So who's the best/greatest/most iconic Sup Forums gangster of the last half-century?
Mafia
Iconic?
Don Corleone
Tony Soprano
Tony Montana
Why do they wear the suits
wanna look classy like their dads
If they take them off, will they die?
Tony Montana
Nucky isn't mafia, he's Irish.
Soprano is probably the best representation of a mafiosi.
>a mafiosi
a single one = mafioso
many people = mafiosi
They have class
mafia movies fucking suck
Don Bot from Futurama. He wasn't as fun as The Clamps, but he has respect.
>not posting /our guy/
so like Henry Hill or Jimmy Conway?
Don and Scarface are way more iconic than Soprank
None of those poofs knows what nemesis means.
Is this a real queston?
>Nucky
>mafia
Anyway, best answer is Joe Pesci playing Joe Pesci in Casino. Violent, impulsive, and self-destructive to a t.
THE POOIKEH BLUOINDERS
OUT OF MY WAY MOUSTACHE PETE FUCKING SHITS
dags
>last half-century
I would like to make it very clear that I am a kind and giving man, but yet I've made a career out of something that is inherently belligerent in nature. It is not the belligerence of a common animal. It is belligerence accompanied by intelligence. Hence, I fight not like a typical fighter, but as a virtuous man who is focused attaining the highest acclaim in my chosen profession.
Fighting by nature can make a man deplorable in the eyes of the spectator. You see, I have accepted that I may be the hero or foe among a great variety of people. The hardest thing is being kind and considerate, two things a man of consequence, such as myself, when I am outside the ring.
It takes great courage to tell someone they have something in their teeth, or perhaps something on their face. But why? If I donate a million dollars it does not take courage. Why is this? Where does the dichotomy between two giving acts live within the act itself? I'll tell you why, because you can see the person's face when you address the simple fact, something that is in their best interest, that they have food debris in their teeth. In this way I, who must look my opponent in the eye before beating him, is no more courageous than the man who points out a simple flaw.
We are custodians of our own virtue, and our humility is not derived from within but how we behave towards those around us. I have always believed this, and this is the reason I speak about the truth of our nature as human beings.
With regards to junior, I have always done the best, in my mind, for his career. And if in the waning days of my life people judge me they are judging me on my belligerence and not the way I have acted towards them