Gino Felino (Steven Seagal) is an NYPD detective from Brooklyn who knows everyone and everything in his neighborhood. He grew up in the neighborhood as a poor kid surrounded by wiseguys and made men but decided to become a cop. Gino has ties to everyone in the neighborhood, including the mob, and he has an understanding with them that neither will harm the other.
In the opening scene of the movie, Gino and his partner Bobby are waiting to bust up a multi-million dollar drug deal. Gino sees a pimp beating up a woman and intervenes; Gino promptly disposes of him. When he throws the pimp through the windshield of his car, we see red pimp shoes sticking out and then the iconic shot from the point of view of inside the car of Seagal scowling.
Shortly afterwards, we see the film’s main villain, Richie Madano (William Forsythe), murdering Gino’s parter Bobby Lupo on 18th Avenue in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn in broad daylight in front of his wife, Laurie, and his two kids. Everyone knows that the killer is Richie, a crack addict who has been Gino’s and Bobby’s enemy since childhood.
Gino knows Richie is not going to leave the neighborhood and he tells his captain (Jerry Orbach) that all he needs is an unmarked police car and a 12-gauge shotgun. His Captain gives him the clearance, providing Gino with a Remington 870 pump action shotgun and a brand new 1988 Chevrolet Caprice 9C1 from the Brooklyn 65th precinct. Gino visits his mob connection Frankie and his boss Don Vittorio to tell them that he is going to find Richie, while they want their own revenge on him for killing a cop on their streets. Gino starts the hunt for Richie at a bar run by Richie’s brother Vinnie Madano. Vinnie and his friends all refuse to provide information, so Gino assaults all of them until they (including the local legend known as “Sticks”) are all left bloodied on the floor. He still doesn’t know where Richie is, but their attitude problem has been taken care of. This scene is also known for its use of the Sicilian terms “Fanocch” (short for fanocchio, meaning faggot) and “Minchia” (dick) several times. Furthermore, Seagal also utters the movie’s most famous and dramatic line with “Anybody seen Richie? Anybody know why Richie did Bobby Lupo?”
November 4th, 2009 at 10:00 am
it’s “Finocchio”, not fanocchio. Saluti dall’Italia
November 9th, 2009 at 11:52 pm
im gay
December 7th, 2009 at 9:43 pm
LOL!! The scene in the bar has been a source of amusement for me and my friends for many years.
January 29th, 2010 at 9:43 pm
“Anybody seen Richie? Anybody know why Richie did Bobby Lupo?”
Of course! Who can forget that line?…