According to The Urban Dictionary it's an old saying
from the Mafiosi in Sicily: «The best payback is the one that comes with planning, and that brings the most horrendous pain to your enemies when they are not expecting and are just enjoying the fruits of all the dishonor they brought upon you.
Not exact matches
Weaving through the jubilant masses, Hoyte van Hoytema's dust - veiled camera alights on Bond in masked skeleton costume, luring a local bombshell («Miss Bala's» Stephanie Sigman) back to his hotel room before the quickest of quick changes finds him suited, booted and planting a hit on venal Italian
mafioso Sciarra (Alessandro Cremona)
from the rooftop.
Cinematographer Dick Pope (Naked, Mr. Turner) lenses with an intense yet subdued color palette, and combined with first - rate production design
from Tom Conroy (Breakfast on Pluto) make London's East End in the Swinging Sixties crackle and spark, but nothing can call away attention
from Hardy, who carries the film with his alternately unhinged and equitable representation of selfsame
mafiosos.
one - upmanship between Tony and Omar (F. Murray Abraham), Tony telling a little kid on the beach to watch as the
mafioso's friend Manny (Steven Bauer) gets slapped by a girl, and Tony wearing Elvira's sun hat (leading to a burst of laughter
from Pfeiffer).
A beautifully and brilliantly bizarre, near - silent cartoon
from France, «The Triplets of Belleville» is a surreal wonder revolving around a back - of - the - pack Tour de France biker who is kidnapped by a midget
mafioso's morphed - together henchmen to...
Robert DeNiro has an effective cameo as Victor Tellegio, a
mafioso, and even Jeremy Renner channels Joe Pesci's hairstyle
from GoodFellas.
It sounds terrific, suiting the menacing,
mafioso character of the Tahoe with a mighty V8 bellow that's very rewarding
from the captain's chair — though if we're honest, it seems the sort of racket that might become rather wearisome if you're in any other seat.
In 1962 he entered the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, where he studied with Joseph Beuys and became known as Blinky Palermo, a name he appropriated
from an American boxing manager and
mafioso.