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Goodfellas Film Analysis

Decent Essays

Based on a true story, Goodfellas is arguably one of the best “gangster movies” made. The 1990’s film is about a man named Henry who grows up in the mob. It tells the ups and downs of not only his story, but what it takes to be in a mob. Many mob styled movies focus on one thing only, the murder. While Goodfellas is based around murder, there is much more to it. You are shown what it does to people, how it corrupts families and changes people’s outlook on life. You are shown the betrayal of people you call “family”. This is what makes Goodfellas one of the greatest mob movies ever made. Films need something to keep the viewers interested or they will not be successful. Goodfellas has that special something that keeps you hooked the whole …show more content…

There could be a great screenplay and a great director, but if the right people are not casted, the whole movie can flop. Ellen Lewis, the casting director for Goodfellas, did an amazing job. When you have a lineup consisting of Ray Liotta , Joe Pesci (Tommy) and the great, Robert De Niro (Jimmy), you have something special. The chemistry between the three is something you do not just find anywhere. The bond between their characters is very believable and the transition into their dark times comes naturally. When things get tough for the three, relationships are tested and things go downhill at a rapid velocity. Being in a mob, you have to be careful who you mess with and when one of these men “whacks” the wrong guy, things go from bad to worse. The directing of the story makes it easy to understand and puts everything into place. The transition from the good times to the bad is outlined with the heartfelt narration of Henry and a great “soundtrack”. As Roger Ebert says in his review, “He [Scorsese] doesn't simply compile a soundtrack of golden oldies; he finds the precise sound to underline every moment, and in "GoodFellas," the popular music helps to explain the transition from the early days when Henry sells stolen cigarettes to guys at a factory gate, through to the frenetic later days when he's selling cocaine in disobedience of Paul Cicero's orders, and using so much of it himself that life has become a paranoid labyrinth.” I completely agree. The use of asynchronous sound is vital in a film like this and Scorsese (along with the editor, Thelma Schoonmaker) delivers everything needed to make this an amazing

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