Forums21
Topics43,347
Posts1,086,200
Members10,381
|
Most Online1,254 Mar 13th, 2025
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: Buttmunker]
#384603
04/13/07 11:51 AM
04/13/07 11:51 AM
|
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238 The Ravenite Social Club
Don Cardi
Caporegime
|
Caporegime

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238
The Ravenite Social Club
|
Yes, a really nice man!  What happens is that the veiwer plays right into the hands of the writer and director in liking Vito Corleone. They convey this false message that says " Hey, this man has morals. He won't deal in drugs, he won't cheat on his wife, and he grants favors to people, how can you not like him?" It's the classic way of making the viewer "root" for the bad guy.  This is a man who ordered the murder of many people. Ordered acts of violence to be taken against many people. A man who believed that his own form of law was justified. A man who ran an organization that sucked the life out of the average working man. A man who was responsible for acts of stealing on his behalf. Vito was a man who made his money by shaking down the average businessman, demanding money from those who worked legitimately for what they earned. Don't believe for one moment that Bonasera paid his debt to Don Vito. Once a person like Don Vito does what he disguises as a "favor" for you, you are in his debt for the rest of your life. And the moment that you refuse to carry out a request on his behalf, he'll have you killed on the spot. While there is a part in all of us that admires the "fictional character" of Vito Corleone on the big screen, in truth he is NOT a man that I would want in my life.
Don Cardi Five - ten years from now, they're gonna wish there was American Cosa Nostra. Five - ten years from now, they're gonna miss John Gotti.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: Don Cardi]
#384610
04/13/07 12:11 PM
04/13/07 12:11 PM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697 AZ
Turnbull
|

Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697
AZ
|
Just to add to what DC said: We're encouraged to "love" Vito because he's a "family man," and because his business is gambling and unions--"victimless crimes"--and because he eschews drug trafficking. Uh-uh! In illicit gambling, the big money doesn't come from the odds favoring the house, it comes from loansharking--a business of broken kneecaps or worse. And every dollar Vito got from his labor rackets was a dollar lifted from the pockets of a working stiff. He rejected Sollozzo not because he was concerned about the bad effect of drugs on society, but because of the bad effect on the police/political protection for his own rackets. And to add to what Olivant said: In the novel and in a deleted scene, Bonasera feared just what Olivant said--that Vito would want him, a registered mortician, to dispose of a high-level victim of the war--which would make Bonasera an accessory under the law, and a target for Vito's enemies. In real life, that's exactly what would have happened. Mob lore is rife with "double coffins" and junkyard body disposals--no doubt forced on people to whom some Don was "generous."
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: olivant]
#384669
04/13/07 04:23 PM
04/13/07 04:23 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
|
The Fuckin Doctor

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
|
I have nothing to add. I've made many posts in other threads on the subject of reel life vs real life .
Buttmunker, I've enjoyed many of your posts since you joined the boards, so please don't take this personally, but I don't think you've ever been around these guys in real life. And I'm NOT asking, the name game is for children. I can only tell you this, from a lifetime of having seen these people for what they really are, a good part of that lifetime impressed by the "glamour" of it all - You do not want a Godfather like Vito Corleone in your life. You want the guy who'll nurture you, encourage you, take you to a ball game. Not the guy who extorts the peanut vendor at the ballpark.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: pizzaboy]
#384752
04/13/07 08:02 PM
04/13/07 08:02 PM
|
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 15,030 Texas
olivant
|

Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 15,030
Texas
|
I have nothing to add. I've made many posts in other threads on the subject of reel life vs real life .
Buttmunker, I've enjoyed many of your posts since you joined the boards, so please don't take this personally, but I don't think you've ever been around these guys in real life. And I'm NOT asking, the name game is for children. I can only tell you this, from a lifetime of having seen these people for what they really are, a good part of that lifetime impressed by the "glamour" of it all - You do not want a Godfather like Vito Corleone in your life. You want the guy who'll nurture you, encourage you, take you to a ball game. Not the guy who extorts the peanut vendor at the ballpark. Ditto!
"Generosity. That was my first mistake." "Experience must be our only guide; reason may mislead us." "Instagram is Twitter for people who can't read."
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: olivant]
#387278
04/21/07 04:24 AM
04/21/07 04:24 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 168
wtwt5237
Made Member
|
Made Member
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 168
|
olivant,do you mean that there's a real Don around you. Does he live his life as Vito did. I mean they have consigliere and caporegimes and soldiers and have men killed?
One has only one destiny, he cannot choose it.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: olivant]
#388024
04/23/07 07:53 PM
04/23/07 07:53 PM
|
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
Neighborhood Guy
|
Neighborhood Guy
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
|
I don't think Vito every really intended to call-in a favor from Bonaserra UNTIL Sonny got killed...or maybe if Mama Corleone passes away before Vito. And I don't believe the Don EVER would have asked Bonaserra to do anything more than the service Bonaserra was capable of providing.
I think he saw the sense of entitlement that Bonaserra brought to the office that day and probably realized that Bonaserra would never have any gratitude for, or any appreciation for, the favor granted.
I always think of the moment in Bronx Tale when Sonny counsels "C" to forget about the twenty bucks that guy owes him...how it's worth the twenty bucks just to get rid of a**hole like that, just to keep him out of his life.
Bonaserra went to the police, saw the injustice of the courts, uses the occasion of the Don's daughter's wedding to ask a favor when he knew it couldn't be refused, enters the office NOT with hat-in-hand but rather that attitude of entitlement, and finally overplays his hand by asking for vengeance and retribution that the Don correctly observes as exceeding an eye-for-an-eye.
Contrast that with Enzo the Baker who does his best work for the wedding reception BEFORE he approaches the Don, then does so humbly and literally with hat-in-hand. Later, after the don is shot, Enzo visits at the hospital (not afraid to be associated or seen with him personally) and VOLUNTARILY ("for you father, for you father...") steps in harms way with Michael.
I think the Don figures a beatdown to make Bonaserra go away is twenty bucks well spent. On the sad occasion in which the Don chooses to ask for a service in return, he gets his money's worth. That's reflected in his almost sarcastic tone when he says, "I want you to use all of your skills..." just so Sonny's body could be viewed at very least by his mother and perhaps be given an open casket wake rather than what Bonaserra was probably thinking...if it was anyone else's son, he'd be in a sealed box now.
I hadn't thought much about that scene until I watched A Bronx Tale the other night. These people may forgive a debt...they just don't FORGET that debt. Not sure I want to live my life wondering when something might jog their memory...
tony b.
Last edited by YoTonyB; 04/23/07 07:56 PM.
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: YoTonyB]
#388057
04/23/07 08:23 PM
04/23/07 08:23 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238 The Ravenite Social Club
Don Cardi
Caporegime
|
Caporegime

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238
The Ravenite Social Club
|
I don't think Vito every really intended to call-in a favor from Bonaserra I think that Vito, being the smart, calculating and cunning man that he was, saw it as an opportunity to "file it away" in case he ever needed something done down the road, hence him saying "Someday, and that day may never come, I will call upon you to do me a service, but UNTIL that day..." etc. etc. Using the word UNTIL was his way of telling Bonasera that WHEN the time came, he had better remember this favor and do what was needed of him without any resistance. Puzo's novel dwells on this and goes into detail about how nervous Bonasera was when he was called on and how he cursed the day that he ever went to Don Corleone for a favor. Bonasera knew that he was now indebted to Vito for life.
Don Cardi Five - ten years from now, they're gonna wish there was American Cosa Nostra. Five - ten years from now, they're gonna miss John Gotti.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: Don Cardi]
#388070
04/23/07 08:41 PM
04/23/07 08:41 PM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697 AZ
Turnbull
|

Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697
AZ
|
Very insightful posts, Tony and DC! I agree. Bonasera did approach Vito as if his "justice" was an "entitlement" to him: He saw Vito as the dispenser of justice, and thought he could buy him. He didn't acknowledge that it wasn't strictly a monetary transaction until the very end of their encounter. And yes, I agree that Vito probably didn't think of an immediate pay off from Bonasera, but rather as a favor to be stashed away against a day when he might need Bonasera's particular services. I doubt that Vito was envisioning those particular services on Connie's wedding day. If memory serves, Michael in the novel makes an analogy to the favors Vito stores up as analogous to the caches of food that Arctic explorers leave behind, "just in case."
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
|
|
|
Re: Someday I'll call upon you to do a service for me
[Re: Turnbull]
#388181
04/24/07 11:53 AM
04/24/07 11:53 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 11,468 With Geary in Fredo's Brothel
dontomasso
Consigliere to the Stars
|
Consigliere to the Stars

Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 11,468
With Geary in Fredo's Brothel
|
Good thread.
Vito's way of doing things was always to build up a store of favors and then gat other favors in return. He is more offended that neither Bonasera nor Bonasera's wife ever invited him or his wife over for a cup of coffee to show their friendship, and he refused to lift a finger for Bonasera until he offered his friendship and fealty to the Don. It is at that point where he says someday he may call on him to do a service in return for what Bonasera asked. This would be the act of a friend....i.e. returning a favor.
DC, there is a deleted scene that echoes what you mentioned about the passage in the book which also shows that despite his eventual returning the favor, he was never a true "friend" to Vito.
For some reason this also brings to mind how just a man Vito was. In the scene in GFII when the grocer has to let Vito go so he can hire Fanucci's nephew, Vito is not angry at all. He tells Abbandando that he raised him as a son, and that he was aloways good to him, and he pointedly says he will not forget it. Considering that he made Abbandano's son the Consigliere, he certainly didnt.
"Io sono stanco, sono imbigliato, and I wan't everyone here to know, there ain't gonna be no trouble from me..Don Corleone..Cicc' a port!"
"I stood in the courtroom like a fool."
"I am Constanza: Lord of the idiots."
|
|
|
|