1 registered members (1 invisible),
143
guests, and 35
spiders. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
Forums21
Topics43,473
Posts1,090,507
Members10,381
|
Most Online1,254 Mar 13th, 2025
|
|
|
Re: Historical figures
#5823
01/07/04 01:12 AM
01/07/04 01:12 AM
|
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 991 New York
DonsAdvisor
Underboss
|
Underboss
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 991
New York
|
I believe there is ONE AND ONLY ONE reallife historical person explicitly named in the entire GF Trilogy:
Fidel Castro
...in GF2 when the rebels yell "Viva Fidel" before they blow themselves up. Otherwise, they only implicitly name the generic titles of "the President" of Cuba in GF2, or the "Pope" in GF3.
"A refusal is not the act of a friend"
|
|
|
Re: Historical figures
#5824
01/07/04 02:00 AM
01/07/04 02:00 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721 AZ
Turnbull
|

Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721
AZ
|
Vito Corleone is a composite of real-life Dons. He's like Joe Profaci (olive oil king), Joe Bonanno (bringing his son along in the business, betrayed by an underboss), Carlo Gambino (never did time in jail), Salvatore Maranzano (defeated a rival boss by having him killed in a restaurant). But Vito's most like Frank Costello, "the Prime Minister," who had the gambling and the unions, was all-powerful politically, had all the judges in NY in his pocket, eschewed drugs, and retired after an unsuccessful assassination attempt. Here is a rundown of other characters in the Trilogy who do--and don't fit "real life":
Close Fit:
Johnny Fontane = Frank Sinatra: Washed-up, teen-idol crooner with fealty to the Mob; role in war movie puts him back on top; sluttish, movie-star ex-wife. Hyman Roth = Meyer Lansky: Jewish adviser to Mafia; “always makes money for his partners”; tight with president of Cuba; started out as a truck mechanic and got connected during Prohibition; fled to Israel and South America to escape Justice Dept. Moe Green = Bugsy Siegel: Pal of Jewish adviser to Mob; “headstrong, talking loud, saying stupid things”; “city he invented was Las Vegas”; “someone put a bullet in his eye.” Johnny Ola = Vincent (Jimmy Blue Eyes) Alo: “Sicilian messenger boy” to Lansky [N.B.: Name is an anagram.] Joey Zasa = Joe Columbo/John Gotti: Meucci Society = Italian-American Civil Rights League; “Best-Dressed Mobster”; publicity hound; shot at Italian-American event. Rosato Brothers = Gallo Brothers: Renegade faction in Mob family declares war on Don (Joe Profaci); Joey Gallo recruits blacks and Hispanics while in jail; “leave the gambling for last.” [N.B.: Eldest brother Larry was garroted in the back of a Brooklyn bar after-hours in 1960 and was saved by a NYC cop who happened by—the basis of the Frank Pentangeli-Rosato Brothers scene, but with roles reversed.]
Stretch Fit:
Emilio Barzini = Vito Genovese: Tried to kill rival to become Capo di Tutti Capi; attempted to make move on drugs at gangster convention (Apalachin). Frankie Pentangeli = Joe Magliocco: Weak successor to strong Don (Profaci); beleaguered by rival faction. Peter Clemenza = Frank Labruzzo (Bonanno Family): Top capo to Don (Bonanno) stayed loyal to son of Don (Bill Bonanno) during gang war; philosophical bent. [N.B.: Richard Castellano played Labruzzo in the TV movie, “Honor Thy Father.”] Sal Tessio = Gaspar Di Gregorio (Bonanno Family): Top capo to Don (Bonanno) betrayed Don and son by siding with rival Don (Stefano Maggaddino) in return for being named head of his own family. Fredo Corleone = Thomas Gambino: Weak son of Capo di Tutti Capi is passed over, given “legit” businesses to run. Luca Brasi = Willie Moretti: Legendary strong-armer; “can do a job of murder all by himself”; “most valued friend” of Joe Bonanno and other Mob bosses; killed by the Mob (probably Vito Genovese).
No Fit:
Michael Corleone. No son ever succeeded and surpassed his father as Don. [N.B.: The two who tried--Bill Bonanno and Junior Gotti--both wound up in jail.] Tom Hagen. No non-Italian has ever served, officially, as a Family’s consigliere.
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: Historical figures
#5827
01/10/04 12:56 PM
01/10/04 12:56 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 144
Don Tissinno
Made Member
|
Made Member
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 144
|
I found this a little before I read this post. At least Bill Bonnanno thinks Vito Corleone was modeled after his father. Bonanno salutes Puzo Family was model for bestselling 'Godfather' By Jon Kamman The Arizona Republic July 3, 1999 Bill Bonanno of Tucson, whose family was the model for The Godfather and whose own memoirs as a mafioso have just been published, saluted Mario Puzo on Friday for having "set the gold standard" for books and films depicting organized crime. "Mario had a lot of help in the sense that he grew up on the West Side (of New York City) and could put on paper what he saw and heard. He did it very masterfully," said the 66-year-old son of Joseph Bonanno, the archetype for Puzo's fictional Don Corleone. "That piece of material has set the gold standard of this genre," Bill Bonanno said of The Godfather. Puzo's work was "not a distorted version - never" of the mafiosi culture, said Bonanno, who objects to the term "Mafia" as a law-enforcement creation that strips the Sicilian mafioso term of its honorable meanings. "I thought he depicted a story of tradition and a story of values and - no pun intended - really a family story," Bonanno said. "He left something that will endure." The elder Bonanno, who was the so-called boss of all bosses of New York's five crime "families" in the 1960s, is now 94, alert and comfortable in Tucson, his son said.
"I'm with you now, Pop. I'm with you."
"Don't worry about anything Frankie Five Angels."
|
|
|
|