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Re: Roman Empire
#18042
10/01/04 03:46 PM
10/01/04 03:46 PM
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224 New Jersey
AppleOnYa
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224
New Jersey
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Originally posted by Turnbull: [QUOTE]...He used the Roman analogy to evoke an earlier time in the Corleone Family when he understood the rules and had complete faith in his Don. And when people knew how to throw a decent party! From his opening line to Fredo about, "...can o' peas my ass...Bring out the peppers and sausage!!!" To later on when he tries in vain to coax the orchestra into an Italian ditty only to get laughed off the stage by 'Pop Goes the Weasel' (with Mama standing nearby...). To the Senate hearings...where he finally admits to no more than being in the olive oil business with Michael's father... To all that is mentioned above...Frankie is GFII's last link to the Corleone Family of the past. A past that basically dies by the end of the film, along with Frankie and Fredo. Y'know...it just now came to me with this very thread the theme that Frankie represents...and how deftly FFC conveyed that link in just about all of his scenes. Apple
A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government.
- THOMAS JEFFERSON
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Re: Roman Empire
#18043
10/02/04 12:25 AM
10/02/04 12:25 AM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839 Elmwood Park, Illinois
YoTonyB
Neighborhood Guy
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Neighborhood Guy
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 839
Elmwood Park, Illinois
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I really like that scene at the military prison. The conversation has both literal and coded meanings for comparing the Corleones to the Roman Empire.
1) The excesses, the corruption, the bacchanalia of the Roman Empire as they exercised absolute power over everyone in their domain...not unlike the old days of Frankie's youth. The Corleone family was very much like the Roman Empire in that regard.
2) The structure of the family patterned after the Roman legions.
3) Frankie's insistence that his family be taken care of in response to Tom's suggestion that Frankie has to go away. Using the analogy of a failed plot aganst the emperor is brilliant dialog. Regardless of the circumstances that put him there, Frankie was smart enough to understand the real consequences of appearing before the Senate sub-committee particularly since his betrayal was already on the record in the form of a sworn affadavit. He was a dead man and he knew it. When they brought his brother over from Italy, is was a not-so-subtle reminder that those consequences might extend to his family. Frankie understood, made it clear to Tom that he had a solution and extracted a promise that the Pentangelli "family was taken care of" (meaning both his immediate family and his "Corleone" family). To Frankie, Tom's word was firm. Frankie kept his honor, his immediate family faced no threats, and his crime family continued to operate their territory in the Corleone empire.
tony b.
"Kid, these are my f**kin' work clothes." "You look good in them golf shoes. You should buy 'em"
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