Casino Quotes Joe Pesci

2021年7月24日
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By/Oct. 28, 2020 10:19 am EST
’A mystery wrapped in a riddle inside an enigma’ is not only one of the most memorable quotes from Oliver Stone’s JFK but also an apt description for the actor who delivered it: Oscar winner Joe Pesci. Anyone who’s been to the movies in the last four decades ’knows’ Joe Pesci from his most memorable screen performances: streetwise, fast-talking, and volcanic-tempered (’Am I a clown?’) in films like Martin Scorsese’s Raging Bull (1980), Goodfellas (1992) and Casino (1995), irascible and tenacious in Home Alone (1992) and the Lethal Weapon franchise. Pesci’s screen persona is so indelible that it’s almost become an adjective: when Snickers wanted an immediately identifiable visual cue to sum up the short fuse that comes with being ’hangry,’ they tapped him.
The problem with ’knowing’ Pesci through his screen work is that the actor seems to work overtime to be unknown, avoiding not only any comparison to his best-known roles, but also leaving no footprint in the public arena. A notoriously reticent interview who gave what is possibly the shortest acceptance speech in Oscar history, Pesci defied industry expectations by turning his back on Hollywood just as it elevated him to leading man status (admittedly, in lackluster projects like Gone Fishin’). At the height of his fame, he retired from acting and focused on what might be the last artistic endeavor anyone would expect from Pesci: music. And even after netting his third Oscar nomination for a ’comeback’ project — Scorsese’s The Irishman — Pesci again faded from view after the acclaim, leaving more questions in his wake. Is there any way to unravel the riddle-wrapped mystery of Joe Pesci? Here are a few clues that might shed some light.
*Top 114 Quotes with Sound Clips by Joe Pesci (Audio) Last updated on: Find and rate the best quotes by Joe Pesci, selected from famous or less known movies and other sources, as rated by our community, featuring short sound clips in mp3 and wav format.
*Often written off as a cash-in on the success of Goodfellas, Martin Scorsese’s 1995 true crime film Casino is one of his most accomplished and overlooked works. Like Goodfellas, the screenplay was based on events chronicled in a non-fiction book written by author Nicolas Pileggi and adapted by both Pileggi and Scorsese.Introducing Little Joe
Born Joseph Frank Pesci on February 9, 1943 in Newark, New Jersey, Pesci started his uncomfortable relationship with the spotlight at an early age. His father, Angelo, worked multiple blue-collar jobs, and sought to spare Pesci and his two siblings from a similar future. Show business was seen as their ticket to a better life, and by the time he was five years old, Pesci was performing on stage and on Star Time Kids, a television variety series that aired on New York’s WNBT (now WNBC) from 1950 to 1955. The experience was, by Pesci’s own description, less than pleasurable: in a 1992 interview with the New York Times, he said, ’I grew up in the business. I had no choice.’ He added that he didn’t think it was right to be pushed into entertainment, and if given the choice, he would have done something ’more calming, in a different area where I did not have to use my emotions.’
Goodfellas is a highly acclaimed 1990 crime film centered around the rise and fall of three notorious mobsters. Below are some of the most memorable, toughest, and funniest Goodfellas quotes from Henry, Jimmy, Tommy, and more. What’s your favorite scene from Goodfellas? Directed by Martin Scorsese, Goodfellas stars Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, and Joe. In a lot of ways, Joe Pesci’s character in Casino, Nicky Santoro, is the flipside of his Goodfellas character, Tommy DeVito. While they were both hot-headed gangsters prone to impulsive acts of. I couldn’t get any jobs, and when that happens, you get so humble it’s disgusting. I didn’t feel like a man anymore - I felt really creepy. I was bumping into walls and saying, Excuse me.The total entertainmer
Though Pesci was less than enthused about performing, it kept him afloat during his pre-fame days. Pesci sang and played guitar in a string of pop and rock acts, most notably in the touring version of the popular New York act Joey Dee and the Starliters, which provided him with his first feature film appearance as an extra in the band’s star vehicle, Hey, Let’s Twist! (1961). It’s worth noting that after Pesci’s departure, both Jimi Hendrix and Charles Neville of the Neville Brothers held down his guitar spot in the group.
Pesci then made his bid for solo pop stardom in 1968 with the release of Little Joe Sure Can Sing! But the LP, which features Pesci covering songs by the Beatles and Bee Gees in a perfectly acceptable voice (that sounds more than a bit like his childhood friend, Frankie Valli), was not a hit, and he returned to gigging, this time with another Jersey musician, Frank Vincent. But live music on the club circuit was out of fashion in the early ’70s, and the pair turned to comedy as a duo, Vincent and Pesci. Decades after they hung up the act, Vincent would remain Pesci’s friend off-camera and frequent nemesis on film: Pesci brutalized Vincent in Raging Bull and buried him alive in Goodfellas, while Vincent returned the favor by bashing in Pesci’s skull in Casino.How to make a mobster
In 1975, Pesci made another bid for fame by co-starring in The Death Collector (also known as Family Enforcer), a low-budget Mafia thriller with Joe Cortese (Green Room) and Pesci as strong-arm types for the Mob, and Frank Vincent as their first target. Solid reviews from the New York Times, among others, prompted Pesci to head to Hollywood. But he found few takers there, and by 1978, Pesci was back in New York and working as a manager for Amici, a restaurant in the Bronx. And it was at this low point that Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro came calling; the director and star had seen Pesci in Death Collector and sought him out to play Joey LaMotta, the brother, manager, and eventual bane of boxer Jake LaMotta’s existence. Critical response was overwhelmingly positive for Pesci’s performance, and an Oscar nomination in 1981 seemed to all but confirm that he was destined for lasting fame. Or so one would think.Mr. Wonderful
Think about Joe Pesci’s film career for a moment: what immediately comes to mind? The Scorsese collaborations, for sure. Home Alone, My Cousin Vinny, and his three Lethal Weapon movies. If you’re a real movie buff: JFK, and maybe even Easy Money. Now take a look at Pesci’s credits on IMDb, and you’ll see that he worked steadily between Raging Bull in 1980 and Lethal Weapon 4 in 1998. If you’re an omnivorous movie watcher, a handful of these might be familiar to you: Pesci had a small role opposite De Niro in the legendary Sergio Leone’s last film, Once Upon a Time in America, and co-starred as (you guessed it) a mobster in the De Niro-helmed A Bronx Tale.Joe Pesci In Casino
Many of his credits, however, are most likely to be total obscurities to you. Did you know that in 1983, Pesci starred as a bowling alley owner with dreams of stardom in the West German musical Dear Mr. Wonderful? Or co-starred in Man on Fire — not the Denzel Washington action thriller, but the 1987 Italian/French film on which it’s based? It’s most likely that in 1989, you didn’t see Pesci’s turns as American author John Dos Passos in The Legendary Life of Ernest Hemingway, or a thinly veiled Weegee, the legendary photographer, in 1992’s The Public Eye. The takeaway? Pesci’s hits are very, very big, and his misses disappear, with little in between.Half Baked
Pesci has given few, if any interviews since announcing his retirement, so his reasons for the decision remain solely with him. However, it’s possible that he simply lost his taste for the projects that were being offered to him. As far back as 1992, Pesci told the New York Times that many of the roles brought to him were ’stupid, ethnic Italian parts’ with ’pizza-pie stupid jokes.’ And while he mostly avoided that characterization in his film work, Pesci did withstand a barrage of jokes about his height (he’s 5’5’) in the dismal NBC action-comedy Half Nelson.
Pesci was top-billed as Rocky Nelson, an NYPD detective who works for a private security firm while trying to launch an acting career. The series, co-created by Glen A. Larson (Battlestar Galactica), paired Pesci with former football greats Dick Butkus and Bubba Smith as security team members, Saturday Night Live alum Victoria Jackson in scatterbrained secretary/romantic interest mode, and a visibly unwell Dean Martin as himself. At the time of its release, critic David Handler described Half Nelson (via Television Obscurities) as ’[managing] to leave you feeling both bored and soiled,’ which undoubtedly helped capsize the series after just seven episodes.Anything but super
Joe Pesci’s Oscar win for his work in Goodfellas helped to wipe away any residue from Half Nelson or his other early obscurities, and it’s likely that he saw the win as the start of a new and improved phase of his career. ’I love to star in movies,’ he told the New York Times in 1992. ’But I want to have good roles. It doesn’t help to get starring roles in something that’s no good. I mean, that will just kill you.’ And for the most part, that’s exactly what happened to Pesci during the 1990s.
Though he netted major box office hits with Home Alone, My Cousin Vinny, and the Lethal Weapon films, much of his output during the 1990s was dismissed by critics and audiences alike. Attempts to fashion him as a comedic leading man in The Super (1991) and Gone Fishin’ (1997) were busts, as were dramatic turns in the terminally soggy With Honors (1994), which cast him as a homeless man with a big heart and a scholar’s brain. He even dabbled in fantasy, playing a cartoonish mobster in the surreal Michael Jackson music project Moonwalker. By 1998, Pesci had clearly lost his patience with the industry: after logging his third and final turn as machine gun-mouthed Leo Getz in Lethal Weapon 4 — which earned him a Razzie nomination — he retired from acting as a full-time profession and focused his energies elsewhere.Joe Pesci Funny QuoteLittle Joe sure is back!
For much of the new millennium, Joe Pesci stuck to his decision to put acting on the back burner. There were offers — he was courted by HBO for the ill-fated racing drama series Luck, but as he told Empire in 2012, ’I’m not looking for a job.’ He instead focused his energies on golf and, to the surprise of many, his first love: singing. In 1998, Pesci released Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just for You, his second album and first new recording in three decades. This being a Pesci project, the album is eccentric, to say the least: the title name checks his Cousin Vinny character and features an ill-advised pass at hip-hop with the single ’Wise Guy.’ But again, Pesci proves that he knows his way around standards and club tunes with his renditions of ’What a Wonderful World,’ the jazz standard ’I Can’t Give You Anything But Love,’ and a bawdy version of the Ray Charles number ’I’ve Got News For You.’
Critics and listeners alike weren’t sure if Sings was comedy, pop, or jazz, and largely dismissed the effort as a vanity project. But Pesci kept his hand in music, though subsequent releases dropped any pretense of humor. As ’Joe Doggs,’ he earned respectable reviews for Falling in Love Again, a collaboration with jazz organist Joey DeFrancesco, and held his own with his idol, Little Jimmy Scott, on ’The Folks Who Live on the Hill,’ a stately duet featured on the legendary vocalist’s final studio album, I Go Back Home, in 2017. Two years later, Pesci would release his third album to date, Still Singing, which featured two duets with Maroon 5’s Adam Levine, of all people.A made man?
In a 2016 interview with Milwaukee magazine, comedy legend Don Rickles, who appeared with Pesci in Casino, said of his co-star, ’I think sometimes he believed he was with the Mob. But he got over it.’ Given Pesci’s terrifying performances as gangsters, it’s understandable how some might misconstrue him as a made man. And while there are stories of the actor interacting with organized crime elements — according to Ray Liotta, the ’Am I a clown?’ exchange from Goodfellas is reportedly based on a real exchange between Pesci and an actual gangster — he’s kept himself out of trouble offscreen. Well, for the most part.
In 2006, Pesci was involved in an alleged assault against an overzealous fan in Florida; according to a police report, he struck a man who ignored his request to refrain from taking his picture. Prosecutors dismissed the allegations over a lack of evidence. A half-decade later, Pesci was involved in not one but two legal cases: the first, in 2012, involved his second ex-wife, actress/model Claudia Haro, who was sentenced to 12 years for allegedly hiring a hitman to rub out her second husband, stuntman Garrett Warren. Pesci was briefly considered as the supposed source of financing for the failed hit, though the allegations were eventually dismissed. The following year, Pesci was awarded an unspecified court settlement from Fiore Pictures after he sued the company for allegedly reducing his salary and role in what would become the 2018 biopic Gotti with John Travolta.
In 2020, Pesci was part of a neighborhood squabble near his home on the Jersey Shore over two property owners’ application to extend the docks on their waterfront homes. Pesci lodged a complaint with environmental protection officials, who firmly but politely requested denial of the proposed extension.So who is this Pesci guy, anyway?
There’s no question that Joe Pesci is a complicated individual. Even he’s noted as much: in an interview with the Baltimore Sun (via Complex), he recalled feeling what could be described as an existential crisis while playing a game of his beloved golf. ’I didn’t know who the hell was about to hit that golf ball,’ he said. ’Was it Leo Getz or David Ferry or Tommy or Harry or Joe? I’ve spent so much time as somebody else, and so little time as myself, I lost sight of who I was for an instant.’
Pesci is an enormously talented actor, and if his quietly menacing performance in The Irishman is any indication, one still capable of mesmerizing audiences. But he seems to prefer to distance himself from acting and instead focus on other outlets that appear to have a greater hold on his heart, including singing and tending to his own personal well-being. And if acting has left him feeling misunderstood, misrepresented, and even left him unsure of who he really is, it’s understandable that he’s chosen to step away from it. So what’s the untold truth of Joe Pesci? He has his world, and we have ours. And given the choice, Joe Pesci would seem to prefer to remain the enigma, the mystery, and the riddle, all wrapped in one.
Revealing mistake: At the beginning of the film where Robert De Niro gets into his car and it explodes, you can clearly see the cut where they have replaced him with a dummy.(00:00:50)
Revealing mistake: Near the end when Ace gets into his Cadillac, in the first shot facing the front of the car, there is a protective glass in front of Ace (the same width as the windshield) with the dashboard in between that glass and the windshield. Note the vertical edge of the glass is visible at the right side, and the rearview mirror’s sticker on the windshield casts a shadow onto the second glass. During the stunt, the flames on the dashboard are between the glass shield and the windshield, keeping the actor safe from harm.(02:46:05)Super Grover
Revealing mistake: When Sharon Stone gets thrown out of Joe Pesci’s club, you can clearly see the pads on Stone’s hand’s to break the impact of the fall.
Revealing mistake: In the scene where Joe Pesci is beaten in the corn fields, if you look closely at the bats you will see them bend ridiculously on impact with his body. Foam bats anyone?
Visible crew/equipment: When Robert De Niro goes to meet Joe Pesci in the desert, the whole crew is reflected on the side of the car.
Continuity mistake: When Joe Pesci is beaten and then buried - look at the blood on his chest. In one shot it is all over - the next it is just a smaller patch.
Continuity mistake: When Remo Gaggi is talking to Andy Stone about Ace cussing out the Board, there’s a pack of cigarettes beside Gaggi in his car. The camera angle changes to show Stone’s face, who is outside the car, and when it flips back to Gaggi, there is a Zippo lighter in place of the cigarettes. The camera goes back to Stone, and when it comes back again, the Zippo is gone and the cigarettes are back. And to top it all off, not once did Remo smoke in this scene.
Continuity mistake: When Joe Pesci is stabbing the guy with a pen that insulted Ace, the pen is shown without blood after there was significant blood on it the cut before, then it goes back to having blood on it.
Continuity mistake: When Ace fires Don Ward, the shot is on Ace and you can see Don turn away. When the shot changes to Don, you see him turn away again.William BergquistQuotes From Casino Movie
Audio problem: After Pesci and De Niro’s meeting in the desert, Pesci gets into his car and you distinctly hear the sound of tyres peeling out. Am I wrong or is this impossible on sand?Upvote valid corrections to help move entries into the corrections section.
Suggested correction:The desert outside Las Vegas isn’t pure sand, but rather a dry lake bed. It is certainly possible to squeal tires on this type of surface.
Continuity mistake: When Robert De Niro is at the restaurant with Sharon Stone and catches her with James Woods, the menu under his hands goes from being horizontal to vertical.BillyBlake
Continuity mistake: When Artie Viscano is complaining to his brother in law about Las Vegas, he backs into about 10 bottles. They all fall except for two, and then the scene cuts to to his brother in law and when the scene cuts back to Viscano, all the bottles are back up.
Continuity mistake: After meeting with Ginger about Lester being beaten up, Nicky is about to leave. Before he does, Ginger hugs him and puts her arms around his neck. Casio keyboard instruction book. In the next shot her right arm has suddenly moved and her elbow is now bent.(01:19:50)Lummie
Visible crew/equipment: In the scene where DeNiro is throwing Sharon Stone’s character out of the house after overhearing her on the telephone, he drags her into the bedroom. Just before the scene cuts away, the camera appears in the mirror on the wall behind them.
Continuity mistake: When Joe Pesci and his brother are beaten and then buried, you see one bat and then suddenly, appearing from nowhere, three bats. Sometimes they are blood covered, then clean, then blood covered again.(02:47:30 - 02:48:25)PanchoLopezAutlan1947
Continuity mistake: In the scene where Sharon Stone is talking to Joe Pesci about how De Niro had his guys beat up James Woods, there are 4 security monitors on the de

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