Witness to the Mob Page #6

Synopsis: Sammy 'The Bull' Gravano was mafiosi. He started out as a soldier, but his talent for murder, including the slayings of his best friends, his wife's brother and his own boss, Paul Castellano, saw him rise to under-boss in the Gambino crime family. However, betrayals within the family saw him break the code of silence and became the highest ranking member of the mob to turn into a rat - 'a rat in a suit,- assisting the government to finally put away the Teflon Don, John Gotti.
Genre: Crime, Drama
Director(s): Thaddeus O'Sullivan
Production: Trimark
 
IMDB:
6.8
Rotten Tomatoes:
60%
Year:
1998
124 min
282 Views


He wanted us still off.

In a restaurant in New Jersey

they had a secret meeting.

Exactly, in the ladies room.

This is the ladies' room.

- Put it on the street.

Very funny.

- Hoop it.

She is a good customer of mine.

Who said such a thing?

We are here on business. We need to talk.

Where do the Chinese do it cold?

For his club in Ozone Park.

There he is every Saturday.

You blasts him down and you smear him!

I bang Gotti down with pleasure,

but it's not that simple.

I needed professionals.

Say who you need.

I take care of the rest.

I bang Gotti down with pleasure.

- This saves us time and money.

If we match Gotti, Gigante know that we

him eavesdropping.

Then we're back to square one.

I want this guy suits, but then

the legal way.

John, I have some new information for you.

A tip for the races?

- We want to protect you.

Are you now sizes from me?

Pity you nothing to take.

I have a few costumes on.

You're too fat, but you adjust them.

Not everyone likes you.

- Because they do not know me.

Got any more?

- Beware of the man in the bathrobe.

Do you have anything better to do?

Damn those FBI guys.

Who have come to tell me this?

That dirty bastard.

He wanted to challenge me?

He wanted to make me sometimes cold?

These filthy freckle-faced.

I told Frankie that he

had on his conscience?

The Chin is furious because he was buddies

with Paul. These two best eels us.

This is for us a little something,

but is it worth it?

That piece of sh*t is not worth the risk.

If we catch him, we get the FBI

on our roof.

They know everything about us.

Let this be a lesson to you.

Never say anything that

you do not want to tire.

If you bullshit like 'Fat' Angie, it costs

you life. Never forget that.

We do it.

Eye for an eye. We are boss

Rotondo cold.

Will do.

- And the brothers Falcona.

Frankie who have stoked.

- We take three for the price of one.

No one sews this family.

We are the largest in the world.

Nobody.

How's it going?

- Jimmy, you're in the wrong place.

I thought you sat down to pee.

Sammy, I beg you.

You Frankie and family betrayed.

I swear. I did nothing.

Away with that guy.

Then asked the Chinese to a conversation

between the families.

We are like brothers.

We want an end to the feud.

We said we did not know who Paul

killed.

He said he knew nothing about the

murder of Frankie.

We said that we are not people

had been killed and that it was very.

We gave the state debt.

All lies and gossip.

We were a Cosa Nostra.

We are surely a Cosa Nostra.

I was unstoppable.

I did now building and concrete

for the entire Gambino family.

Together with the other families scaled

We construction costs by 20 percent.

This city was not built without

We got paid for it.

Nothing for nothing. We determined the

price and the little guy got the bill.

Our family had everything in hand.

Construction, clothing, garbage,

transportation, Hotels, restaurants.

Everything you can imagine.

We were the boss.

We abused the system at all

conceivable ways.

We knew no mercy.

Not all guys who could fame to.

Guys, you must see this.

What is this?

That's not much.

My mother was sick. That cost money.

You'll get it next week.

Fine, no problem.

The problem is that sh*t you snort.

I'm just cold.

I have a pill too much.

Do you like a little. Did you hear me?

Sure.

I heard you.

There's that f***ing FBI again.

They can flag it hang.

I have an idea. Give me an ice pick.

Yes, grab at an ice pick.

What that club one evening yields,

is enough for the whole week.

I know Nicky is your friend,

but keep him a bit of an eye.

What does he do then?

I'm not confident.

He does not think. Keep an eye on him.

Well then.

A liar is always looking in his glass

if he's lying.

Mikey was in the wrong camp and I

should have known.

That sound I like to hear.

So I can see it.

Well done, Sal. Very good.

Joe, watch out for your heart.

Are they happy now?

They now come back with reinforcements.

What has this guy done?

You have not said anything.

- Oh, no?

No, you did not say anything.

I heard that guy for themselves

wanted to start.

Can you imagine that?

Driving with that trade.

Then the guy had witnesses he had,

Fortunately for him, amnesia.

The headlines screamed: "I Vergotti.

From this period dates his nickname

"Distinguished Don '.

His face appeared in the

newspapers and on TV.

Everyone was busy with John.

It's the moment.

- Go ahead.

They sit down cards.

Louie was just released

after a short sentence.

I went to greet him.

I wanted to know what he was planning.

And I wanted to know what he did to me was.

Welcome home.

- I'm glad I'm free.

How you doin '?

- I came 's see how you were.

How was in jail?

As always. You're your time.

And you're doing well in construction.

- That's right.

There, you too can benefit.

There I therefore regret.

Thanks for your help when I was stuck.

It was your money. You're still in Tali's.

Imagine. Sammy 'The Bull' underboss

of the Gambino family.

I really did not ask.

Is not it great that a kid from our

neighborhood that has reached?

What actually happened with Paul

and Tommy when I was in jail?

What are you talking about?

You know that.

How you've tackled the boss.

So is life. Those things happen.

How those damn Gotti ever boss

become remains to me a mystery.

We owe everything to Paul.

Why did he kill? And Tommy?

Because he walked away. Since when

do you care about Tommy?

He was a friend.

- Your partner, you mean.

You let me fall for him.

You went behind my back to him.

I know.

You saw the storm coming, and you chose for him.

And now you regret it. Yet?

What should I say.

I did not mean to hurt you.

Understand one thing. That Paul and

Tommy was strictly business.

You simply do not talk about it.

Is that clear?

Let's not more brands.

He continued to haunt us.

It is now the case one after the other.

That dirty b*tch Giacoloni would catch me.

40 years to life.

These witnesses are jailbirds who hope

a shorter sentence.

I'm crazy about you.

- Good to see you. Have a nice day.

Do you understand?

- Have you any news?

My old pal Louie Milito bullshit behind

my back on us and Paul.

Indicators can not use.

He knows nothing. I'll make sure he

his mouth.

If he's too much bullshit, he goes out.

Let him now.

I vouch for him, I mean.

But keep him in the hand, for I speak

you pointed to.

I give you my word.

How you doin 'here? What's the score?

Forty-Niners 21 points,

against 10 for Chicago.

Those damn Bears.

I have $ 60 on them deployed.

I need to call.

Deb, it's me.

I'm home late, do not wait for me.

I do not eat at home.

I'm home at ten o'clock.

Norman, come here.

What is this?

A staple.

Do you DIY here?

- I do not.

Damn.

Look at this' s see.

That's number one.

This tent is secure?

Next time do better.

- You would still guarding the lot?

They are smarter than they seem.

Our informant was an investigator for

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Stanley Weiser

Stanley Weiser is an American screenwriter. He was born in New York City. He is a graduate of the NYU Film School. His screen credits include Wall Street and W., both directed by Oliver Stone. He also wrote the 20th Century Fox film, Project X. He is credited for creating characters in the sequel to Wall Street: Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps. In addition, he served as script consultant on Oliver Stone's Nixon and Any Given Sunday. Weiser's other projects include two civil rights dramas, developed as feature films, but made for television. Murder in Mississippi, a chronicle of the 1964 Freedom Summer movement and the lives and deaths of Cheney, Schwerner, and Goodman, the three young civil rights workers who were killed by the Ku Klux Klan, which aired on NBC in 1990. It was nominated for four Emmys and won the Directors Guild of America Award for best TV movie. Freedom Song, a semi-fictional account of the early SNCC movement in Mississippi, was co-written with Phil Alden Robinson, who also directed. They shared a Writers Guild of America Award and Humanitas nomination for the 2000 TNT film. Weiser also adapted the novel, Fatherland, by Robert Harris, for HBO. It was nominated for three Golden Globe awards and Miranda Richardson won for best supporting actress in a TV or cable movie. He wrote the NBC four-hour mini-series Witness to the Mob in 1998, which was produced by Robert De Niro. He also wrote Rudy: The Rudy Giuliani Story, for which he received a Writers Guild of America nomination for best TV movie. As of 2012, he wrote a biopic on the life of Rod Serling, the writer and The Twilight Zone creator. Weiser began his career as a production assistant for Brian De Palma on Phantom of the Paradise, and as an assistant cameraman on the Martin Scorsese documentary, Street Scenes. He is married and lives in Santa Monica, California. He is a founding member of the West Los Angeles Shambhala Buddhist Meditation Center. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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