy had killed one of their guys, knowing it was an automatic death sentence for Tommy.
Bloodletters is literally goated. He does good research.
It's interesting how you mention the implausibility of the Goodfellas Melfi theory because we have a very similar situation with Steve Van Zandt and whether Sil is actually the main character in the show Lilyhammer. The Sopranos is referenced twice very directly from what I remember, but at one point seemingly at random another character refers to Van Zandts' character as 'Sil'. Now, this where you have to open your mind a little bit, but I'd say alternate universes within The Sopranos is very much on the table. We already know that there are very subtle supernatural elements within the show through the presence of Lyvia that AJ experiences after her death and the apparitions (Paulie's vision of the virgin Mary or, more relevantly, Pussy showing up in a mirror that one time), take that along with the fact that Melfi and Tony actively discussed the possibility of alt realities following Tony's psychedelic experience on Mescaline. Oh, and yeah, Kevin Finnerty, of course.
Overall I'd say there's enough there to speculate about the theory as well as in regards to other characters besides just Melfi. That's why imo Lilyhammer is probably Sil's coma altering his awareness to reality to the point where he literally becomes a different version of himself and I think similar comparisons can be made elsewhere, too. My point is that I suppose Goodfellas and Sopranos aren't a shared universe, but perhaps two entirely distinct and yet connected all the same universes merging. Idk. I'm usually really against contrived speculation about supernatural elements in stuff that's very much not about that but Sopranos managed to do it so well that I really can't help myself
Great video. I'm glad you included so much historical background as well.
the imagery in this is great
They did use fake cash for part of it. I noticed in one scene there were stacks of bills that all had the same serial number.
I dont get it. People getting lazy. At 13:12 while stating "...insisted on using real cash" shows an edit of a scene using prop money. You would think that when editing the video, you would make sure that what you present doesnt conflict with your premise. Take the time to find the scene (if there is one) where real currency is used!
uhh… Henry wears the Star of David because his wife, Karen is jewish. Karen’s Mother (Henry’s future In-Law) only wants Karen to marry another Jewish man, so Karen lies and says Henry is half jewish, it’s why when Karen’s mother says “Oh i heard your half jewish” he responds “Just the good half!” the star of david is to trick his in-law, not because he’s jewish. Henry hill was a catholic
good video man, keep it up!
Alright this video was a banger, now all we need is a godfather part 1 and 2 iceberg
I love how you do the iceburg vids keep up the great quality
Great video. Well researched, well spoken, and fun to watch.
Earned my sub with this one.
Cool video, I would have put Lois's censored airline ticket near the end of the film. I still don't know why that was done since that never happens in the rest of the film.
I've also wondered why we've never seen any kind of deleted scene or outtakes for this movie which I guess is common for Scorsese, I've only seen one for Casino.
yes, what a missed opportunity that was. I always wondered that myself too on the censoring of the airline ticket. Might have just been a cheap trick by Scorsese and the editing crew to evoke an extra sense of realism
The reason it was edited is the airline company demanded this / they did not want their name associated with crime
The Dubbed Airline Tickets Maybe down to the Airline not wanting any Bad Publicity 🤷🏾♂️
Copland is a truly great Stallone project, I think you'd like it since you appreciated Goodfellas so much!
I totally agree with the unreliable narrator part. The fact that all the big violent scenes, people getting beaten to d, guys talking about violent things and laughing while Hill looks on in quiet disgust. Henry is always apparently "just watching", or "just so happens to be there" when the other members of the crew do these terrible acts of violence, but never seems involves himself in the act. Making himself seem like a victim of the people around him, when he was clearly a part of it too.
Good video keep it up
I think you got the whole Bronx tale thing exactly right. The characters in Good Fellas are absolutely horrible and we should strive to NOT be them, and not give into their influence. And for all father out there, you gotta be active in your kids life; punishment is needed but so is guidance and love.
Regarding the religious aspect. The real Henry Hill did convert to Judaism in order to marry his wife. So there's that angle.
14:00 it's a tuff guy thing, he's not gay, although if you're in prison you get a pash for dat.
20 years in the can, he probably had to make some compromises
I think its a bit much to say that its unforgivable that he doesn't like "The Sopranos", it seems its more a matter of taste and that its a different mafia from the one he grew up with, I also wouldn't be surprised if its because he feels its trying too hard to be like Goodfellas (which makes sense because even Chase regrets making the first season too similar in tone to Goodfellas). And if he's afraid David Chase is eclipsing Goodfellas with The Sopranos, then he shouldn't worry anymore after Many Saints... Lol
nah its unforgiveable
Wild to see another VE coming out about Goodfellas right now - I started working on one about a month ago haha
Morrie and Jimmy isn’t quite right.
Remember that Jimmy was pissed for not getting the money Morrie owed him. Morrie figured he could get back to even and then ahead, but was such a ballbreaker.
Morrie probably wouldn’t have lived out to old age, but he probably could have lived longer if he had done like Henry.
The Reason Scorsese didn't like the sopranos is because he was in it and doesn't even remember.
I think you mean Sopranos and that was not him, it was a look a like
@@bulldawg7232He spelled it Right 🧐
@@mickplanter4593 he changed it
Vincent and Pesci should have done one last movie together in which Vincent beats up Pesci. Then he could have gone to the big show business in the sky with the score being 2-2.
Insanely obscure iceberg
As someone who is from Ohio, its a perfect state for witness protection. Really all you have to do to blend in is be an OSU buckeyes fan and drink more than usual.
Goodfellas: "Hey. I got another one. Gonna capture my 'essence'!"
The Shining: "Good job! Keep going!"
The song playing during the beginning credits isn't My Way. It's Rags To Riches. The singer escapes me
Great iceberg video!
28:40 I didn't know Kurt Angle was in this movie LOL
32:57 Frankie Carbon is based off of Angelo Sepe and Richard Eaton the death scene with him in a meat truck is reference to Richard Eaton death IRL he sold Jimmy some fake coke for 2.5 million dollars
That’s funny, I’ve never seen or heard about this iceberg but I did notice the Crucifix and Star of David and always saw it as Henry cared more about wearing the jewelry than he cared about what they meant in regards to religion. I mean, Henry was no moral man and any religion was superficial. Karen being Jewish to him just meant, “Oh, the wedding is going to be a little different.” 🤷♂️
And I’m speaking strictly about Henry in the movie.
Excellent intro!
Jimmy being Satan is a reference to De Niro playing a character named "Louis Cypher" (aka Lucifer) in a 1987 horror movie named Angel Heart.
The commentary on this top tier 💀
Thanks!
I think the unplanned trilogy was Mean Streets, Italian Americans ( his documentary) and Good Fellas are the trilogy. Raging Bull is a beast of its own in my opinion
I reject the notion that someonr in an interreligous marriage is a hypocrite. There are thousands of interreligous marriages. Are they all hypocrites? I prefer to think of it as love taking precidence. Besides, neither Karen or Henry seemed religous and their necklaces were maybe just jewelry.
It all really depends on how devout you claim to be
i always thought blow was a sequel to goodfellas as a kid
I feel the child grooming bit could also apply to something going on between Billy Bats and Tommy. That comment about guys like him in the can and the way Tommy reacts to the comments about "spit shining" has some very disturbing and dark implications about their past relationship
I'm enjoying this, though. I subscribed.
Thank you, glad you are enjoying my walkthrough!
Excellent video
The point-shaving racket was a whole section of the book. I think it was removed because it wouldn’t have really connected with the story that much or been that entertaining, same with Henry enlisting in the army to try and leave the mob early on.
Could you read the topics of each iceberg. I know a lot of us just listen without watching. But other than that, Awesome video!
As a catholic, i used to wear 2 Star of David rings in my right hand. I am a full blown hypocrite, but don’t get me wrong, i was wearing because I thought it looked cool lol, but it is not uncommon seing catholics using the Star of David in some way, protestants too
My dad is Jewish and my mom is a Christian, so I wear both a Star of David and a cross.
Those two symbols are diametrically opposed. The star has nothing to do with David, but is an occult hexagram first found in Prague in, I think, 1611.
@@DrJ-hx7wvThe Star of David Had 6 Points & A Pentagram Holds Only 5❗️.
The Star of David Is The Jewish National Flag‼️.
28:41 is that Kurt Angle superimposed over the back of Karen’s head or am I going crazy?!?!
Your misstating of the events of the Godfather really drew my attention. It was Vito, not Sonny that had the horse head placed
Babe wake up, Elusory dropped a vid
you're single arent you
@@firstworldproblems6064nope
Cop Land is an excellent film. it's one of a handful of movies that I will watch over & over again. The cast is LOADED. Sly, The Wolf Harvey (Pulp Fiction), Ray Lotta, Melfi, I'm tired of typing. It's a much watch and it's fun to watch cops try to evade the cops who investigate cops. I may watch it now for a refresh...:)
Cop Land was great! Awesome ending too.
Cool video! But why is the colour palette so desaturated/low contrast?
Copyright issues he had to use a filter
15:46 i think it was not Sonny Corleone but his father Vito Corleone. The message was conveyed through his lawyer, Mr. Tom Hagen, which the director rebuked!
Interesting video. I don't understand what "iceberg" means though. Can you explain? Thanks!
Batts was connected to GOTTI & that while crew.
There WAS gonna be retribution.
That's how it is as a WISEGUY
You gotta make a Casino iceberg if it even exists
Can you imagine if the movie was called "Wiseguy?"
There were actually other witnesses besides Jimmy and Henry at the bar when Tommy comes back to kill batts. One guy and girl leaving right when Tommy walks in
Actually "Rags to Riches" is the song playing over the opening credits crawl, not "My Way".
You're correct. My brain didn't work here and when I say Sonny Corleone instead of Tom Hagen 🤦🏻♂️ Thanks for pointing that out @dionysoscub. No idea why I said opening credit roll whatsoever. Deserves its own iceberg talking point
Im gonna go get the papers, get the papers
Score means too have Made some Money ( I’ve had a Good Score Today) not meaning I’ve Ive Whacked 💥 Somebody Today🤷🏾♂️
Beautiful amazing
The first time Pacino worked with De Niro was the movie, "Heat".
The point of that bit was to identify the first time Scorsese (not De Niro) worked with Pacino. It was intended to be Goodfellas where Pacino was asked to play Jimmy, then there was this project called Modigliani that I actually didn't touch on in the video that never came into fruition, so The Irishman was technically the first time.
Separately yeah, Heat was indeed the first time De Niro and Pacino worked together
A score is a deal where you make money. "I made a good score last weekend selling a pound of weed"
intelligence is elusory for this guy
That’s a big big stretch to say he must hate the sopranos.
The Sopranos is nigh-inarguably the greatest italian american work in showbiz history and Marty has only publically commented on it ONCE ever and it was negative. How is it a big big (two bigs) stretch, Ryan?
@@Elusory because he only ever talked about it ONCE, it's insane to make up so much bs based on one instance and he didn't even say anything negative. That is a lie on your part. he just made a vague statement about not understanding New Jersey and the modern mafia because thats not the time and place he is from.
@@ryancialone3045 Wrong
@@Elusory womp womp. don't beg me to take your idea seriously if that's all you got then
@@ryancialone3045 Haha ok, high effort response: Chase has gone on record numerous times stating the profound influence that Goodfellas has had on his creation, not to mention how many were brought on for Sopranos that came from Goodfellas. Imagine you are Chase, and Scorsese has only gone on public record ONCE about your creation: one of your heroes in the genre space, reducing your magnum opus accomplishment to: "I don't get it."
Here you are, calling me a schizophrenic for asserting that Scorsese probably hates the show/Chase. Scorsese has gone on record to laud horror movies with monsters in them. So he must "get" that world, but not Sopranos, right? Scorsese partnered with Terrance Winter and others who worked on The Sopranos to produce/direct Boardwalk Empire. I guess that means Scorsese "gets" 1920s prohibition era Atlantic City, but not the italian mafia operating in upstate New Jersey 90s - 00s, right?
To say you disagree with my assertion that he "hates" it is fine if you want to play semantics, but you seem to be asserting that he's justified in being totally disinterested and dismissive of it (if this is your position, aka that "art is subjective and he is entitled to his opinion", then you are both a Sopranos Hater and Marty Apologist. If true, thank you for unveiling your true identity)
It would be like if Stan Lee (Marvel Comics) only ever made ONE comment on Batman or DC comics, saying that he "didn't get it". If you want to pretend there isn't an enormous sub-text there, then ok, you're entitled to your opinion. Not sure where calling me a scizo came from
You should’ve put Goodfellas Early script in the middle of the iceberg. The original script started during the Billy Batts Party scene. And I believe the death was more accurate. Tommy repeatedly beats him with a shovel before he’s put down, just like in real life. But this was changed to stabbing.
Instead Scorsese decided to use En Media Res, only fellow screenwriters know what that is
What an excellent video. Really good points of view. I do think the scene where Jimmy is upset at Tommy being whacked was an act is a stretch, but then again maybe not. I just don't think thsts what Scorse was trying to convey. Any regard excellent thought provoking takes.
Check out Henry Hill on the Stern Show. I believe they touch on the sports betting in an interview at Sirius. Henry was on the phone.
After watching this , because of some of your interpretations/opinions on this film.Makes me wonder if you actually understand this film at all.This film has many layers and it seems like you have only watched it at its surface level.
28:24 I thought I was trippin for a sec
Few tiny things wrong but still a great video.
"You think I'm funny" scene was "lifted" from an old film. I will be including this in another video.
Do one of these for the sorpanos
I did! That was my last upload before this one
Score means the soundtrack homie lmao comon now
Scorsese is just player hating on Sopranos because now Goodfellas sits in the shadow of Sopranos but without Goodfellas there would be no Sopranos so he feels under-appreciated
In real life jimmy talked Tommy into killing Billy bats because when Billy went away to prison, Jimmy took over Billy‘s racket and now Billy was back, which would cost Jimmy a lot of money Billy was also a friend of John Gotti, who is rumored killed Tommy
7:35 This point is made even stronger when we consider the real-life Hill's efforts (after the film was released) to promote himself. He wasn't a reliable narrator then either. He's basically a pathological liar that blamed everyone else and ignored/minimised his own mistakes. Some of these interviews were actually pretty sad and showed a guy that was basically a living ghost. I get the feeling that the only reason he wasn't "whacked" was due to this. The mafia knew he wasn't a risk anymore, he had no knowledge that wasn't out there, and eeked out an existence by giving interviews where he repeated the same stories like a drunk at a bar.
14:28 is that Frank Vincent mugshot
It’s Phil Leotardos from The Sopranos.
Not seeing Copland?
Must be a millennial 😒🤞🏾🤦🏾♂️
de niro and paacino co-starred in HEAT in 1995, 24 years before the irishman.
wise guys is not synonymous with smart guys. it means mobster.
Why is this called an "iceberg"? It's just a random mashup of trivia and somewhat funny speculative theories.
Copland is great and unique. It's rare to see mid budget movies these days.
Is it just me maybe I'm seeing things but it's like Spider looks absolutely nothing like Chrissy Moltisanti