This scence broke my heart. The way Johnny says. Im ok...Im not gonna fight... Im outta your way kid.. You win. Al speaking to his Son before he went away to prison. Jimmy in the trench in WW1.. Many more. Boardwalk had some stellar scences. Miss it
Jimmy in the trench broke my fucking heart. It showed that he survived literal Hell on Earth in the Ardennes Forest just to go home and get whacked by a fuckin Breadstick in a bowtie.
Bro Torrio is one of the smartest gangsters of all time. Creates a successful criminal operation in Chicago, probably the largest, gets in some wars, gets wounded, and therefore has an excuse to leave the life for good. The one thing all these guys struggle/fail to do. And he even secured the future of the operation with Capone. Dude was a g.
That's hiw its supposed to be. Build it, live to see it thrive and pass it on to the next generation. Most of those old school gangsters didn't know when to quit.
@@errolmargiela1261Probably even more. IRL Torrio came back to the states cause Italy was cracking down on the mob over there, doubt he or anyone else put a hit on Nucky tho, season 5 Nucky storyline was completely fictionalized.
@@elijahriser other than the difference in size he did an excellent job lol. But I’m a big Stephen Graham fan anyways. From Snatch to The Irishman he’s had some really good roles
After the failed hit, Torrio mostly retired from "the business" although he did a couple years in the late 30s for tax evasion. He died in 1957, outliving Capone by ten years.
Notice how everyone else puts their hands in front, except Capone. Hands behind the back is classic body language of one being in control. He knows what conversation is coming. He's ready for it, even if its subconsciously.
I mean, considering Capone was the one that tried to kill Torrio and put him there in the first place, is basically already running everything and already has plans to finish taking over if say that yeah...he was feeling pretty in charge.
Interesting point - Capone lasted about six years as Boss of the Chicago Outfit before the Feds got him - 1925-1932. John Gotti lasted about six years as Boss of the Gambino Family before the Feds got him -1986-1992. They were both real Showboats who couldn't keep their faces out of the news media.
Correction: their egos couldn't keep them out of the spotlight. The reason that guys like Carlo Gambino and Torrio were never touched by the feds is because they knew how to keep a low profile. Gotti and Capone opened the flood gates that gave the feds all of the ammo they needed to take them down and the mob down.
You can't embarrass the government and get away with it. The irony is you would thought mafiosos would have understood *_respect._* A mob boss would never allow a street thug to publically show him up. So why would the US government allow the same?
"Oh jeez Johnny, are you sure?" I love how insincere that "are you sure", it's like when someone offers you something you've always wanted and you have to pretend you're not excited out of courtesy.
@@Sevan_UP we will never know even historic record have no answer to that question but regardless of who setup the hit its a wake up call for old torrio you cant play the game forver its a young man game its best to retire and with some decent amount of money and respect then to die being the richest man in the city i think torrio knows that eventully capone ambition would be his final doing if he continues to hold on to power so it would be better to give all to capone and you will still retain that friendly relationship and you can nagotiate your exit like a boss gracfully steping aside for his underling to take over willingly always inspire lasting respect then if the underling have to fight for it
Yeah man and think its saying even though he wants to be boss he is taken aback for a moment by the massive amount of responsibility he is taking on.it is a huge undertaking after all in my humble opinion.
+John Graber they're are always strengths and weaknesses to every historical interpretation and evaluation but obviously nobody but the two guys in the room actually knew what was said, and even if it was clarified it's only capones side of it all and one thing I've noticed with gangsters young and old is that they tend to exaggerate or manipulate virtually all information about themselves e.g. Frank Lucas, peewee Kirkland etc. Point also in case with the fact that in his time al Capone was almost a propaganda minister with his image in Chicago how he played audiences, he certainly wasn't one of the most successful gangsters and probably just got lucky with these events and the lack of proper federal law enforcement etc. But he was one of the most well known, which isn't a success to a rational criminal but maybe it was for Capone.
Creamy because we are talking about what 2 criminals have said in a room how the fuck can any historian do any research about it??? There are a few jobs in this world where the people will fill up spots just to give their job a reason. Historians create and speculate on a lot of stuff, what u think? That theyd say they dont know? So when u say ''research'' its very often speculations. With facts theres no historian involded they are only involded when its shit that no one knows. Like u dont need a historians to know what happened at pearl habor.
@@RA-pe2qj fuck that. Some old men lived by ratting every young made guy they thought could do harm to their businesses. Carlo Gambino, Michael and Sonny Franseze, Chin... those are exceptions to the rule
Boardwalk fans have to watch future Oscar winner Rod Steiger do this scene to see the inspiration, and to see the full emotional potential. Steiger's Al Capone also used music the way Coppola did in the Godfather. We all worshipped that movie.
"I'm out of your way," was a tacit nod to the allegation that it was actually Capone who put the hit out on Torrio. Kinda poetic considering what Torrio did to Colossimo that it would be his own underling that retires him.
@@coolstuff3066 Torrio died an old man over 30 years after handing it off to Capone. Capone was imprisoned and done in his 30s, and died a blithering idiot in his 40s.
@John Gilmore Its never been confirmed either way, it's a topic of debate, I read Capone: The Man and the Era, and Mr. Capone, both full length Al Capone biographies, both authors spent most of their entire lives studying Al Capone an the Prohibition era, both of them said it was for sure Retaliation for the O'Banion hit, and that possibly the North side gang hit torrio second a few days after on purpose to attempt to start a war between Torrio and Capone so they could destroy themselves while the Irishmen picked up the scraps..... But it's never been confirmed either way, I don't believe capone would have done that though. He respected Torrio more than his own Father
Great scene. This actor was brilliant as Johnny the Fox. He single-handedly gave a human presence to faceless legend of Chi-town. We always heard the name but now we have an idea of who he was. Smart move bailing when he did.
People keep saying that Al tried to have Torrio killed to take over, but I’m pretty sure it was Hymie Weiss who tried to have him killed in retaliation for O’Banion’s death…
If u mean in real life then maybe your rite but on the show it wus 100% AL...they pretty much jus came out n sed it Lol it wus obvious leading up to it tho
HBO has always done well with organized crime history. Its not corny or cartoonish and has a real feel to it. There's a rumor that they might be working on a series about the mob in the 1950s. Something about Phoenix and Chicago. Still just a rumor and idea stage.
don was smart he knew that al capone ambition was bigger then his one day he will take it anyway might as well just give it to him at least you can his gratitude and become like farther to him
@@TheHappyTrainWreck Nah, the hit on Torrio came from a crew connected to O'Banion. It was retaliation for Frankie Yale's crew hitting O'Banion in his shop. Telling Al he was "out of his way" was more about Torrio letting Al know he didn't have the stomach for it anymore. How it was depicted in Boardwalk Empire closely mirrors what occurred in real life. Capone loved Torrio like a father, and would never have done anything to hurt him.
Jared Smith even the creator said on the show that Torrio and Capone were suspicious of each other, as the attempt on Torrio came soon after the one on Capone, and that no one knew if it was retaliation for killing Dean
Alphonse Capone…. A legend in my area… around the world really. If anything this portrayal of him is light compared to the real life actions taken by him.
Love how Johnny speaks it like it was, a hit from Capone. "You win kid" etc. And Al is like "Jeez Johnny, are we let em get away?" Playing the part of loyal friend to the end... Even when Johnny straight mentions that i know it was you, Al is like yeah but i still act like i dont know that you know it was me.
You would think that Capone would want Torrio dead, so he can take over. Instead, Capone was surprised by Torrio giving him the operation. Capone was as loyal as it gets.
Was it ever confirmed if Al was behind the attempted hit on Torrio? I know earlier in the season Torrio walked out of Al's office right before gangsters shot it up w/ Tommy guns.
This was what Nucky never had.. he killed his second... Torrio was the only only one left alive from the meeting in the very first episode...he was smart enough to know when to leave the game
He didn't leave the game completely as he tried to set up Nucky to be killed in a restaurant in season 5 to help Lucky and Meyer take over. But still, survived in the end.
When torrio says you win kid, I'm out of your way. Was this an application that he thought Al tried to have him killed. Maybe I didn't understand correctly
@@mrdontpl8y torio tried to have al killed to stop a war. The only person that was consolidating torio power was Capone. With Capone still alive the Irish went straight after torio.
I never got why the hell Torrio was so adamant about Al Capone taking over the day to day so Johnny could relax and focus on retiring then in season 4 he gets mad at Capone for "squeezing him out" when he was the one who told Al to step up in the first place.
torrio is the one who tries to have capone killed. it wasnt in retaliation for obanion. you can tell capone suspects it too. and then when torrio gets shot. it confirms it. because that was the retalition for obanion. boss for a boss. the other shooting was by torrio to take out al.
It's hard for many successful men to give up their business, its their whole life often times. They are the boss there, respected, loved, maybe feared. I see it all the time, even with fathers and sons.
it seems like thats implied but it doesnt make any sense because the real life capone loved torrio and had pretty much complete freedom with him as boss
Pootis Spencer In reality, it was a reprisal from I think o banion for a previous hit on a shop, but it wouldn’t be too much of a stretch for him to “think” it was al
This scence broke my heart. The way Johnny says. Im ok...Im not gonna fight... Im outta your way kid.. You win. Al speaking to his Son before he went away to prison. Jimmy in the trench in WW1.. Many more. Boardwalk had some stellar scences. Miss it
Jimmy in the trench was so well done.
Jimmy in the trench was perfect
Jimmy in the trench broke my fucking heart. It showed that he survived literal Hell on Earth in the Ardennes Forest just to go home and get whacked by a fuckin Breadstick in a bowtie.
The scene of Jimmy in the trenches reminds me of Kubrick’s ‘Paths of Glory’. When all the men storm the ant hill. Powerful stuff!
Jimmy died that moment in the trenches. What Nucky did to him was mercy.
Bro Torrio is one of the smartest gangsters of all time. Creates a successful criminal operation in Chicago, probably the largest, gets in some wars, gets wounded, and therefore has an excuse to leave the life for good. The one thing all these guys struggle/fail to do. And he even secured the future of the operation with Capone. Dude was a g.
That's hiw its supposed to be. Build it, live to see it thrive and pass it on to the next generation. Most of those old school gangsters didn't know when to quit.
If he was so smart, why'd he get involved with putting a hit out on Nucky after he was supposedly "going to Europe"?
@@danieldevito6380 He probably is talking more about the historical Torrio just as much as the fictional one.
@@errolmargiela1261Probably even more. IRL Torrio came back to the states cause Italy was cracking down on the mob over there, doubt he or anyone else put a hit on Nucky tho, season 5 Nucky storyline was completely fictionalized.
claims he is going to Europe..ends up in new York being lackey for phil leotardo lol
he did twenny fuckin years
@Danny M radeeedda
Uncle philly my ass
I can't go there. But you do what you gotta do.
I wanted a women, but I compromised and jacked off into a tissue
Stephen Graham kills this role. The way he’s ruthless and borderline evil in some scenes but the emotion and respect he shows to Johnny Torrio
Capone was 6 ft 225. This man is a shrimp
@@elijahriser other than the difference in size he did an excellent job lol. But I’m a big Stephen Graham fan anyways. From Snatch to The Irishman he’s had some really good roles
@@elijahriser Capone was 5 foot 10.
@@elijahriser he was not even 6ft. So you may need to research something before claiming false stories as facts.
@@elijahriser lmao the only 6 feet he's got is dirt stacked on his criminal corpse. rest in piss.
"There is a difference between quitting and quitting while you're ahead" American Gangster.
“Vietnamese Dude*”
"Quitting when you're ahead is not the same as quitting"
"It's yours Al, Take it". "Take what"?
"The shine box, It's yours".
Amazing!
😀
🤣🤣👍
@Fleet Admiral Perry - It's a reference to Goodfellas
@@fleetadmiralperry3389 go home and get your fuckin shinebox.
After the failed hit, Torrio mostly retired from "the business" although he did a couple years in the late 30s for tax evasion. He died in 1957, outliving Capone by ten years.
Its even more Odd that Johnny Torrio lived longer than Al.
No not really when you think about it, If Al Lived more life in this 6 years than most people would live if they could be 20 years old till age 200
@@FranklinSninsky torrio was a crime boss for years. he was a top man in New York.
Johny Torio was a smart smart man advised Luciano and Myer
So was Frank Costello who also got out and became an advisor to the commission
Notice how everyone else puts their hands in front, except Capone.
Hands behind the back is classic body language of one being in control. He knows what conversation is coming. He's ready for it, even if its subconsciously.
Crazy detail, why I like reading comments
Makes you look submissive.
I mean, considering Capone was the one that tried to kill Torrio and put him there in the first place, is basically already running everything and already has plans to finish taking over if say that yeah...he was feeling pretty in charge.
In real life, at the time of this scene, Torrio was 42 and Capone 25.
26
Still an old man in a young man profession.
@@Account.for.Commenthe was a fuckin kid
...and the torch was passed.
Interesting point - Capone lasted about six years as Boss of the Chicago Outfit before the Feds got him - 1925-1932. John Gotti lasted about six years as Boss of the Gambino Family before the Feds got him -1986-1992. They were both real Showboats who couldn't keep their faces out of the news media.
Correction: their egos couldn't keep them out of the spotlight. The reason that guys like Carlo Gambino and Torrio were never touched by the feds is because they knew how to keep a low profile. Gotti and Capone opened the flood gates that gave the feds all of the ammo they needed to take them down and the mob down.
Not to mention they are both Neapolitans and not Sicilian.
You can't embarrass the government and get away with it.
The irony is you would thought mafiosos would have understood *_respect._*
A mob boss would never allow a street thug to publically show him up.
So why would the US government allow the same?
kbjazzgtr001 1931
Interesting take, it seems that Neapolitans are more flashy and outgoing, while Sicilians are more reserved and laid back
"Oh jeez Johnny, are you sure?" I love how insincere that "are you sure", it's like when someone offers you something you've always wanted and you have to pretend you're not excited out of courtesy.
Joey Lock it seemed sincere to me
But ah Rudy says truth ain't the truth
So that means that Al was the ones that made the Hit on Torrio? In this scene?
@@Sevan_UP we will never know even historic record have no answer to that question but regardless of who setup the hit its a wake up call for old torrio you cant play the game forver its a young man game its best to retire and with some decent amount of money and respect then to die being the richest man in the city i think torrio knows that eventully capone ambition would be his final doing if he continues to hold on to power so it would be better to give all to capone and you will still retain that friendly relationship and you can nagotiate your exit like a boss gracfully steping aside for his underling to take over willingly always inspire lasting respect then if the underling have to fight for it
Yeah man and think its saying even though he wants to be boss he is taken aback for a moment by the massive amount of responsibility he is taking on.it is a huge undertaking after all in my humble opinion.
according to Mafia historians this is exactly how it happened word for word!!
Johnny just gave it all to Al
i wonder who i saw behind the flowers...its one of them historians.
historians pretend to know lot of things... whos to contradict them?
+John Graber they're are always strengths and weaknesses to every historical interpretation and evaluation but obviously nobody but the two guys in the room actually knew what was said, and even if it was clarified it's only capones side of it all and one thing I've noticed with gangsters young and old is that they tend to exaggerate or manipulate virtually all information about themselves e.g. Frank Lucas, peewee Kirkland etc. Point also in case with the fact that in his time al Capone was almost a propaganda minister with his image in Chicago how he played audiences, he certainly wasn't one of the most successful gangsters and probably just got lucky with these events and the lack of proper federal law enforcement etc. But he was one of the most well known, which isn't a success to a rational criminal but maybe it was for Capone.
SMbigpapi As I understand it were not the Chicago Outfit and La Cosa Nostra different.
Creamy because we are talking about what 2 criminals have said in a room how the fuck can any historian do any research about it??? There are a few jobs in this world where the people will fill up spots just to give their job a reason. Historians create and speculate on a lot of stuff, what u think? That theyd say they dont know? So when u say ''research'' its very often speculations. With facts theres no historian involded they are only involded when its shit that no one knows. Like u dont need a historians to know what happened at pearl habor.
“We started it??? We get a dead gumar in Queens and her Ukranian father!!”
I'm not even gonna blame phil!!
Goomar.
Quasimodo predicted all of this ya know
*Gets shot in train store*
Who did whaa?
Varsity shinebox whatever happened there...borko
lol
Nostradamus
Torrio had both Fear and love in his eyes when talking to Al.
Notice how the boys stand to attention when the bosses wife enters the room. Total respect.
This is a young man's game.
Beware the Old Men in a game where men did young...
Shit its a no man's game imo. Im not getting killed by scumbags over some fckn booze
@@RA-pe2qj fuck that. Some old men lived by ratting every young made guy they thought could do harm to their businesses. Carlo Gambino, Michael and Sonny Franseze, Chin... those are exceptions to the rule
We'll have ya outa here in no time and then we'll get them sob's
I can't go there, but you do what ya gotta do
"It's all yours, Al. Me? I'm quitting. It's Europe for me."
Boardwalk fans have to watch future Oscar winner Rod Steiger do this scene to see the inspiration, and to see the full emotional potential. Steiger's Al Capone also used music the way Coppola did in the Godfather. We all worshipped that movie.
Al Capone takes over the shinebox
I hope he remembers to wear the jaaaaaacket!
"I'm out of your way," was a tacit nod to the allegation that it was actually Capone who put the hit out on Torrio.
Kinda poetic considering what Torrio did to Colossimo that it would be his own underling that retires him.
You can truly tell Al loved Johnny...had real respect for him
Have you watched the show? Al HATED him it was not even subtle
@Bart Zhang yes I've watched the series a numerous of times....I wouldn't say hated but he always jabbed at him
Hey he had it figured out....knew when it was time to leave. The real life Torrio lived another 30+ years after handing it all off to Capone.
Getting shot 6 times including in the face and only surviving because the gun jammed might help you figure it out
@@geedee1264 Only guy who couldn't make his own funeral, Al I got dis' neck thing you take care of it akkk akk
@@geedee1264 thats funny he was 50 cent and tupac😂😂
He out lived al Capone by like ten years
@@coolstuff3066 Torrio died an old man over 30 years after handing it off to Capone. Capone was imprisoned and done in his 30s, and died a blithering idiot in his 40s.
When your friend offers you the last slice of pizza: 2:01
Hahaha
😅
“The tricks to stay alive long enough to cash out.” -Nucky Thompson
Torrio knew this better than anybody and Nucky learned that from him.
One Of My Favorite Scenes In The Whole Series!
Smart move, Al was his prime suspect and when he said "we got guards" Torrio thought of it as "you won't survive the second time" and gave up
So do you think Al put a hit on Johnny Torrio?
Johnny's hair looked like Christophers mudders muff
Call Capone what you want. He was loyal.
@Nightwave Radio that's never confirmed, only suggested.
@Nightwave Radio u sir a moron to thank al wanted to killed the man that brought him to Chicago
@Nightwave Radio yup and Torrio tried to kill him up at the who're house
@Nightwave Radio no he wasn't.
@@flightofthebumblebee9529 yes he was lol
They almost painted this scene as it Johnny thought Al is the one who tried to kill him when that was not the case.
@John Gilmore Its never been confirmed either way, it's a topic of debate, I read Capone: The Man and the Era, and Mr. Capone, both full length Al Capone biographies, both authors spent most of their entire lives studying Al Capone an the Prohibition era, both of them said it was for sure Retaliation for the O'Banion hit, and that possibly the North side gang hit torrio second a few days after on purpose to attempt to start a war between Torrio and Capone so they could destroy themselves while the Irishmen picked up the scraps..... But it's never been confirmed either way, I don't believe capone would have done that though. He respected Torrio more than his own Father
@@FranklinSninsky i agree. They imply that Capone did it in BE but in real life Capone never would have done that to Johnny.
We need a new gangster series Sopranos and Boarwalk were awesome
Sopranos, Boardwalk, Peaky Blinders, Gomorrah.... some of the best crime shows out there.
Great scene. This actor was brilliant as Johnny the Fox. He single-handedly gave a human presence to faceless legend of Chi-town. We always heard the name but now we have an idea of who he was. Smart move bailing when he did.
You got my word, I’ll back off
They are asking for the location of Phil and compensation for a Tony's sister.
And then i put it in drive
Al had the makings of a Varsity Athlete from Day One.
People keep saying that Al tried to have Torrio killed to take over, but I’m pretty sure it was Hymie Weiss who tried to have him killed in retaliation for O’Banion’s death…
If u mean in real life then maybe your rite but on the show it wus 100% AL...they pretty much jus came out n sed it Lol it wus obvious leading up to it tho
HBO has always done well with organized crime history. Its not corny or cartoonish and has a real feel to it.
There's a rumor that they might be working on a series about the mob in the 1950s. Something about Phoenix and Chicago. Still just a rumor and idea stage.
That's interesting. Never even knew Phoenix had an organized crime history.
It sure does. Lots of transplanted Chicagoans there.
I wonder if the pool cue was chalked
. . .Is that a Sopranos reference?
That hanky, had Carlos lipstick on it
Very funny Ryan, very cute. I don’t quite get it, but cute
Markus K you’re on a roll
i heard they found an 8 ball in his side pocket
Got redundant double management bleeds of half the kick
Lord Snow redundant upper management
Lord Snow we wipe em out absorb the whole fucking thing
Take out an entire fucking family?
San 'Santino' Paik
Carmine always said They were a glorified crew
I agree in spirit, but I have to counsel..
I get the feeling that sometime down the line al was gonna take it by force anyway.
don was smart he knew that al capone ambition was bigger then his one day he will take it anyway might as well just give it to him at least you can his gratitude and become like farther to him
I think the implication of the scene is that it was Al who was behind the attempted hit. But since it failed, he had to play coy.
@@TheHappyTrainWreck Nah, the hit on Torrio came from a crew connected to O'Banion. It was retaliation for Frankie Yale's crew hitting O'Banion in his shop. Telling Al he was "out of his way" was more about Torrio letting Al know he didn't have the stomach for it anymore. How it was depicted in Boardwalk Empire closely mirrors what occurred in real life. Capone loved Torrio like a father, and would never have done anything to hurt him.
Jared Smith even the creator said on the show that Torrio and Capone were suspicious of each other, as the attempt on Torrio came soon after the one on Capone, and that no one knew if it was retaliation for killing Dean
@@Bamont so for sure it wasn't Al who did the hit on Torrio in this episode
They had redundant double management bleeding off half the shinebox.
Alphonse Capone…. A legend in my area… around the world really. If anything this portrayal of him is light compared to the real life actions taken by him.
He was a degenerate hoodlum and a psychopath
He had pull after, he was part of helping the commission form
This is the same guy that jammed an icepick through my lung and had the nerve to look me in the eye too.
What? This a quote or something from somewhere?
@@cloudgary7596 sopranos
THE KING IS DEAD
LONG LIVE THE KING
Love how Johnny speaks it like it was, a hit from Capone. "You win kid" etc. And Al is like "Jeez Johnny, are we let em get away?" Playing the part of loyal friend to the end... Even when Johnny straight mentions that i know it was you, Al is like yeah but i still act like i dont know that you know it was me.
i love the possible ambiguity of this show
It real life it was not Capone it was Hymie Weiss who set it up as payback for O'Banion.
No more, Al. No more of this.
You would think that Capone would want Torrio dead, so he can take over. Instead, Capone was surprised by Torrio giving him the operation. Capone was as loyal as it gets.
Capone put him in the hospital
you are making a funny
Hope dats sarcasm
Johnny thought Al tried to kill him, no proof of that.
Johnny "It's all yours kid" Al "Are u sure"? As if😂
I say this to my sons every time there is only a slice or 2 of pizza left in the box.
"Al...we don't want your fuckin' drills...."
Torrio was a tough old man.
I feel like Torria knew Al just grazed him out of respect
Best Capone ever
Al: Thanks. In return i got a box of drills for you.
Butchie Torrio: we dont want your fawking drills...
Was it ever confirmed if Al was behind the attempted hit on Torrio? I know earlier in the season Torrio walked out of Al's office right before gangsters shot it up w/ Tommy guns.
no
This was what Nucky never had.. he killed his second... Torrio was the only only one left alive from the meeting in the very first episode...he was smart enough to know when to leave the game
He didn't leave the game completely as he tried to set up Nucky to be killed in a restaurant in season 5 to help Lucky and Meyer take over. But still, survived in the end.
@@20dollarponydlc42 if Jimmy was around he wouldn't even dared that
No more Butchie, no more
When torrio says you win kid, I'm out of your way. Was this an application that he thought Al tried to have him killed. Maybe I didn't understand correctly
@Anti-Federalist 1776 he knew al tried to kill him and later he tried to kill al..
@@mrdontpl8y torio tried to have al killed to stop a war. The only person that was consolidating torio power was Capone. With Capone still alive the Irish went straight after torio.
capone does his best to act surprised but i think everyone saw it coming
Imagine a syphilitic Al Capone kissing your hand.
Most people forget Al Capone was controlling Chicago by the time he was 28..
@Paulie’s Walnutz .. In most all television and movies that portray Al Capone? ..Make him look like his in his forties.
“It’s Europe for me.” Isn’t that exactly what Johnny Torrio said to Al when he gave Al everything and decided to quit? I think it is!
“The whole operation? Cmon, fuck you talkin about Phil?”
Thats quite the promotion
And the City of Chicago suffered for it.
According to Gianni Russo.... Capone got to be the boss because Russo gave his blessing
“We gotta stop meetin’ like this!”
I love the even if it was you pretend it wasn't cause it will be if I don't step down ..... It's your turn..x x 💓💛💙💜❤💚💓💕💛
was expecting to see the hymie weiss hit, shame
Torrio blames al Capone when talking with Nucky
I never got why the hell Torrio was so adamant about Al Capone taking over the day to day so Johnny could relax and focus on retiring then in season 4 he gets mad at Capone for "squeezing him out" when he was the one who told Al to step up in the first place.
torrio is the one who tries to have capone killed. it wasnt in retaliation for obanion. you can tell capone suspects it too. and then when torrio gets shot. it confirms it. because that was the retalition for obanion. boss for a boss. the other shooting was by torrio to take out al.
It's hard for many successful men to give up their business, its their whole life often times. They are the boss there, respected, loved, maybe feared.
I see it all the time, even with fathers and sons.
Go ahead, the shine box is all yours now!
have em lookin like mirrors...
Rich Weigel fucking mirrors
At first Im like
"Van Alden?!"
Then I remembered.
No more of this Butchie
How the baton of power passed -
Fishlips Carmine ➡️ Johnny Sack ➡️ Sheikh of Iran ➡️ Butchie ➡️ Tommy
Ya like dags?
yeah I like dags, I like caravans better
you sayin i can’t shoot?
No way thats him
Oh fuck me Turkish, your lady friend got a voice?
@M N he played in snatch not in lock stock and 2 barrels\
That's what you get for whacking Tony, Butchie.
When you die in Boardwalk Empire do you automatically get transferred to Sopranos
The Sopranos came first so that’s not possible
@@scottmthw Boardwalk was Atlantic City New Jersey in the 1920s while Sopranos was New Jersey in the early 2000s so its the other way around.
@@jaroncreed you don’t get it. The TV series The Sopranos ended before the TV series Boardwalk Empire began.
@@scottmthw pretty sure the joke was in reference to the timeline not the release date of the series.
Kiss the man hand knowing he was the “son-of-a-bitch”!
Graham is an amazing actor, if I hadn't seen This Is England & Snatch I would have never guessed he's a Brit.
Gianni Russo told Mr Torrio to retire. Lol
I'm this line of work not everyone get to walk away
Al....look at me...I am Johnny.... I think.
This was his bar mitzvah
Morphine is incredibly motherfucking delicious, I love it!
Mane...that cough 😬
The way he words it, seems he thinks al is behind it?
got that impression myself
it seems like thats implied but it doesnt make any sense because the real life capone loved torrio and had pretty much complete freedom with him as boss
Pootis Spencer In reality, it was a reprisal from I think o banion for a previous hit on a shop, but it wouldn’t be too much of a stretch for him to “think” it was al
Jonnhy torrio was born in irsina (Matera) south Italy
Great acting right there
The nun, WEHT?!
You have my word, we’ ll back off
This is a young man’s game
The game is the game
all game have to end evnetually his time is up its time for capone to play the game now
Come on Phil...20 years in the can, for what?
Al never got kill he die like how his boss die from NATURE
Thats Buccie!
Always wondered whod be afterButchie.
That's all Al wanted was the take over.