As Far Back As I Can Remember, I Always Wanted to Be… Terrified of Joe Pesci

If The Godfather is a majestic opera about honour among thieves, Goodfellas is a karaoke night at the Bada Bing gone violently wrong. Martin Scorsese takes the glossy sheen off mob life and replaces it with a blowtorch, a shovel and a body in the boot of a car.

Based on the true story of Henry Hill, Goodfellas is the cinematic equivalent of being handed a brick of cocaine and a gun, then told to “have fun.” It’s a fast-talking, fast-cutting, voiceover-saturated descent into hell—except hell has better suits and more pasta.

image of the movie poster for goodfellas 1990
Movie poster for Goodfellas (1990) © Warner Bros

Plot Summary: Crime, Cocaine and Cooking with Too Many Onions

Henry Hill (played by Ray Liotta, wide-eyed and increasingly sweaty) starts out as a young punk in 1950s Brooklyn who idolises the local gangsters. They’ve got money, cars, women and—crucially—the power to park wherever they damn well please.

Henry quickly becomes one of the boys, working with Jimmy Conway (Robert De Niro, perpetually on the edge of calmly murdering you) and Tommy DeVito (Joe Pesci, a five-foot-tall Molotov cocktail in Gucci loafers). Together, they rob, bribe, beat, shoot, snort and swear their way to the top of the criminal food chain.

Then, like most criminal empires built on paranoia and cocaine, it all goes spectacularly wrong.

Cast: An Acting Masterclass in Sweaty Panic and Sudden Violence

Ray Liotta as Henry Hill

Liotta’s performance is basically a slow-motion panic attack in Armani. He starts off smooth and ends up looking like he hasn’t slept since Reagan was in office. We believe every twitch, every scream, every “Karen, where’s the stuff?!”

Robert De Niro as Jimmy Conway

Cool, calculating and more terrifying than a wasp in a dark room. He smiles like your uncle and then orchestrates your murder while humming along to Tony Bennett. Classic Jimmy.

Joe Pesci as Tommy DeVito

A one-man chaos machine. Violent, unpredictable and entirely incapable of taking a joke. His “Funny how?” monologue is a masterclass in tension-building and possibly the main reason no one ever invited him to open mic night again.

Lorraine Bracco as Karen Hill

Karen is the long-suffering wife who eventually gets hooked on the lifestyle and the nose candy. Her voiceover provides a rare glimpse into the feminine experience of mob life: equal parts glamour, screaming and fear for your life.

image from a scene in the movie goodfellas 1990
Goodfellas (1990) © Warner Bros

Iconic Scenes: Laughter, Murder and Meatballs

  • The “Funny How?” Scene
    One of the most intense moments in cinema, built entirely on a single sentence. It’s like being held hostage at a dinner party by someone who brought a knife and an inferiority complex.
  • The “Layla” Montage
    Dead bodies being discovered to the sweet strains of Layla is the kind of tonal whiplash Scorsese does best. Beauty and brutality, served ice-cold.
  • The Helicopter Paranoia Sequence
    Henry’s coke-fuelled meltdown is an anxiety masterclass. If you’ve ever had a panic attack in traffic while juggling drugs, guns and sauce prep, you’ll feel seen.

Themes: Loyalty, Greed and Sudden Murder Over Minor Inconveniences

Goodfellas isn’t just about gangsters—it’s about addiction. Not just to drugs, but to status, money, power and the kind of friendship where your best mate might stab you in the neck if you sneeze wrong.

Power

Everyone wants it. Most die for it. Those who survive end up in witness protection, microwaving egg noodles.

Loyalty and Betrayal

No one in this film trusts anyone and rightly so. The second you turn your back, someone’s either sleeping with your wife or digging your shallow grave.

The American Dream (But Worse)

Henry Hill lived the American Dream—until it drove him into paranoia, bankruptcy and a life of mediocrity. Which, for a mobster, is basically worse than death

image from a scene in the movie goodfellas 1990
Goodfellas (1990) © Warner Bros

Based on a True Story (Unfortunately for Henry Hill)

Goodfellas is adapted from Nicholas Pileggi’s book Wiseguy and most of the absurdity is straight from the source. Yes, there really was a Lufthansa heist. Yes, Henry ratted everyone out. And yes, the mob really did whack people for looking at them funny. You’d get better job security working at a haunted amusement park.

Cultural Impact: Mob Life, But Make It Relatable

  • Reinvented the gangster genre with grit and style.
  • Influenced everything from The Sopranos to Guy Ritchie’s entire filmography.
  • Made the phrase “Funny how?” a permanent fixture in pop culture and social anxiety.
  • Scored Scorsese an Oscar for… well, no, actually he got snubbed. Again. (He had to wait until The Departed. Which, ironically, is kind of a remake of Infernal Affairs, not even his own idea. Go figure.)

My Final Thoughts: Nobody Goes to Jail, They Go to Hell with a Paycheck

Goodfellas is a high-octane morality tale soaked in blood, marinara and cocaine sweat. It’s a film that seduces you into rooting for the bad guys—then yanks the curtain back to reveal the broken, twitching, paranoid wrecks they’ve become.

It’s not about glamorising crime. It’s about showing what happens when you spend decades living like a king… only to end up living like a pleb in the suburbs, complaining about supermarket ketchup.

The ultimate cautionary tale for anyone considering a career in organised crime. Or customer service.

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If You Like Goodfellas, I Recommend These Movies:

GoodFellas Poster

GoodFellas

Directed by Martin Scorsese
1990-09-12
Winkler Films
Drama Crime

The true story of Henry Hill, a half-Irish, half-Sicilian Brooklyn kid who is adopted by neighbourhood gangsters at an early age and climbs the ranks of a Mafia family under the guidance of Jimmy Conway.

Robert De Niro
Robert De Niro
James Conway
Ray Liotta
Ray Liotta
Henry Hill
Joe Pesci
Joe Pesci
Tommy DeVito
Lorraine Bracco
Lorraine Bracco
Karen Hill
Paul Sorvino
Paul Sorvino
Paul Cicero
Frank Sivero
Frank Sivero
Frankie Carbone
Tony Darrow
Tony Darrow
Sonny Bunz
Mike Starr
Mike Starr
Frenchy