Goodfellas -1990 May 2026
The film’s legacy is immense. It invented the modern “rise and fall” drug-crime narrative ( The Sopranos, Breaking Bad, The Wolf of Wall Street all owe it a debt). But its power remains primal. It makes you laugh at a man getting stabbed, then makes you feel sick for laughing. It makes you envy the leather jackets and the fast cars, then makes you hate yourself for the envy.
The first hour of Goodfellas is arguably the most intoxicating stretch of cinema ever committed to film. Scorsese, working with his legendary editor Thelma Schoonmaker, constructs a montage of pure desire. Young Henry skips school, gets a job at the cabstand, and learns the rules. Don’t whack anyone. Don’t deal drugs. Always pay your debts. goodfellas -1990
Goodfellas is not a tragedy; it’s an indictment. Unlike The Godfather , which mourns the loss of honor, Goodfellas argues there never was any honor to begin with. These are not noble criminals; they are high-functioning sociopaths with good tailoring. Scorsese has no pity for Henry Hill, but he has a profound, terrifying understanding of him. The film’s legacy is immense
The final act of Goodfellas is a masterwork of cinematic anxiety. Henry is addicted to cocaine (breaking the cardinal rule), and the world begins to fragment. Scorsese famously shot the last hour in a state of controlled chaos. The dissolves are sharper, the cuts faster. The day of the “Lufthansa heist”—the biggest score of their lives—is rendered in a montage of Henry cooking egg noodles and sauce while a helicopter circles his house. It makes you laugh at a man getting