Italianamerican

Italianamerican

  • 49 Mins
  • 1974
  • en
  • star6.7/ 10

Filmmaker Martin Scorsese interviews his mother and father about their life in New York and family history back in Sicily.

Review

tmdb53400018

Italianamerican is a 1974 documentary, not even an hour long, wherein acclaimed director Martin Scorsese interviews his parents, Catherine (she played Tommy DeVito's mother in Goodfellas) and Charles (he played Henry Hill's cellmate in the same film), forming an interesting time capsule of the Italian-American experience. Scorsese's parents relate detailed accounts of being Sicilian immigrants in New York City, their family lives, and "the old country" after the war. This is a very talking heads-ish doc with numerous still photos and a bit of footage interspersed in it. However, Catherine has a lot of personality, whereas Charles takes awhile to open up to the camera(s?). Oh, Catherine shows us how to make meatballs, and if the viewer needs more info, a complete recipe is given at the end of the film's credits! This is really necessary viewing for any fan of Scorsese's. It's available to watch at Youtube.

Image 0
Image 1

Movies You May Like

I'm a Porn Star
Jaws vs. Kraken
Running with the Devil: The Wild World of John McAfee
Looking Back to the Future
This Is It
Unacknowledged
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Klimt & The Kiss
The Corporation
Stephen King's World of Horror
King Cohen: The Wild World of Filmmaker Larry Cohen
Doctors of the Dark Side
Im toten Winkel - Hitlers Sekretärin
Bringing Godzilla Down to Size: The Art of Japanese Special Effects
La Vie moderne
Michael Jackson: Chase the Truth
Inside the Mind of a Cat
The Ringleader: The Case of the Bling Ring
Bootsmann
After Porn Ends 2

Recommended Movies

Mean Streets
Green Street Hooligans: Underground
Villeneuve Pironi
The Kite Runner
Blow-Up
True Romance
Being John Malkovich
Paranormal Activity
Taxi Driver
Wonder Woman 1984
GoodFellas
The Godfather Part II
Us
Joker
Green Book
Weekend at Bernie's
올드보이
Good Will Hunting
Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood
Rear Window