Frank Marino's Divas Las Vegas - 2021 All You Need to Know

frank marino casino

frank marino casino - win

One thing i was pondering with the legendary joe pescis birthday

I’m almost surprised he was never in the show considering the many legendary mob actors but I guess he was so known for goodfella/casinos it may have been distracting. While frank vincent and chianese had somewhat lesser roles in goodfellas/casino and The Godfather 2 respectively. (Though Johnny ola, billy bats, and frank marino are quite memorable, it’s not like they were primary characters). Anyways if he did end up getting casted what kind of role could you have seen him in? Or what existing role do you think he would have been good as? Vincent and Curtatola did such a perfect job with their characters but I could’ve seen Pesci playing Johnny sack or Phil (though they’d have been different)
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[EXPANSION] The Maryland Cabal | Building the Stage

Accompanying Song

The Democratic People’s Republic of Maryland

State Song

Peter Franchot | Governor of Maryland
Jim Taiclet | Chairman of the UNAAC
Jim Perdue | Chairman of Perdue
Bill Marriott | Executive Chairman of Marriott International
Eilif Sereck-Hanssen | CEO of Laureate Education
Ronald Daniels | John Hopkins School of Medicine
Steve Johnson | CEO of HMSHost
Kenneth Samet | CEO of MedStar Health
Lawrence Kurzius | CEO of McCormick & Company
Patrik Frisk | CEO of Under Armor
Todd Combs | CEO of GEICO
Steven C. Preston | CEO of Goodwill Industries
David Zaslav | CEO of the Discovery Channel
Calvin Butler, Jr | CEO of BGE
Pradman Kaul | CEO of Huges

Construction Companies

Kevin Mandia | CEO of DeWalt Tools
Governor Larry Hogan | Owner of Hogan Companies Construction
Timothy Regan | CEO of The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co.
Robert D. Moser | President of Clark Construction
James Davis | President of the James G. Davis Construction Corp.
Kenneth Grunley | CEO of Grunley Construction Co.

Trucking/Transportation Companies

Marino Transportation | Construction Shipping/Transportation
Alfredo Trucking | Heavy Equipment Transportation
COWAN | LTL Trucking
Eric Morgan | President of Piedmont Airlines

Private Security Companies (Sadly From Virginia)

Academi) (Blackwater)
Triple Canopy
Vinnell

International Lawyers and State AG

Brian Frosh | Representing the state of Maryland
Here
2023 | The Democratic People’s Republic of Maryland 

”The world is ours” -- Discovery Channel Slogan

As Maryland continues to ever seek more influence in the United States, many (as seen above) have been collaborating for years to see state entities enter the world stage. With the United North American Aegis Company chairman Jim Taiclet leading the charge and being the first to break into the Liberian market (along with help from Ghana ). With the New Bethesda Megaplex in the works in the United States, the Aegis company felt unstoppable in terms of development undertakings. This came especially true after the not one, not two, not even three, but four (still working on that last one) multibillion dollar military contracts from the swiss and continued support from the United States Federal government. Revenue was massive. With new headquarters in western Europe, the stage was truly set for the Aegis company.
As Jim Taiclet thought in his office, he truly saw the pure and raw benefits of working in Liberia. He decided to call his friends about it. Being one of the largest company in the state of Maryland by a vast margin and having a history of shady practices when it came to getting things done immediately set up a meeting between the old Comptroller turned Governor Peter Franchot, Baltimore mayor turned Governor Martin O’Malley, and construction company owner turned Governor Larry Hogan. To consult them about his plan. After picking their brain about the plan, they agreed that investment a hostile economic takeover of Liberia would be the best thing for the Democratic People’s Republic of Maryland. In turn, they immediately began getting their friends together, composed of the most powerful entities in the state of Maryland with not only stateside reach, but international reach in a majority of the cases and global reach in a notable amount of cases. Together, they all formulated a grand plan in the Governor's Mansion in Annapolis that the Liberian government simply couldn’t refuse.
The general idea was to have Liberia in the putty of Maryland's hands. Through investment and a strangling corporate hand, they would work to do just that.

General Investment Plan: 2023/4-2035

The companies of Maryland together are a multi hundred billion dollar powerhouse by itself larger than most African nation's when bridging together state and private entities. The Maryland Cabal planned on using this intense and concentrated capital to dump funds into Liberia to spread their own influence over the small West African nation of Liberia and use it, and eventually other African nations, as a supply house for raw materials, a factory full of cheap labor, and a fertile breeding ground for pure, unadulterated, capitalism. Between Hogan, Franchot, and O’Malley, they proposed a roughly $200 billion dollar investment plan to completely revamp Liberia from the ground up, the Maryland way. The plan would be to completely rework the Liberian economy to benefit the state of Maryland (and the US to a secondary extent) and expose them to Maryland culture and innovations over a period of 8-10 years. Western Africa will feel the might of raw Maryland economic power.

Healthcare Sector

The Maryland healthcare sector (Represented by the John Hopkins School of Medicine, HMSHost, and MedStar Health) will start off the deal by creating the “the Jim Taiclet Frederick-Monrovian General Hospital” thanks to alleged ‘private’ funding by Aegis company CEO Jim Taiclet. The namescape will also be due to Monrovia Frederick County, Maryland. The hospital will be the primary healthcare center providing American tier healthcare at Liberian costs. As Liberia only has 5,000 health workers and 51 native doctors, we can easily dominate the market by building a massive hospital to rival, and eventually collapse John F. Kennedy Medical Center) and we can simply expand from there. By having a fully staffed, American style hospital in Liberia, we can dominate the healthcare market there in a big way.
The strategy is to provide free services until the JFK Medical center closes due to failing in every way compared to the Frederick-Monrovian Hospital. By stealing the doctors from the JFK center and the medical workers by providing a hyper competitive wage (for Liberian standards which shouldn’t cost us that much overall), we can easily create a healthcare monopoly in the nation of Liberia with ease. This will be combined with GEICO selling “health insurance” plans to the population (despite the fact GEICO only does auto insurance in the United States.) They will ‘expand’ into every type of insurance when it comes to Liberian operations to ensure that the Liberians buy into the Maryland system we will establish and be a direct benefactor of.

Construction and housing sector

The housing sector will be taken over by Maryland’s finest major contractors and trucking companies. Utilizing the drastically cheaper resources found in Western Africa, we can build apartment blocks, townhomes, single family homes, major arenas, casinos and give Monrovia a major facelift by effectively gentrifying the entire nation bit by bit. As we will be able to dominate the wages given to day laborers and full time workers with the brainpower and might of American construction, we should be able to completely rebuild Liberia into a paradise of Maryland based capitalism and splendor. It will be a utopian state of the finest Maryland infrastructure.
The gimmick here will be buying out the residents across Liberia. As the total GDP of Liberia is $3.2 billion dollars with the average Liberian making around $704 a year ($1,414 in PPP dollars) and then doing massive redevelopment projects across the nation's major cities and becoming the best and only game in town. By using the construction companies themselves to issue loans to people for buying homes (something similar to what GM financial does). With the contracting companies of Maryland acting as the developer and banker for these properties, over time, Maryland based companies will be the only game in town to own property in Liberia. Offering the 20, 25, and 30 year loans as seen in the United States and with the entire Maryland Cabal strong arming the Liberian economic ministry due to sheer economic power as a block, we could become very powerful, very quickly. We will effectively set up a Maryland based monopoly.

Tourism Sector

As we have the power of Marriott International on our side along with the contractors, we can build up the hospitality sector of Liberia from something frankly, questionable, to an upper-middle class wonderland of cheap goods and services in a foreign land. By using HMS-Host to develop operations for the food in the nation (something they will do for the hospital system as well as noted), it should be generally very easy to establish a tourism sector for Americans and Europeans that they are already familiar with by having a low overhead.

Manufacturing/Agriculture

We will be using McCormick, Under Armor, the Aegis Company, DeWalt Tools, and Perdue (due to the large AG sector), to manufacture goods in a cheap manner. Taking a note out of China’s book in African investment, we will undercut the Chinese themselves by using cheap labor whilst still paying the average Liberian a “competitive wage” that, in reality, is only large enough to consume more Maryland (and American to a lesser extent) goods. Considering we lost a considerable amount of AG goods supply after the US broke up, we will offset this and become the American breadbasket by owning high amounts of Liberian assets and sending them back to America to sell them at American standard rates to make a huge profit.

Infrastructure

Using various Maryland based companies, Liberia can transform in a matter of a few years with Huges (for internet), BGE (for energy production), and the several infrastructure companies to redevelop roads while they are redeveloping and rebuilding neighborhoods.
With these lofty and grand plans, Jim Taiclet of the Aegis company feels that a coordinated effort like this will yield wildly effective results for improving the state of Maryland, bring cheap goods and services into the United States and most importantly, turn a heavy profit. The Maryland Cabal has decided to work this plan over the next 8-10 years and establish a very clear, and even overwhelming force in Western Africa. With Liberia being a relatively low bar for the massive economic power held by these Maryland based companies, they all decide to put this plan into motion.

The Stage Has Been Set.

submitted by De_Dingledangler to worldpowers [link] [comments]

What does a rebuild look like? (Overly High Effort Post)

So I’ve been thinking about this a lot since the end of the season, and after we heard a bunch of the talk from the Yohe/Rossi/Madden hot take crowd about the supposed fact that this team is fundamentally flawed, has something wrong with the room, needs to be completely rebuilt, etc. “I know what’s coming this summer” horseshit aside, it’s really been bugging me to think about what these people really expect a rebuild to look like. So, since it’s the offseason and there’s nothing else to do, I figured I’d put on my amateur talent scout/horrible GM prediction skills and analyze what, exactly, the Pens could do, and what they’re likely to do in the offseason. Keep in mind that I’m literally nobody and have no inside information beyond what’s public and I have no credentials on this front either, but I’m also completely an expert and fuck you if you disagree with any of my opinions. I’ll break this down into tiers from most likely to be with the team next season to the UFAs who are almost certainly gone.
Tier One: The Stars
Sid – Goes without saying… right? I mean, maybe not – maybe you blame Sid for the lack of leadership on the team, or you think he’s contributing to an environment that is no longer conducive to winning. But, does anyone really believe that? Plus, and this is actually more important than that kind of tripe that nobody truly believes – can you even begin to think of a trade that would be for equal value to what Sid is worth to this franchise? That last reason is the biggest reason why none of this tier should – or will – be traded: you can’t possibly get equal value back to what they’re worth. Either the team trading for them would be foolish to do it (they’re still young enough that they’re not on their farewell tours, but they’re old enough that you’d have to be in win-now mode, and none of those teams who would fall under that category are going to give up the kind of assets it would take to make an even trade).
Geno – Geno started Game One like a wrecking ball and I was convinced that his line would end up being the turning point in that series. Boy was I right – but also wrong. Instead of dominating the Habs’ lack of depth, they looked listless at times and like they just never got back in sync. That’s led to the yearly talk about trading Geno and Letang, but frankly, JR has already committed to both and you’d never get equal value for Geno. He’s worth too much to the franchise and probably will retire a Penguin unless he leaves as a UFA.
Letang – GMJR has already committed to him so he’s not being traded in all likelihood, and there’s really no trade package that would bring back equal value for what he’s worth to the team. He plays 25 minutes a night, and even though he makes infuriating turnovers at times, they’re usually because he’s trying to be creative and doing something physically gifted that we, as fans, take for granted – even when he fails at it. Do yourself a favor and watch the tape – when there’s a breakout pass out of the defensive zone, watch when Letang fires the pass and then watch when Jack Johnson or even Marcus Pettersson throws the pass and see the difference. Letang makes this offense tick, even when that offense sucks and doesn’t put up any goals against a trash tier team like Montreal. He’s not going anywhere, like his hair or not.
Tier Two: Not Quite Stars, but basically untouchable
John Marino – I’ll eat… something if they trade Marino.
Jake Guentzel – I struggled a bit trying to figure out where to put Jake on this list. The thing is, like it or not, he was Not Good in that series against Montreal. Still, give him a pass because he was coming off of a long term injury that I’ve had and can personally attest to the fact it sucks and takes a while to recover from.
Tristan Jarry – I mean, I’d say he’s PROBABLY in this tier, but who knows; maybe GMJR gets a sick trade package for him and keeps Murray instead. I find that REALLY hard to believe, so I’m keeping him here, but I’d allow for the possibility.
Tier Three: We literally just signed these guys, so why the hell would you trade them?
Brandon Tanev – So his contract still seems a little too long and for a little too much money, but after watching him basically be the only dude on the ice skating hard for long periods of that Montreal series, I can’t imagine trading him even if you could. There’s probably a market for him somewhere if you want to retain salary, but that would be taking a big L on someone who arguably does help the team, so I don’t see it happening.
Jason Zucker – So, Zucker wasn’t nearly the impact player we were hoping to get after he scored a billion goals with Sid after acquiring him, but then again, who was? He’s with the team fairly long term, and while his acquisition price is a sunk cost, it still seems stupid as hell to trade him away at this point. He’s a useful top six forward, even if he’s not a top liner.
Tier Four: Entry Level Contracts/Very Inexpensive Contracts That Make Little Sense to Move
Dominik Simon – Simon is a possession demon, and even if his hands seem like they’re as bad as mine playing beer league sometimes, he’s a valuable part of the team and he costs 750k. I can’t see him getting traded.
Sam Lafferty – He’s still on his ELC and even though he was shit in the one game he got in the playoffs, the coaching staff and JR think highly enough of him to at least try to play him in a playoff game. I doubt he’s going anywhere.
Teddy Blueger – He’s a useful defensive forward making very little money. If you don’t end up needing him for your roster, you probably lose him on waivers, but I doubt trading him is terribly likely. He’s probably still in the bottom six next season.
Chad Ruhwedel – He makes pocket change and seems to be fairly useful #8 defenseman. He’s cleared waivers in the past and probably would in the future again.
Tier Five: I wouldn’t trade them, but GMJR might if he loses a bunch of money at Rivers Casino and wants to shake shit up
Brian Dumoulin – I’m prefacing this with the fact that I really like Dumoulin, and I do value advanced and/or fancy stats so I know he’s not the problem. But, he’s not nearly as untouchable as any of the guys above, and he’s someone with a tradeable contract who could probably fetch some assets back in return. I know absolutely nothing about the locker room culture and I don’t pretend to know anything about it, but if Dumoulin is anything but a model citizen in the room, I could see him getting moved. Still, I wouldn’t do it.
Bryan Rust – Rust seems to be a pretty standard GMJR whipping boy, and I don’t understand it at all. His advanced metrics are pretty amazing and he added the goal scoring touch this year to round out his overall game. If he’s on almost any other team, he’s probably one of their focal point stars but he gets buried a bit here given how talented the lineup is. Still, would anybody be surprised if GMJR goes on a bender and decides to move him?
Tier Six: Trade Possibilities, but what’s the point?
Marcus Pettersson – I know what you’re thinking here – he wasn’t the problem, and I agree. But, he has rather middling advanced metrics, and if I’m being honest, I am not excited to start paying him 4 million next season. Still, of this tier, he’s the least likely to go because… we’re paying him 4 million next year. But he’s very, very far from untouchable and nor should he be untouchable. His pairing was largely buoyed by stellar play from Marino and I’m not sure he’d have been remarkable at all without being tethered to that rocket. Still, with the contract… probably not going anywhere.
Zach Aston-Reese – ZAR was at fault for some pretty bad goals against during the Montreal series, and of that buzzsaw fourth line, he’s probably the most tradeable and replaceable. You could likely get value for him, since he’s only making $1m for another year. I probably would keep him, though.
Jared McCann – He’s probably going to be at least tendered as an RFA because he’s too valuable to let walk without getting anything in return, but the fact that he was the first guy on the bench when things started to go south doesn’t bode well for him – neither does the fact that he was on the single worst line during that shit show of a series. For a while, he looked like one of the future stars of the team as he was riding with Sid, but when he’s been separated from the gravy train, he hasn’t been as productive or looked nearly as irreplaceable. Could you get some value out of him by moving him? Maybe. Maybe not.
Tier Seven: Please God someone take these guys
Nick Bjugstad – He’s not totally useless, but he’s on a horrible contract that’s already gotten him traded once and he’s currently injured. I think it’s fairly unlikely the Pens will be able to move him unless they retain salary, which… sigh. I guess if you have to. At least he’s only got one more year left on his contract. Speaking of which…
Jack Johnson – 3 more years at $3.25m. If you can trade him, you do it. But you probably have to retain salary and you probably have to package something with him to offload him. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s still a Penguin next season for that reason.
Tier Eight: More Likely Trade Candidates
Patrick Hornqvist – Horny has had a great career with the Pens, is by all accounts a great locker room dude and a good powerplay guy, and is completely useless at fives. I think you could get some value from trading him to a team who’s in GMJR’s Tom Wilson Fever Dreams Mode (NEED MORE GRIT). I wouldn’t be happy to see him go at all based on what he’s provided over the years, but I would understand and I actually do think it’s time.
Matt Murray – A lot of blame has always been heaped on Murray because he’s the guy who took over for the guy a lot of us liked. I personally don’t buy the exorbitant contract demands talk, but who knows. The bottom line, though, is that his metrics have been suffering for a few seasons now and for better or worse, it doesn’t make much sense to keep both goaltenders and he doesn’t save enough of the highest danger shots. Should he have to? No. But he isn’t really stealing games for us at this point and Jarry sometimes does. There are enough horrible goalie situations in the league that you should be able to trade him somewhere, but I wouldn’t expect to extract a ton of value out of the trade. Hopefully I’ll be pleasantly surprised, though.
Tier Nine: RFA Non-Tender Candidates
Evan Rodrigues – He didn’t really flash when he got a chance, even if that wasn’t much of a chance. He’d be cheap to keep in all likelihood but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him non-tendered.
Jusso Riikola – I kinda doubt you can find much better than him at that price point and I can’t imagine him fetching more than league minimum to be honest. Still, it’s possible GMJR has had enough of the Riikola experiment and is ready to move on. I’d probably keep him, for what it’s worth, but the staff started Jack Johnson over him for four games in the playoffs. Clearly they don’t think terribly highly of him.
Tier Ten: UFA’s
Justin Schultz – And now… starting for your Washington Capitals… Seriously though, JR threw him solidly under the bus and I can’t see him sticking around. And also seriously, I bet he signs with the Caps.
Conor Sheary – They literally just traded for him again, which shows they think he has some value, so it’s possible they throw him a reasonable contract offer. It’s even possible that he decides to stick around. Let me be clear: I actually really liked his game in the playoff series and I say that unironically. He was buzzing a lot, made some creative passes, and was in the right spot pretty often. Still, they lost, and he didn’t score, so he’s an obvious candidate to move on from.
Patrick Marleau – Press F to pay respects.
Conclusions:
So, what’s left? What does a real “rebuild” look like for this team that’s already fairly tight to the cap? Let’s say they move on from everyone I listed in tiers 8-10… your starting lineup looks like this (I have no idea what wings people play so I’m making this up and I fully admit that – this is just an exercise to show you that not much changes, spoiler alert):
Guentzel – Sid – Simon
Zucker – Geno – Rust
X – McCann – X
Tanev – Blueger – ZAR
Letang – Dumo
Marino – Pettersson
Johnson – X
Jarry
X
Extras: Bjugstad, Lafferty, Ruhwedel
Cue “Is This Rebuilding?” meme – even if we started dipping into the less-likely-to-be-traded tiers, this roster really doesn’t feel like it’s being changed much, unless GMJR panics and decides to turn this into Grit City™ again. My prediction is that we don’t see a lot of turnover this season – maybe a few trades here and there, but this roster is mostly the same on opening night in December or January or whenever.
What do you guys think?
submitted by markaments to penguins [link] [comments]

Frank Vincent died just as The Irishman started filming. Who could he have played in The Irishman?

The Irishman will act as a reunion for a lot of Scorsese's original muses. The last time Vincent was in a Scorsese movie was over 20 fuckin' year.
Sadly Vincent won't be one of them since he died last year. It got me thinking, if he was still alive who could he have played in The Irishman?
I made a little video collating my thoughts together on the matter if you're interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDfWQuKytIM
If you prefer to read, I wrote it up here:
All Martin Scorsese movies that have starred Joe Pesci – Raging Bull, Goodfellas and Casino – have also starred the late Frank Vincent. Robert De Niro and Scorsese picked up the two, who at the time were a music and comedy duo, for two significant roles in Scorsese’s 1980 boxing drama Raging Bull. Since then, Pesci has gone onto have two major roles in Marty’s two most famous gangster movies, including an Oscar winning turn as tommy DeVito in Goodfellas. Vincent also had roles in these two films but had much smaller parts, though his performance as Billy Batts in Goodfellas has given audiences one of the most famous scenes and lines in the entire genre. Vincent’s last role in a Martin Scorsese film came as the enforcer of Joe Pesci’s character, Frank Marino in the 1995 crime film Casino.
Evidently, Frank Vincent was very much a part of the Martin Scorsese mob scene. Surely then, had he not have passed away in September 2017, there would have been a role for him in the 2019 Scorsese gangster movie The Irishman? One of the key attractions of the film is the way in which it serves as a reunion to some of Scorsese’s original muses, such as Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci and Harvel Kietel, bringing together all these actors who worked together many years ago, whilst making room for veterans of the gangster genre who have yet to work with Scorsese, namely Al Pacino.
We may never know if Frank Vincent was in mind to have a role in the film, but if he did, who could he have played? A role as one of the film’s big three characters – Jimmy Hoffa, Frank Sheeran and Russell Buffalino, seems unlikely. A reading of the script was done around 2013 and it is thought the only actors at the table were Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci, suggesting they were always going to play their characters. Given their pedigree, it only makes sense.
So who else is there then? A minor role as a relatively low-key character or a random mobster is possible, but would be a rather waste of the actor’s talent. One of the juicer roles in the film is that of mob boss Angelo Bruno, known as the ‘gentle’ don for his preference for dialogue over violence, a part which will be played by Harvey Kietel. Personally, I feel neither Kietel nor Vincent would be the perfect actors to play the role. I imagine Bruno as a kind of tender and moderate character, one that people feel comfortable being around. Both of the mentioned actors are terrific at playing fierce gangsters, even if the characters aren’t outright vicious both actors are adept at delivering performances with subtle and nuanced intensity, such as Kietel’s role as the abusive boyfriend in Scorsese’s Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore or Vincent’s turn as the gangster Phil Leotardo in the TV show The Sopranos. Because of this I don’t feel either actor would be utilized to the best of their ability playing this character.
One mobster I think would be a perfect fit would be Anthony Provenzano, also known as Tony Pro, who will be played by Stephen Graham. I think Graham is a great actor, but it was a little jarring, given his age in comparison to the rest of the cast, hearing that he would be playing Tony Pro. Vincent was more suited to playing the role, I feel. Provenzano was often the middle man between union leader Jimmy Hoffa and the mafia, and is likely to have several profanity fuelled outbursts in the film and a few verbal beat downs with Al Pacino, a character trait which Vincent is no stranger to. He even kinda looks like Provenzano.
A far smaller role, but one that would give him screen time with most of the main cast, would be as mobster Chuckie O’Brien. He looks nothing at all like O’Brien but if Scorsese wanted Vincent to play a role similar to the one he played in Casino, namely supporting muscle, this would be the perfect role. It’s likely we’d see him a lot hovering in the background of mob conferences, occasionally pitching in and having a part in one major scene in the movie that I won’t give away if you haven’t read the book it’s based on.
Another gangster he could have played was Phil Testa, one of Bruno’s understudies and his eventual successor as boss of the Philadelphia crime family. Again it is likely to be quite a small role, but one that would suit him given Testa being known for having a stern and uncompromising presence.
So what do you think? Would you have liked to see Frank Vincent in The Irishman? If so who do you think he could have played?
submitted by The_Social_Introvert to thesopranos [link] [comments]

Frank Vincent died just as The Irishman started filming. Who could he have played in The Irishman?

The Irishman will act as a reunion for a lot of Scorsese's original muses. Sadly Vincent won't be one of them since he died last year. It got me thinking, if he was still alive who could he have played in The Irishman?
I made a little video collating my thoughts together on the matter if you're interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDfWQuKytIM
If you prefer to read, I wrote it up here:
All Martin Scorsese movies that have starred Joe Pesci – Raging Bull, Goodfellas and Casino – have also starred the late Frank Vincent. Robert De Niro and Scorsese picked up the two, who at the time were a music and comedy duo, for two significant roles in Scorsese’s 1980 boxing drama Raging Bull. Since then, Pesci has gone onto have two major roles in Marty’s two most famous gangster movies, including an Oscar winning turn as tommy DeVito in Goodfellas. Vincent also had roles in these two films but had much smaller parts, though his performance as Billy Batts in Goodfellas has given audiences one of the most famous scenes and lines in the entire genre. Vincent’s last role in a Martin Scorsese film came as the enforcer of Joe Pesci’s character, Frank Marino in the 1995 crime film Casino.
Evidently, Frank Vincent was very much a part of the Martin Scorsese mob scene. Surely then, had he not have passed away in September 2017, there would have been a role for him in the 2019 Scorsese gangster movie The Irishman? One of the key attractions of the film is the way in which it serves as a reunion to some of Scorsese’s original muses, such as Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci and Harvel Kietel, bringing together all these actors who worked together many years ago, whilst making room for veterans of the gangster genre who have yet to work with Scorsese, namely Al Pacino.
We may never know if Frank Vincent was in mind to have a role in the film, but if he did, who could he have played? A role as one of the film’s big three characters – Jimmy Hoffa, Frank Sheeran and Russell Buffalino, seems unlikely. A reading of the script was done around 2013 and it is thought the only actors at the table were Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci, suggesting they were always going to play their characters. Given their pedigree, it only makes sense.
So who else is there then? A minor role as a relatively low-key character or a random mobster is possible, but would be a rather waste of the actor’s talent. One of the juicer roles in the film is that of mob boss Angelo Bruno, known as the ‘gentle’ don for his preference for dialogue over violence, a part which will be played by Harvey Kietel. Personally, I feel neither Kietel nor Vincent would be the perfect actors to play the role. I imagine Bruno as a kind of tender and moderate character, one that people feel comfortable being around. Both of the mentioned actors are terrific at playing fierce gangsters, even if the characters aren’t outright vicious both actors are adept at delivering performances with subtle and nuanced intensity, such as Kietel’s role as the abusive boyfriend in Scorsese’s Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore or Vincent’s turn as the gangster Phil Leotardo in the TV show The Sopranos. Because of this I don’t feel either actor would be utilized to the best of their ability playing this character.
One mobster I think would be a perfect fit would be Anthony Provenzano, also known as Tony Pro, who will be played by Stephen Graham. I think Graham is a great actor, but it was a little jarring, given his age in comparison to the rest of the cast, hearing that he would be playing Tony Pro. Vincent was more suited to playing the role, I feel. Provenzano was often the middle man between union leader Jimmy Hoffa and the mafia, and is likely to have several profanity fuelled outbursts in the film and a few verbal beat downs with Al Pacino, a character trait which Vincent is no stranger to. He even kinda looks like Provenzano.
A far smaller role, but one that would give him screen time with most of the main cast, would be as mobster Chuckie O’Brien. He looks nothing at all like O’Brien but if Scorsese wanted Vincent to play a role similar to the one he played in Casino, namely supporting muscle, this would be the perfect role. It’s likely we’d see him a lot hovering in the background of mob conferences, occasionally pitching in and having a part in one major scene in the movie that I won’t give away if you haven’t read the book it’s based on.
Another gangster he could have played was Phil Testa, one of Bruno’s understudies and his eventual successor as boss of the Philadelphia crime family. Again it is likely to be quite a small role, but one that would suit him given Testa being known for having a stern and uncompromising presence.
So what do you think? Would you have liked to see Frank Vincent in The Irishman? If so who do you think he could have played?
submitted by The_Social_Introvert to flicks [link] [comments]

[Discussion] - Frank Vincent died just as The Irishman started filming. Who could he have played in The Irishman?

The Irishman will act as a reunion for a lot of Scorsese's original muses. Sadly Vincent won't be one of them since he died last year. It got me thinking, if he was still alive who could he have played in The Irishman?
I made a little video collating my thoughts together on the matter if you're interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDfWQuKytIM
If you prefer to read, I wrote it up here:
All Martin Scorsese movies that have starred Joe Pesci – Raging Bull, Goodfellas and Casino – have also starred the late Frank Vincent. Robert De Niro and Scorsese picked up the two, who at the time were a music and comedy duo, for two significant roles in Scorsese’s 1980 boxing drama Raging Bull. Since then, Pesci has gone onto have two major roles in Marty’s two most famous gangster movies, including an Oscar winning turn as tommy DeVito in Goodfellas. Vincent also had roles in these two films but had much smaller parts, though his performance as Billy Batts in Goodfellas has given audiences one of the most famous scenes and lines in the entire genre. Vincent’s last role in a Martin Scorsese film came as the enforcer of Joe Pesci’s character, Frank Marino in the 1995 crime film Casino.
Evidently, Frank Vincent was very much a part of the Martin Scorsese mob scene. Surely then, had he not have passed away in September 2017, there would have been a role for him in the 2019 Scorsese gangster movie The Irishman? One of the key attractions of the film is the way in which it serves as a reunion to some of Scorsese’s original muses, such as Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci and Harvel Kietel, bringing together all these actors who worked together many years ago, whilst making room for veterans of the gangster genre who have yet to work with Scorsese, namely Al Pacino.
We may never know if Frank Vincent was in mind to have a role in the film, but if he did, who could he have played? A role as one of the film’s big three characters – Jimmy Hoffa, Frank Sheeran and Russell Buffalino, seems unlikely. A reading of the script was done around 2013 and it is thought the only actors at the table were Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci, suggesting they were always going to play their characters. Given their pedigree, it only makes sense.
So who else is there then? A minor role as a relatively low-key character or a random mobster is possible, but would be a rather waste of the actor’s talent. One of the juicer roles in the film is that of mob boss Angelo Bruno, known as the ‘gentle’ don for his preference for dialogue over violence, a part which will be played by Harvey Kietel. Personally, I feel neither Kietel nor Vincent would be the perfect actors to play the role. I imagine Bruno as a kind of tender and moderate character, one that people feel comfortable being around. Both of the mentioned actors are terrific at playing fierce gangsters, even if the characters aren’t outright vicious both actors are adept at delivering performances with subtle and nuanced intensity, such as Kietel’s role as the abusive boyfriend in Scorsese’s Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore or Vincent’s turn as the gangster Phil Leotardo in the TV show The Sopranos. Because of this I don’t feel either actor would be utilized to the best of their ability playing this character.
One mobster I think would be a perfect fit would be Anthony Provenzano, also known as Tony Pro, who will be played by Stephen Graham. I think Graham is a great actor, but it was a little jarring, given his age in comparison to the rest of the cast, hearing that he would be playing Tony Pro. Vincent was more suited to playing the role, I feel. Provenzano was often the middle man between union leader Jimmy Hoffa and the mafia, and is likely to have several profanity fuelled outbursts in the film and a few verbal beat downs with Al Pacino, a character trait which Vincent is no stranger to. He even kinda looks like Provenzano.
A far smaller role, but one that would give him screen time with most of the main cast, would be as mobster Chuckie O’Brien. He looks nothing at all like O’Brien but if Scorsese wanted Vincent to play a role similar to the one he played in Casino, namely supporting muscle, this would be the perfect role. It’s likely we’d see him a lot hovering in the background of mob conferences, occasionally pitching in and having a part in one major scene in the movie that I won’t give away if you haven’t read the book it’s based on.
Another gangster he could have played was Phil Testa, one of Bruno’s understudies and his eventual successor as boss of the Philadelphia crime family. Again it is likely to be quite a small role, but one that would suit him given Testa being known for having a stern and uncompromising presence.
So what do you think? Would you have liked to see Frank Vincent in The Irishman? If so who do you think he could have played?
submitted by The_Social_Introvert to Movie_Club [link] [comments]

Tejano Cartel and La Vega Money Washers

The Italian Mafia is set up all over the United States and in almost every major city. They are also involved with most of the casinos in US which they use to launder their criminal profits. They also run prostitution rings which often go hand in hand with casinos. The Fertitta family are an Italian billionaire crime family that own Station Casinos and also own the Houston Rockets and run the UFC. John Gotti III is a UFC fighter. The mafia rig fights for their bets and have been recruiting enforcers through the UFC. The Fertittas married with the Galveston crime family in Texas with operations in Vegas and Houston. Members of the Fertitta crime family include Frank Fertitta III worth 2 billion, Lorenzo Fertitta worth 2 billion, and Tilman Fertitta worth 4 billion. One of the most profitable states is in Texas because it is along the Mexican border. Corrupt Texas authorities claim that the Dallas crime family is inactive however this is not the case. Even with the weakening of the Dallas crime family other mafia associates would take over this prosperous territory and they have. Joseph Civello was the top boss until the 1970’s of the Dallas Mafia sharing a similar name with the Civella crime family of Kansas City. It is the House of Torlonia that are the Princes of Civetella-Cesi similar to the name Civella which ran the Kansas City crime family. The Torlonia family own the Kansas City crime family and have part ownership over the criminal operations in Austin and Dallas. The Torlonia family are intermarried with the Spanish House of Bourbon with Princess Beatriz of Spain and Don Marco Torlonia the 6th Prince of Civitella-Cesi who died in 2014. The Bourbon family are the primary owners of the Mexican drug cartels. Don Marco’s son Prince Giovanni Torlonia is the current head of the Torlonia family along with his brother Prince Marino Torlonia. The Torlonia family’s connection with Spain is important because the Spanish House of Bourbon are the primary owners of the Mexican drug cartels and the Mexican Mafia. The Torlonia family share ownership over some criminal enterprises like the Juarez Cartel. The Italian Mafia and cartels use proxies gangs to do their dirty work like the Mexican Mafia, Aryan Brotherhood of Texas, and street gangs like MS13. Count Alessandro Lecquio-Torlonia has connections with both Spain and Italy and he is also a top member of the House of Torlonia. About a thousand years ago the Conti di Segni family settled a branch in Conty, France which merged with the Bourbons and married in with the French Savoy family branch and La Tremoille family that were the Princes of Taranto. This family moved back to Italy as the Torlonia’s becoming the Vatican’s bankers. The Conti and Contini families had ruling families in Venice as well. The Torlonia family represent the ancient Conti di Segni family and they are owners of various mafias and drug cartels and Texas and Vegas is part of their territory. Count Alessandro Lecquio- Torlonia is the primary owner of their Texan mafia operations and owner of the Juarez Cartel.
The Torlonia family are also the owners of the Pittsburgh crime family or LaRocca crime family. Their Jewish white collar criminal billionaire front man is Mark Cuban who is from Pittsburgh and he moved to Dallas and became the owner of the Dallas Mavericks. Mark Cuban is involved in ordering games to be rigged for the mafia’s fixed bets. Sports are rigged for the mafia’s bets. The Pittsburgh crime family is headed up by Thomas Ciancutti today who may have some command over the Kansas City faction. Gregorio Conti founded the Pittsburgh crime family and the Torlonia family are partly a continuation of the Conti di Segni family. Pope Innocent III or Lotario dei Conti di Segni authorized the Roman Catholic Franciscan Order and it was the Franciscan Priest Garcia de San Francisco that founded Juarez, Mexico and established the first European settlement there which is where the Juarez Cartel originated from and operates from today. Junipero Serra was also a Franciscan priest who helped establish settlements in Tijuana where the Tijuana Cartel operates from. The House of Torlonia launder their criminal profits from their American crime families and Mexican drug cartels in Las Vegas casinos. The word casino is an Italian term derived from the noble families running gambling events out of their casas or houses. The Torlonia family are owners of the Franciscan Order and Juarez is their territory since their Franciscans founded its first European settlement. The Torlonia family are part owners of the Juarez Cartel and their fascist La Linea death squads. The Boncompagni-Ludovisi family of Rome are also part owners in the mafia’s Texas operations specifically in Austin and the Dallas crime family is still in operation managed by Civella associates and other various crime families. The Boncompagni family own the Bonanno crime family which were allied with the Cerrito crime family and I believe they covertly moved to Austin, Texas. Bon-Compagni means Good Fellows a term for made men in the mafia. Prince Nicolo Boncompagni of Rome is the head of this princely family and is married to Rita Jenrette of Texas. The Sforza-Cesarini family has married with the Velasco noble family of Spain with Don Guillermo Maria Miguel Fernandez of Velasco and Balfe married to Princess Carolina Sforza-Cesarini. Velasco, Texas is named after a Mexican General and relative of the Velasco family which ruled as Dukes in Spain. Luis de Velasco was the Viceroy of New Spain ruling from Mexico City. The Fertittas with Tilman Fertitta who is worth over 4 billion own the Houston Rockets. James Harden plays for the Rockets and is a mafia agent of Tilman Fertitta who runs a large gang of violent stalkers. Tilman Fertitta and James Harden are ruthlessly evil.
Las Vegas is a Spanish word and means “the meadows.” Vegas was Spanish-Mexican territory before it became part of the United States and was likely named in honor of the Vega family of Spain represented today by Inigo of Arteaga and Martin the XXVIII Lord of the House of La Vega. I believe Caesars’ Palace hotel and casino in Vegas is named in honor of the Sforza-Cesarini family. The mafias are involved in most casinos in the United States and use them for money laundering and gambling rackets using fixed bets and rigged slot machines. The Jesuit Xavier University educated James Zenni Jr. is a founder and owner of Z Capital Group which owns Affinity Gaming with casinos in Vegas including Silver Sevens Casino. The Black Nobility and Ferrari family have the Eldorado Resorts owned by their Carano family agents which also own Ferrari-Carano vineyards and winery. Eldorado Resorts owns various casinos through out the United States including the Isle of Capri in Kansas City. Gary Carano is the head of this family with his sister Cindy Carano and wife Dana Carano. The owners of mafias use their influence to prop up businessmen who then covertly work with and enable mafias. MGM was established by the Pallavicini front man Kirk Kerkorian who also built Caesars Palace. MGM is headed up by CEO James Murren who received a Trinity College grant for Cesare Barbieri Center to conduct research in Rome, Italy. The Melzi family are the Dukes of Lodi today and they possessed the Villa Melzi d’Eril in Bellagio, Italy currently owned by the Gallarati Scotti family through their marriage with the Melzi d’Eril family. Bellagio, Italy gives the name to the Bellagio hotel and casino in Vegas. Don Pedro Enriquez d’Azevedo and Toledo of Spain was Governor of Milan and appointed Luigi Melzi as Lieutenant Royal and granted them a fiefdom in Magenta, Italy. Duke Benigno Melzi d’Eril is the current head of this family. Excalibur Hotel and Casino is owned by MGM and takes its name from the Legend of Arthur in British mythology. The Wellesley family are British peers and were also granted titles of Dukes of Ciudad Rodrigo, Spain for fighting against the French for the Spanish Crown. Arthur Charles Valerian Wellesley, 9th Duke of Wellington and his son Arthur Wellesley, Earl of Mornington are the heads of this family and both taking the name Arthur like the King Arthur who wielded the sword Excalibur. Oscar Goodman is a mafia lawyer that defended Meyer Lansky, Nicky Scarfo, and Frank Rosenthal. Oscar Goodman was also the former mayor of Las Vegas from 1999 to 2011. Meyer Lansky III is the grandson of Lansky and he operates in Vegas today as a top Jewish mobster in the US. Oscar Goodman's wife Carolyn Goodman is the current mayor of Las Vegas. The Goodmans are criminal associates of Cosa Nostra and have been governing Las Vegas from 1999 up till today.
submitted by AhuwahZeus to conspiracyfact [link] [comments]

The violent history of Joe Pesci and Frank Vincent *(possible spoilers)*

Instance 1: Raging Bull (1980) In Raging Bull, Joey LaMotta (Pesci) beats up Salvy (Vincent) at the copacabana for making moves on Vicky, Jake LaMotta's wife.
Instance 2: Goodfellas (1990) When Billy Batts (Vincent) gets out of prison, Tommy (Pesci) and him get into the infamous "shoe shining" argument at the bar. Ultimately leading to Tommy returning to the bar to beat him to death.
Instance 3: Casino (1995) Frank Vincent finally gets his revenge in Casino when his character, Frank Marino, beats Nicky Santoro to death with a baseball bat
Do these guys hate each other or does Scorsese just love to make them hate each other???
submitted by Seansieee to movies [link] [comments]

All of the MPAA/CARA-rated films of 1975 (out of the 2,935 films released worldwide that year.)

G
  1. Against A Crooked Sky (Director: Earl Bellamy)
  2. At Long Last Love (Director: Peter Bogdanovich)
  3. Blood Beast Of Monster Mountain (Directors: Massey Cramer + Donn Davison)
  4. Challenge To Be Free (Directors: Tay Garnett + Ford Beebe, Jr.)
  5. Dersu Uzala (Director: Akira Kurosawa)
  6. Dick Deadeye, or Duty Done (Director: Bill Melendez)
  7. Doc Savage: The Man Of Bronze (Director: Michael Anderson)
  8. Emilio + His Magical Bull (Director: Edward Nassour)
  9. Escape To Witch Mountain (Director: John Hough)
  10. He Is My Brother (Director: Edward Dmytryk)
  11. Hugo The Hippo (Director: Bill Feigenbaum)
  12. Lions For Breakfast (Director: William Davidson)
  13. Lost On Paradise Island (Director: George Leszkay)
  14. Mr. Quilp (Director: Michael Tuchner)
  15. Mr. Sycamore (Director: Pancho Kohner)
  16. My Name Is Legend (Director: Duke Kelly)
  17. One Of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing (Director: Robert Stevenson)
  18. Return To Campus (Director: Harold Cornsweet)
  19. Ride A Wild Pony (Director: Don Chaffey)
  20. Stevie, Samson + Delilah (Director: Steve Hawkes)
  21. Superbug, The Craziest Car In The World (Director: Rudolf Zehetgruber)
  22. Terror Of Mechagodzilla (Director: Ishirô Honda)
  23. That Lady From Peking (Director: Eddie Davis)
  24. The Adventures Of The Wilderness Family (Director: Stewart Raffill)
  25. The Apple Dumpling Gang (Director: Norman Tokar)
  26. The Godmothers (Director: William Grefe)
  27. The Great Adventure (Director: Gianfranco Baldanello)
  28. The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix (Director: Ivo Caprino)
  29. The Return Of The Pink Panther (Director: Blake Edwards)
  30. The Strongest Man In The World (Director: Vincent McEveety)
  31. The World Through The Eyes Of Children (Directors: Jimmie Rodgers + Bob Williams)
  32. Their Only Chance (Director: J. David Siddon)
  33. Train Ride To Hollywood (Director: Charles R. Rondeau)
  34. Tubby The Tuba (Director: Alexander Schure)
  35. Viaje fantástico en globo (Director: René Cardona Jr.)
  36. Zorro (Director: Duccio Tessari)
  37. e'Lollipop (Director: Ashley Lazarus)
PG
  1. ‘Sheba, Baby’ (Director: William Girdler)
  2. Alice Cooper: Welcome To My Nightmare (Director: David Winters)
  3. Aloha, Bobby + Rose (Director: Floyd Mutrux)
  4. Barry Lyndon (Director: Stanley Kubrick)
  5. Bite The Bullet (Director: Richard Brooks)
  6. Boss Nigger (Director: Jack Arnold)
  7. Brannigan (Director: Douglas Hickox)
  8. Breakheart Pass (Director: Tom Gries)
  9. Breakout (Director: Tom Gries)
  10. Bronson Lee, Champion (Director: Yukio Nora)
  11. Bug (Director: Jeannot Szwarc)
  12. Cat + Mouse (Director: Claude Lelouch)
  13. Cher Victor (Director: Robin Davis)
  14. Children Of Rage (Director: Arthur Allan Seidelman)
  15. Cipolla Colt (Director: Enzo G. Castellari)
  16. Conduct Unbecoming (Director: Michael Anderson)
  17. Convoy Buddies (Director: Giuliano Carnimeo)
  18. Cooley High (Director: Michael Schultz)
  19. Cornbread, Earl + Me (Director: Joseph Manduke)
  20. Crazy Mama (Director: Jonathan Demme)
  21. Darktown Strutters (Director: William Witney)
  22. Deliver Us From Evil (Director: Horace Jackson)
  23. Diagnosis: Murder (Director: Sidney Hayers)
  24. Diamonds (Director: Menahem Golan)
  25. Dogpound Shuffle (Director: Jeffrey Bloom)
  26. End Of The Game (Director: Maximilian Schell)
  27. Flash + The Firecat (Directors: Beverly Sebastian + Ferd Sebastian)
  28. Fugitive Lovers (Director: John Carr)
  29. Funny Lady (Director: Herbert Ross)
  30. Galileo (Director: Joseph Losey)
  31. Give ‘Em Hell, Harry! (Directors: Steve Binder + Peter H. Hunt)
  32. Guitar Picks + Roach Clips (Director: Anton Noel)
  33. Half A House (Director: Brice Mack)
  34. Hard Times (Director: Walter Hill)
  35. Hearts Of The West (Director: Howard Zieff)
  36. Hedda (Director: Trevor Nunn)
  37. Hennessy (Director: Don Sharp)
  38. Hester Street (Director: Joan Micklin Silver)
  39. How Come Nobody’s On Our Side? (Director: Richard Michaels)
  40. Hustle (Director: Robert Aldrich)
  41. I Wonder Who’s Killing Her Now? (Director: Steven Hilliard Stern)
  42. Infra-Man (Director: Shan Hua)
  43. Inside Out (Director: Peter Duffell)
  44. It Seemed Like A Good Idea At The Time (Director: John Trent)
  45. Jacques Brel Is Alive + Well + Living In Paris (Director: Denis Héroux)
  46. Jaws (Director: Steven Spielberg)
  47. Keep Off My Grass (Director: Shelley Berman)
  48. King Arthur, The Young Warlord (Directors: Sidney Hayers, Pat Jackson + Peter Sasdy)
  49. Las Vegas Lady (Director: Noel Nosseck)
  50. Le Sauvage (Director: Jean-Paul Rappeneau)
  51. Leonor (Director: Juan Luis Buñuel)
  52. Lepke (Director: Menahem Golan)
  53. Let’s Do It Again (Director: Sidney Poitier)
  54. Lies My Father Told Me (Director: Ján Kadár)
  55. Love + Death (Director: Woody Allen)
  56. Lucky Lady (Director: Stanley Donen)
  57. Mackintosh + T.J. (Director: Marvin J. Chomsky)
  58. Mahogany (Directors: Berry Gordy, Tony Richardson + Jack Wormser)
  59. Man Friday (Director: Jack Gold)
  60. Monty Python + The Holy Grail (Directors: Terry Gilliam + Terry Jones)
  61. Moonrunners (Director: Gy Waldron)
  62. Mr. Ricco (Director: Paul Bogart)
  63. Murph The Surf (Director: Marvin J. Chomsky)
  64. Operation: Daybreak (Director: Lewis Gilbert)
  65. Paper Tiger (Director: Ken Annakin)
  66. Peeper (Director: Peter Hyams)
  67. Picnic At Hanging Rock (Director: Peter Weir)
  68. Posse (Director: Kirk Douglas)
  69. Psychic Killer (Director: Ray Danton)
  70. Race With The Devil (Director: Jack Starrett)
  71. Rancho Deluxe (Director: Milton Katselas)
  72. Return To Macon County (Director: Richard Compton)
  73. Rooster Cogburn (Director: Stuart Miller)
  74. Rosebud (Director: Otto Preminger)
  75. Royal Flash (Director: Richard Lester)
  76. Russian Roulette (Director: Lou Lombardo)
  77. Sasqua (Director: Channon Scot)
  78. Sharks’ Treasure (Director: Cornel Wilde)
  79. Sheila Levine Is Dead + Living In New York (Director: Sidney J. Furie)
  80. Smile (Director: Michael Ritchie)
  81. Smoke In The Wind (Directors: Andy Brennan + Joseph Kane)
  82. So Sad About Gloria (Director: Harry Thomason)
  83. Sons Of Sassoun (Director: Sarky Mouradian)
  84. Special Section (Director: Costa-Gavras)
  85. Supercock (Director: Gus Trikonis)
  86. Take A Hard Ride (Director: Antonio Margheriti)
  87. That Lucky Touch (Director: Christopher Miles)
  88. That’s The Way Of The World (Director: Sig Shore)
  89. The Adventure Of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother (Director: Gene Wilder)
  90. The Black Bird (Director: David Giler)
  91. The Brass Ring (Director: Martin Beck)
  92. The Devil’s Rain (Director: Robert Fuest)
  93. The Drowning Pool (Director: Stuart Rosenberg)
  94. The Executioner (Director: Cyril Frankel)
  95. The Fortune (Director: Mike Nichols)
  96. The Giant Spider Invasion (Director: Bill Rebane)
  97. The Great McGonagall (Director: Joseph McGrath)
  98. The Great Waldo Pepper (Director: George Roy Hill)
  99. The Hiding Place (James F. Collier)
  100. The Hindenburg (Director: Robert Wise)
  101. The Killer Elite (Director: Sam Peckinpah)
  102. The Maids (Director: Christopher Miles)
  103. The Man Who Would Be King (Director: John Huston)
  104. The Man Who Would Not Die (Director: Robert Arkless)
  105. The Manchu Eagle Murder Caper Mystery (Director: Dean Hargrove)
  106. The Master Gunfighter (Director: Tom Laughlin)
  107. The Other Side Of The Mountain (Director: Larry Peerce)
  108. The Passenger (Director: Michelangelo Antonioni)
  109. The Prisoner Of Second Avenue (Melvin Frank)
  110. The Stepford Wives (Director: Bryan Forbes)
  111. The Story Of Adele H (Director: François Truffaut)
  112. The Sunshine Boys (Director: Herbert Ross)
  113. The Terrorists (Director: Caspar Wrede)
  114. The Wilby Conspiracy (Director: Ralph Nelson)
  115. The Wild McCullochs (Director: Max Baer, Jr.)
  116. The Wind + The Lion (Director: John Milius)
  117. Timber Tramps (Director: Tay Garnett)
  118. Tommy (Director: Ken Russell)
  119. W.W. + The Dixie Dancekings (Director: John G. Avildsen)
  120. Walking Tall, Part II (Director: Earl Bellamy)
  121. Whiffs (Director: Ted Post)
  122. White Line Fever (Director: Jonathan Kaplan)
R
  1. 92 In The Shade (Director: Thomas McGuane)
  2. A Boy + His Dog (Director: L.Q. Jones)
  3. A Man With A Maid (Director: Vernon P. Becker)
  4. A Woman For All Men (Director: Arthur Marks)
  5. Aaron Loves Angela (Director: Gordon Parks, Jr.)
  6. Abduction (Director: Joseph Zito)
  7. Abigail Leslie Is Back In Town (Director: Joseph W. Sarno)
  8. Alfie Darling (Director: Ken Hughes)
  9. Alias Big Cherry (Director: Matt Cimber)
  10. Apache Blood (Director: Vern Piehl)
  11. At Last, At Last (Director: Marino Girolami)
  12. Au-delà de la peur (Director: Yannick Andréi)
  13. Autopsy (Director: Armando Crispino)
  14. Best Friend (Director: Noel Nosseck)
  15. Black Force (Director: Michael Fink)
  16. Black Lolita (Director: Stephen Gibson)
  17. Black Magic (Director: Ho Meng-Hua)
  18. Black Moon (Director: Louis Malle)
  19. Blazing Stewardesses (Director: Al Adamson)
  20. Blonde In Black Leather (Director: Carlo Di Palma)
  21. Blood, Sweat + Fear (Director: Stelvio Massi)
  22. Bucktown (Director: Arthur Marks)
  23. Can I Keep It Up For A Week? (Director: Jim Atkinson)
  24. Capone (Director: Steve Carver)
  25. Catherine + Co. (Director: Michel Boisrond)
  26. Cleopatra Jones + The Casino Of Gold (Director: Charles Bail)
  27. Cookies (Director: Joël Séria)
  28. Coonskin (Director: Ralph Bakshi)
  29. Cousin cousine (Director: Jean-Charles Tacchella)
  30. Cover Girl Models (Director: Cirio H. Santiago)
  31. Criminally Insane (Director: Nick Millard)
  32. Dread Aim (Director: José Bolaños)
  33. Deadly Hero (Director: Ivan Nagy)
  34. Deadly Strangers (Director: Sidney Hayers)
  35. Death Race 2000 (Director: Paul Bartel)
  36. Deep Red (Profondo Rosso) (Director: Dario Argento)
  37. Delinquent School Girls (Director: Greg Corarito)
  38. Dirty Hands (Director: Claude Chabrol)
  39. Dog Day Afternoon (Director: Sidney Lumet)
  40. Dolemite (Director: D’Urville Martin)
  41. Down The Ancient Stairs (Director: Mauro Bolognini)
  42. Dr. Minx (Director: Howard Avedis)
  43. Dragon Flies (The Man From Hong Kong) (Director: Brian Trenchard-Smith)
  44. Drifter (Director: Pat Rocco)
  45. Farewell, My Lovely (Director: Dick Richards)
  46. Flat Out (Director: Pierre Unia)
  47. Forced Entry (Director: Jim Sotos)
  48. Foreplay (Directors: John G. Avildsen, Bruce Malmuth, Robert McCarty + Ralph Rosenblum)
  49. Framed (Director: Phil Karlson)
  50. French Connection II (Director: John Frankenheimer)
  51. Friday Foster (Director: Arthur Marks)
  52. Gemini Affair (Director: Matt Cimber)
  53. Gone With The West (Director: Bernard Girard)
  54. Goodbye Bruce Lee: His Last Game Of Death (Directors: Bin Lin + Harold B. Swartz)
  55. Hss Anybody Seen My Pants? (Director Hubert Frank)
  56. Hua ei man cheng chun (director: Mu Chu)
  57. If You Don’t Stop It...You’ll Go Blind!!! (Directors: Keefe Brasselle + I. Robert Levy)
  58. Jessi’s Girls (Director: Al Adamson)
  59. Johnny Firecloud (Director: William Allen Castleman)
  60. Journey Into Fear (Director: Daniel Mann)
  61. Katie Tippel (Director: Paul Verhoeven)
  62. Kidnap Syndicate (Director: Fernando Di Leo)
  63. Kitty Can’t Help It (Director: Peter Locke)
  64. Kung Fu-ry (Director: K.S. Cheung)
  65. L’agression (Director: Gérard Pirès)
  66. L'uomo che sfidò l'organizzazione (Director: Sergio Grieco)
  67. Gambling City (Director: Sergio Martino)
  68. Lady Cocoa (Director: Matt Cimber)
  69. Last Stop On The Night Train (Night Train Murders) (Director: Aldo Lado)
  70. Le téléphone rose (Director: Édouard Molinaro)
  71. Legacy (Director: Karen Arthur)
  72. Linda Lovelace For President (Directors: Claudio Guzmán + Arthur Marks)
  73. Lisztomania (Director: Ken Russell)
  74. Lord Shango (Director: Ray Marsh)
  75. Los tres compadres (Director: Arturo Martinez)
  76. Love + Energy (Director: Pasquale Festa Campanile)
  77. Mandingo (Director: Richard Fleischer)
  78. Mary, Mary Bloody Mary (Director: Juan López Moctezuma)
  79. Mitchell (Director: Andrew V. McLaglen)
  80. Mujang haeje (Director: Doo-yong Lee)
  81. My Pleasure Is My Business (Director: Xaviera Hollander)
  82. Nashville (Director: Robert Altman)
  83. Night Moves (Director: Arthur Penn)
  84. Night Of The Howling Beast (Director: Miguel Iglesias)
  85. Night Of The Seagulls (Director: Amando de Ossorio)
  86. Nymph (Director: William Dear)
  87. Once Is Not Enough (Director: Guy Green)
  88. One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (Director: Milos Forman)
  89. Order To Assassinate (Director: José Gutiérrez Maesso)
  90. Out Of Season (Director: Alan Bridges)
  91. The Night Caller (Director: Henri Verneuil)
  92. Pick-Up (Director: Bernard Hirschenson)
  93. Pleasure Party (Director: Claude Chabrol)
  94. Poor Pretty Eddie (Directors: David Worth + Richard Robinson)
  95. Posse From Heaven (Director: Phillip Pine)
  96. Prisoners (Director: William H. Bushnell)
  97. Rafferty + The Gold Dust Twins (Director: Dick Richards)
  98. Rancho Deluxe (Director: Frank Perry)
  99. Rollerball (Director: Norman Jewison)
  100. Satan’s Black Wedding (Director: Nick Millard)
  101. Saturday Night At The Baths (Director: David Buckley)
  102. Seven Beauties (Director: Lina Wertmüller)
  103. Shame Of The Jungle (Directors: Picha + Boris Szulzinger)
  104. Shampoo (Director: Hal Ashby)
  105. Sharon’s Baby (Director: Peter Sasdy)
  106. Shivers (Director: David Cronenberg)
  107. Shôrinji kenpô (Director: Noribumi Suzuki)
  108. Six Pack Annie (Director: Fred G. Thorne)
  109. Smiling Maniacs (Director: Marcello Aliprandi)
  110. Street Girls (Director: Michael Miller)
  111. Sunburst (Director: James Polakof)
  112. Super Spook (Director: Anthony B. Major)
  113. Switchblade Sisters (Director: Jack Hill)
  114. Syndicate Sadists (Director: Umberto Lenzi)
  115. Teenage Seductress (Director: Chris Warfield)
  116. That Most Important Thing: Love (Director: Andrzej Zulawski)
  117. The ‘Human’ Factor (Director: Edward Dmytryk)
  118. The Astrologer (Director: James Glickenhaus)
  119. The Black Dragon Revenges The Death Of Bruce Lee (Director: Chin-Ku Lu)
  120. The Black Gestapo (Director: Lee Frost)
  121. The Blazer Girls (Director: Jean-Paul Scardino)
  122. The Candy Tangerine Man (Director: Matt Cimber)
  123. The Day That Shook The World (Director: Veljko Bulajic)
  124. The Day Of The Locust (Director: John Schlesinger)
  125. The Divine Nymph (Director: Giuseppe Patroni Griffi)
  126. The Dragon Dies Hard (Director Kuan-Chang Li)
  127. The Eiger Sanction (Director: Clint Eastwood)
  128. The Four Assassins (Director: Cheh Chang)
  129. The Four Deuces (Director: William H. Bushnell)
  130. The Ghoul (Director: Freddie Francis)
  131. The Girl From Starship Venus (Director: Derek Ford)
  132. The Happy Hooker (Director: Nicholas Sgarro)
  133. The Immortal Three (Director: Doris Wishman)
  134. The Infidel (Director: Charles Bodine)
  135. The Lost Honor Of Katharina Blum (Directors: Volker Schlöndorff + Margarethe von Trotta)
  136. The Love Butcher (Directors: Don Jones + Mikel Angel)
  137. The Meal (Deadly Encounter) (Director: R. John Hugh)
  138. The Night Child (Director: Massimo Dallamano)
  139. The Night They Robbed Big Bertha’s (Director Peter Kares)
  140. The Noah (Director: Daniel Bourla)
  141. The Old Gun (Director: Robert Enrico)
  142. The Reincarnation Of Peter Proud (Director: J. Lee Thompson)
  143. The Rocky Horror Picture Show (Director: Jim Sharman)
  144. The Romantic Englishwoman (Director: Joseph Losey)
  145. The Sensuous Nurse (Director: Nello Rossati)
  146. The Specialist (Director: Howard Aveis)
  147. The Story Of Sin (Director: Walerian Borowczyk)
  148. The Sunday Woman (Director: Luigi Comencini)
  149. The Swinging Barmaids (Director: Gus Trikonis)
  150. The Teasers (Director: Michele Massimo Tarantini)
  151. The Ultimate Warrior (Director: Robert Clouse)
  152. The Wild Party (Director: James Ivory)
  153. Three Days Of The Condor (Director: Sydney Pollack)
  154. Trip With The Teacher (Director: Earl Barton)
  155. Trucker’s Woman (Director: Will Zens)
  156. Varsity Playthings (Director: Walter Boos)
  157. Violated (Director: Albert Zugsmith)
  158. Virgin Cowboy (director: George Watters)
  159. Wang Yu, The Destroyer (Director: undisclosed)
  160. Welcome Back, Brother Charles (Director: Jamaa Fanaka)
  161. Wheeler (Directors: Jack Collins + Jim Feazell)
  162. White House Madness (Director: Marl L. Lester)
  163. Zig-Zag (Director: László Szabó)
X (most later re-rated R or re-released sans rating altogether)
  1. Black Emanuelle (Director: Bitto Albertini)
  2. Emmanuelle II (Director: Francis Giacobetti)
  3. Felicia (Director: Max Pécas)
  4. Frankenstein all’italiana (Director: Armando Crispino)
  5. Inserts (Director: John Byrum)
  6. Laura’s Toys (Director: Joseph W. Sarno)
  7. Maîtresse (Director: Barbet Schroeder)
  8. Snuff (Directors: Michael Findlay, Horacio Fredriksson + Simon Nuchtern)
  9. The Beast (Director: Walerian Borowczyk)
  10. The Boob Tube (Director: Christopher Odin)
  11. The Story Of O (Director: Just Jaeckin)
submitted by tombstoneshadows28 to movies [link] [comments]

Obituary: Frank Vincent, actor who played a tough guy in The Sopranos and Goodfellas

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 50%. (I'm a bot)
Frank Vincent, a veteran character actor who often played tough guys, including mob boss Phil Leotardo on The Sopranos, has died.
Vincent died peacefully on Wednesday, a statement from his family said.
The ruthless New York mob boss who frequently clashed with Tony Soprano on the popular drama and who was memorably "Whacked" at a service station, Vincent portrayed gangsters for director Martin Scorsese.
He appeared in Raging Bull, Goodfellas - where he played Billy Batts, a made man in the Gambino crime family - and Casino, playing Frank Marino, based on real-life gangster Frank Cullotta.
Born in North Adams, Massachusetts, to Frank and Mary Gattuso, Vincent was raised in Jersey City, New Jersey, where he acted in school plays and learned piano, trumpet and drums.
Vincent is survived by his wife Katherine, daughters Debra and Maria, son Anthony, two grandchildren, and three siblings, Prophet said.
Summary Source | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: Vincent#1 plays#2 Frank#3 family#4 where#5
Post found in /worldnews.
NOTICE: This thread is for discussing the submission topic. Please do not discuss the concept of the autotldr bot here.
submitted by autotldr to autotldr [link] [comments]

[SELLING] Online Dollar Bin (Rock/Jazz/Country)

So I am a crate digger and I love it. I thought it might be fun to post an online dollar bin and let you fellow crate diggers go at it. Everything is $1.00. All listed below are playable and range from G to NM-. If you have specific questions about any let me know. PM or post. US domestic S&H will be $4.00 and $0.50 for each additional record.
Pop/Rock
Jazz
Country
Hip/Hop
Soundtracks/World/Spoken Word
submitted by Time_to_Panic to VinylCollectors [link] [comments]

frank marino casino video

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Entertainer Frank Marino attends The Hunger Games: The Exhibition grand opening at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino on June 06, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Joan Rivers impersonator Frank Marino arrives at the gala premiere of "The Beatles LOVE by Cirque du Soleil" at The Mirage Hotel & Casino June 30,... Frank Marino, known for portraying the late Joan Rivers in Las Vegas, admits to not following through on pledged charitable donations. (Image: David Becker/Review-Journal/Frank Marino/Casino.org) Buy Frank Marino tickets at the River City Casino & Hotel in St Louis, MO for Oct 03, 2021 07:30 PM at Ticketmaster. Moviestore Frank Vincent als Frank Marino in Casino 91x60cm Farb-Posterdruck: 22,99€ 6: Jason Bourne [dt./OV] 7,99€ 7: Good Fellas [Blu-ray] 9,87€ 8: GoodFellas - Drei Jahrzehnte in der Mafia (BOX) [2Blu-Ray] [Region B] (Deutsche Untertitel) 20,66€ 9: GoodFellas - Drei Jahrzehnte in der Mafia [dt./OV] 3,89€ 10: Best of the Muppet Show: Vol. 5 (Alice Cooper / Vincent Price / Marty Frank Marino pauses for a moment in his dressing room before performing in "Frank Marino‘s Divas Las Vegas" at the Linq hotel-casino in Las Vegas on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016. Nightly Frank Marino is the world's most beautiful female impersonator, drag queen as Joan Rivers in Divas Las Vegas Featuring RuPauls Drag Race Girls. Casino (1995). Sam "Ace" Rothstein sorgt dafür, daß in den Casinos von Las Vegas alles gut läuft. Das heißt: die Politiker müssen geschmiert werden, die Spieler dürfen nicht zu viel gewinnen, und die eigenen Kassen werden immer wieder um einige Millionen erleichtert. Tatkräftige Unterstützung erhält der Manager dabei von dem Schläger Nicky Santoro. Frank Marino has been called one of the best guitarists of the 1970s. Don’t miss this phenomenal musician as his 50th anniversary tour makes a stop at River City Casino and Hotel on Sunday, October 3, 2021. Buy your tickets today! Frank Marino : [narrating] What could I say? I knew if I gave them the wrong answer, I mean, Nicky, Ginger, Ace - all of them could have wound up getting killed. Because there's one thing about these old timers: they don't like any fucking around with the other guys' wives. It's bad for business. So I lied, even though I knew that by lying to Gaggi, I could wind up getting killed too. Hotels near Frank Marino's Divas Las Vegas: (0.02 mi) The LINQ Hotel & Casino (0.07 mi) Harrah's Las Vegas Hotel & Casino (0.14 mi) Best Western Plus Casino Royale (0.14 mi) Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel & Casino (0.18 mi) Hilton Grand Vacations at the Flamingo; View all hotels near Frank Marino's Divas Las Vegas on Tripadvisor

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CASINO(1995) ACE FIRES IDIOT COWBOY - YouTube

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