• Home
  • Fraternities&Sororities
  • Entrepreneurship
  • WealthBuilding
  • Brotherhood
  • Sisterhood

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Gangstalking: Exposing the Freemason Zionist Agenda, Next caller = Vice President JD Vance

How to Know If Your Encounter Was Truly from God | Aposlte Joshua Selman

Very important vocab part 4//Synonyms and Antonyms Quiz / Vocabulary | with story

Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Divine 9
  • Home
  • Fraternities&Sororities
  • Entrepreneurship
  • WealthBuilding
  • Brotherhood
  • Sisterhood
Divine 9
You are at:Home » The Godfather: When Blood is Smeared with Money (pt. 1/2)
Brotherhood

The Godfather: When Blood is Smeared with Money (pt. 1/2)

adminBy adminOctober 31, 2023No Comments48 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email



Check it out: Michael Corleone is angry,  again. He is claiming that we are “back with   the Borgias”. What prompts this outburst  is a business meeting in Vatican City,   in which he realizes that the board of the  Vatican bank is planning to swindle him for  

Hundreds of millions of dollars. He was hoping  that, at least in the vicinity of the Holy See,   he would be able to escape the world of everyone  backstabbing each other for the sake of money,   but, as happens throughout the saga, he finds that  the higher he climbs, the greed just gets greater,  

And that the Vatican is as corrupt as it was  in the infamous days of the Borgias. The board   members, however, are unfazed by his accusations. What is the meaning of this remark? Why does he   think that Michael should know what this  means? Simple. He saw the movie. This  

Meeting is supposedly taking place in the late  1970s, meaning, after the first two Godfather   films already came out, and exposed the inner  workings of the mafia, or, within the universe   of the Godfather, the business of Don Corleone  and his family. This self-reference attests to  

The creators’ awareness of the way that their  creation has transcended the silver screen, and   became part of Western culture, especially the way  we talk, think, and understand business. The work   that explored the worlds of capitalism, organized  crime, and greed, became part of the fabric that  

Makes up this world, a subject of exploration in  its own right. A lot has been said about the way   ‘The Godfather’ affected the way we perceive  the mafia, and moreover, the way the mafia   perceives itself. A lot has also been said about  the historical, social, cultural, aesthetic, and  

Personal dimensions of the creation, and they were  all widely examined. In this video, I will attempt   to shine a spotlight on it from a different  perspective. I want to enter the subconscious   of ‘The Godfather’, to the place where money meets  human psychology to produce crime, and see what it  

Teaches us about the subject. The characters in  the saga think that they can liberate themselves   from the personal level, and operate in a purely  business manner, but we the viewers see that “it’s   not business, it’s personal”. Humans, we see,  cannot think of money in a purely rational manner,  

And it sometimes makes them act in a way  that negates business logic, and sometimes   negates their own logic. From our outsider’s  perspective, we shall try to figure out what   are the factors that make them act this way. We must, however, be wary of thinking that we  

Possess a purely objective point of view, allowing  us to completely understand the characters. We’ve   been to that movie already. ‘The Godfather’  belongs to the long tradition of gangster flicks,   and one of the conventions of the genre was  that the film has to provide an explanation  

To the phenomenon of crime. Relying on the  time’s leading criminological theories,   the gangster flicks tried to show what made the  hero stray from the right path, what is it about   the human psyche, or the structure of society, or  the environment, that needs fixing. In the 1930s,  

The explanations tended to be sociological, while  after the war they leaned towards psychology,   but they all shared the trait of providing a  supposedly top-down view: we, the enlightened   and rational people, analyze the actions of the  irrational people, from our vantage point of  

View. The gangster plays a double role: on the one  hand, he provides release for the viewer, in that   he acts out our socially repressed impulses, and  manages to get away with it, at least for a while;   on the other hand, he comes to a bitter end,  caused by those same impulses, thus affirming  

That it is better to live a lawful life. In this  way, we use the gangster to momentarily live out   our fantasies, but also prove our superiority over  him; and furthermore, we are using him to explore   the irrational side of Man, so we can understand  it and control it. Typically for Modern western  

Thinking, the gangster flicks displayed the belief  that rational and scientific thought can reach a   purely objective and unprejudiced point of  view, allowing it to fully understand human   behavior. And even if we haven’t reached that  point yet, we are still more advanced than the  

Gangster – meaning, closer than him to the truth  – and therefore we can understand his actions.   This intellectual vanity crumbled in the middle  of the 20th century, and the belief that we can   fully understand human behavior, or that there  are perspectives more advanced than others,  

Came under growing doubt. This change, inevitably,  seeped into cinema, and ‘The Godfather’ already   belongs to the era that began with 1967’s ‘Bonnie  and Clyde’, where the definitions of good and bad,   or rational and irrational, are not that clear  cut, and straight culture is wrapped up with the  

Criminal world in a complicated relationship.  But ‘The Godfather’ goes a step further:   in traditional gagster flicks, the gangster was  devoid of ethnicity, partly because the Hollywood   code forbade ethnic stereotyping, but also  because he was supposed to represent the everyman,  

Whose actions display the irrational side of all  of us. ‘The Godfather’, in contrast, shows its   heroes as very rational people, operating based  on ancient cultural principles, and regards crime   as springing out of these principles, and out of  the clash between cultures. The ethnic side, then,  

Plays a crucial role here, and every character  is portrayed as a product of their culture.   We are, then, looking at the psychology of the  characters, but unlike psychoanalytical analyses,   that tend to regard the characters as driven by  their subconscious drives, ‘The Godfather’ saga  

Seems to suggest that a person’s cognitive side  plays a major part in their psychology. I shall,   therefore, analyze the cognitive side of  the characters, and show how their worldview   leads them to act as they do, and eventually even  leads them to act against their own interests and  

Beliefs. In other words, unlike psychoanalytical  analyses that try to show how the irrational   creates the rational, this video will try to  show how the rational creates the irrational.   I decided to split the video into two parts, so  it will actually be two videos. The first video,  

That will not be very spoilery, will analyze the  different worldviews featured in the Godfather   saga. The second part will spoil everything,  and will show how these worldviews affect the   development of the plot, and maneuver  the characters towards their fate.  

‘The Godfather’ is based on a bestseller written  by Mario Puzo, and published in 1969. Puzo was   a serious author, who published several  novels by then, but did not find success,   and his dire financial situation convinced  him to compromise his art, and try writing  

A more commercial book. As an Italian-American, he  decided to explore the world of the mafia, and the   result was ‘The Godfather’, the first book to shed  some light on the dark world of American organized   crime. The characters and plot are fictional, but  the heroes’ code of conduct is based in reality,  

And the stories are based on true events, turning  the story of the Corleone family into a symbol   of the history of the mafia in America. The novel  was a massive hit, and Paramount studio was quick   to buy the rights to it, but transferring these  explosive themes to the screen wasn’t going to  

Be easy. The project was offered to several known  directors, but after they all backed away from a   story that shows mobsters in a positive light, the  studio decided to gamble and give it to a young,   mostly unknown, Italian-American director named  Francis Ford Coppola. This wasn’t easy either:  

Coppola, like other directors who  came out of sixties counter-culture,   despised the Hollywood studio system, and aspired  to create independent, personal films. The idea   of working with a big studio, and on yet another  film in the worn-out genre of gangster flicks,  

Didn’t exactly enchant him. But he desperately  needed cash to save his independent production   company, so he agreed to take it on. Even so, he had no intentions of giving up on his   artistic aspirations. His stated goal was to turn  the film into a metaphor for capitalist society,  

And, together with Puzo, he adapted the script  accordingly. Furthermore, they turned it into a   story of Italian immigration to America, based on  their personal and family experiences. Following   a production riddled with confrontations between  the director and the studio, the movie finally saw  

Light in 1972, becoming an overnight sensation,  an Oscar guzzler, and one of the highest grossing   films in cinema history. Paramount immediately  hired Puzo and Coppola to create a sequel,   and this time, the two could fully manifest  their artistic ambitions, turning the story into  

A modern Shakespearean tragedy. ‘The Godfather  part 2’ was released in 1974 to rave reviews,   and the overall impact of both films elevated  the Godfather saga to a level much higher than   any other gangster movie, the level of  one of cinema’s greatest masterpieces.  

In 1977, Coppola re-edited the two  movies into a television mini-series,   where the scenes are rearranged in chronological  order, telling a linear story. It also contains   some scenes that were edited out of the films,  and I shall use some of them in my analysis.  

Coppola capitalized on the success to go his  independent way, becoming the most prominent   American director of the seventies. But  in the eighties, his luck changed, leading   him to bankruptcy. Lucky for us, because this  compelled him to team up with everyone once again,  

Creating the third part of the saga, released  in 1990. This offering got mixed reviews,   but I regard it as a worthy finale.  There were even talks of another sequel,   but they ended with Puzo’s passing, in 1999. Let us, then, turn our gaze to the silver screen…  

In a scene from ‘Godfather 2’, Don Michael  Corleone arrives in Miami to visit his business   partner, the cunning Jewish mobster Hyman Roth.  The conversation takes place in Roth’s home, with   his wife in the other room, and the old man is  imparting some life lessons to his young partner.  

Words of wisdom, indeed, and Michael’s reaction is  to get up and close the door, because he wants to   cut the bullshit and start talking seriously. They  discuss their business, and Michael concludes:   Which completely contradicts what he said a  moment before, when the door was open. And this,  

In a nutshell, is the picture that ‘The Godfather’  portrays of the way we treat money: on the one   hand, it is the most important thing, that we all  pursue; on the other hand, when we are in public,   in an “open doors” situation, we play down its  importance and belittle it. American culture,  

According to ‘The Godfather’, is a fake  culture, where everyone is taking part   in a hypocritical discourse, portraying itself  as a culture driven by noble values, while all   of its citizens are actually driven by greed. Why this hypocrisy? Why is it so important to us  

To conceal the truth, when it comes to money?  Michael has an answer. When a young man comes   to him and asks for his blessing to marry his  niece, he inquires about his financial situation.   Michael, then, sees it as a conspiracy by the  rich, to keep their fortune. But this is a  

Superficial answer. ‘The Godfather’ portrays a  much more complicated picture, and the attempt   to break it down to its parts / will serve  as the starting point to our discussion.   Before we get to that, I should clarify the  psychological perception which, I believe,  

The creators are espousing. Let’s go back to the  beginning of the story, when Michael is only the   Don’s son, a young man who wants to integrate in  American society. He has an affair with a Yankee   called Kaye, and the two seem very much in love,  conducting an American-style relationship. At  

One point, however, he has to flee the country,  abandon Kaye, and find shelter in Sicily. There,   in the Mediterranean island, we see him  integrating in his ancestors’ culture, and even   falling in love with a local girl named Apollonia.  But what’s interesting is the way this happens:  

One glance is enough for him to fall madly in  love, and a few hours later he already asks her   father for her hand. This is what the locals call  lightning strike, a concept that doesn’t exist in   American culture, but is rooted deep in Italian  culture. It’s not just “love at first sight”,  

But finding the one you were destined to be with,  by some cosmic process. The Michael that we see in   America, a rational and restrained guy who finds  it hard to express his love to Kaye, would not be  

Able to fall in love in this way, but here it is a  different Michael. The manner in which he courts,   acts, and makes love with Apollonia is also very  different from the manner he does those things   with Kaye, and some interpreters claim that this  is the “real”, authentic Michael. But the way I  

Understand ‘The Godfather’, there is no place  to talk about authenticity: a person’s psyche   is determined by their cultural world, and even  something as deep as love is determined by it.   This shall be the basis for my analysis. My working hypothesis will be that every  

Person or culture have a worldview arranging their  world, and their psychology, behavior and language   are determined by this worldview, and change  when it changes. If we wish to find out what   creates the doublespeak about money, then, we  must first dissect ‘The Godfather’ into the  

Different worldviews that appear in it, and then  see how they determine the attitude towards money,   and the discourse around it. Don Corleone’s  world oscillates between America and Sicily,   existing mainly at the point of merger between  these two cultures, and we shall examine each  

Of them in detail. Our analysis shall be quite  rudimentary, and present only some of the most   basic principles and values of these worldviews,  but it will suffice for our discussion.   Our introduction to the Sicilian culture comes  through the town of Corleone, Vito’s birthplace.  

In this culture, the highest value is family, and  everything revolves around it. A good family life   is the recipe for happiness, and the aspiration  is therefore to create inner harmony within it,   and protect it from outside dangers. Every  member of the family is committed to it,  

And must obey the head of the family. The head of  the family, on his part, must be “strong for his   family”, meaning, take the tough decisions that  would ensure its welfare, security, happiness,   and good name. This is true of every family, and  more so for a mafia family, whose head, the Don,  

Is also the strongest man in the area, and has  every other family in it under his protection.   The family name is built on two things:  wealth and honor. When it comes to wealth,   it’s not so much about making more,  but about preserving what you have,  

Because Sicily was a poor country, living mainly  on agriculture. The most important family asset,   then, is its honor. Any harm done to the  family honor must be met with a harsh reprisal,   and if the head of the family is not  strong enough to defend the family honor,  

It is perceived as weak by the other families,  and then its financial status is also at stake.   The main currency of this culture is  blood. Blood symbolizes the family,   it is the thing that binds the family members  together, and their actions should therefore  

Be aimed at preserving and glorifying this blood  dynasty. It is practically an economy of blood,   and it is a strict and accurate economy: if the  blood of one family member is shed, the financial   balance is thrown, until it is reinstated with the  shedding of the blood of a member of the offending  

Family. Betraying the family, or bringing  dishonor upon it, also demand payment in blood.   When it is a mafia family, a man can join it even  if he wasn’t part of it, and that by marriage,  

Or by a blood alliance in which he becomes a  soldier in its service. These ties are not as   strong as true blood relations, but they are  still binding and cannot be broken. On an even   lower lever, one can ask the local Don to be  godfather to their son, and then their family  

Enjoys the protection of the Don and is committed  to him, but this is a less binding commitment.   The head of the family, as mentioned, is the one  responsible for running the family business, and   this business includes both the blood economy and  the money economy. He is also the main authority  

In his immediate family, but it is actually the  mother who is the center of this family. Since   she does not deal with blood business, she’s  on a higher moral plane, and therefore the one   maintaining the unity within the family, and the  healthy relationships within it. The men who are  

Running the family business know that they are  doing it for the sake of family life, and take   care not to involve the women and children in them  – they are not to be harmed in the blood feuds,  

And the family business is not discussed in their  presence. The men, therefore, live in two parallel   worlds: the open world of family life, in which  they have to be kind and loving, and the hidden   world of family business, in which they must  follow the cold logic of greed and violence. The  

Women and children, on their part, know that they  must not inquire about this world, and that the   men are hiding it from them for their own good. This concealment is very successful, because it   is based on ancient and strict principles. The  mafia was born in Sicily as an underground body  

Against the different conquerors that occupied  the island, and developed mechanisms to maintain   a code of silence, Omerta, that became part  of the Sicilian consciousness. Once it became   a crime organization, this code was employed to  hide its existence, and create the semblance of  

A lawful family business. And yet, at least in  Corleone, this hidden crime world is out in the   open. Sicilian crime may work in the darkness, but  its logic is the same as the logic of the culture,   co everyone knows the rules of the blood  economy, and what they entail. When Don Ciccio,  

The strong man of Corleone, kills Senior Andolini  for offending his honor, Andolini’s widow knows   that he will also kill her little boy Vito, to  preempt the possibility that the latter will seek   vengeance upon reaching maturity. She begs the  Don for mercy and vows the boy will not avenge,  

But Ciccio knows that the blood rules are stronger  than any oath, and refuses. Vito runs and hides,   and the Don’s men go out in the streets of  the town, and publicly announce that anyone   who helps him will be killed. The logic of blood  rules Corleone, and although it is against the  

Laws of the state, no one bothers to hide it. Bottom line, though, this is a losing economy.   Years later, when Michael arrives at Corleone, he  wonders about the scarcity of men in the place,   and his local companions explain that  they all died in blood feuds. From all  

The preservation of the value of blood, it  is running out. Sicily, in ‘The Godfather’,   appears on the one hand as a paradise of an honest  and simple life, that the immigrants to America   want to maintain in their new country, and on the  other hand as a hell of poverty and murder, whose  

Inhabitants want to escape and go to America. one  of them is the boy Vito Andolini, who eventually   manages to escape Corleone and get to America;  and there, in the land of endless opportunities,   he finds a completely different logic. When I speak of American culture,  

I mean the white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant culture  that dominated the United States when Italian   immigration arrived. The period portrayed in  the first two films begins when Vito gets to   America in the beginning of the 20th century, and  ends in the beginning of the 1960s, with most of  

The action taking place in the fifties. In this  period, which the fifties constitute its apex,   the highest value of American culture is society.  Society isn’t perceived just as a collection of   individuals, but as an organic and growing  body, that all citizens belong to and take  

Part in its growth, and all benefit from it.  These decades are therefore characterized by   comprehensive social reforms, whose goal is  to create an enlightened society – that is,   a society that is based on rational principles,  sublimates the wild side of Man, and manifests  

The ideals of liberty, equality, and justice.  Societies like the Sicilian society, dominated   by selfishness and violence, is perceived in  this consciousness as backwards societies,   that did not emerge out of the animalistic stage  of Man, and our goal is to progress and transcend  

This stage. The state is the apparatus that  is supposed to “civilize” its citizens and   get society to this goal, and therefore it  is a very invasive apparatus, that penetrates   all aspects of life and regulates them. This perception is shared by all Western  

Countries of the time, but American culture also  has an opposing perception, which sanctifies the   individual and their right to pursue happiness,  which is usually related to wealth. In the   capitalist system, this tension between the  individual and society is resolved by the  

Perception that if the individual accumulates more  wealth by dealing with others, everyone benefits.   If blood is the currency of Sicilian culture, in  American culture it is money, that replaces blood:   instead of killing others to take their money,  we trade with them. At heart, capitalism is also  

Selfish, but it is a selfishness that doesn’t lead  to bloodshed, and benefits society, and therefore   is regarded as enlightened. Business is the blood  that flows in the arteries of American society,   and the businessman ensures its vitality. Here, too, business is regarded as the domain  

Of the more selfish men, while the women are  perceived as morally superior, and their domain   is therefore the home and the family. But  the place of the family within this worldview   is essentially different. While in Sicilian  culture, the family is the highest value and  

Business is done for its sake, in American culture  both family and business are part of the bigger   structure of society. Business is there to ensure  the financial prosperity of that society, whereas   family is responsible for advancing society  towards enlightenment. The women are perceived  

As those who see the “big picture” of society, and  their role is therefore to domesticate the men,   and rear the children in the right way.  The woman, then, isn’t “just” a housewife,   but carries a very important job, and housewives  were given detailed manuals on how to run their  

Household. One of the principles was that the  woman must be involved in the man’s trouble at   work, give him someone to talk to and support  him, and help guide him to take the right and   ethical decisions. In an ideal family, husband and  wife should be partners, open about everything.  

American economy, unlike the Sicilian, is  a successful economy. And according to the   story that the American society tells itself, it  also thrives and progresses, turning its members   into more enlightened people. While is Sicily we  saw that everything happens in broad daylight,  

American culture represses some parts of human  nature – the anti-social parts – and hides them   in the dark. It does recognize that Man is still  partly in this darkness, but believes in its   ability to take him out of there, and educates its  citizens accordingly. But ‘The Godfather’ shows  

Us the dark side of this worldview itself, how,  in its attempt to rectify old ills, it creates   new ills. The powerful and invasive apparatus of  the modern state is supposed to civilize humans,   to elevate them above their primitive animalistic  state, but it does more than that: it erases their  

Identity and their heritage, and severs their  roots. And so, when young Vito Andolini arrives   to America, the immigration officer looks at the  sign around his neck that says ‘Vito Andolini from   Corleone’, and absent-mindedly registers his name  as ‘Vito Corleone’, foisting a new identity upon  

Him. When the boy grows up, he finds that there’s  a gap between the American story and reality,   and that a poor immigrant boy has almost no chance  of living the American dream, or, at least, no  

Legal chance. And since you are nothing in America  if you are poor, he turns to crime. Once he does,   he reconnects with his Sicilian heritage,  combining it with what he learned in America,   to establish the mafia of the new world. Vito’s journey from rags to riches, from a poor  

Immigrant boy the head of the crime world, begins  with his murder of the neighborhood thug Fanucci,   a man who made his living by extorting protection  money from every business owner in Manhattan’s   Little Italy. He takes Fanucci’s place as the  local strongman, but here we see the difference  

Between them: he does not extort the members  of the community, but becomes their guardian,   teaching them that they can come to him for help  with their troubles. Thus, he enjoys the loyalty   and protection of the community, and achieves the  status of Don, just like in Sicily. But America is  

Not Sicily, where the Don is the most powerful and  honored man. Here he must play by the rules made   by systems more powerful than him, and therefore  must build his organization differently.   First, to win honor in America, it’s  not enough being the strongest man in  

The neighborhood. The scale is much larger, and  to get his family to the status he aspires to,   he must arrange it as a profitable business. Vito  constructs his crime syndicate to be like an army,   commanding hundreds of soldiers, compartmentalized  in a way that ensures no crime could be attributed  

To its heads. On top of that, he establishes  connections in the worlds of politics, law,   and media, becoming an almost omnipotent octopus.  The highest value of the American mafia is still   the family, but the family is perceived as a  business firm, and because it uses any means  

Necessary in its business, it rapidly becomes  a mighty empire, an American success story.   In Sicily, we saw, blood has higher value than  money. In America, because of this focus on   business, money achieves almost equal status,  and undermines the rules of the blood economy.  

Emotions are still driven by blood, but the  logic is business logic, and the aspiration   is to become part of American rationale.  Vito sees himself as a “reasonable man”,   meaning, a man who has transcended the irrational  culture of his homeland, where you must follow  

The rules of its eye-for-an-eye economy.  The same goes for the other mafia Dons.   Vito, then, forgoes vengeance, which was  so important in the Sicilian culture,   because it harms business. And the other Dons  believe him, because they all see themselves   as reasonable men, meaning, men who are  more enlightened than the Sicilian Dons,  

And no longer think in the terms of the blood  economy, where everyone loses. Then again,   Vito continuously emphasizes the superiority of  blood – that is, your emotional connection to   your family – over any other value. Along with  showing us how he builds his financial empire,  

The films also show how he builds his family as a  warm and loving cell. Once his children get older,   he tries to bequeath these values to them. However, he lives in a so-called “civilized   and enlightened” society, so he must conceal  the logic of blood. Every mafia family must be  

Running some legitimate family business, from  which it supposedly makes its fortune – for   the Corleone family, it is the marketing  of olive oil it imports from Sicily. Its   family life also obeys the local values  of decency, and the principles of omerta,  

And of hiding the real family business from the  women and children, are kept much more strictly.   While in Sicily we saw Don Ciccio sitting on his  porch and openly discussing his murders, Don Vito   discusses his business only in a closed room, with  all the blinds shut. The logic of blood confines  

Itself to dark places, hidden from everyone,  outwardly denied, masked by code. In this way,   the Mafia successfully kept its presence in  America a secret for decades. If we look at   gangster flicks before the sixties, we will  not find the word ‘mafia’ mentioned in them.  

The mafia’s worldview in the new world,  then, is the product of a transformation   in the Sicilian worldview, once it met the  American worldview. But its mere existence   is diametrically opposed to American thought,  that aspires to penetrate all the dark places,  

Expose them, and clean them of any unenlightened  thinking. In the 1950s, the word ‘mafia’ first   enters American consciousness, as a terrifying  concept that threatens to destroy it from within,   and the American system begins to fight it.  The majority of the plot of ‘The Godfather’  

Takes place, then, at a point in time when there  is another paradigm shift, the result of this   clash. To fully understand the worldviews  of the American society and of the mafia,   we must also see how they portray each other,  and what comes out of the clash between them.  

Let’s turn our focus to this convergence. After WWII, the American society turned   to take care of all its inner ills,  aiming to eradicate them once and for   all, and fulfill the promise made by President  Roosevelt during the war: “We of the United  

Nations are not making all this sacrifice of  human effort and human lives to return to the   kind of world we had after the last world war.  We are fighting today for security, for progress,   and for peace, not only for ourselves but for  all men, not only for one generation but for  

All generations. We are fighting to cleanse the  world of ancient evils, ancient ills.” The Senate   formed special committees, with wide ranging  authority, to handle each problem specifically,   and these committees subpoenaed members of bodies  that were seen as undermining American society,  

And demanded of them to testify against their  comrades. But the committee that handled the   mafia problem found it very hard to gain the  cooperation of the witnesses, or even to prove   that the mafia is a real thing, and not a myth.  For some reason, they did not recognize that the  

Committee is working for their sake and for the  sake of their children, and refused to help it.   If we want to use cinema to understand the way  that the American consciousness perceived what was   going on, ‘The Godfather’ alone will not suffice.  But there is another movie, in which we will find  

Everything we are looking for. Not just any movie,  but one of the biggest movies of the fifties:   ‘On the Waterfront’, directed by Elia Kazan,  and released in 1954. Kazan was one of the   people who agreed to testify before the Senate  about the activities of communists in Hollywood,  

And got criticized by many of his colleagues  for doing so. This film was his way to justify   his actions, although he avoids making a  direct connection, by making it not about   communists but about the mafia – or the mob, as  they are called here. It is one of the films that  

Display fifties rationality best of all. The film is notable in another way, being   the first true showcase for method acting. The  acting style known as “The Method” was developed   in the 1940s, mainly by acting teacher Lee  Strasberg, and actor Marlon Brando. In essence,  

The method actor is required to recall a life  experience similar to the one they are playing,   and give expression to their own emotions through  their acting. It was used in theatre at first,   but in the early fifties, Brando started to play  in films, and brought it to the big screen. It was  

By no means a smooth transition. His expressive  style seemed very odd to the moviegoing audience,   standing out like a sore thumb among the  actors around him, and was ridiculed by many,   especially comedians. In ‘On the Waterfront’ he  plays the leading role, and he is also, finally,  

Surrounded by a cast of other method actors,  who all deliver an electrifying performance.   Method acting stopped being a joke after this  film, and Brando’s Oscar-winning performance.   The story takes place on the Manhattan  docks, where the longshoremen union is  

Ruled by a crime syndicate. Heading the union is  a mobster who goes by the name Johnny Friendly,   a brash and charismatic man who lives up to his  name, by being friendly to all those who are loyal  

To him. Under this gregarious veneer, however, he  is a ruthless and greedy man, who runs the union   in a way that would make the most profit for  him and his cronies. With the power of money,   he also controls the dockworkers: anyone who  speaks up against him finds himself removed  

From the work schedule, and without salary. The  dockworkers, who are poor uneducated people,   lower their heads and accept their fate, to  the dismay of the local priest, Father Barry.   This is an important point – the waterfront, the  movie tells us, is not part of America. The movie  

Does not attack the capitalist system for its  love of money, but makes a distinction between two   forms of love of money: the American, rational  love of money, in which people do business   with each other to everyone’s benefit, and the  irrational, selfish love of money found on the  

Waterfront, where everyone thinks of themselves,  and so everyone loses except Friendly and his   goons. The latter is what is known as greed, and  since everyone is driven by it, it allows the mob,   that is based on greed, to prevail. Friendly and his gang fit the stereotype  

Of the irrational gangster that typified classic  Hollywood: fancy dressers, hot tempered, selfish,   and violent. The Waterfront Crime Commission, on  the other hand, are wise and level headed people,   who are trying to expose the syndicate’s crimes  and indict Friendly. But his people show loyalty,  

See themselves as a family, and refuse  to cooperate with the investigators. And   what’s more confounding is that even the  dockworkers who aren’t part of the gang,   and are severely suffering under its  rule, refuse to testify against it.   This is based on old American  values of camaraderie and loyalty,  

But the film is hammering into our mind that  this behavior is, at the end of the day,   irrational. We can see that they gain nothing  by remaining silent, and that logic, morality,   and everything else determine that they should  leave these silly principles behind, and testify  

Before the commission. But even those who do see  the light are ruled by another powerful emotion:   fear. Anyone who “rats” knows that they will pay  for it with their life, so they don’t talk. The   movie begins with the murder of Joey Doyle,  a dockworker who intended to spill the beans  

To the commission. To lure Joey into the trap,  they exploit his friendship with Terry Malloy,   whose brother Charlie is Friendly’s right hand.  Terry is a simpleton, a former prize fighter,   who doesn’t know much and just follows Friendly’s  orders. But he is fond of his pal Joey, bereaves  

His death, and feels used and betrayed that he was  unknowingly part of the plan to kill him. Even so,   when he is subpoenaed to testify, he doesn’t  think of complying. He doesn’t know much,   but he knows that Friendly, Charlie,  and the rest of the gang are his family,  

And that there’s nothing worse than stooling. But then he meets Edie Doyle, Joey’s kid sister.   Edie studies in a monastery and wishes to be  a teacher, to educate the next generation of   Americans, but her loss makes her realize that  there are things that need tending right away,  

And she sticks around to help Father Barry  save people from the mob. Edie and Terry   feel mutual attraction, but when they talk,  the difference between them comes to light.   This is how the genders were perceived in the  1950s. The men were perceived as partly animal,  

Who haven’t completely left the jungle behind.  This is why they are selfish and violent. The   women were perceived as more civilized, having  the sociable nature needed to create a harmonic   society. Therefore, the job of the woman was to  tame the man, and to rear the children to be more  

Civilized. Women were now regarded as the head  of the family, and they stayed at home to take   care of it, while the men were out to provide  for it. Edie thinks Terry is like an animal,   but she believes that he can be saved, so  she maintains her relationship with him,  

Even after learning of his part in her  brother’s murder. Terry, meanwhile,   is deeply affected by her, and feels pangs of  conscience. He turns to Father Barry for advice.   This is the logic that ruled the entire  Modern Age, reaching its culmination in  

The nineteen-fifties. Humanity was seen as one  big family, which we should all become part   of. In the jungle, people lived in tribes,  but we must transcend this tribal thinking,   because this type of family is fake. The defeat  of fascism was seen as the defeat of tribalism,  

And now western societies wanted to eliminate  every other tribe as well, and create the   brotherhood of Man. As we see, though, Barry  leaves it to Terry to decide. While communist   societies tried to impose this brotherhood in  a top-down way, democratic societies believed  

It should be left to the people to grow  organically, and figure it out themselves.   When Friendly finds out what has been going on  with Terry, he sends Charlie to either straighten   him out, or eliminate him. But Terry refuses  to play along, and Charlie can’t bring himself  

To hurt his brother. And here we see Friendly’s  true face: Charlie, allegedly his best friend,   didn’t follow orders, so he has him killed. The  brotherhood of the syndicate is fake brotherhood,   which only serves the selfish needs of its head.  When Terry discovers his brother’s dead body,  

He sets out to take revenge on Friendly,  but is intercepted by Father Barry.   Terry is convinced, and so he finally  climbs up out of the jungle, and joins the   enlightened world, the civilized brotherhood  of Man. He testifies before the commission,   doesn’t crumble under the murderous  looks given to him by the mobsters,  

And exposes the criminal ways of the syndicate. This, then, is how American consciousness   perceived the mafia in the fifties: as a tribe of  people who did not yet rise above the irrational   jungle state, and have yet to realize that their  own good requires them to become part of society,  

Part of humanity. The film already recognizes  the strong family bond between the mobsters, but   sees it as a fake and irrational bond, in contrast  with the true fraternity, the family of humankind.   People like Father Barry, Edie, and the commission  people do understand it, leaving the jungle  

Behind, but they still have to help others get  to that level. And they will eventually succeed,   since they have the superior point of view. The  scene in which Father Barry lets Terry decide for   himself shows his belief that every human has a  rational side, and this side is the stronger side,  

That will eventually prevail. When Terry  achieves enlightenment, he understands that by   testifying he is not betraying anyone, but, on the  contrary, was betraying himself all those years.   Existence in a homogenic society is the  natural state of man, and this is what he  

Should strive and work for. ‘On the Waterfront’  manifests the confidence typifying American   consciousness at the time, the confidence that  eventually society will get its members to an   enlightened state, and defeat organized crime. Less than two decades divide between ‘On the  

Waterfront’ and ‘The Godfather’, but there’s  a world of difference between them. There is   one thing that binds the two films together:  their place in the history of method acting.   If ‘On the Waterfront’ was the first time  that cinema took method acting seriously,  

‘The Godfather’ is its victory lap, as it was now  the norm. The saga acknowledges it not only by   casting Brando as Vito Corleone and Lee Strasberg  as Hyman Roth, but also by giving a chance to   a new generation of amazing method actors,  who would go on to dominate American cinema  

In the next two decades. Ideologically,  however, we see a complete reversal.   Let’s see how ‘The Godfather’ portrays the  period of the government investigating the   mafia. The Senate Committee on crime is trying to  break the Corleone family, and manages to secure  

The cooperation of one of its enforcers, a guy  named Willi Cicci. Cicci is simple man, who has   about the same mental abilities as Terry Malloy,  so the so-called “enlightened” people should have   a clear advantage over him, and ability to expose  the irrational impulses driving him. Or do they.  

The senators are trying to get to the bottom of  things, expose the truth hiding under Cicci’s   elusive lingo. But when they get to it,  a strange thing is happening to them:   they find it hard to talk straight. Cicci has  no problem discussing bloodshed, and his coded  

Language is simply the language that the mafia  developed to conceal its murderous logic. But when   the senators discuss bloodshed, they distance  themselves from it by using high language,   which Cicci can barely understand. This suggests  that they did not really transcend the jungle,  

But merely covered it with civilized language, and  it still resides within them. They believe that   they have a top-down view of the mobsters, but are  actually dealing with the American subconscious,   that rules them from within. Cicci, on his part,  is amused by their squirming. For us viewers,  

It isn’t certain who has the advantage here. Cicci, unlike Terry Malloy, is a low-level   enforcer, and the information he has is not  enough to indict Don Corleone. The Committee   needs someone closer to the Don, and it finally  manages to catch a big fish: Frank Pentangeli,  

A high-ranking member of the family, believes,  wrongly, that Michael ordered his elimination, and   agrees to testify against him. The FBI keeps him  in an army barracks under heavy guard, and manages   to bring him to the Senate in one piece. Pentageli  is ready to tell all, but when he turns to look  

At Don Corleone, his smile freezes. Accompanying  Michael is his big brother, Vincenzo Pentangeli,   who was flown in from Sicily, and looks at him  accusingly. The senators ceremoniously begin   the questioning that would finally expose the  Don Corleone for what he is, but the witness,  

To their dismay, refuses to cooperate, retracting  all his previous statements. Society’s moment of   triumph over the mobster turns into a crushing  defeat, and the senators can’t fathom what just   happened. What we are witnessing is no less than  a reversal of the Modern worldview, the worldview  

At the basis of ‘On the Waterfront’: it is not  loyalty to the tribe that is revealed as bogus,   crumbling before loyalty to society, but the other  way around. Loyalty to family, to blood ties,   is the authentic loyalty, overpowering any  other. Fifties American rationale collapses.  

This fictional scene dramatizes what actually  happened at the time, when the belief that humans   will eventually see the light, and unite as one  happy society, collapsed. The 1950s committees did   not manage to expose and eliminate the mafia, and  by the end of the decade, it was the committees  

Themselves whose morality was put under question,  especially after the actions of Senator McCarthy.   When the novel ‘The Godfather’ came out in 1969,  it was partly an attack on fifties mentality,   an attempt to tell the story from a different  angle. According to the book, the Manhattan  

Docks are actually controlled by the Corleone  family, and the family fraternity in it isn’t   bogus at all. The movie adaptation doesn’t mention  the docks, but even so, the combined effect of the   novel and the film undermines the worldview  of ‘On the Waterfront’, trying to reveal its  

Falsehood. This is one thing that we should  not forget when we analyze ‘The Godfather’:   it constitutes a clash between two worldviews,  and is constructed accordingly. So now,   let’s go back to the year 1972, put ourselves in  the minds of American viewers viewing this film  

For the first time, and try to understand  how it affects the way we view the world.   ‘The Godfather’ opens with a big party scene,  the wedding of Don Corleone’s daughter. But   the Don is not among the partygoers. In a closed,  half-lit room, he sits with his crew, and visited  

By members of the Italian-American community, who  come in one by one, asking his help with solving   their problems. From their stories, we learn that  they are not treated fairly in American society,   not even by its official institutions, and only  the Don can help them. We further learn that he  

Is a very powerful man, with ties in all walks of  society, and almost omnipotent in his ability to   solve problems. But he does not exert his power  unjustly. On the contrary, he uses it to bring  

Justice to the people wronged by society. The  Don is not, then, an enemy to the American way of   life, but rather heir to all the heroes we’ve seen  in American cinema since the days of the western,   an individual who fights for justice against  a corrupt system. If we are looking for the  

Traditional gangster image we are used to seeing  in cinema, we find it in his eldest son, Sonny – a   hot-headed, impulsive, fancy dressing, womanizing  type – but he is portrayed as a bad mobster,   who brings displeasure to his father. The true  mobster, according to ‘The Godfather’, is a family  

Man, a serious, level-headed, keeps a low-profile  type, acting on purely rational principles. Later,   we learn that Don Vito built his empire on  bootlegging and illegal gambling – that is,   vices that we regard as mostly harmless  – and that he is a loving, caring,  

And loyal family man, who adopted a young orphan  named Tom Hagen and made him part of the family,   and a godfather who truly cares for the community  members under his protection. Don Corleone, then,   gains our sympathy, appearing as a good American.  We identify with him, as we identify with all  

Cinema gangster protagonists, but in his case  the identification is not because he speaks to   our irrational urges, but rather because we feel  that his logic and morality is similar to ours.   One of the people who visit the Don in his room  is his godson Johnny Fontaine, who causes a big  

Stir among the partygoers, because he is a very  famous singer. Fontaine tells the Don that he   suffers from a disease that makes his voice weak  and harms his singing career, so he is trying to  

Develop an alternative career as a movie actor.  He has his eye on a part in a big war movie,   which fits him perfectly, but the producer has a  personal grudge against him, and refuses to let  

Him have it. The Don promises Johnny he will get  the part, because he is about to make the producer   an offer he can’t refuse. What does this mean? We  already know, because in the previous scene we saw   his youngest son Michael, and his girlfriend Kaye,  sitting on the lawn and watching the festivities,  

But not taking part in them. We learn that  Michael does not want to get involved in   the family business, so he is dating Kaye, a  non-Italian girl. But he feels obligated to tell   her the truth about his family, and Fontaine’s  appearance gives him the right opportunity.  

And so we learn that we’ve been duped. After  we developed sympathy for Don Corleone and came   to see him as a hero, we find out that maybe his  motives are noble, but his methods are murderous,   and unbecoming of our enlightened society. Or are they? Is it possible that his methods  

Are also compatible with our society? The  story of Johnny Fontaine sounds suspiciously   familiar – wasn’t there an Italian-American singer  with a similar life story? In the early 1940s,   Tommy Dorsey’s big band included a young  singer named Frank Sinatra, who became a  

Sensation with the girls, got an early release  from the contract in 1942, and launched a very   successful solo career. Towards the end of the  decade, however, his career suffered a slump, he   temporarily lost his voice, and his film career,  consisting of musical roles, also stalled. That,  

Until he was surprisingly cast to play a major  part in the war movie ‘From Here to Eternity’,   in 1953, in a dramatic part which won him an  Oscar, and put him back on top. Sinatra went on  

To become one of the biggest movie stars of the  decade, the greatest pop singer of the century,   and one of America’s golden children. Truly, an  example of the realness of the American dream,   proof that in America, even a poor immigrant can  become the biggest entertainer in the world. But  

Not everyone bought it. ‘The Godfather’, based  on rumors that circulated in the industry,   claims that this story is false, that American  society actually suppressed Sinatra’s career,   and that his talent could have been denied  of us, if it wasn’t for the mafia employing  

Counter-force. The conclusion is that the rules of  capitalism are based on selfishness and violence,   and that the story that America is telling itself,  that it is an enlightened society, and the mafia’s   action are “not part of America”, is a lie. How is it that the Americans fail to notice  

The fallacies in their worldview? We shall  take a couple of Americans as an example.   After promising his help to Johnny Fontaine, Vito  sends Tom Hagen, his adopted son and counselor,   to talk to that Hollywood producer who stands  in his way, a man named Waltz. But Waltz  

Refuses to budge, and eventually explains why. Waltz is part of the enlightened worldview that   regards materialism as a negative thing,  so to show that he isn’t materialistic,   he adds that he also had feelings towards that  actress. But when he describes these feeling,  

He does so in a language so materialistic, that  we realize that he is, in fact, all dollars and   cents, and has no other dimension. He speaks the  enlightened language, but doesn’t understand it,   and every successful American we meet  in the saga is made of the same cloth.  

‘The Godfather II’ opens, once again,  with a big party scene. This time,   it is Don Michael Corleone, who is throwing a  party in his Nevada mansion. Among the guests   is the state senator Geary, who is giving a  speech, commending Michael for his “magnificent  

Contribution to the state”, and presents a  generous check he got from him, donation to   the local university. The Senator and his wife  are very friendly to the Corleones, but then,   when the men close themselves in Michael’s room  and the women stay outside, the tune changes.  

We see the difference between the two men.  While Michael is aware of the hypocrisy,   and regards “civilized” language as a  tool to be used when the doors are open,   Geary is unaware of it, and a moment after he  extorts Michael and displays shameless greed,  

He reverts to the position of a civilized  American, blaming his counterpart for the same   things that characterize him. He believes that his  behavior constitutes doing business, unlike the   greedy mobsters. In Geary’s case, the door exists  inside his own mind, and he can pass through it  

From one side to the other without even noticing  the hypocrisy – it became second nature to him.   In the beginning of our discussion, we asked  what creates the doublespeak about money that   we find in ‘The Godfather’. We can now  answer this question. American culture,  

As it is revealed before our eyes, is based on  a contradiction: it perceives capitalism as an   economic system suitable for an enlightened  society, when it is actually a system based   on “every man for himself”. This contradiction is  built into the American worldview, so the truth  

Has to be repressed, to prevent the collapse  of this worldview. The language of business   supplants the violent reality with a seemingly  enlightened discourse, thus allowing the Americans   to continue living the delusion. And here we find  two forms of doublespeak: the mobsters understand  

That capitalist logic is actually similar to their  logic of blood, and so they operate easily within   the system, where all they have to do is develop  a coded language that describes their logic in a   way that sounds like business talk, a language  in which a murder threat is “an offer you can’t  

Refuse”, and killing is “pushing a button”. Thus,  they manage to be seen as businessmen in the   eyes of society, and since they master the true  logic of capitalism, they also achieve financial   success. With the regular Americans, the picture  is more complicated. American consciousness  

Is trapped in the enlightened discourse, that  cleansed itself of violent of blood expressions,   so when it tries to discuss bloodshed, it wriggles  around the subject to avoid admitting it is part   of its logic. When it talks about money, it is  proud to mention “bloodless” monetary activity,  

Like business or charity, but apologetic or  condemning when it talks about selfish monetary   activity. The Americans who are financially  successful are those who have learned, like   Waltz and Geary, to internalize this language, and  are pursuing selfish goals while presenting it to  

Others and to themselves as doing business. But Waltz and Geary cannot live forever in   their blissful blindness, and both wake  up one night to find, to their horror,   that they are sleeping in a bed soaked in blood.  It suddenly dawns on them that the blood logic is  

What rules them, and worse, that there is someone  who masters this logic much better than they do,   and thus has control over them. And just as the  Godfather arranges this rude awakening for them,   so does ‘The Godfather’ release the blood that was  locked in the American subconscious, and splashes  

It across the screen. Gangster flicks were always  violent, but the rules set by Hollywood’s code of   production compelled them to create a bloodless  crime aesthetic, because, the logic went, blood   might arouse the viewers’ aggressive tendencies.  But, it could be claimed, this is just the type of  

Repression and wriggling that prevented Americans  from seeing how violent their society is. The   violence of ‘The Godfather’, made a few years  after the collapse of the code, does not hide,   but is shown in a graphic and ugly way, as if  trying to expose the reality underneath the  

Civilized veneer. And the reality that is thrown  in our faces is that not only are the mobsters   not irrational, but their rationality is actually  our rationality, and our capitalist logic helps   the mafia succeed. Both forms of doublespeak – the  mafia one and the American one – intertwine with  

Each other, and create a violent and hypocritical  discourse, in which crime can thrive and prosper.   This project presumes to explore the subconscious  of ‘The Godfather’, yet so far, we explored only   the American subconscious, at least as it is  portrayed by ‘The Godfather’. From our analysis,  

It might seem as though the worldview of  the mafia doesn’t have a subconscious:   the mobsters say exactly what they mean, even if  it is said in coded language. It would appear that   the worldview of the mafia is more real, more  connected to reality, and that mobsters don’t  

Suffer from the complexities that the American  worldview instills into the minds of its holders,   and can therefore operate in the capitalist  system and succeed better than others. But it   isn’t that simple. The clash with American culture  does affect the worldview of the mafia, and this  

Effect is actually what drives the main plotline.  After we’ve explored the dark side of the American   culture, we shall now, in the second part, enter  deeper into the darkness of Don Corleone’s room.

source

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleComplacency in the U.S. Economy
Next Article “Should I Pledge a Christian Fraternity or Sorority?” #GreekLife #Renounce #Denounce #christianity
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Gangstalking: Exposing the Freemason Zionist Agenda, Next caller = Vice President JD Vance

June 24, 2025

Very important vocab part 4//Synonyms and Antonyms Quiz / Vocabulary | with story

June 24, 2025

Як отримати Духа Святого? #2

June 24, 2025

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Demo
Top Posts

Gangstalking: Exposing the Freemason Zionist Agenda, Next caller = Vice President JD Vance

June 24, 2025

Balancing Life as a College Student

July 5, 2023

Why Are Sorority Values Important?

July 5, 2023

It’s Not Just Four Years- It’s a Lifetime

July 5, 2023
Don't Miss
Fraternities and Sororities February 3, 2024

The Satanic Origins Of The College Greek Fraternities And Universities.

On to and honest how do we know the level of us true the heavenly…

APO Landmark -Service to the FRATERNITY 2

Unveiling the Secrets of the Freemasons #Freemasons #Mystery #ConspiracyTheories #SecretSocieties

Healing Energy And Connectivity In IFA ISESE ep. 63

Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Chapter App about design, business and telecommunications.

Demo
About Us
About Us

Welcome to the Divine9 Blog, your ultimate destination for uncovering the transformative power of fraternities, sororities, wealth building, and entrepreneurship. Join us on this captivating journey as we explore the rich tapestry of experiences, wisdom, and knowledge that these four remarkable categories have to offer.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Gangstalking: Exposing the Freemason Zionist Agenda, Next caller = Vice President JD Vance

How to Know If Your Encounter Was Truly from God | Aposlte Joshua Selman

Very important vocab part 4//Synonyms and Antonyms Quiz / Vocabulary | with story

Most Popular

Upsilon Psi of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc. Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University

April 1, 2024

Aqwal Zari ااقوال زريں اقوال حضرت علي خيانت

February 9, 2025

Fraternities& Sorority stereotypes

October 24, 2023
© 2025 Divine9.blog
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.