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WARNER

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Martin Scorsese
Cast:
Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci, Lorraine Bracco, Paul Sorvino, Frank Sivero, Tony Darrow, Mike Starr, Frank Vincent
Writing Credits:
Nicholas Pileggi (novel, "Wise Guy"), Martin Scorsese

Tagline:
Three Decades of Life in the Mafia.

Synopsis:
Henry Hill and his friends work their way up through the mob hierarchy.

Box Office:
Budget
$25 million.
Opening Weekend
$6.368 million on 1070 screens.
Domestic Gross
$46.836 million.

MPAA:
Rated R

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA 5.1
Castillian Spanish Dolby Digital Stereo
French Dolby Digital Stereo
German Dolby Digital Stereo
Italian Dolby Digital Stereo
Portuguese Dolby Digital Monaural
Czech Dolby Digital Stereo
Hungarian Dolby Digital Stereo
Polish Dolby Digital Stereo
Russian Dolby Digital Stereo
Thai Dolby Digital Stereo
Turkish Dolby Digital Monaural
Subtitles:
English
French
Italian
German
Castillian Spanish
Dutch
Chinese
Korean
Latin Spanish
Brazilian Portuguese
Czech
Greek
Hungarian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Thai
Turkish
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
French
Italian
German
Castillian Spanish
Dutch
Chinese
Korean
Latin Spanish
Portuguese
Czech
Greek
Hungarian
Polish
Russian
Thai

Runtime: 145 min.
Price: $34.99
Release Date: 5/5/2015

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Director Martin Scorsese, Former GoodFella Henry Hill, Co-Screenwriter Nicholas Pileggi, Producers Irwin Winkler and Barbara De Fina, Cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, Editor Thelma Schoomaker, and Actors Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, Paul Sorvino, Lorraine Bracco, Joe Pesci And Frank Vincent
• Audio Commentary with Henry Hill and Former FBI Agent Edward McDonald
• “Scorsese’s GoodFellas” Featurette
• “Getting Made: The Making of GoodFellas” Featurette
• “The Workaday Gangster” Featurette’
• “Made Men: The GoodFellas Legacy” Featurette
• “Paper Is Cheaper Than Film” Featurette
• Theatrical Trailer
• “Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film” Documentary
• Four Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies Shorts
• Trailer


• Hardcover Book


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

EQUIPMENT
Panasonic TC-P60VT60 60-Inch 1080p 600Hz 3D Smart Plasma HDTV; Sony STR-DG1200 7.1 Channel Receiver; Panasonic DMP-BD60K Blu-Ray Player using HDMI outputs; Michael Green Revolution Cinema 6i Speakers (all five); Kenwood 1050SW 150-watt Subwoofer.

RELATED REVIEWS


Goodfellas: 25th Anniversary Edition [Blu-Ray] (1990)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (April 27, 2015)

Were it not for 1972’s The Godfather, it seems likely that 1990’s GoodFellas would now be viewed as the greatest gangster film of all-time. Heck, even with the existence of Coppola’s classic, GoodFellas might still deserves that honor.

GoodFellas tells the story of Henry Hill. As a youngster in the 1950s, Henry (Christopher Serrone) admires the local gangsters and aspires to be one of them. He gets into this scene on a low level and rises through the ranks.

Most of the film shows Henry’s life and career as an adult (Ray Liotta). We follow his relationship with wife Karen (Lorraine Bracco) and fellow gangsters such as Tommy DeVito (Joe Pesci) and Jimmy Conway (Robert De Niro) as we view Henry’s rise and fall.

Back in the late 1990s, I viewed 1990’s GoodFellas as part of a Martin Scorsese “mini-marathon”. On the same day, I also took in 1973’s Mean Streets and 1980’s Raging Bull. Interestingly, I found that GoodFellas largely addressed the various concerns that I had about the earlier films.

No details about how the characters became what they are? Not a problem here! GoodFellas spends a great deal of time setting up the story, as we see young Henry experience the enormous allure of the "wiseguys" up close. It's made so abundantly clear why Henry chose such a path that I'm sure many a viewer wishes they'd been able to follow his choices.

Scorsese manages to both glorify and condemn organized crime all at the same time. For certain, the many perks of that life become abundantly clear throughout the film. We see just how high on the hog these folks lived, just as if they were American royalty.

On the other hand, Scorsese clearly depicts the prices to be paid. Some of these are rather obvious - jail, death, etc. - but some didn't seem so apparent to me until I'd seen GoodFellas a few times.

Many Mafia films frequently bandy about the notion of loyalty and make it seem central to that way of life. GoodFellas shows that loyalty only goes so far; throughout the movie, virtually every character does whatever he needs to do to get by - screw the other person, no matter who they are. Shared history and past allegiances mean nothing to these people; it's all "survival of the fittest" with them.

It's ironic to consider just exactly how amoral and reprehensible these gangsters are, since they seem much more overtly "well-adjusted" than characters like Taxi Driver’s Travis Bickle or Raging Bull’s Jake La Motta. Those men’s demons clearly became demonstrated throughout the films, whereas we never see any evidence that the characters of GoodFellas recognize just how inhuman they are. These are people without any shred of self-awareness, since they apparently require absolute self-confidence to survive. More egocentric characters you will not find; each gangster clearly believes that the world revolves around him.

When I said "he" and "him" in the previous paragraphs, that wasn't a politically incorrect error on my part. Women don’t play much of a role in most of Scorsese's films; Taxi Driver, Mean Streets and Raging Bull all clearly work from a male perspective in which women generally reside in the background.

GoodFellas doesn't exactly shatter that image - the focus clearly resides mostly on the males - but Scorsese does make a much greater attempt to demonstrate the female side of things and their perspective. Most of this comes through Henry’s wife Karen. Just as we learn what interested young Henry in the criminal life, we very clearly see what intrigued Karen: the money, the power, the sheer energy of the entire lifestyle.

Such a situation would really need to be intoxicating, because it seems unlikely that anyone who objectively views the situation would honestly believe such a life to be worth the risks. It's apparent that most of the women involved with the other gangsters essentially came from similar situations, so they really don't know any better. Karen, however, is an outsider, so she would have less pre-investment. Heck, Karen even tells us that all of her friends would’ve fled once they saw the dark side of Henry’s existence.

That's why it's good that Scorsese demonstrates just how giddy Karen's experiences with Henry were and why she bought in to the life. This perspective fails to appear in Raging Bull, and though GoodFellas could have succeeded without it, the female point of view makes it a much more complete and fulfilling movie. Rarely do filmmakers try so hard to illustrate why people - men and women - remain in damaging situations, but Scorsese attempts this and succeeds.

For once, Robert De Niro doesn't offer the strongest performance in the cast. To be sure, he's very fine, although at that point, he had started to ever-so-slightly degenerate into self-parody. At times, he seems just a little too comfortable in his role as Jimmy Conway and he seems to coast. Still, he's very good, and whatever faults occur in his performance seem minimal.

However, Joe Pesci's Tommy clearly becomes the best-realized performance in the group, one for which he won a well-deserved Best Supporting Actor Oscar. In a group of amoral characters, none are more so than Tommy, who is one nasty little piece of work.

What makes Tommy and most of the others so chilling, though, is the fact that they demonstrate so little recognition that they're messed up. In fact, Tommy seems to delight in his psychotic image; he's the little guy who's determined to scare all of those who intimidated him when he was younger. Pesci plays Tommy with relish and tears apart the screen with his vicious energy.

As the Hills, both Liotta and Bracco are fine. Liotta is frequently cited as the weak link in the cast, but I don't really agree. He has the most difficult role since he's the focus of the film, and he's also a relatively milquetoast character when compared to the others. It's easy for Henry to get upstaged by the multitude of flashier gangsters we see throughout the film. Liotta could have been better, I suppose, but I think he does well.

My opinion of Bracco's turn as Karen has modified over the years. Initially, I had a hard time getting past her vocal style; she spoke in such a strange cadence that the whole thing seemed oddly forced.

Since then I've gotten used to Bracco’s style and I've been able to see what an open, honest performance she gives. It's not a showy role, but Bracco does a terrific job of demonstrating the emotional rollercoaster Karen seems to ride on a virtually daily basis.

GoodFellas stands as Scorsese's masterpiece. While many of his other films are very strong, I don't think any really compete with it. From start to finish, he demonstrates such complete self-confidence that it's astonishing.

GoodFellas is a bold, daring film that uses every tool at the director's disposal to create a true epic. Is it "the best mob movie ever," as one DVD claimed? Maybe, maybe not; if not, it's a close number two to the first Godfather.


The Blu-ray Grades: Picture A-/ Audio B/ Bonus A

GoodFellas appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This became a terrific presentation.

Sharpness was positive. Any “softness” reflected the source photography – not that those instances created concerns. The movie seemed concise and accurate the vast majority of the time. I noticed no signs of shimmering, jaggies or edge haloes, and source flaws were absent. This was a clean image.

For the most part, GoodFellas went with a naturalistic palette, though one that tended toward the red side of the register. The colors remained tight and solid throughout the flick. Blacks were dense and firm, while low-light shots appeared nicely visible and never became too dark. GoodFellas has never looked better.

The DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack didn’t seem terrific, but it was above average for audio from 1990. The soundfield emphasized the front speakers to a large degree. Speech showed up in the right spots except for the narration. It usually popped up close to the center, but at times it blended to the sides for no apparent reason, and that caused some minor distractions.

Music consistently offered nice stereo imaging, and effects often broadened out the spectrum well. The various elements were accurately placed and meshed together neatly.

Surround usage remained minor throughout the flick and played a small role. Most of that activity occurred during the May 11, 1980 sequence, which included helicopters and the most prominent rock music in the flick. Otherwise, the surrounds essentially remained passive.

The quality of the audio also seemed good but unexceptional. Speech usually came across as natural and concise. Music varied dependent on the source, as the movie included a wide range of tunes. Overall, they were adequately reproduced and seemed to represent the original recordings well.

Effects displayed good accuracy and were clean. I noticed virtually no distortion and also thought the elements packed nice bass response when necessary; for example, gunshots blasted effectively. The audio of GoodFellas never excelled but it was more than acceptable.

How did the 25th Anniversary Blu-ray compare to the 20th Anniversary Blu-ray from 2010? The lossless audio didn’t do a lot to better the old DD 5.1 mix, but it added a bit more range and punch. Visuals gave us the more obvious improvements, as the new Blu-ray was cleaner and tighter than its predecessor. Though the original Blu-ray was perfectly acceptable, the 2015 version topped it.

The 25th Anniversary release included the old set’s extras as well as a new one. To start, we find two separate audio commentaries.

The first track comes from director Martin Scorsese, writer Nicholas Pileggi, producers Barbara De Fina and Irwin Winkler, cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, editor Thelma Schoonmaker, former GoodFella Henry Hill, and actors Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, Joe Pesci, Lorraine Bracco, Frank Vincent, and Paul Sorvino. Almost all of the participants were recorded separately for this edited, non-screen-specific piece.

Toward the end, we hear from Liotta and Hill together, but otherwise the participants stay on their own. The commentary doesn’t fill the movie’s entire running time, as it skips some parts and lasts a total of two hours, four minutes, and 13 seconds.

We learn about many subjects connected to GoodFellas. At the start, Pileggi and Scorsese go over the development of the script and how they brought the movie to the screen. From there we hear specifics about the production, with an emphasis on the creation of some notable scenes, and we also get information about casting, the actors’ approaches to their characters, and the atmosphere on the set.

We find some fascinating tales like Sorvino’s generally negative outlook; he initially regretted taking the part, and when he first saw the final flick, he hated it. Overall, this commentary proves extremely informative and engaging.

For the second track, we find notes from Henry Hill and former FBI agent Edward McDonald. The pair sit together for their running, screen-specific commentary. Not surprisingly, Hill dominates the track as he talks about the reality behind the film. We learn about specifics of various situations and people.

We also hear about some events not depicted in the film, like Hill’s military service. McDonald presents things from the law enforcement point of view, as he details the methods used to snare wiseguys and goes over some different circumstances. He also chats a little about his cameo role.

While valuable overall, this commentary can become somewhat frustrating. It suffers from more than a few gaps, and at times Hill just chuckles about the excesses of his youth. I thought Hill could have elaborated on more of the situations that he did, which made it disappointing when he failed to do so. Nonetheless, there’s enough useful and interesting material here to make the commentary worth a listen.

Some featurettes follow. Getting Made: The Making of GoodFellas runs 29 minutes, 39 seconds and includes interviews with Scorsese, DeFina, Winkler, Pileggi, Liotta, De Niro, Pesci, Sorvino, Bracco, Vincent, Hill, Schoonmaker, and Ballhaus. We hear about working on the script, casting and the actors’ work on their roles, Scorsese’s approach to the film and improvisation, photographic choices, the film’s editing and music, and reactions to the film and studio concerns.

Surprisingly, “Getting” avoids much redundancy after the commentaries, as it presents similar subjects but different takes on them. It moves through the production in a clear and concise manner and offers a nicely tight examination of the film and its creation.

After this we find The Workaday Gangster, a look at criminal realities. It lasts eight minutes as we get comments from Hill, DeFina, Pileggi, Vincent, Scorsese, and Sorvino. Mostly they reflect on the issues that affected Hill and others of his ilk, with an emphasis on the darker side of the experience. Some of this echoes Hill’s commentary, but it nonetheless provides a good little glimpse of the truth behind the movie.

In Made Men: The GoodFellas Legacy, we hear reactions from some folks not associated with the film. The 13-minute, 35-second featurette includes remarks from actor/director Jon Favreau, directors Albert and Allen Hughes, director Joe Carnahan, director Richard Linklater, director Antoine Fuqua, and director Frank Darabont.

They lavish praise on GoodFellas and let us know what they think makes it such a special film. This offers a few interesting perspectives since it comes from filmmakers, but it seems too heavily focused on plaudits and not enough on a critical interpretation of the work.

Paper Is Cheaper Than Film provides a look at Scorsese’s planning. It takes four minutes, 30 seconds to show movie clips along with Scorsese’s original script notes and mini-storyboards used to compose shots. It’s a moderately insightful glimpse of Scorsese’s processes.

A documentary entitled Public Enemies: The Golden Age of the Gangster Film comes next. Narrated by Alec Baldwin, this program runs one hour, 45 minutes, 13 seconds, and it provides notes from Pileggi, Scorsese, Royal College of Art author/rector Sir Christopher Frayling, film historian/author Glenn Mitchell, Silent Players author Anthony Slide, Postwar Hollywood: 1946-1962 author Dr. Drew Casper, Sin in Soft Focus: Pre-Code Hollywood author Mark Vieira, Inside Warner Brothers author Rudy Behlmer, film critic/novelist Kim Newman, The Golden Age of Cinema: 1929-1945 author Dr. Richard B. Jewell, The Gangster Reader author Alain Silver, author/film historian Jeffrey Vance, Sopranos writer/producer Terence Winter, film critic/author Peter Travers, Little Caesar: A Biography of Edward G. Robinson aithor Alan L. Gansberg, actors Joan Blondell and Edward G. Robinson (via archival footage), The Tough Guys author Gregory William Mank, directors William A. Wellman, Raoul Walsh, Howard Hawks and Mervyn LeRoy (archival), screenwriter John Bright (archival), Donnie Brasco director Mike Newell, Underworld USA author Colin McArthur, The Women of Warner Bros. author Daniel Bubbeo, From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies author Molly Haskell, Bonnie and Clyde screenwriter Robert Benton, Mean Streets screenwriter Mardik Martin, The Gangster Reader James Ursini, film critic/author Richard Schickel, The Dark Side of the Screen author Foster Hirsch, Power and Paranoia: History, Narrative and the American Cinema author Dana Polan, Hal Wallis: Producer to the Stars author Bernard F. Dick, film critic/author Leonard Maltin, film historian Tony Maietta, City Boys: Cagney, Bogart, Garfield author Robert Sklar, Bogart author Eric Lax, actors Virginia Mayo and Joan Leslie, Black Out: World War II and the Origins of Film Noir author Sheri Chinen Biesen and author/professor Patricia King Hanson.

“Enemies” looks at the roots of the gangster genre and early examples, social influences and the genre’s heyday in the 1930s, and its subsequent development over the decades. With almost two hours at its disposal, “Enemies” certainly gets a lot of time to explore its subject, and it fills this time well.

We get just enough movie footage to flesh out the comments, and those remarks provide a rich history of the gangster films. Yeah, it skimps on info about movies made since the 1940s, but it doesn’t purport to investigate all eras of gangster flicks; as the title notes, it focuses on the “golden age”. “Enemies” becomes a wholly satisfying documentary.

The set also features four Merry Melodies and Looney Tunes cartoons. We find 1933’s I Like Mountain Music (7:02), 1937’s She Was An Acrobat’s Daughter (8:39), 1946’s Racketeer Rabbit (7:55) and 1954’s Bugs and Thugs (7:14). All of these connect to the gangster theme, but they vary in terms of quality. Mountain features magazine subjects who come to life; it appears because it shows a few gangsters. It’s cute and interesting for archival reasons but not actually very entertaining.

Daughter shows a night at the movies and attempts humor via the onscreen material and the antics of the audience. It makes the cut due to its parody of Bogart’s Petrified Forest. I like it more than Mountain; it’s not a classic, but it amuses well enough.

As for Rabbit and Thugs, both star Bugs Bunny. The former casts Bugs as a wanderer who ends up amidst gangsters; these characters include spoofs of Edward G. Robinson and Peter Lorre. Thugs places Bugs among bank robbers, neither of whom appears to have a clear cinematic antecedent. Both are entertaining, though I prefer Rabbit; its Robinson/Lorre parodies add kick to it.

In addition to the film’s trailer, we get a new addition to the 2015 Blu-ray: Scorsese’s GoodFellas. In this 29-minute, 54-second program, we hear from Scorsese, De Niro, Bracco, Pileggi, Liotta, Winkler, Schoonmaker, Wolf of Wall Street writer Terence Winter, and actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Harvey Keitel. The program gives us thoughts about Scorsese’s approach to the material, casting, characters, and performances, costumes and period details, photography, music, and retrospective thoughts about the film.

Even after so many prior extras, “Scorsese’s GoodFellas” manages some new insights. It’s a general piece but it comes up with good thoughts and memories as it goes.

Finally, we locate a hardcover book. This gives us an essay about the film as well as photos and a list of awards. It finishes the set on a positive note.

GoodFellas remains Martin Scorsese’s masterpiece, as it offers the best realization of his style yet filmed. Never before or since did Scorsese seem so supremely confident and in charge of his gifts in this stunning flick. The Blu-ray delivers excellent picture and supplements as well as more than adequate audio. GoodFellas stands as a classic and this 25th Anniversary Blu-ray gives us the strongest version of the film to date.

To rate this film, visit the Special Edition review of GOODFELLAS

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Review Archive:  # | A-C | D-F | G-I | J-L | M-O | P-R | S-U | V-Z | Viewer Ratings | Main