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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38983
05/20/06 08:55 PM
05/20/06 08:55 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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Let me just say and then I am done with this topic.
If Puzo wanted the 5 families families to include the Corleones, he would not have written phrases like:
The representatives of the Five Families of New York were the last to arrive and Tom Hagen was struck by how much more imposing, impressive, these five men were than the out-of-towners...."
or
Of the five New York Families opposing the Corleones his (Stracci's) was the least powerful".
or
“The war of 1947 between the Corleone Family and the Five Families combined against them proved to be expensive to both sides
or
"For the last year the Corleone family had waged war against the five great mafia families of New York"
or
“There were five or six “Families” too powerful to be eliminated”
or
“It was Brasi operating alone, when one of the six powerful families tried to interfere and become the protector of the independents….”
or
"(this) was the first challenge to trhe Corleon family and their power in ten years. There was no doubt Sollozzo was behind it, but he never would have dared attempt such a stroke unless he had support from at least one of the five great New York families."
There are, of course, others......
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38984
05/20/06 08:57 PM
05/20/06 08:57 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 Toni_corleone: Let me just say and then I am done with this topic... ![[Linked Image]](http://www.gangsterbb.net/emoticons/clap.gif) That's terrific. Because judging from your contributions to this thread in particular, your attitude seems to suck almost as badly as mine. 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: The Controversy of the Families
#38985
05/21/06 12:25 AM
05/21/06 12:25 AM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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Originally posted by The Hollywood Finochio: How else did Puzo contradict himself? Here are two examples which come immediately to mind (all citations and page numbers are from the 30th Anniverary paperback edition): In the opening scene at Connie's wedding (page 15),' Puzo writes about Don Corleone and his tuxedo: "The guests so exclaimed at how well he looked in his tux that an inexperienced observer might easily have thought that the Don himself was the luck groom." Then, just 30 pages later (page 45), in the scene describing Don Corleone's visit to the hospital with his sons to see the dying consigliere Genco, Puzo writes "He (Dr. Kennedy) was surprised when his (Genco's) wife and daughters turned to the short heavy man dressed in an awkwardly fitting tuxedo." Then Puzo writes about Michael's war injuries. In the scene at Connie's wedding (page 17), he writes: "When Michael Corleone was discharged early in 1945 to recover from a disabling wound...." Then, writing about how Michael felt after killing Sollozzo and McCluskey (Pages 151-152), Puzo writes: "The feeling was familiar and he remembered being taken off the beach of an island his Marine division had invaded. The battle had been still going on but he had received a slight wound and was being ferried back to a hospital ship." There were others; We had an entire thread about them once, but I couldn't find it.
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38989
05/21/06 10:25 AM
05/21/06 10:25 AM
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Joined: May 2004
Posts: 552 London
The Hollywood Finochio
The Don
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The Don
Underboss
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 552
London
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The Bocchichio's were not present at the meeting, they were completely ommitted the family from the book, when it was decided to not show how Mike got back to the US. If they were present, The Don would have announced them at the start
Sonny - Well then, business will have to suffer, all right? And listen, do me a favor, Tom. No more advice on how to patch things up, just help me win, please
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38990
05/21/06 02:45 PM
05/21/06 02:45 PM
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 92
BadaBing
Button
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Button
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 92
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Originally posted by plawrence: Let me just say and then I am done with this topic.
If Puzo wanted the 5 families families to include the Corleones, he would not have written phrases like:
[b]The representatives of the Five Families of New York were the last to arrive and Tom Hagen was struck by how much more imposing, impressive, these five men were than the out-of-towners...."
or
Of the five New York Families opposing the Corleones his (Stracci's) was the least powerful".
or
“The war of 1947 between the Corleone Family and the Five Families combined against them proved to be expensive to both sides
or
"For the last year the Corleone family had waged war against the five great mafia families of New York"
or
“There were five or six “Families” too powerful to be eliminated”
or
“It was Brasi operating alone, when one of the six powerful families tried to interfere and become the protector of the independents….”
or
"(this) was the first challenge to trhe Corleon family and their power in ten years. There was no doubt Sollozzo was behind it, but he never would have dared attempt such a stroke unless he had support from at least one of the five great New York families."
There are, of course, others...... [/b] In the book, what did Michael say to Hagen at the funeral about killing everyone?
CHRISTIAN You desecrated a classic film. This is worse than "Godfather III." GIBSON Whoa, whoa, hey, whoa! Let's not say things we can't take back. CHRISTIAN All right, all right, I'm sorry.
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38991
05/21/06 07:52 PM
05/21/06 07:52 PM
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Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 385 Tampa, FL
waynethegame
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 385
Tampa, FL
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In the novel he doesnt say it at the funeral and he never specifically says who he's going to kill. He basically just says how Barzini will set him up, and then how Tessio is the traitor (interestingly, Hagen makes the comment that he bets the traitor is Carlo).
Wayne
"Finance is a gun. Politics is knowing when to pull the trigger." Don Lucchesi
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38993
05/21/06 11:02 PM
05/21/06 11:02 PM
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238 The Ravenite Social Club
Don Cardi
Caporegime
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Caporegime

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238
The Ravenite Social Club
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Originally posted by Tony Love: Originally posted by Don Cardi: [b]Good. Now we can have a decent discussion about this without anymore of the meaningless "let it rest" and the "I am done with this topic" replies. I'm still waiting to have a decent discussion on the "Godfather IV?" board. It seems every thread on that has at least two "let it rest" posts, usually by Apple. [/b]I don't go into that thread very much. But I'll have to check it out. I don't understand it. If there are a few people who are interested in having an ongoing discussion about the GF movies, what is the problem? If you or I do not think that there is any reason to continue a discussion, and others are still having one, then you or I should just move on instead of making posts like " end of story, enough about this already," etc. Don Cardi 
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.
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38994
05/22/06 10:20 AM
05/22/06 10:20 AM
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Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100 Ann Arbor
stavka
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100
Ann Arbor
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Mike at the funeral in the book? - doesn't say much - but more importantly Cuneo and Stracci are not murdered like they are in the movie.
"I don't shine shoes no more..."
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38995
05/22/06 01:01 PM
05/22/06 01:01 PM
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 228 Carmine Cuneo's Turf
Montauk
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 228
Carmine Cuneo's Turf
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Originally posted by Al Neri Barzini: Yeah its true, there is controversy of the heads of the five families pacino made an error in the baptism saying that he was getting a meeting with the head of the five families..his father was dead so what is the missing head of family even though he killed him..he didnt beacuse they provided Fredo protection 1.Corleone 2.Barzini 3.Tattaglia 4.Cuneo 5.Strachi 6.MOLINARI
The biggest godfather controversy or polemic..Is now answered..have a nice day I figured that Molinari was on a level of, say, Zalucchi (aka Mr. "I don't want it near schools").
Montauk
We might be able to tape the gun behind it.
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38997
05/22/06 01:55 PM
05/22/06 01:55 PM
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Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100 Ann Arbor
stavka
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100
Ann Arbor
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Don Zalucchi was the Don of Detroit, and a thinly veiled Joe Zerilli of the the Zerilli/Tacco clan.
My take on the issue having read the books is that the Corleones were above the five other (Italian) families, including one not named - the Corleones alone controlled most of the political/legal scene - in addition to Unions and Gambling (which are the best things to have)
But if we need a real life fifth family or gang in addition to the standard four plus Corleone why not the Roth-Green-Lakeville Road-combine that fills in for the real life Lansky-Siegel-Dalitz (along with the Mayfield road gang)
This is the historical period were Jewish mobsters were transitioning either into legitimate business or the grave - but still held some power in New York and Chicago and points in between.
Jews would not sit in on a modern day commission meeting of book and movie, but would certainly be a force to be considered, and were so in both GF and GFII.
It is unlikely most Italians would use the familia styling, but Lepke Buchalter had a seat on the commission before his demise.
"I don't shine shoes no more..."
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38998
05/22/06 02:46 PM
05/22/06 02:46 PM
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Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,211 Little Chicago
Tony Love
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,211
Little Chicago
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Originally posted by Don Cardi: I don't understand it. If there are a few people who are interested in having an ongoing discussion about the GF movies, what is the problem? If you or I do not think that there is any reason to continue a discussion, and others are still having one, then you or I should just move on instead of making posts like " end of story, enough about this already," etc.
Don Cardi DC, DC.. tsk tsk.. That's what you get for making sense.
"Any American who is prepared to run for president should automatically, by definition, be disqualified from ever doing so"-Gore Vidal "Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth"-John Fitzgerald Kennedy "The reason the mainstream is thought of as a stream is because of its shallowness"-George Carlin
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#38999
05/25/06 09:17 AM
05/25/06 09:17 AM
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 82
Carstonio
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 82
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Originally posted by plawrence: The guests so exclaimed at [b]how well he looked in his tux that an inexperienced observer might easily have thought that the Don himself was the luck groom."
"He (Dr. Kennedy) was surprised when his (Genco's) wife and daughters turned to the short heavy man dressed in an awkwardly fitting tuxedo."[/b] In the first case, weren't the guests simply sucking up, excuse me, showing proper respect? These were the same guests that besieged Johnny Fontaine with drinks after the Don complained that no one had thought to wet his godson's throat.
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39000
05/25/06 09:27 AM
05/25/06 09:27 AM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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Possibly, I suppose. But Puzo might have mentioned that had it been the case - it would have been an interesting note to add, wouldn't it?
And why leave it that way to possibly confuse the reader?
What I'm saying here is that there were places where the book was sloppily written, and Puzo's failure to name the sixth family may have simply been another one, especially considering all of the times he took pains in his writing to indicate that there were six.
There were several other inconsistincies in the book besides the two I cited.
One of these days I'm gonna go through the entire book with a fine tooth comb and find them all and write a post about it.
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39001
05/25/06 06:24 PM
05/25/06 06:24 PM
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Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 385 Tampa, FL
waynethegame
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 385
Tampa, FL
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Originally posted by Carstonio: Originally posted by plawrence: [b] The guests so exclaimed at [b]how well he looked in his tux that an inexperienced observer might easily have thought that the Don himself was the luck groom."
"He (Dr. Kennedy) was surprised when his (Genco's) wife and daughters turned to the short heavy man dressed in an awkwardly fitting tuxedo."[/b] In the first case, weren't the guests simply sucking up, excuse me, showing proper respect? These were the same guests that besieged Johnny Fontaine with drinks after the Don complained that no one had thought to wet his godson's throat. [/b]That was exactlhy what I thought when I first read that line.. that everyone was just being nice to Don Corleone because of who he was (and the fact that you NEVER insult your host, mafioso or not)
Wayne
"Finance is a gun. Politics is knowing when to pull the trigger." Don Lucchesi
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39002
05/25/06 06:41 PM
05/25/06 06:41 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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Even if you guys are right - and you may very well be - it's still an example of sloppy writing by Puzo.
He's leaving the reader confused as to whether or not Vito really did look good in his tuxedo, or if people were simply saying he looked good out of respect for him.
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39003
06/03/06 01:33 PM
06/03/06 01:33 PM
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Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,211 Little Chicago
Tony Love
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,211
Little Chicago
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Originally posted by plawrence: Even if you guys are right - and you may very well be - it's still an example of sloppy writing by Puzo.
He's leaving the reader confused as to whether or not Vito really did look good in his tuxedo, or if people were simply saying he looked good out of respect for him. Maybe it's not necessarily sloppy writing. Maybe Puzo wrote this way to make it an open ended possibility. Beauty, of course, is in the eye of the beholder. Don Corleone probably looked like God himself to people like Bonasera or Enzo who desperately needed him for a service. To others, such as Don Barzini, he was merely an enemy, and Barzini probably saw him that way. Who knows, it may be sloppy writing, but I'd like to pretend that there's more to it than just that.
"Any American who is prepared to run for president should automatically, by definition, be disqualified from ever doing so"-Gore Vidal "Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth"-John Fitzgerald Kennedy "The reason the mainstream is thought of as a stream is because of its shallowness"-George Carlin
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39005
06/04/06 06:18 AM
06/04/06 06:18 AM
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902 New York
SC
Consigliere
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Consigliere

Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902
New York
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Originally posted by olivant: I thought we settled this a 100 years ago. Nope. Originally posted by olivant: Puzo initially refrred to the five families that controlled Newy York and New Jersey. The Corleones were one of them. Thats never been established. If anything, Puzo hints at just the opposite (in the 30's the five or six Families other than the Corleones who were too powerful to be eliminated; at the sitdown orchestrated by Barzini where the five New York dons were the last to arrive; etc.). Originally posted by olivant: Tom never tells Sonny that the five families would come after the Corleones. He says that the other families would and the Corleones would be outcasts. Not true. Tom tells Sonny, "Now nobody has ever gunned down a New York police captain -- never. It would be disastrous. All the Five Families would come after you, Sonny. The Corleone Family would be outcasts!" Originally posted by olivant: Madonne! Well, we agree on that! 
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39006
06/04/06 07:51 AM
06/04/06 07:51 AM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
RIP StatMan
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RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
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The representatives of the Five Families of New York were the last to arrive and Tom Hagen was struck by how much more imposing, impressive, these five men were than the out-of-towners...."
Of the five New York Families opposing the Corleones his (Stracci's) was the least powerful".
“The war of 1947 between the Corleone Family and the Five Families combined against them proved to be expensive to both sides
"For the last year the Corleone family had waged war against the five great mafia families of New York"
“There were five or six “Families” too powerful to be eliminated”
“It was Brasi operating alone, when one of the six powerful families tried to interfere and become the protector of the independents….”
"(this) was the first challenge to trhe Corleon family and their power in ten years. There was no doubt Sollozzo was behind it, but he never would have dared attempt such a stroke unless he had support from at least one of the five great New York families."
"Difficult....not impossible"
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39007
06/07/06 10:27 PM
06/07/06 10:27 PM
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Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 1
Capo Molinari
Associate
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Associate
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 1
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For all those nay-sayers about their not being 5 families besides the Corleones....see this THIRD DRAFT of the Godfather script: http://www.awesomefilm.com/script/THEGODFATHER.txt ------------------------------------------------------- The VIEW ALTERS, and we see that the line is endless. JOHNNY FONTANE, tears openly falling, takes his turn. Children are taken by the hand, and lifted for their last look at the great man. CLEMENZA whispers into the ear of LAMPONE. LAMPONE immediately arranges for the members of the Five New York Families to pay their respects. First CUNEO, then STRACHI and then ZALUCHI. Then PHILIP TATTAGLIA, who merely passes by the Coffin. Then BARZINI in a black homburg, standing a long time. MICHAEL watches the scene. BARZINI crosses himself and passes on, immediately rejoined by his men. -----------------------------------------------------------
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39008
06/08/06 10:28 AM
06/08/06 10:28 AM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,697
AZ
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Welcome, Capo Molinari! Hope to see many thoughtful posts from you. As you see, scripts for the Trilogy underwent many revisions. Quite a few people here have surfaced earlier versions of one or the other of the films that sometimes show interesting nuances or even dramatic deviations from the storylines that actually appeared. But the bottom line always is: what was in the film(s) as shown? In this case, Zaluchi was never mentioned in the film. He appears in the novel, but as the Don of Detroit.
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.
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Re: The Controversy of the Families
#39009
06/08/06 12:44 PM
06/08/06 12:44 PM
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Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100 Ann Arbor
stavka
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 100
Ann Arbor
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...and Zaluchi's dialog in the book is nearly identical to the man credited as being Zaluchi in the film - who speaks about "his city" implying he is not from New York City in the movie.
Zaluchi's name is also very similar to the actual real-life then Don of Detroit, I beleive the other Don in the movie is supposed to be from Cleveland if compared with the book.
"I don't shine shoes no more..."
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