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The Death of the American Gangster Film

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2019
  • Support me on Patreon: / eyebrowcinema
    The history of the American Gangster movie and an analysis of how Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America killed the genre. This video essay considers the major characteristics of the gangster film, how the genre evolved over time, and how Leone exploited genre archetypes to reveal the innate brutality of the gangster myth.
    To skip the discussion on Noodles and Deborah: 29:22
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Komentáře • 4,2K

  • @EyebrowCinema
    @EyebrowCinema  Před 2 lety +471

    Hey everyone, I had to make a small trim near the beginning of my video that cuts off a bit of my voiceover to appease a copyright claim. Apologies for the inconvenience.

    • @Black_Revue
      @Black_Revue Před 2 lety +5

      But what of the Hood Gangster Movie...
      You know it's best Left Unsaid

    • @incognitoman3656
      @incognitoman3656 Před rokem +4

      Oh, that’s fine. Didn’t notice the first time I watched, and I stumbled into here from recommendations now. Did you ever talk about breaking bad as a TV show? It makes for a good “”gangster film””

    • @johnstrawb3521
      @johnstrawb3521 Před rokem +2

      Just an FYI: it's not NWARR, the way a pirate might say it, but "nwah." No "r." It's french, so perhaps you'd like to consult a pronunciation guide.

    • @valeriekeefe8898
      @valeriekeefe8898 Před rokem

      Bursogyny, bursogyny, bursogyny. I can't wait until a great anticisfeminist filmmaker does something to detail the orgy of murder, rape, neglect, exploitation, and self-justification of the heiresses of the cisfeminine emptiness and power fantasies that defined Sparta. Guess you won't remove that, you TERFy hack. Pity there's no copyright claim on pimping the myth of the magical dupe oppressor class, you hateful bigot.

    • @incognitoman3656
      @incognitoman3656 Před rokem

      @@valeriekeefe8898 wow, even if this is real I’m laughing so hard rn

  • @CapitalFProductions
    @CapitalFProductions Před 4 lety +6900

    Great video but I think it also misses one crucial detail: the decline of the mafia and gangsters in general. By the time the 90’s rolled around, mafia gangs were decimated by law enforcement and its rare they ever made headlines or felt relevant. That’s a big running theme for Sopranos, about how that era was ending and times were changing, like how mafia movies replaced westerns. Now corporate CEO’s and white collar crimes are the go-to villains since they’re more relevant

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 Před 4 lety +132

      Yeah, i wondered where that was

    • @thebeststooge
      @thebeststooge Před 4 lety +305

      WalMart is more gangster than real gangsters today.

    • @javierperalta7648
      @javierperalta7648 Před 4 lety +740

      Drug cartels are the Mafia of today. Now you get all these films and shows about drug dealers. Breaking Bad, Narcos, Sicario, Traffic, etc.

    • @thebeststooge
      @thebeststooge Před 4 lety +301

      @@javierperalta7648 Yep, and the Godfather movie touched upon that as the old dons didn't want that shit but the young pups, back then, knew that is where the cash was.

    • @javierperalta7648
      @javierperalta7648 Před 4 lety +194

      @Kathryn Dorsey Yeah the Italian mob in America is dead. But not in Italy itself. Specially the Ndrangheta. But that is because the Ndrangheta has become a drug cartel on its own right and controls most of the cocaine traffic in Europe

  • @atomicdancer
    @atomicdancer Před 4 lety +5649

    So first Sergio Leone kills off the American Western, with 'Once Upon a Time in the West.'
    Then he kills off the American gangster movie, with 'Once Upon a Time in America.'
    Such a shame he didn't live long enough to make a superhero movie!

    • @MaccabeesHammer
      @MaccabeesHammer Před 4 lety +184

      OMG yes

    • @tumadrexuxa
      @tumadrexuxa Před 4 lety +388

      There is a "superhero killer series" called "the boys" but is in fucking Amazon prime and nobody watches it

    • @ronfroehlich4697
      @ronfroehlich4697 Před 4 lety +11

      Whammy!

    • @ExtremeTalker-xw6cd
      @ExtremeTalker-xw6cd Před 4 lety +358

      E. C. What are you talking about?!?! The Boys was so fucking popular and so many people watched it you melon!

    • @hampibaba1
      @hampibaba1 Před 4 lety +25

      @@ExtremeTalker-xw6cd series 2 airing later this year......can't wait

  • @carlosschroeder3638
    @carlosschroeder3638 Před 2 lety +484

    I once read that Sergio Leone filmed landscapes as if they were actors and actors' faces as if they were landscapes. He was magnificent.

    • @darkartsdabbler2407
      @darkartsdabbler2407 Před rokem +37

      That sounds poetic but makes no sense

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před rokem +45

      @@darkartsdabbler2407 I think it means that landscapes were shot as if characters in the story while faces for aesthetic like landscapes usually are.
      It kind of makes sense when you see how operatic some of his movies are and the face close ups.

    • @unsubme2157
      @unsubme2157 Před rokem +3

      So he used the camera

    • @batcaveloner1383
      @batcaveloner1383 Před 8 měsíci +1

      If only he got to make several more movies… he wanted each film to get bigger and bigger!!!

    • @user-me8qj6zk8n
      @user-me8qj6zk8n Před 2 měsíci

      I second the motion

  • @elliotbaker5416
    @elliotbaker5416 Před rokem +368

    I think an important crime film to mention is Heat (1995). A film that, on the surface, could be seen as another romanticised action flick. However, in my opinion, it's deeply personal story about two seemingly very different men, their obsessions with each other, their realisation of how similar they are despite glaring differences in personality, and their struggle to escape from the painful lives they each live.

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Před rokem +5

      Heat is basically wolf of wall st with guns

    • @plato8427
      @plato8427 Před rokem +19

      @@nolesy34 how?

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Před rokem +1

      @@plato8427 two men one a crim the other a cop

    • @Meta_Myself
      @Meta_Myself Před rokem +1

      HEAT is free on CZcams!

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Před rokem +1

      @@Meta_Myself how? My phone is ultra high efficient and only is a white glow
      I suppose I could call someone for 50 minutes it starts to get a bit warm

  • @ozricaurora6943
    @ozricaurora6943 Před 4 lety +1930

    The sopranos is brilliant because it makes everything about the gangster lifestyle look realistic and ugly

    • @ibnmianal-buna3176
      @ibnmianal-buna3176 Před 3 lety +262

      Yeah that’s one of the reasons why the last 3 seasons of the Sopranos are so depressing and nihilistic. You can really feel that this lifestyle is something nobody should ever get involved with, it’s not rewarding at all.

    • @asap.6283
      @asap.6283 Před 3 lety +140

      @@ibnmianal-buna3176 That’s also why I love The Sopranos even more. The longing for nostalgia, the banalities of life, it’s this gritty realistic portrayal of gangsters in our society and the American people.

    • @hydrocritical2268
      @hydrocritical2268 Před 3 lety +12

      It did the opposite for me.

    • @theeoddments960
      @theeoddments960 Před 3 lety +97

      The thing that I hate so much about the sopranos is the audience who watches it takes all the violence and bad blood and betrayal at face value and just go “fuck yah! Kick the shit outta him tony!” I mean If you’ve ever seen the sopranos convention that’s all it is. The show was so good because of it’s writers that reeled the larger than life characters to be realistic and ultimately sad at the end. Steve schirippa, the guy who plays Bobby bacala is a quiet, dull but respectful man who talks quietly and is always polite to everyone in the show, while schirippa in real life is an outspoken, loud and larger than life Italian that reflects on the show as being a badass representation of Italian mobsters. He is a really great representation of how I think a lot of the audience is like.

    • @plasticweapon
      @plasticweapon Před 3 lety +4

      realistic?! HA HA HA HA HA!

  • @23skidoo46
    @23skidoo46 Před 4 lety +5261

    nah, the real reason it died is DeNiro, Pesci and Pacino got old.

    • @danielbergonzi7319
      @danielbergonzi7319 Před 4 lety +324

      No, Pesci wanted a singing career.

    • @NYCDom
      @NYCDom Před 4 lety +33

      Yep

    • @Abner.s.j
      @Abner.s.j Před 4 lety +165

      I honestly have to agree with this claim more than the video's

    • @DandyJoestar
      @DandyJoestar Před 4 lety +107

      @Jeff Sol stay with the stash, treat the broads like trash, you'll catch a blast if you move to fast

    • @johnnynoirman
      @johnnynoirman Před 4 lety +5

      Hahahaha...

  • @renatorocha1710
    @renatorocha1710 Před rokem +160

    Sergio Leone, a man that impacted my life with his movies like no one else alive could. May his films never be forgotten

  • @solarprophet5439
    @solarprophet5439 Před rokem +194

    Vito could be friendly, warm, and even kind because he could compartmentalize his mind effectively, preventing any regret, revulsion, or guilt he may have felt for some of the things he'd done from affecting his core personality. Michael couldn't do that. His mind's response was to simply shut away his emotions at all times, resulting in him becoming the cold, distant, and occasionally cruel man he was by the end of the second film. I think Vito knew that's what would happen, which is why he wanted to keep Michael away from that life.
    Most people are capable of making cold, hard decisions. Dealing with the emotional fallout of those decisions in a healthy way is where they fail.

    • @komiks42
      @komiks42 Před rokem +16

      True. Vito was respected
      Michael was feared

    • @Icemann89
      @Icemann89 Před rokem +6

      Michael's behaviour was heavily influenced by his fear. He was taking extreme measures to ensure his family is safe. Any mistake could lead to the death of a loved one, so he left nothing to chance. When Kay announced to him she's leaving and taking kids with her, it terrified him as much as their death. Later we see him dealing with her the same way he dealt with Fredo, with apathy and contempt.
      I think Vito was more accepting of the possibility of losing a family member. He chose that life after all. If he was as terrified as Michael was, he wouldn't have built his criminal empire in the first place. Vito also didn't have to face domestic problems. His wife was extremely loyal to him and wouldn't dare to leave him (I am not saying Kay was wrong to leave, she had a very good reason.).

  • @samd2013
    @samd2013 Před 3 lety +1344

    The Wolf of Wall Street is a criminal movie, it feels like a natural evolution from the gangster genre. The movie feels like a spiritual successor to goodfellas; they both have practically the same opening line, have a similar ending, and an entertaining as hell rise/fall crime story in the middle. At the end of goodfellas, which is in the 80s, somebody mentions that “those people at Wall Street are the real criminals”. The wolf of Wall Street isn’t a “gangster movie”, but it’s definitely in the same vein as it.

    • @gregwatson8219
      @gregwatson8219 Před rokem +6

      Bonnie& Clyde only true Gangster on run. classic

    • @williaminnes6635
      @williaminnes6635 Před rokem +10

      I found it illuminating. In between college, I worked at a multilevel marketing scheme which folded just prior to creating a completely legitimate utilities company off the back of the terror inspired in ordinary consumers by the introduction of more aggressive energy metering by the state. The motivational techniques used always rang stale. I was ripped off a bit later by a dried up old confidence trickster who referred to what they had taught me - under the seal of "proprietary information" as "good things to know." It was interesting to see a perspective into a time before my own in which these techniques were novel, effective, could sway prospects to be clients and earn commissions. In modern times, of course, the real racket is precisely as forecast by Gordon Gecko in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps - climate change and the carbon panic.

    • @williaminnes6635
      @williaminnes6635 Před rokem +6

      and make no mistake, it is a racket, and one on a Smedley Butler scale.

    • @Stoney-Jacksman
      @Stoney-Jacksman Před rokem +5

      You are confusing a Scorcese (crime)film with a mob movie in general.
      Wolf of wall street is a movie like i love you Philip Morris and many others ..going from little to a lot and then lose it all. Doesnt make it a gangster film by any means. Because it isnt.

    • @samd2013
      @samd2013 Před rokem +13

      @@Stoney-Jacksman I didn’t say it’s a gangster film, I said it’s in the same vein as one.

  • @nateds7326
    @nateds7326 Před 4 lety +1247

    If once upon a time in america put the nail in the coffin for the glamorized gangster I think the irishman absolutely cremated it.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +264

      Well said. The two are definitely companion pieces and given Scorsese's efforts to help restore OUATIA I suspect it was definitely on his mind when putting together The Irishman.

    • @Borganov20
      @Borganov20 Před 4 lety +118

      sasholsuma it really wasn’t, it was one of the most entertaining 3 hours and 30 minute long movies ever.

    • @kielanwade5096
      @kielanwade5096 Před 4 lety +37

      @sasholsuma yeah I also disagree, I didn't even notice how long it was

    • @mikedowns8293
      @mikedowns8293 Před 4 lety +9

      @@kielanwade5096 For me the story had been told sufficiently (am referring to Jack Nicholson's "Hoffa" as well as C. Walken's "Kill The Irishman")

    • @kielanwade5096
      @kielanwade5096 Před 4 lety +46

      @@mikedowns8293 I think the film is less about the disappearance of Hoffa and more about the effect those choices had on the people involved and what those effects look like when you're old and grey. That's why Martin said it isn't important to him whether the story is true or not, it's about the characters but yeah those are two good films.

  • @mtalhaawais
    @mtalhaawais Před 2 lety +87

    Once Upon A Time in America is the saddest movie I have ever seen. I haven't been able to watch it in years because of how emotional it makes me.

    • @bobziadie2988
      @bobziadie2988 Před 6 měsíci +2

      If you truly want to see a movie farrrr sadder, watch Johnny Got His Gun. You will want to stick a knife in your chest watching it.

    • @razvandzukic3627
      @razvandzukic3627 Před 4 měsíci

      Watching this today. ​@@bobziadie2988

    • @gangsterbroccoli
      @gangsterbroccoli Před měsícem

      first time i’ve cried at the end of a movie since I was a child

    • @joeyxl3456
      @joeyxl3456 Před 11 dny +1

      It is so sad. And that is also hugely due to Ennio Morricone's amazing score. Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone, an awesome pairing.

  • @andreagv3
    @andreagv3 Před rokem +41

    An absolute gem of an analysis and as a huge fan of Leone but most of all "Once upon a time in America" (a forgotten and for a long time maligned masterpiece), I think your video really does it justice and highlights its cultural significance. Well done! Bravo.

  • @idcook
    @idcook Před 3 lety +2741

    A great follow-up to this might be a study of "The Irishman." A story that never actually presents the mobsters as glamorous so much as violent middle-class wannabes.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 3 lety +335

      Definitely something I'm toying with.

    • @acropolisnow9466
      @acropolisnow9466 Před 3 lety +36

      Great book, terrible film.

    • @Tross-fe1bq
      @Tross-fe1bq Před 3 lety +130

      @@acropolisnow9466 what didn't you like about it?

    • @armyofninjas9055
      @armyofninjas9055 Před 3 lety +117

      @@Tross-fe1bq Everything. I loathe that movie. Weird makeup on old men. Bad story. Boring. Using the same 3 actors to try and sell a movie to a brainwashed fanbase. Obvious cash in is obvious. Terrible movie.

    • @MrTeamGuy
      @MrTeamGuy Před 2 lety +168

      @@acropolisnow9466 to each its own. I really love that homage movie

  • @thiccboss4780
    @thiccboss4780 Před 5 lety +736

    a worse crime than booze bootlegging is how criminally underrated this essay is

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +53

      Comment of the year.

    • @Geronimo_Jehoshaphat
      @Geronimo_Jehoshaphat Před 4 lety +6

      That, or... Y'now... the multiple rapes commited by the protagonist.

    • @michaelcharlesthearchangel
      @michaelcharlesthearchangel Před 4 lety

      @@EyebrowCinema.
      Movie of the Election Year 2020.
      GTA THE MOVIE.
      The Story begins on Facebook.
      ::
      facebook.com/GrandTheftAutoStory/

    • @ElvishShellfish
      @ElvishShellfish Před 4 lety

      I dunno, the bootlegger is a real scourge on society. Lips that touch liquor shall ne'er touch mine!

    • @Sidiciousify
      @Sidiciousify Před 4 lety

      you mean *is this criminally underrated essay

  • @NotUrBlkCrschnAntiGayMissile

    It's crazy how some crime is glamorized while other crime is demonized based on who is committing it.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před 2 lety +4

      It's more about who they're hurting. Nobody really minds that much when some random rich guy snorts cocaine since the only one he's really hurting is himself but a poor guy doing crack illicits condemnation since he's likely stealing and robbing to support his habit. A bank robber can be a Robin Hood style celebrity since they're stealing from trillion dollar banks that grow fat off the labor of the common man, but the public will hate you if you rob an old lady's house. Nobody will bat an eye if you shoot a nazi but if you shoot a dog they'll lynch you. If you fart in Justin Biebers face people will cheer but they'll boo if you do the same to a girl scout.

    • @johnhenry4844
      @johnhenry4844 Před 2 lety +61

      @@arthas640
      Bruh if you think rich guys don’t hurt people as a job you haven’t been paying attention

    • @hermestrismegistus3417
      @hermestrismegistus3417 Před rokem +11

      Bro ur so smart

    • @greedojenkins9984
      @greedojenkins9984 Před rokem +16

      Modern day Malcom X just wow

    • @heytherebato
      @heytherebato Před rokem

      No one wants to watch cartel members torture children to death dingus

  • @80sports20
    @80sports20 Před rokem +92

    I think it’s simpler than this. The decline coincides with the presence of the mafia/organized crime in our culture. The early/mid 90’s was the pinnacle of the John Gotti Mafia era. He made the mafia “cool” from a media perspective so you had all the 90s mafia movies that were very popular (Goodfellas, Casino, Bronx Take, etc). Prior to that, The Godfather era was when the Mafia first became known by the public, so the movies were intriguing and gave the public a Hollywood view of what it was. The Sopranos era of the early 2000’s played off the “new era” of the mafia where it is much more subtle and behind the scenes, direct contrast to the John Gotti era. This was also really intriguing and popular for Hollywood. Nowadays, the mafia doesn’t even have much of a “subtle or behind the scenes” presence. That culture that was prominent and present just a few decades ago, is a shell of itself. So it’s hard to make a movie or entertainment genre based on a culture that doesn’t have a big presence anymore.

    • @advaithramesh6697
      @advaithramesh6697 Před rokem +3

      Is that really the case? organized crime is still there its just much more brutally gunned down by the police. But the realism in gangster films is still quite attractive. "Like Oh this the town I used to live , and such a story might have takenplace just down my street!"

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 Před rokem

      ​@@advaithramesh6697That's the point. The mafia has little power and glamour now. Its culture is gone, it's been exposed as a crime racket like any other. There's nothing else to be told, they're generic baddies at best like the Russian Mob.

    • @esdrasferreras1227
      @esdrasferreras1227 Před 15 dny

      I think it’s important to recognize the breaking bad and better call saul era of crime film

  • @LLlap
    @LLlap Před 4 lety +289

    I always interpreted the dessert scene as a commentary of how actually young the kids are. Like they want to be adults, to have money, power, sex but cant help eating the dessert. Like they`ve been robbed of their childhood and forced into the gritty adulthood.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +57

      That's a great reading.

    • @playboymaxim
      @playboymaxim Před 4 lety +18

      Good, but I relate to the original interpretation. It's kind of like getting Mcdonald's fries for someone, eating one like, "ah he/she ain't gonna miss it" but liking them so much that you just keep dipping your hand into the bag until there are no more fries left.

    • @2005JoinDate
      @2005JoinDate Před 4 lety +30

      My interpretation of that scene was to show how poor and hungry they were. Satiating his hunger in that instance was more important than sex

    • @giveall9695
      @giveall9695 Před 4 lety +6

      My god I interpreted it the same way...

    • @blacktoothfox677
      @blacktoothfox677 Před 3 lety +10

      @@RobertIsraelKabakoff I bet you don't even understand why that comment is so reptilian; that's how far into the inhuman lizard-brain you've gone. What are you missing!? ...Where to even begin...

  • @ChristiantrospectiveGamer
    @ChristiantrospectiveGamer Před 4 lety +225

    One thing this ideal about Micheal Corleone leaves out...his first wife, Apollonia, being murdered by a car bomb. I think that's ACTUALLY what broke him...not executing the two guys in the restaurant. The reason he isolated himself from everyone else is because he never truly loved anyone else. I also believe it's why he could never live up to his father. Her death damaged him in a way that he never was able to recover from.

    • @richardvillafana8111
      @richardvillafana8111 Před rokem +10

      That is an excellent point.

    • @samthunders3611
      @samthunders3611 Před rokem +7

      We never saw the self explanation so obvious in the movie..?.
      You think
      It was completely obvious
      No revelation to the Greek tragedy story
      He loved Kate very much but didn't want to dystroy another girls life when he returned but...
      but he destroyed a young innocent girl's life for nothing she died
      While hiding as a murderer and became like he never wanted to be
      He was the straight guy the Army guy
      Going to college
      His family ruined it a young life and everything he got involved with destroyed
      He was a depressed angry guy forced he felt into.a situation he could of Walked away from easy Sonny was trigger happy crazy
      He would of been.thrilled he wanted it
      Sibling rivalry and Sony teasing him Joe College crap
      All he had to do was nothing
      But obviously he didn't.
      Became ruthlessly bitter
      The 38 times we watched it
      ( or Goodfellas just say)
      Showed us that

    • @roddo1955
      @roddo1955 Před rokem +3

      Nice one. I have always thought that Michael, deep down didn't really care much for his family. But can't reconcile with it. Feeling he was breaking free from them and simultaneously feeling he was letting them down. He wanted a life away from the mafia and kinda looked down on his family. He always had a 'distant' streak. But it was the burden of duty and loyalty that made him feel he HAD to take over. That's not real love. It's an imitation of love. What I see in Michael as the new Don, is someone who claims that nothing is personal in business but acts from a place of cold, calculated, disassociated, pent up, anger.

  • @gianni206
    @gianni206 Před rokem +13

    I remember telling my bro “wow, the ending of The Irishman was really good, so worth it”, and he watched to the end only to be surprised it was the exact opposite of what he expected

    • @tonythetiger1600
      @tonythetiger1600 Před rokem

      Lol u bugger haha n imho the Irish man was OK at best, abit clesehay it was bearing a dead horse n oooof the de-aging CGI why was ut used it'd been better 2 cut the scenes out

    • @gianni206
      @gianni206 Před rokem +1

      @@tonythetiger1600 Really? I thought the de-aging was good.
      But yeah, the overall movie was “ok”, I somewhat agree with that

  • @remka2000
    @remka2000 Před rokem +10

    You mentioned it but that Morricone soundtrack is absolutely haunting.

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Před 4 lety +3167

    The godfather is the way mafia wants to look, the goodfellas show what there actually are.

    • @mo2k638
      @mo2k638 Před 4 lety +23

      Can you elaborate further

    • @Jarod-vg9wq
      @Jarod-vg9wq Před 4 lety +544

      Mo 2k the godfather is a benevolent man of honour and family and is also calm and nice, the bangers in that film are respectable and are men of honour, and in goodfella ps there foul mouthed, prown to violence, ready to cut hit or shoot anyone at the drop of a hat if they so much as think you insulted them, brutality beat people who forget to pay them protection and backstage each other. The kind of people you want the punisher to hunt down.

    • @stijnvandamme76
      @stijnvandamme76 Před 4 lety +397

      ​@@Jarod-vg9wq I think it's more a case of Old country Mafia vs New country Mafia.
      In Sicily to this day, they still pretend to be a force for the good among people, if you would believe it, they are a charitable organisation that tends to the needy and poor out of pure altruism (as opposed to as a public front so people wouldn't rat em out), If you think about it. that's also what politicians will try to make you believe.. but i digress.
      US mafia on the other hand has long since given up on that concept and embraced capitalism at the core .
      It also shows in the amount of members that turn on their former co-conspirators.. in the US they will turn more frequently if the prison sentence they face is big enough and they can get a good witness protection deal..
      while in Italy, it's much much rarer for any of them to turn.. The Omertà is much stronger in Italy
      Furthermore.. GodFather was a series about the higher ranks of the family..Goodfellas were street hustlers.. none of them were Capo.. hell, none of them were made men...except for Pauli.. but even then he was not the head of an entire family..
      So comparing them on being foul mouthed of violence.. well that's different levels of an organisation for ya.
      a CEO of a garbage company doesn't talk like the men who drive the garbage truck either.
      They get cleaner as you go up the lines of the hiearchie

    • @kurby1235
      @kurby1235 Před 4 lety +44

      you legit know fuck all about mafia to assume that lol...

    • @LandersWorkshop
      @LandersWorkshop Před 4 lety +275

      Godfather was the view from the top, goodfellas was the view from the bottom. None of the goodfellas are even 'mafia' made men but associates who are low-grade usually.

  • @nateds7326
    @nateds7326 Před 5 lety +894

    Are we gonna ignore the incredible old age makeup on De Niro and woods?

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 5 lety +204

      I think the secret is partly how simple it is. A lot of modern movies try to get really fancy and advanced with their old age make-up and it frequently looks garish and unnatural.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před 4 lety +27

      those guys don't need that makeup now

    • @nigecheshire9854
      @nigecheshire9854 Před 4 lety +4

      @Shaken not stirred BOB is a DICK, right on bro/ sis? 👍🏻

    • @frankmachin5438
      @frankmachin5438 Před 4 lety +27

      Coolio 14 we encourage ‘em to be dicks - why does anyone give a sh*t what a freakin actor says? 100 years ago they were only half a step up from hookers and now, in the 21st century Matt Damon, DeNiro or Brie Larson fart and people prick up their ears like they’re William F Buckley or Walter Kronkite. Now days the only prerequisite for being taken seriously on political matters is fame. Unless he or she is talking about acting or cinema, I couldn’t give a fat rat’s ass what an actor thinks.

    • @ianbaker6525
      @ianbaker6525 Před 4 lety +4

      @@frankmachin5438 exactly

  • @frankthespank
    @frankthespank Před 2 lety +140

    That rape scene in Once Upon a Time in America was so shocking… I can separate real life and acting but holy shit did that scene seem so real, the way she screamed and fought back was so messed up…

    • @robotpanda77
      @robotpanda77 Před rokem +34

      Its almost as if hanging out with a gangster is a bad idea? Who knew??

    • @victorharvey7747
      @victorharvey7747 Před rokem +4

      Wow now I gotta watch it to appreciate the acting thanks brother👍

    • @waxmeltfan
      @waxmeltfan Před rokem +60

      @@robotpanda77 blaming the victim😾 tch tch

    • @neinja66469
      @neinja66469 Před rokem +39

      @@waxmeltfan frrrr tho wtf is up with bro above us? Like not all gangsters are sexual predators either but nah had to blame the victim too 🙄🙄

    • @waxmeltfan
      @waxmeltfan Před rokem +7

      @@neinja66469 people love to be ignorant

  • @kevinhixson1586
    @kevinhixson1586 Před 6 dny +2

    I'm italian on my fathers side. My great grandfather came to america in the 10s. Started a deli and got involved with the midwestern mafias, allegedly meeting Al Capone. He left the mafia during the 30s and lived to be almost 100 years old and died of natural causes.
    My grandfather was a mechanic who used his shop as a front for his own illegal crimes, pimping, drug dealing and tax dodging and laundering, went to prison in the 80s for tax stuff, and got out in the 2000s.
    It really messed up my father's and uncles lives as my grandmother divorced and went through a bunch of different boyfriends some of whome were abusive. My grandfather also died of natural causes but died broke and left nothing to his children.
    My father was a drug dealer and grew up in a semi-broken home. He had a bunch of friends who had similar backgrounds so he formed his own crew with them. They mostly dealt in drugs. He made a lot of money in this time, he had 5 cadilac cars and 2 motorcycles at the age of 20. At 22 he was shot in the face and robbed by his "crew". And i was left in the similar situation he was in growing up.
    Organized crime gave my family the lives they wanted to live, but it also cost them everything in the end. And each time it was in diminishing returns, it would appear. The sopranos is probably the best interpretation of the mob life in the modern day.

  • @Tommy-5684
    @Tommy-5684 Před 4 lety +558

    im kind of surprised that Carlitos Way dosnt get a mention as a post gangster in a sense after getting out of prison and failing to escape his past

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +124

      I really regret not including Carlito's Way. At the time the omission made sense but in hindsight I wish it was featured.

    • @gachoman2012
      @gachoman2012 Před 4 lety +38

      I like Carlitos Way more than Scarface, being that I feel like it's super Shakespearean.

    • @jrob4795
      @jrob4795 Před 4 lety +8

      Oh, well hell if you're going to talk about Carlitos way, you gotta mention Sugar Hill.

    • @knowledge1366
      @knowledge1366 Před 4 lety +2

      @@gachoman2012 damn man.. your taste is kinda fucked up. carlitos way is cool and all but just al pacino's acting in scarface makes it one of the best movies ever

    • @damonroger3184
      @damonroger3184 Před 4 lety +25

      @@knowledge1366 Nah. Scarface is a classic in it's own right, and one of my all time favorites. But Carlito's Way is a much more well-crafted film.

  • @takayasu2009
    @takayasu2009 Před 4 lety +1756

    'Good Fellas' from my point of view de-glorified gangsters as well.

    • @kostajovanovic3711
      @kostajovanovic3711 Před 4 lety +30

      Really? Tell me more

    • @javierperalta7648
      @javierperalta7648 Před 4 lety +181

      The last important romanticized gangster movie made was The Departed

    • @takayasu2009
      @takayasu2009 Před 4 lety +11

      Javier Peralta Never seen it.

    • @fangsabre
      @fangsabre Před 4 lety +360

      I can see that. The main character glorifies being a gangster, but considering at the end of the movie hes a washed up loser in the witness protection program after ratting on one of his friends who murdered the rest of his friends, yeah it isnt really pro gangster

    • @mattsalvatore3193
      @mattsalvatore3193 Před 4 lety +9

      @@takayasu2009 Infernal Affairs remake

  • @speedracer2008
    @speedracer2008 Před 2 lety +37

    28:29 the lack of music also makes the scene scary. It really forces us to take in the gravity of what Noodles is doing, without music to distract us.

  • @ishmaeldarjean2757
    @ishmaeldarjean2757 Před rokem +23

    The depiction of Max in Once Upon a Time in America was certainly a ruthless takeover of everything they had worked for together as a crew for one persons gain. He basically threw away their friendship and bond for himself. Living with that for a prolonged period would drive anyone in sane to the point of suicide. Great job in making those critical observations on Noodles and how he had let the old Max die for his translation of Sec’y Bailey. What stood before Noodles at the end was a corpse in his eyes that was already dead.

  • @malagrrl
    @malagrrl Před 4 lety +82

    Regarding Clyde Barrow's supposed impotence in Bonnie and Clyde, mentioned at about 12:25 -- in real life, Clyde Barrow had been incarcerated on a Texas prison farm as a teenager and was supposedly raped on a daily basis by an older, bigger inmate -- until Clyde beat him to death with a piece of pipe, the first time he killed a man. In the film, I believe that Clyde's awkwardness with Bonnie is supposed to be a reference to what happened to the real Clyde Barrow -- as in, this man associates sexual activity with suffering, and has to deal with PTSD-type stress when Bonnie indicates that she wants to get romantic.

    • @RIPIZZY
      @RIPIZZY Před rokem +8

      I’ve also read that depicting Clyde as impotent was an attempt to make him seem weak and tamp down the public reverence for the couple. Their folk-hero status definitely pissed a lot of law enforcement off back in the day

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 Před rokem

      @@RIPIZZY Pisses me off as well. They’re thieves and murderers, not much else.

  • @bruins4rent213
    @bruins4rent213 Před 4 lety +327

    And with "The Irishman" fade to black

    • @rocklord16
      @rocklord16 Před 4 lety +7

      No Irish need apply.

    • @mo2k638
      @mo2k638 Před 4 lety

      Mr PapaGeorgio what ?

    • @mo2k638
      @mo2k638 Před 4 lety +1

      Mr PapaGeorgio What’s your obsession with black people ?

    • @mo2k638
      @mo2k638 Před 4 lety +1

      Zesty Meatballs thanks for changing idiot

    • @asap.6283
      @asap.6283 Před 3 lety +8

      @Sidharth Rao I really disagree with people saying that Goodfellas glorified the mafia. It showed the phenomena of choosing to be a mobster, and the obsession that comes with it. By the end of the movie, Scorsese shows that not only are they all psychos, but lost souls who have been allured to the criminal lifestyle

  • @monsterman272
    @monsterman272 Před rokem +10

    I was blown away watching White Heat on TCM as a kid. My sister and I were obsessed with Cagney films after. Great video, thanks!

  • @mainmanmainlining7575
    @mainmanmainlining7575 Před rokem +3

    This is a fantastic visual essay on the American gangster genre. So many film channels are absolute nonsense. Usually headed by attention seeking leaches, infecting other people’s passion with their lack there of, but your the real-deal! Very well done.

  • @s1050
    @s1050 Před 4 lety +670

    Not really a fan of modern Netflix style TV shows replacing movies. I like 3 hour gangster classics. The Irishman was a great return. Hopefully Netflix etc keep greenlighting those kinda movies

    • @scottherf
      @scottherf Před 3 lety +25

      and that there is the key problem. a single player will never foster creativity or risk. Never, forget it. Netflix is death, sorry. but like uber they'll both be gone/transformed in 5 years.

    • @giovannicervantes2053
      @giovannicervantes2053 Před 3 lety +20

      @@scottherf uber is hemorrhaging more money than a hemophiliac in a coinstar but netflix will definitely stay but like you said if you get a netflix original series that is a statement that your career is practically dead like a bloated fish

    • @hisholiness4537
      @hisholiness4537 Před 3 lety +1

      @@scottherf Netflix is older than Google lol it's not going anywhere

    • @jamesearlcash7725
      @jamesearlcash7725 Před 3 lety +6

      @C M it was old actors and directors trying desperately to stay relevant today. It’s basically “The Expendables” mobster version, dripping with cheese and barely acceptable as entertainment.

    • @dogdude259
      @dogdude259 Před 3 lety +7

      @@scottherf whether you like it or not streaming services are the future and tbh its for the better cable and satellite is overrated and overpriced and ads are annoying

  • @willmosse3684
    @willmosse3684 Před 4 lety +565

    Nice analysis. I would argue, however, that the decline of the classic gangster movie is about the real world decline of the classic gangster, at least as much as it is about cinematic trends. Yes, we now have street gangs and Latin American cartels, but those have a very different feel than the mid-20th Century American organised crime mobs. That was really the theme of Scorcese’s The Irishman. That era is now just a memory in the minds of a few dusty old men in dusty old people’s homes, being played by octogenarian actors who are technologically de-aged for one last look at the scene.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Před 3 lety +32

      It is more than just about the state of gangsters. It is happening to culture as a whole. Popular music is dreadful and art is a doll sitting on a toilet.

    • @bruh_oly1370
      @bruh_oly1370 Před 2 lety +41

      The culture has all changed . You can’t depict a bunch of criminals organising all kinds via smartphones. The rise of causal clothing also - you gonna show a bunch of guys at the top dressed up in skinny jeans like Connor mcgregor ? Cmon

    • @bobgotracks5680
      @bobgotracks5680 Před 2 lety +2

      @@bruh_oly1370 well said

    • @burtbiggum499
      @burtbiggum499 Před 2 lety +33

      @@bighands69 Im sure there were people 50 years ago saying the same shit

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před 2 lety +13

      I agree entirely. The American and European "gangster" or "mobster" died out in the 70s with the rise of the latin american cartels, the decline of the Italian mob, and the eventual incoming waves of latin american immigrants and eastern European Mafia. Not only did the overall focus of criminal enterprises move from racketeering, union corruption, numbers running, gambling, and moonshine all produced locally to cocaine, heroin, crack, sex slaves, and meth imported from south and central america but that also lead to a shift in demographics as well. This all also lead to gangs becoming more and more cut throat and violent as well as more powerful as they could more easily exist in places with little to no laws and then spread out from their base of power rather then having to exist in the US and try to stay under the radar.
      Basically the idea of the Italian American mobster became popular in the great depression and prohibition and continued until it died out alongside its real world counterpart in the 70s. With the rise of the cartels in the 80s and the crack epidemic in the 80s and 90s the Italian mob became antiquated and almost naive.

  • @eugeloo
    @eugeloo Před 2 lety +8

    Just watched Once Upon a Time in America for the first time. This definitely helps me appreciate more. Thank you!

  • @wickeywaanzla3015
    @wickeywaanzla3015 Před rokem +5

    Unpopular opinion: the genre is slowly coming back. Real ex-wiseguys have CZcams channels, a new generation found out about the Sopranos, and actual crime families are on the uptick again. Civilians today know more about Mafia than at any other time period in it's existence.

    • @br3akstuff
      @br3akstuff Před 5 dny

      That does not mean the genre is coming back at all. The mafia has very little cultural presence especially to under 30s.

    • @wickeywaanzla3015
      @wickeywaanzla3015 Před 5 dny

      @@br3akstuff You obviously don't have your finger on the pulse. I'm under 30. A ton of younger people are starting to find this stuff appealing because we live in a time where every institution is corrupt and people can't afford to take care of their families. We just watched a former president battle multiple RICO indictments.

    • @br3akstuff
      @br3akstuff Před 5 dny

      @@wickeywaanzla3015 Okay? Thay doesn't mean the mafia hasn't greatly declined and no more mafia shit will be made likely, especially considering no young Italian-American actors would want to subject themselves to being "mafia actors" also I personally don't hear anyone my age talk about the mafia ever. Maybe people are not interested in seeing guys who look like your school counselor in skinny jeans doing scams on an iPhone.

  • @johnhanamy9795
    @johnhanamy9795 Před 4 lety +503

    Perhaps the old style gangster movie charted the rise and fall of the working class. With the industrial working class practically extinct enter the middle class mobster, Walter White's school teacher from "Breaking Bad", Francis Underwood's crooked congressman in "House of Cards" and Marty Byrd's business consultant from "Ozark". Female characters are more central too. Gangsters haven't gone away they've just adapted.

    • @noamchomsky3077
      @noamchomsky3077 Před 4 lety +28

      John Hanamy you just decimated his whole video...poor bastard prolly wished didn’t make it now.

    • @johnhanamy9795
      @johnhanamy9795 Před 4 lety +61

      @@noamchomsky3077No, I hope not. It was a good video. His love of gangster movies is apparent. I enjoyed watching it

    • @noamchomsky3077
      @noamchomsky3077 Před 4 lety

      John Hanamy how condescending of you.

    • @ahumanbeingfromtheearth1502
      @ahumanbeingfromtheearth1502 Před 4 lety +44

      @@noamchomsky3077 "expressing an appreciation of someone's work? How condescending"
      You seem like you have received no love from anyone in your life. I would suggest seeing a therapist.

    • @BOB-wx3fq
      @BOB-wx3fq Před 4 lety +31

      Even the Sopranos had that upper middle class vibe, I think this is a smart comment

  • @leoalphaproductions8642
    @leoalphaproductions8642 Před 3 lety +326

    I remember watching Once Upon a Time in America for the first time and it blew me away. It’s one of the most beautifully written masterpieces. The musical score itself is also one of the best I’ve heard in any film.

    • @ThirteenAmp
      @ThirteenAmp Před rokem +20

      Yeah and the fact that it's not a typical gangster movie, it's an opium trip gangster epic

    • @bobvylan7215
      @bobvylan7215 Před rokem +5

      Highly underrated. Agreed.

    • @snyperheadshoot
      @snyperheadshoot Před rokem +4

      My favorite movie, alongside BR2049, watched it 4 times, I had never felt 4 hours passing by so easily.

    • @gavinkaylhem8038
      @gavinkaylhem8038 Před rokem +4

      Nope.
      The real film ended up on the cutting room floor. Well known fact.
      And it's a terrible movie. With large chunks missing.
      Once upon a time in the west.
      That's the movie.

    • @sophiaperennis2360
      @sophiaperennis2360 Před rokem +1

      @@gavinkaylhem8038 Did you watch the theatrical version of the movie? That was butchered beyond recognition. The European version is much better, all though that still isn't the full version.
      To be honest though, my problem with the film isn't that it was cut, i just don't like the morality of it. Leone's films were always violent but i thought the older movies he did had more humanity in them. And on that note, i'd say his most underrated film is Duck, You Sucker!.

  • @intelligentspeculator7327
    @intelligentspeculator7327 Před 2 lety +24

    Great analysis, but the last 5 minutes seem too rushed, they go through too many memorable films, too quickly, and miss some of them, that could add a lot to this analysis, like Donnie Brasco and Carlito's Way. "Once Upon in America" was not yet the end of the story. I think this could definitely use a part 2, for the classic gangster films after "Once Upon in America".

  • @literaldeville5382
    @literaldeville5382 Před rokem +7

    I really do think that the romanticism on display in the earlier scenes isn't just there to make the critique of said romanticism more cutting later on, but also because it's meant to characterize Noodles as a broken man obsessed with a nostalgic past that never was and because Leone himself understood and even believed in the myth of the gangster epic even if he knew that the reality was detestable. It's not just deconstructing a romanticized ideal, it's about romanticism and why people believe in it even as it breaks them.

  • @Warszawski_Modernizm
    @Warszawski_Modernizm Před 4 lety +205

    RIP Enio Morricone !

  • @KoreaMojo
    @KoreaMojo Před 4 lety +159

    These gangster films are like watching high levels of narcissism from the outside. You can either collude in the fantasy image with them or see things for what they are no matter how hard the context is being manipulated. It's a superficial illusion that is easily dispelled but often seductive and always understandable as a temptation.
    Great piece of work here! I appreciate the thoughtfulness a lot.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Před 3 lety +15

      Very few of the best gangster films were seductive. They nearly all finished in despair or disaster.

    • @williamthegunnut3839
      @williamthegunnut3839 Před 2 lety +2

      The Godfather is a masterpiece

  • @merlinjames5954
    @merlinjames5954 Před rokem +3

    How could you neglect to mention Goncharov (1973)?? (otherwise great video)

  • @theraymunator
    @theraymunator Před 2 lety +12

    I watched Once Upon a time in America with my mom quite some time ago, I can't really remember at what age, but I do remember that I was too young to really understand the film's deeper themes, but old enough so that some of the violence didn't nearly faze me as much as it did, although that's not saying much since watching someone get raped is always horrible, even in film.
    After getting into more mature media that touches on themes of why people commit atrocities, I've always wanted to see that movie again, because I think it's a good movie that shows that evil is often born from as you put it "taking as much as you can for yourself".

  • @giggityguns123
    @giggityguns123 Před 3 lety +195

    “The Godfather’s dead, and we killed him” - Friedrich Nietzsche

  • @fluentincinema7730
    @fluentincinema7730 Před 3 lety +227

    I would just like to say, this is one of the most accurate analysis I have ever seen. Once Upon a Time in America is one of my favorite movies and I am happy that there are people who still watch it. I hope we can see the original version in the future. Amazing job, wish more people would watch this.

    • @Ktulut
      @Ktulut Před rokem +2

      Hope for you, you could see the original European cut of Once Upon Time in America, because as very often, the first American editing, which was wanted by the American distributor, was an artistic slaughtering (same happened to Terry GIlliam's Brazil).

    • @enoch9468
      @enoch9468 Před rokem +2

      @@Ktulut I think he talks about the fact the Leaone actually made it a 10 hour movie and then trimmed it and all of this stuff is in some studio safe somewhere

    • @Ktulut
      @Ktulut Před rokem +1

      @@enoch9468 Then I am as eager as anyone to see ithis

    • @jesseplinkman5000
      @jesseplinkman5000 Před rokem

      @@enoch9468 It was six hours, & no one knows where the additional footage is.

  • @the98themperoroftheholybri33
    @the98themperoroftheholybri33 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Road to Perdition is perhaps the most accurate portrayal of an American gangster from the 1930s imo.
    Mostly because the majority of the film is from the pov of a child

  • @maxalvarez5223
    @maxalvarez5223 Před 8 měsíci +2

    This is the best CZcams video I’ve ever seen on film I think, you hit the nail on the head with everything A+

  • @joejoerunya8908
    @joejoerunya8908 Před 4 lety +291

    I think that Michael Corleone was just a victim of his time period. The stakes were higher because they were making way more money, and the gangsters he dealt with were a new breed. They attacked him at his house etc. Think of Vito... gangsters in his day had respect for each other (as long as you didn't mess with their business etc). Michael simply had to become ruthless because those new guys had no rules

    • @icheko2498
      @icheko2498 Před 4 lety +31

      I like your comment. I would want to add though that with michael it shows a more honest thing that happenes in these situations. That an innocent michael turns more violent and full of darkness the more he gets into the murder. It shows the truth of this life that murderers don't get softer the deeper they dive into that world.

    • @vassilyvodka2638
      @vassilyvodka2638 Před 4 lety +5

      @Channel My interpretation is that in Vitos days the Mob has risen into while in Michaels days they wanted to maintained it, that's why they became more ruthless so that they don't lose their empire

    • @FrontWing-EndPlate
      @FrontWing-EndPlate Před 4 lety +5

      @Christian Tompkins 'Sonny, it's not personal..its strictly business'

    • @FrontWing-EndPlate
      @FrontWing-EndPlate Před 4 lety +1

      @Christian Tompkins horseshit your talkin pal

    • @Funkydonut
      @Funkydonut Před 4 lety

      He was just a tragic hero

  • @christopherhalim2801
    @christopherhalim2801 Před 4 lety +155

    I can't believe you talk about gangster films without mentioning the greatest of them all: "Angels with Filthy Souls"

  • @jasonbodine6033
    @jasonbodine6033 Před rokem +4

    Great video! So well analyzed and edited. I especially appreciate the breakdown of “Once Upon a Time in America”. I am an absolute fan of the entire genre, and appreciate when a gangster/Mob movie is done properly. Another rags-to-riches-to-rags story is “American Gangster“. But it, too, is a part of the genre that started with the movie “The G-men”, where the protagonist is the Law. The Law that must bring down the criminal. A movie you might like as well is “A Most Violent Year” where the protagonist is actually trying to get away from the Mob life (though his wife comes off as a Godfather III Connie Corleone-esque gangster, more so than her husband could ever be).

  • @davidvalensi8616
    @davidvalensi8616 Před 2 lety +3

    It doesn't matter, even bad Leone is better than almost anyone else, I can't even compare him to Scorsese, they're two different styles, there is no bad Leone.

  • @FastEddie86
    @FastEddie86 Před 4 lety +351

    The untouchables, goodfellas, the godfather part iii, Carlitos way, casino, Donnie brasco. All made after once upon a time in America.

    • @larrythewanderer3422
      @larrythewanderer3422 Před 3 lety +63

      And The Irishman

    • @sliv_dawg
      @sliv_dawg Před 3 lety +23

      Well those kind of fall into what he said at the end! Am three of those are real life stories casino names change but still

    • @Mike-do3oy
      @Mike-do3oy Před 3 lety +3

      @@sliv_dawg godfather part 3 is not based on real life stories neither was Carlito’s way

    • @danonilus
      @danonilus Před 3 lety +30

      And none of them romantices the gangster life.

    • @jacopoabbruscato9271
      @jacopoabbruscato9271 Před 3 lety +19

      The Untouchables is centered on the cops though, not on Al Capone

  • @vintage_life
    @vintage_life Před 4 lety +765

    Once upon a time in America is probably the best gangster movies I ever seen

    • @erikbentley9005
      @erikbentley9005 Před 4 lety +99

      It’s the greatest movie ever made in my opinion.

    • @dawsondjodvorj2408
      @dawsondjodvorj2408 Před 4 lety +37

      @Jack The Film Fanatic it's a matter of opinion, I like OUATIA more than the godfather 2, however I do believe performances in the godfather 2 is better.

    • @erikbentley9005
      @erikbentley9005 Před 4 lety +15

      Jack The Film Fanatic to me they aren’t really comparable since they go for vastly different themes + structure. Godfather Part II is in my top 10 all time though

    • @patrickbush9526
      @patrickbush9526 Před 4 lety +3

      I just watched the movie again for the umpteenth time and I'll vote for you if you run for president be cool St Louis

    • @Slice2099
      @Slice2099 Před 4 lety +35

      Goodfellas is way better the fuck

  • @Kings_Gambit
    @Kings_Gambit Před 2 lety +11

    What a fantastic look into the genre. Brilliantly edited, written and narrated, thoroughly enjoyable watch.

  • @randomuser8390
    @randomuser8390 Před 2 lety +35

    The gangster movie never died in my opinion, it just shifted along with time and followed the crimes of their era. I don't think the gangster movie ever will truly die because they are always a reminder about the real conflict and action that happen in the real world rather than the exotic adventures of a superhero in fantasy setting.

  • @natalieps2387
    @natalieps2387 Před 3 lety +49

    The godfather is so sad bc in being a more ruthless & cold mob boss than his father, the previous boss he defeats all his enemies as tom says " theirs nobody left you won" but in the end of Part 2 hes alone. Surrounding by all the money power & the compound all he can do is sit & remember when he had his family. His parents are dead , both his brothers dead ( one killed by his own hand ) his first wife & imo true love was murdered. He has banished his 2nd wife & mother of his kids. His brother in law he had killed. All that's left is his sister connie & adopted brother tom. He really only trusts with his life al neri, essentially an employee. Pacino is an acting genius. Its unforgivable he did not win an oscar for both godfathers in the 70s. He perfectly portrayed the arc of a young college student & war hero who wanted nothing to do with his family to a ruthless mob boss who mows down all his fathers & now his enemies. We see the turning points when be protects his dad from a crooken cop & the turk in the hospital. I love when enzo the baker helps him than Renzi's hands are shaking so badly from anxiety & fear that he cant light his cigarette. Michael lights it for him & notices his hands are so steady. I wondered if that was from surviving war & being a hero so he obviously was a great soldier or if he was just cold blooded to begin with. He has to kill a police captain & the turk to help protect his dad. He goes to hide out in Sicily & in the same day finds out his brother sonny was murdered & his wife, the woman that was the love of his life was killed in a car bomb meant for him. All these events with Pacino's acting are amazing in showing the change in michael corleone. He loved kaye but was not the love of his life. That's why its disappointing they cut out the scenes where michael had been spending many years looking for her murderer fabrizio & Michael having him killed in a car bomb , the same way appolonia was killed. To me those deleted scenes show a big reason michael became so cold. He is married with 2 kids to kaye & he still has been searching for apollonia 's killer. Avenging her death was all personal.

  • @pheunithpsychic-watertype9881

    As glamourized as scarface was i could honestly feel the boredom she was talking about, not about the movie but about the lifestyle.

    • @speedracer2008
      @speedracer2008 Před 3 lety +19

      Recent gangster films, particularly those of the 80’s, convey the emptiness of the gangster lifestyle, like Scarface and Once Upon A Time In America.

    • @reikun86
      @reikun86 Před 3 lety +12

      You can only have so many tigers in your estate.

  • @maynardburger
    @maynardburger Před rokem +15

    A lot of missed opportunities to talk about how black gangster movies kind of picked up the mantle as the mafia(in film and in reality) faded. I also think much more should have been talked about in terms of the inherent toxic masculinity involved in basically every single gangster. You had the misogyny section, but this goes way, way deeper than that. It's such a critical part of what makes the gangster in general. And also why these movies almost always appeal first and foremost to men.

  • @mangaming1942
    @mangaming1942 Před rokem +6

    I like how you talked about the ending for Once upon a time in America. People sometimes think way too hard on movies and envision their own ending. It reminds me of Evangelion where people hated the ending so much the creator made a new bad ending just for them.

  • @NelsonStJames
    @NelsonStJames Před 4 lety +212

    As long as the "American Dream" persists the gangster film will never truly die.

    • @JR-ju3kj
      @JR-ju3kj Před 4 lety +32

      Agreed,nor will the gangster lifestyle,itself. The Italian-American mob hasn't gone anywhere.They're still around-it's just that their power,influence and glamour has diminished and that they're not as flashy and public as they used to be.
      They've gone back to being more quiet and low-key.
      It's just like Western films,gangster movies are STILL being made and will STILL continue to be made....but the glory days of their era are long gone.

    • @jiminsapplebottomjeans3945
      @jiminsapplebottomjeans3945 Před 3 lety +5

      J R dude, that’s true I live in the south of Italy and it’s kinda the same, you know the influencial people that are involved in it but its taboo and you can’t really talk about it.

    • @matthewsawczyn6592
      @matthewsawczyn6592 Před 3 lety +3

      @@JR-ju3kj Just like we have neo-westerns and neo-noir, we are in the age of neo-gangster. Different look, same principles

    • @raze_
      @raze_ Před 3 lety +15

      @@JR-ju3kj i mean they fell off because italians/irish stopped being oppressed. And got replaced with poc gangs. Almost all organized crime groups started as a way to protect marginalized communities that werent being protected by police. Paying for protection was actually paying for protection in the beginning then became extortion.

    • @htf5555
      @htf5555 Před 3 lety +2

      what dream

  • @jackkeating8234
    @jackkeating8234 Před 4 lety +47

    This is truly one of the greatest videos on CZcams, let alone probably the best video about Once Upon a Time in America. Wonderful dissection of the genre and the film that (really, truly) ruined it.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +6

      You're too kind. Thank you. I'm glad you liked it.

  • @Eletheo
    @Eletheo Před 3 lety +6

    I appreciate that you give credit to Asphalt Jungle for it’s influence. Lot of people like to credit Rififi as the origin of the heist film. While a terrific film, it clearly borrows a LOT from Asphalt Jungle and came out five years later! Both are well worth watching and remembering.
    Oh, and I might as well mention Bob the Gambler, another fantastic French heist film from 1956 that also borrows some things from Asphalt Jungle.

  • @Lethgar_Smith
    @Lethgar_Smith Před 2 lety +4

    4:43 That's a real browning machine gun firing at that wall as Jimmy Cagney ducks behind it. With no edit.
    He talked about that scene often in interviews.

  • @kylevernon
    @kylevernon Před 3 lety +39

    It kind of incredible that you mentioned my top two favorite movies “Goodfellas, and then The good, the bad, and the ugly” because I’ve always seemed to put them in different categories. I guess they’re similar in a lot of ways, which is why I like them so much.

  • @blkplaguelmc
    @blkplaguelmc Před 3 lety +263

    "Once upon time killed the genre!!!"
    Scorcese: Hold my beer, twice, no actually 3 times

    • @Bervik
      @Bervik Před 3 lety +25

      Scorsese deconstructs gangsters with entertaining exposition dumps, not a lot of filmmakers can make expository narration entertaining

    • @epitaph3988
      @epitaph3988 Před 2 lety +1

      He addressed those movies in the video.

    • @0Fear
      @0Fear Před 2 lety +3

      @@epitaph3988 He addresses them, but his way of dismissing them is flimsy.

    • @alejandrobolin5224
      @alejandrobolin5224 Před 2 lety

      @@0Fear you people really didn't understand the point of the video or just took it's claim waaaaay too literally

    • @kainlives7958
      @kainlives7958 Před 2 měsíci

      Honestly…The Irishman is the last genuinely good gangster film imo

  • @spazatafeltyd9871
    @spazatafeltyd9871 Před 2 lety +2

    As far back as I can remember, I've always wanted film reviews to be this good...

  • @RichardKoenigsberg
    @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +221

    The young man eats the cake because he's poor and desperate, not because he's greedy and selfish. The director wants us to feel sympathy for the young man. There's a sadness in the scene.

    • @mauriciomolina592
      @mauriciomolina592 Před 4 lety +81

      And represent that the kid it's still a kid, and don't really need to have sex with Peggy, same with the Gangster life.

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +43

      I saw that scene again. One can feel tremendous empathy for the poor kid. To call him "creedy and selfish"--is nonsensical. He's a poor, hungry kid.

    • @skatemetrix
      @skatemetrix Před 4 lety +24

      That shows the baseness and depravity of society: on the one hand large segments of the poor are suffering from malnourishment, on the other hand this is a highly sexualized society with depraved morals.

    • @TheCheweeRevolutions
      @TheCheweeRevolutions Před 4 lety +82

      Interesting to hear the different interpretations. To me it always represented his inability to delay gratification. If he was a bit more patient he could have got something much better than a bun but he couldn't wait. Just like in life they had to get rich the quickest way the knew how, by turning to crime. They may have been much happier if they'd taken their time and been legitimate business men.

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +9

      @@TheCheweeRevolutions Nice comment

  • @adict126
    @adict126 Před 3 lety +50

    About a year ago I watched Once Upon A Time In America and every 'new' gangster film I watched since then did nothing for me (that includes The Untouchables) and this video perfectly explained why, that film is like a millstone, in general death of gangster films, but also a 'personal' one. Excellent video, well done!

    • @ThirteenAmp
      @ThirteenAmp Před rokem +5

      The Untouchables just isn't a good movie, it's crazy boring and inaccurate. Typical boring Costner movie. The movie Mobsters isn't very good either
      But shows like Boardwalk Empire and Peaky Blinders are insanely good gangster shows, Boardwalk covers the same characters, time period and stories in the movies the Untouchables and Mobsters

    • @kaiser1963
      @kaiser1963 Před rokem

      one upon a time in america is overrated best mob film is still goodfellas

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 Před rokem

      a MILLSTONE or a milestone?

    • @patnewbie2177
      @patnewbie2177 Před rokem

      @@renzo6490 They meant millstone, as it's sometimes used to describe a burden.

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 Před rokem

      @@patnewbie2177 …ah, thank you.

  • @chelizard2516
    @chelizard2516 Před rokem +4

    That was beautiful. I remember the first time I saw Once Upon A Time for the first time, I kept thinking about it for days. A real art masterpiece.

  • @wendelldallas7572
    @wendelldallas7572 Před 2 lety +25

    I believe that the (chronologically) post-opium den sequences are part of a dream Noodles has in which he is subconsciously dealing with his cruelty and wrongdoings that he committed throughout his time as a mobster in the 1930s. I mean, the 1960s scenes play out in a way that is almost too perfect for a guy like Noodles who mistreated so many people. The fact that Deborah seems to have forgotten about the rape while Noodles never even attempts to make amends and doesn't even apologize seems like it is all not actually taking place. That and the entire plot portion that deals with Secretary Bailey really does seem like it is part of Noodles subconciously downplaying his responsibility for turning information in to the cops about the gang - the existence of Secretary Bailey takes the blame away from Noodles and throws it back on Max. I know that half of the folks out there think it is a dream while the other half think that it is not. To me, the story and the dynamics of the characters are more logical from the perspective of it being an opium induced dream in which Noodles tries to subconciously take the blame off of himself.

    • @davidbrown4540
      @davidbrown4540 Před rokem +6

      I think you got the wrong idea. Deborah (if we're taking things in a literal sense) has not forgotten at all. It has shaped her life. It is no accident that when we see her at the end she is in White Face, like a ghost, like an apparition of her former self, the young girl so full of life at the beginning. And then she somehow ended up married to Max as a means of ..what? Revenge?

    • @NancyBruning
      @NancyBruning Před 7 měsíci

      I’m in the opium induced dream camp. Those scenes have a more dreamlike quality with symbolic undertones. Deborah says”Actresses have long memories.” She definitely didn’t forgive the rape. The garbage truck at the end symbolizing the trash they all were. And more….

  • @mahmudmurad4655
    @mahmudmurad4655 Před 4 lety +39

    This is one of the greatest videos I've seen on the subject. Thank you. I hope you do more videos about the great Sergio Leone. And R.I.P. maestro Ennio Morricone.

  • @gcole2108
    @gcole2108 Před 4 lety +25

    This is interesting. In my early teens, I went through a gangster movie phase- I watched Scarface, the Godfather, Donnie Brasco, Goodfellas, Casino, etc and loved them all. But the only one I never finished was Once Upon A Time in America. I turned it off halfway through. Something about it repelled me. I think this reviewer got to the heart of my reaction.

    • @onastick2411
      @onastick2411 Před 2 lety +2

      I watched Once Upon a Time in America, and didn't rate it at all. Don't know which cut, I might have to revisit it, I did that with The Shining, just to be disappointed again. But I'm man enough to give it another go, I owe to myself.

  • @harryyoseminy7623
    @harryyoseminy7623 Před 6 dny

    Your doing gods work, my boi. This is exactly what I’ve been looking for as a filmmaker since the death channel chriswell

  • @SwaggerNauts365
    @SwaggerNauts365 Před 5 lety +61

    Once Upon a Time in America is about regret and comradery.

  • @nathrob2437
    @nathrob2437 Před 4 lety +204

    Lol the gangster film died when the popularity of the real gangsters started to fade, the government and police cracking down on the mafia because of the image Al capone and all the modern day mafia created made them too loud and easier to cracking down on and the mafia retreated back to their old ways, when you didn't hear about it or see it and with that the movies started to decline also, you would never hear about the real mafia unless you was in certain circles, they got too loud and paid for it.

    • @williamscott2649
      @williamscott2649 Před 4 lety +4

      Nath Rob there’s word out there that they are now rebuilding and getting stronger... the FBI etc have had to move units to terrorism etc and so the Mavis can rebuild. They now control 60% of the world drugs trade etc

    • @nathrob2437
      @nathrob2437 Před 4 lety +17

      @@williamscott2649 this where you're missinformed, the likes of capone and john gotti are small time, the real sicilian mafia never diminished, they have been functioning how they always have, behind the scenes, these other "gangsters" well they just played dress up and looked the part

    • @williamscott2649
      @williamscott2649 Před 4 lety +4

      Nath Rob completely agree. I think there’s also a difference between the Sicilian and American Sicilian ones. Sicilian have always been in the shadows, look at how important it was when Buscetta became a pentito way back when. It was the first break into them... on the other side is the A-S one, where they have always been more in the limelight. The five families of NYC (which is true) are very famous and documented, whereas in the Sicilian one there is next to no information of their structure

    • @nathrob2437
      @nathrob2437 Před 4 lety +15

      @@williamscott2649 that's because they are not seen as criminals in sicily, they are a part of their culture, so the people in sicily that aren't a part of it know to keep their noses out or face the consequences, you know your facts my friend, allot of people wouldn't have known what I was talking about haha

    • @williamscott2649
      @williamscott2649 Před 4 lety +5

      Nath Rob it’s the culture of “omertà” out there - very prevalent in Sciascia’s detective stories (all in Italian)! And thank you!

  • @cosmoissleeping
    @cosmoissleeping Před rokem +2

    Many actual gangsters were considered folk heroes in the 1930s as well. A populace weathering the Great Depression as fat cats were much more insulated to the complications viewed bank robbers and moonshiners as the good guys

  • @Damnto
    @Damnto Před 3 lety +1

    As a Italian American who had family in the mafia….they’re sociopaths or people who are out of luck and take the wrong ways to make money but they still have pride in what they do
    The movies are heavily romanticized the closest to the real thing is the sopranos and once upon a time in America

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito Před 3 lety +29

    Wrong.
    Nothing was ever the same after we all heard,
    "Keep the change, you filthy animal," in _Angels With Filthy Souls._

  • @louieandtommysdiscountedit3177

    The dark themes contrasted with the classic look of the film really make it stand out. OUATIA was released in 1984, yet the color and texture of the film looks as though it came from the 50s/60s. I guess you could just chalk this up to cheap Italian film stock, but damn, does it go a long way.
    Yeah, now that I think about it, this film, and a handful of other films before, definitely contributed to a change in cinema that embraced honesty. It’s almost as if Leone saw A Clockwork Orange and said to himself, “Why aren’t gangsters depicted like this?”
    Incredible essay, dude. Glad there are people covering this masterpiece.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +2

      I hadn't thought about similarities to A Clockwork Orange, but that is a really good point. And yeah, the richness of the film's color and texture make it feel much older than it really is, which is crucial.
      Thanks for the kind words.

    • @speedracer2008
      @speedracer2008 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah. Sergio Leone (RIP) put a lot of effort into making New York in Once Upon A Time In America look like it did in the 1920’s, 1930’s and 1960’s. Plus, the music from Ennio Morricone (RIP) is beautiful. My favorite track is Poverty, which is the track you hear in this video when the narrator explains how seriously the film handles the consequences of the gangster lifestyle to show how hollow and unfulfilling it is.

  • @hushthecipher
    @hushthecipher Před rokem +2

    Irishman is definitely a succesor to Once Upon a Time in America. It's a pretty sad movie which lacks alot of flashiness and that's definitely intentional. The fact that, the criminal protagonist ends up sad and alone in a nursing home is the perfect contrast to the idea of living large & dying young in a blaze of glory.

  • @raulvidal2343
    @raulvidal2343 Před rokem +2

    Watching this is November 2022, and I was very disappointed to not see a mention of Scorsese's masterpiece Goncharov, from 1973, arguably the greatest gangster movie ever made.

  • @davidbranin969
    @davidbranin969 Před 4 lety +43

    Feel like I'm listening someone's thesis. The gangster lives on in film quality tv shows like the Soprano's, The Wire, Peaky Blinders and Boardwalk Empire.

    • @michaelcharlesthearchangel
      @michaelcharlesthearchangel Před 4 lety +1

      It lives on in GTA THE MOVIE.
      GTA THE MOVIE.
      The ultimate crossover between gangster movies and the GTA universe.
      The Godfather IV-esque Story begins on Facebook.
      ::
      facebook.com/GrandTheftAutoStory/

    • @DreDaDon16
      @DreDaDon16 Před 3 lety +6

      Snowfall too

  • @gold24k54
    @gold24k54 Před 4 lety +307

    A fantastic video, and in my opinion, Once Upon a time in America is the greatest film ever made. (In my eyes it is).

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +44

      Thank you for saying so. It is indeed a classic and I would agree that it's a masterpiece.

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +19

      I agree: greatest film ever made. Much better than GODFATHER. Maybe that's why the genre ended: couldn't surpass this film, which told the whole story, why bother.

    • @AllenMacCannell
      @AllenMacCannell Před 4 lety +5

      @@RichardKoenigsberg - the theme song played when the new bride arrives at the train station with noone alive to greet her, was one of the most moving scenes in cinema history.

    • @hakshustletv
      @hakshustletv Před 4 lety +14

      @@RichardKoenigsberg Idk know about the "much better than Godfather" part but it surely doesn't get talked about nearly enough

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +1

      @@AllenMacCannell And when she leaves NOODLES ON THE TRAIN TO hOLLYWOOD.

  • @djpolo99
    @djpolo99 Před rokem +4

    Excellent analysis! I would suggest New Jack City follows the same pattern of gangster movies because it was literally the story of Scarface mixed in with the real life story of The Supreme Team.

    • @Afrocypher9590
      @Afrocypher9590 Před rokem +2

      Not the Supreme Team, but the Chambers Brothers outta Detroit. Screenplay was co-written Barry Michael Cooper's rewrite was adapted from his December 1987 The Village Voice cover story entitled _"Kids Killing Kids: New Jack City Eats It's Young,"_ about the drug war in Detroit. The account referred to the 20th anniversary of the 1967 riots in Detroit, and in it's wake, the rise of crack cocaine gangs in the late 1980s/early 1990s, such as Young Boys Inc as well.

  • @boombler4320
    @boombler4320 Před rokem +3

    I cant believe he didnt mention the best gangster movie ever made: "Goncharov" from 1973. Truly one of the movies of all time!

    • @GrosvnerMcaffrey
      @GrosvnerMcaffrey Před rokem +1

      If people keep pushing this joke they're gonna make the movie real

  • @nateds7326
    @nateds7326 Před 4 lety +55

    This video is a big reminder that I need to watch Bonnie and Clyde

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 4 lety +7

      It's pretty awesome. Historically significant, of course, but it's also exceptionally well-made and exciting.

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg Před 4 lety +4

      @@EyebrowCinema I re-watched it recently (after seeing it when I was young). Much too much idealization. The real story was much more gruesome. It's actually not fun to be a gangster.

    • @GH3K3
      @GH3K3 Před 4 lety

      Check out the parody MAD magazine did of that movie (#119, IIRC). Hilarious. The complete run of MAD is online now.

    • @pablovio
      @pablovio Před 4 lety +1

      Fritz Lang's You Only Live Once is a great crime drama, the first ever based on the Bonnie And Clyde story. Bonnie and Clyde is excelent, and depicts another era of filmaking. But I'm much more interested in Lang's movie, because of its noirer (more noir)point of view: it sees the criminals as a product and image of society, and Lang's narrative strongly creates and inocent criminal bound to tragedy. It's interesting to wacht alogn with something like howard hawks's Scarface from the same decade, a movie that sees the glamourized version of crime life but also totally blames the individual morality of the criminals for their evil doing. It's curious, in You Only Live Once maybe society creates criminals, but the criminal life that it shows is far from glamourous, and it's a hollywood production. Maybe hollyood has more than one narrative per archetype.

    • @scottherf
      @scottherf Před 3 lety

      @@RichardKoenigsbergThat's the film's point. but the images are sooo powerful.

  • @theguywhoisaustralian1465
    @theguywhoisaustralian1465 Před 4 lety +15

    "In the end, it's just a pipe dream"
    I see what you did there, that was really good.

  • @samuelbarber6177
    @samuelbarber6177 Před 2 lety +13

    There’s the question over whether or not Noodles may be an unreliable narrator. Since we begin and end with him in the opium den, there’s the possibility that none of the events depicted in the film even happened. Let alone whether or not they may have been glamourised in his memory.

  • @carterbacon6232
    @carterbacon6232 Před rokem +1

    I love your choice of music for this video.

  • @stephaniejaniczekssmugglerscan

    Bonnie and Clyde werent “gangsters” they were grade B criminals.

    • @hitrapperandartistdababy
      @hitrapperandartistdababy Před 3 lety +92

      I cannot fathom how anyone can empathise with them just because thwy where a criminal couple. The fact that thousands showed up to their funeral truly shows how blinded people are/where

    • @123698lol
      @123698lol Před 3 lety +3

      @@hitrapperandartistdababy it was a different time

    • @bigtastyben5119
      @bigtastyben5119 Před 3 lety +8

      @@hitrapperandartistdababy They were a real life Robin Hood and Little John, The fact that millions of people were impoverished because of a few brokers incompetence (amongst other things) turned them into folk heroes overnight. People weren't blind you are just stupid.

    • @hitrapperandartistdababy
      @hitrapperandartistdababy Před 3 lety +45

      @@bigtastyben5119 Fuck out of here with the bullshit, they robbed and killed for themselves. aint nothing Robin Hood about that, and sure as shit nothing heroic about that

    • @hitrapperandartistdababy
      @hitrapperandartistdababy Před 3 lety +10

      @@123698lol there was never a right time to rob and kill

  • @danielfolk5266
    @danielfolk5266 Před 3 lety +109

    The fact that this video has less than one million views baffles me. Seriously, your videos are underrated.

    • @EyebrowCinema
      @EyebrowCinema  Před 3 lety +13

      That's very kind of you to say, Daniel. That said, I'd kill for the rest of my videos to even have a quarter of what this one has.

  • @summerkagan6049
    @summerkagan6049 Před rokem +2

    Boy what a great analysis of the gangster film archetypes. I would like to see you take on neo-noir films like:
    Grifters
    House of Games
    New Jack City
    Sacario
    The Counselor
    The Departed
    Black Dahlia
    LA Confidential
    Eastern Promises
    Little Odessa
    Heat
    Den of Thieves
    Triple 9
    The Drop

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Před rokem

      Would zerozerozero be included?

    • @summerkagan6049
      @summerkagan6049 Před rokem

      Yes it would. Also American Gangster and Training Day. I forgot to mention No Country For Old Men.

  • @Ktulut
    @Ktulut Před rokem +6

    Awesome video ! Thank you ! Sometimes, I asked myself if such a movie could have been produced by American industry. This movie has definitely a special flavor due to its European origin and view on the American culture.

  • @CultureScreen
    @CultureScreen Před 3 lety +31

    "I'm gonna go get the papers, get the papers" JTT

    • @zhubacca
      @zhubacca Před 3 lety

      'I've read all the literature' nJBP

  • @JLRoberson
    @JLRoberson Před 4 lety +27

    Well, thanks to this video I finally gave ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA(the reconstructed long version) a chance, and my god, what a bizarrely hidden masterpiece. This film should have people making references to it like they do the other ones. Perhaps it's too grown-up to be reduced to quotable lines, and yet the script is AMAZING.
    It's not better than the Godfather. I don't think they can really be compared. They're up to very different goals. GF is a straight-up tragedy and OUATIA is more meditative, and really about memory, age and regret. GF is like Aeschylus or Shakespeare; ONCE UPON is more like...Proust.
    One is the work of a young man at the start of his career, which is why we're more with Michael than Vito. The other is the work of an old man near the end of his, bringing all he's seen and done in that time into a maximalist finale. It doesn't reference other films because Leone is the one you make references TO.
    I will say in many ways it's more human and complex than the Godfather, though. I will also say that there are, in fact, many scenes where we are "with" them, in context of the setting. They do clever things. They help a union. That''s still Robin Hood. But then we are pushed away.

  • @GregFries
    @GregFries Před rokem +1

    ***MAJOR SPOILERS BELOW; SERIOUSLY DO NOT READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN"T SEEN THE MOVIE ALREADY, AS IT WILL RUIN THE ENTIRE MOVE FOR YOU***
    The destruction of Noodle's humanity through the rape of Deborah is intentionally orchestrated by Max, and it is done to further demonstrate how severe and complete Max's betrayal of the "gangster brotherhood" is by the end of the film. It also illustrates that James Woods character, Max, is one of the most sinister and cunning movie villains of all time. A true gangster in the most monstrous of ways.
    When they are all young, Noodles loves Deborah and she welcomes his attention and affection, and she even returns it (by inviting him in to watch her dance when she knows how Noodles feels about her). However, at this time, Deborah also consistently rejects Noodles because he is from a poor, lower class family. Max observes this entire dynamic, and understands how much Noodles loves Deborah and how much she motivates him. Max secretly dislikes Noodles for being as competent as him (the stolen watch, the floating bricks), and resents the gang because their bond was already established when he arrived in New York, so he is "left out". Max, however, is also the ultimate villain, and wants to keep Noodles and the gang functioning, so that they can continue to earn money for him, since they are also ultimately disposable to him too.
    When Noodles gets out of jail, and now finally has money and "status", as an adult because of the gang's success, he again attempts to pursue a relationship with Deborah because he loves her. Only to be rejected by her again. It is only revealed to us later in the movie, when Noodles visits Deborah as an old man, that Deborah rejected Noodles because she was already in a "secret" relationship with Max, and fathered a son by him.
    Max recognized when they were kids that he could control Noodles' if he took away Noodle's only serious alternative option to the gang life, Deborah. If Max could prevent Noodles from realizing his love for Deborah in a meaningful relationship when Noodles got out of jail, then Max could continue to use his talent for his own enrichment. As Max planned, Deborah's rejection of Noodles again as an adult caused Noodles to lose his shit (i.e. humanity; the rape), and to further commit to a life centered on crime and the gang. This entire sequence of events was orchestrated by Max from when they were children.
    Perhaps Max didn't know that Noodles would rape Deborah, but he most likely didn't care, because he certainly knew that if he could create a reason for Deborah to reject Noodles as an adult, Noodles would be tormented and weakened by this, and become even more dependent on and committed to the gang, and would therefore be available to serve Max as a capable resource to use and exploit.

  • @787GX
    @787GX Před 11 měsíci +1

    I can tell you are passionate about movies. Good stuff.

  • @FlipOfficial
    @FlipOfficial Před 3 lety +39

    I am currently on a mafia binge.
    I have watched these movies as a kid and always thought how cool it is to be a mafia boss with all the rise to riches and power. But I never dove deeper into them, to see beyond the surface of the characters and story.
    I share a lot of the thoughts made in the video and would say that this is a wonderful explanation of the death of the traditional mafia movies.
    Really well put.