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To: Free ThinkerNY
“And there was nothing we could do about it.”
2 posted on
06/12/2012 8:26:41 PM PDT by
dfwgator
To: Free ThinkerNY
"Hey, what do you like, the leg or the wing, Henry? Or ya still go for the old hearts and lungs?"
5 posted on
06/12/2012 8:35:38 PM PDT by
re_nortex
(DP...that's what I like about Texas.)
To: Free ThinkerNY
“He was a Rat, He ratted yas all out!”
So I need you to go down to Florida with Little Paulie and take care o’ that thing for me!”
6 posted on
06/12/2012 8:35:49 PM PDT by
Jim from C-Town
(The government is rarely benevolent, often malevolent and never benign!)
To: Free ThinkerNY
He got out without having to die.
8 posted on
06/12/2012 8:38:54 PM PDT by
Terry Mross
("It happened. And we let it happen." - Peter Grifin, FAMILY GUY)
To: Free ThinkerNY
He sounded like an ok guy when I heard him on Howard Stern years ago.
9 posted on
06/12/2012 8:40:10 PM PDT by
Williams
(No Obama)
To: Free ThinkerNY
To: Free ThinkerNY
‘Good Fellas’ was the greatest movie ever made.
To: Free ThinkerNY
Billy Batts is waiting for him, and he’s pissed!
14 posted on
06/12/2012 8:45:33 PM PDT by
dfwgator
To: Free ThinkerNY
Luv ya, Henry Henry..
Signed,
Jimmy Two-Times.. Two-Times..
To: Free ThinkerNY
17 posted on
06/12/2012 8:52:56 PM PDT by
fieldmarshaldj
(If you like lying Socialist dirtbags, you'll love Slick Willard)
To: Free ThinkerNY
I love that era where everyone had a nickname. If you want to laugh — next time you are at the library pick up a Damon Runyon short story collection. There is a hilarious one about these 3 hoodlums who, during the depression, decide to kidnap their bookie — cause he was the only one who had any money. The only character I remember was Harry the Horse and of course Bookie Bob (which is the title of it). These characters aren’t mobsters like Hill but NY hoodlums. Really funny.
20 posted on
06/12/2012 8:58:44 PM PDT by
bunster
To: Free ThinkerNY
“Sure, mom, I settle down with a nice girl every night, then I’m free the next morning.”
“Whenever we needed money, we’d rob the airport. To us, it was better than Citibank”
“Paulie may have moved slow, but it was only because Paulie didn’t have to move for anybody.”
22 posted on
06/12/2012 9:14:16 PM PDT by
Free Vulcan
(Election 2012 - America stands or falls. No more excuses. Get involved.)
To: Free ThinkerNY
Those old union delegates are really taking Wisconsin hard...
23 posted on
06/12/2012 9:30:49 PM PDT by
Dr.Deth
To: Free ThinkerNY
Business bad? F@#k you, pay me. Oh, you had a fire? F@#k you, pay me. Place got hit by lightning, huh? F@#k you, pay me.
To: Free ThinkerNY
“Those people who took a subway to work every day just to pay bills were dead...they had no b@ll$...if we wanted something we just took it.”
28 posted on
06/12/2012 10:22:44 PM PDT by
MichaelCorleone
(The GOPe has played us like a violin for the last time; high time to build the Constitution Party.)
To: Free ThinkerNY
Ray Liotta and Henry Hill.
I remember Hill used to go on Howard Stern decades ago and was always a mess. Drunk, on drugs or both, but he had great stories from the life.
29 posted on
06/12/2012 10:23:19 PM PDT by
Lazlo in PA
(Now living in a newly minted Red State.)
To: Free ThinkerNY
It’s all egg noodles and ketchup in hell.
30 posted on
06/12/2012 10:27:13 PM PDT by
dead
(I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
To: Free ThinkerNY
32 posted on
06/13/2012 1:56:57 AM PDT by
SMGFan
To: Free ThinkerNY
This makes me feel old. It was only about 20 years ago that the Henry Hill movie came out and he did not look that old in the movie. My favorite scene in that movie was the Billy Batts scene when the guy out of prison (Billy Batts) end up getting killed over a shoeshine joke. Then they stuff him in a trunk (still half-alive) and get fed Italian food in the middle of the night by one of the killers' mother (the short, loudmouth one). The mother asks "how come the blood all over the clothes" and she was told that they "hit a deer" on the way over there.
I wonder if Henry Hill was in any of the other gangster movies. I don't remember ever seeing him again.
To: Free ThinkerNY
The real life mobster portrayed by Ray Liotta in Goodfellas (and main char in book that inspired it, N. Pileggi’s Wise Guys. Film named differently to avoid confusion with tv show Wise Guy
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