Reviews

Made Men: The Story of Goodfellas by Glenn Kenny

ross_maclean's review against another edition

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4.0

Genuinely insightful in all aspects of the film, from inspiration and adaptation to the meat and potatoes of getting it onscreen. The level of detail about the smallest aspect is glorious and Kenny’s access to many of the major players is admirable. Context is, of course, necessary but occasional protracted side-steps to discuss other Scorsese films lead down blind alleys and hamper momentum when you just want to get back to the matter at hand. The overall structure is nicely balanced (with the majority devoted to a scene-by-scene breakdown of the film, covering various and exhaustive aspects of said scene) but sometimes leads to repetitiveness when the same ground is covered in separate chapters. More than just a making-of; it wrangles real life (both the inspiration for the film and behind-the-scenes of the film) and analysis of what we finally see before us and how it got there.

tubegeek's review

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funny informative medium-paced

5.0


Glenn Kenny
has taken aim at a popular film by a popular filmmaker and a (mostly) well-known cast, and hit the target he was aiming for: an energetic, stylish stream of pop-culture consciousness that is both personal and broad. Kenny sidesteps the conventional wisdom for an idiosyncratic 360º view of a film that is familiar and loved by many.

At the same time as he considers the film, he also considers the career of Martin Scorsese (pronounced "Scor-seeze" by the true cognoscenti) and this film's place in that career - what led up to it, what was going on during its construction, and where it led afterwards.

In addition, fully fleshed-out pictures of a skilled crime writer (Nicholas Pileggi) and his bullshit-factory subject (Henry Hill) are detailed with all due respect and enough grains of salt to fill a Sanitation Dept. spreader truck.

In all these ways I felt like the book opened up a serious/unserious spreadsheet of What Is Worth Discussing About "Goodfellas." With digressions and tangents galore, we get a rich serving of opinion, fact, opinions about opinions, and facts about facts. (I use "rich" in the comedic sense "That's pretty rich!")

Wherever you start from at the outset, you will be somewhere else at the end, and the destination will be more fun than where you began. As examples, Michael Imperioli's stock rose quite high in my personal index as a result of reading his thoughtful discussion of what it meant to be in this film as a rookie mook, and the mystery of Joe Pesci is well-described though not solved.

Ultimately it's enough to say that Glenn Kenny has done right by the various egos and personalities that make up this story's story. A straight-up guy from whom I expected no less, and the result is a very enjoyable read for minutia nerds and casual cinephiles alike.

Disclaimer: I have met Glenn and talked shit with him about movies and other topics upon a fair few occasions. Even so, I am unerringly objective about his book, as well as everything else.

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tubegeek's review against another edition

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5.0

Glenn Kenny has taken aim at a popular film by a popular filmmaker and a (mostly) well-known cast, and hit the target he was aiming for: an energetic, stylish stream of pop-culture consciousness that is both personal and broad. Kenny sidesteps the conventional wisdom for an idiosyncratic 360º view of a film that is familiar and loved by many.

At the same time as he considers the film, he also considers the career of Martin Scorsese (pronounced "Scor-seeze" by the true cognoscenti) and this film's place in that career - what led up to it, what was going on during its construction, and where it led afterwards.

In addition, fully fleshed-out pictures of a skilled crime writer (Nicholas Pileggi) and his bullshit-factory subject (Henry Hill) are detailed with all due respect and enough grains of salt to fill a Sanitation Dept. spreader truck.

In all these ways I felt like the book opened up a serious/unserious spreadsheet of What Is Worth Discussing About "Goodfellas." With digressions and tangents galore, we get a rich serving of opinion, fact, opinions about opinions, and facts about facts. (I use "rich" in the comedic sense "That's pretty rich!")

Wherever you start from at the outset, you will be somewhere else at the end, and the destination will be more fun than where you began. As examples, Michael Imperioli's stock rose quite high in my personal index as a result of reading his thoughtful discussion of what it meant to be in this film as a rookie mook, and the mystery of Joe Pesci is well-described though not solved.

Ultimately it's enough to say that Glenn Kenny has done right by the various egos and personalities that make up this story's story. A straight-up guy from whom I expected no less, and the result is a very enjoyable read for minutia nerds and casual cinephiles alike.

Disclaimer: I have met Glenn and talked shit with him about movies and other topics upon a fair few occasions. Even so, I am unerringly objective about his book, as well as everything else.

katiemack's review against another edition

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4.0

I received an eARC of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

I would advise against diving into this expecting solely an oral history of Goodfellas. While Glenn Kenny provides a comprehensive (too comprehensive, at times--there's a long chapter on the music behind the film that I, admittedly, skimmed), he also delves into other aspects of Martin Scorsese's career and conducts some insightful and entertaining interviews with Scorsese, Thelma Schoonmaker, Barbara De Fina, and others along the way.

If you enjoy Scorsese's work and enjoy works about films, this is worth your time--just, you know, skim the parts that aren't of interest to you.

jasoneff's review

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funny informative inspiring medium-paced

5.0

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