Monday, January 23, 2023

“That Kid’s Name was Moe Greene!” (The Godfather II, 1974): One of the Greatest Speeches in the History of Pictures Runs Only 1:50, and Yet, I Remembered It as Having Run Much, Much Longer

By N.S.

In 1959 Havana, Jewish gangster Hyman Roth (really, Meyer Lansky, as played by Lee Strasberg) speaks to Corleone Mafia family godfather, Michael Corleone (Al Pacino), about the late Moe Green (really Bugsy Siegel, played by Alex Rocco in The Godfather, 1972).

One of the greatest speeches in the history of pictures, it’s a bookend speech to Michael’s brief one in The Godfather, justifying his desire to kill Irish NYPD Capt. McCluskey (Sterling Hayden), that it’s “Strictly business, nothing personal.”

Both speeches were ironic, in that the speaker says the exact opposite of what he means.

Killing McCluskey was nothing, if not personal. McCluskey was sent to murder Michael’s father, Godfather Don Vito Corleone (The Bum), at the hospital where he was recuperating from an earlier assassination attempt. When McCluskey found Michael in front of the hospital, acting as his father’s personal bodyguard, an enraged McCluskey had one of his reluctant men (“But he’s a war hero.”) hold Michael up straight, while McCluskey broke his jaw.

And Hyman Roth loved Moe Green (Bugsy Siegel) like a brother. And his name was Moe Green! As soon as Michael had one of his button-men shoot Green/Siegel through the eye, Roth resolved to kill Michael.

Although Roth’s speech only lasted 1:50, it was so powerful that I recalled it running much longer. My mind’s eye filled it out, based on its dramatic power.

Preamble: Michael: “Who had Frank Pentangeli killed?”

Roth: “The, uh, the Rosato brothers.”

Michael: “I know. But who gave the go-ahead? I know I didn’t.”


The Speech

Roth: “There was this kid I grew up with. He was younger than me. Sort of looked up to me, you know?

“We did our first work together. Worked our way out of the street. Things were good. During Prohibition, we ran molasses into Canada. Made a fortune. Your father, too.

“As much as anyone, I loved him and trusted him. Later on, he had an idea to build a city out of a desert stop-over for G.I.s going to the West Coast.

“That kid’s name was Moe Greene, and the city he invented was Las Vegas!

“This was a great man. A man of vision and guts. And there isn’t even a plaque, signpost, or statue of him in that town.

“Someone put a bullet through his eye. No one knows who gave the order.

“When I heard it, I wasn’t angry. I knew Moe, I knew he was headstrong. Talking loud, saying stupid things. So when he turned up dead, I let it go. And I said to myself, ‘This is the business we’ve chosen.’ I didn’t ask who gave the order, because it had nothing to do with business!”




Postscript: Either Francis Ford Coppola or his script writing partner, Mario Puzo, ripped off the brief speech “Strictly business, nothing personal” in The Godfather, from a crime b-picture, The Naked Street (1955). A youthful Anthony Quinn played the crime boss who said the line to his goons, when he ordered them to murder their best friend, Farley Granger.



5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Without question the godfather series and movies probably has had a lot of influence on American street gangs, especially when it comes to all these shoot ups that occur during a funeral for a gang banger the opposite gang knows that all the gangbangers there after all, I’ll be in one spot at one time and make for enticing targets, and they do shoot shoot up the place and kill a lot of people as it is in godfather two of the very start when Paulo gets killed at the funeral of his father

Anonymous said...

I don't understand why anyone likes the Godfather movies. They are about horrible monsters, who unfortunately actually exist. And justice is rare--evil men frequently prosper and nothing bad happens to them--just look at Stalin, Mao, Castro, Soros, the Clintons, the Bidens, Fauci, Bill Gates, and countless other examples. And evil men do not see themselves as evil--for example, Bill Gates killed thousands in India and Africa with his vaccines--and that is before he helped poison the world with his Covid fake vaccines. Yet he wonders why people don't like him.

Anonymous said...

>business

the 'friendship' (partnership) between michael corleone and hyman roth, which was actually a thinly veiled hostility that moviegoers could sense, was a very important thread in the fabric of tension that was palpable in godfather 2

Anonymous said...

jerry pdx
Here in the progressive paradise of pdx a group of local community groups called "Living Cully" have plans for a blue collar and once nearly all White neighborhood, but what those plans say to low income Whites is you're s*%#t out of luck and to middle class Whites, you're gonna have to pay through the nose for the "wonders of diversity" and expensive "climate change" improvements: https://www.oregonlive.com/environment/2023/01/ne-portlands-cully-neighborhood-fights-displacement-climate-change-with-urban-renewal-but-will-it-work.html
My family lived for about 2 yrs. in the Cully neighborhood, I was 10-12 yrs. old and it was a nice White blue collar neighborhood, the only crime I remember was the local Gypsy Jokers motorcycle club who had a big run down house filled with motorcycles and cops constantly cruising by and staking it out.
Along with climate change mumbo jumbo the plan is to "diversity" the neighborhood with "low income" housing projects designed to attract black, latinos, immigrants and anybody else who isn't White. In theory, it's supposed to improve the neighborhood and make it more attractive so property tax rates will go up helping pay off the bonds. Really? Supposing you are a White homeowner and you are being told that you will be paying higher property taxes in order to fund low income housing for negroes and Mex, would you want that?
I've read through this article trying to find some benefit for Whites and I can't find one thing. It's filled with lies, cliches and coded woke crap designed to fool the gullible and make anyone who disagrees seem like some kind of racist.
Gentrifying is happening in Cully, and yes, it will also push out poorer Whites along with blacks and latinos but it can't be stopped so local corrupt and evil community groups are maneuvering for a money grab at climate change government money and increased wealth created by people who work hard to improve their homes and neighborhoods. Now these people will have to contend with the massive increase in crime brought by negroes and Mex housing projects, exactly what happened in East PDX (Rockwood). Not that there aren't black and Mex residents already in Cully, there's plenty of them but those are people that chose to move there and weren't mass imported via government planning, those low income projects bring in a different breed with an entitled criminal attitudes. Our woke city counsel is party to this, there won't be any dissenters, we had one Republican elected to the counsel but she's latina fake conservative, she'll be 100% behind anything that brings more Mex to the city.

Anonymous said...

NO "GODFATHERS" HERE--THIS YEAR'S OSCAR BEST PICTURE NOMINEES

GRA:I actually heard of three of them.

“Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a twisty sci-fi adventure, led the nominations for the 95th Academy Awards on Tuesday morning, picking up 11 nods. It was followed closely behind by “All Quiet on the Western Front,” a World War I epic, and “The Banshees of Inisherin,” a darkly comic look at friendship that unfolds against the backdrop of the Irish civil war, both of which scored nine nominations.

All three films will vie for best picture, in what is shaping up to be a much more commercially-successful collection of honorees than recent years. The best picture race contains the two highest-grossing films of the year, “Avatar: The Way of Water” and “Top Gun: Maverick,” along with “Elvis,” a musical biopic that scored with audiences last summer. Other contenders include Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical “The Fabelmans”;”Tár,” a drama about an abusive conductor; “Women Talking,” a look at the residents of a repressive religious community; and “Triangle of Sadness,” a send-up of the 1% that unfolds partly on a mega-yacht.

GRA:Obviously attempting to get higher ratings by nominating two blockbusters--desperate times need desperate measures.Maybe more than the base million wokesters will watch this year.

--GRA