Sentences with phrase «mobsters killed»

With the game taking placing in past and present, and with multiple playable characters; each has their story to tell; the fans, 5 - different playable characters, who continue the criminal / mobster killing spree that Jacket started; the journalist, who is on the mission to seek answers and write the next bestseller, the psychotic cop who uses his rank and power to his advantage; the soldier, fighting a war in Hawaii; and finally, the Russian mobster growing in power and control.
A person in the solicitor's office tips off the mobster and the mobster kills the individual's dog, burns down his house, and does other horrible things to the individual.

Not exact matches

She's the daughter of a mobster, and while she falls in love with the Green Arrow and stops killing people for awhile, she invariably turns toward the dark side again.
The killing of Osama bin Laden has made US President Barack Obama look like a «mobster», Ken Livingstone has said.
Synopsis: Assassin Robert Rath (Sylvester Stallone) arrives at a funeral to kill a prominent mobster, only to witness rival hired gun Miguel Bain (Antonio Ba... [MORE]
So says professional killer Jackie Cogan at one point in Killing Them Softly, the third film by New Zealander Andrew Dominik - and considering the filmmaker's efforts to establish a connection between the events in the movie and the economic crisis started in the late 2000s thanks to the greed and lack of scruples of Wall Street, it is easy to see Cogan as an ordinary employee of any company complaining about the lack of vision of his bosses and, on the other hand, the big bankers as Armani - dressing versions of the violent mobsters who inhabit the crime section of the newspapers.
When it all gets too much for Judah and the threats get more serious, the solution suggested by his mobster brother Jack (Jerry Orbach) is to have Dolores killed.
Incompatible fugitive recovery agents, the flighty Jersey Bellini (Michael Dudikoff) and his more serious - minded female partner, B.B. (Lisa Howard), have, for the last time, ticked off mobster Wald (Tony Curtis) by apprehending his rather inept henchmen just as they are about to commit a robbery or kill one of Wald's enemies.
This tendency to cut corners leaves London Boulevard feeling increasingly shaky as it progresses, leaving us with characters whose motivations are never really explained beyond the roles assigned to them (mobsters, when left to their own devices, will try to kill each other, etc.).
Behind it was the Wanda film «Detective Chinatown 2,» an action comedy about a pair of detectives who travel to New York's Chinatown to investigate who killed a mobster's son.
The first movie had Keanu Reeves's stoic man of action taking on the Russian mobsters who killed his dog — a vengeance with a vicious edge.
He takes one of them (Bartha) hostage and tells the other three that their friend will be killed unless they kidnap and bring back a rival mobster, Mr. Chow (Ken Jeong).
Here, he plays retired hit man Jimmy Conlon, who has one night to save his estranged son Mike (Joel Kinnaman) from being killed by Jimmy's onetime boss, mobster Shawn Maguire (Ed Harris).
Sure, this is a fairly implausible story and begs the asking of such questions as «Isn't there an easier way to kill a mobster than holding an overnight siege?»
It also pulls off the clever trick of operating as a gangster movie — these mobsters have missions to complete and people to kill — while at the same time sarkily undermining these same folk, attributing to them a heavy dose of incompetence.
The heist which sparks Cogan's killing spree to appease the mobsters, is masterfully done.
An easy heist turns into a bloody debacle and worse still, the cuckolded Irish mobster nearly kills him.
The mobster (Riccardo Scamarcio) wants him to kill somebody.
All this changes when Conlon's son, Mike (Joel Kinnaman), witnesses Maguire's mobster son, Danny, killing rival gangsters.
After killing hundreds of white suited mobsters, the plot only gets more convoluted and your lead further down the proverbial rabbit hole.
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