Sonny Corleone

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Santino 'Sonny' Corleone
Sonny Corleone played by James Caan
Born December 31, 1916
New York City, New York, USA
Died August 7, 1948
Long Island, New York, USA

Santino 'Sonny' Corleone (1916–1948) is a fictional character in Mario Puzo's novel The Godfather and its 1972 film adaptation. He is the oldest son of fictional New York Mafia 'Don' Vito Corleone. He has two brothers, Michael and Fredo, an adoptive brother, Tom Hagen, and a sister, Connie. Sonny was portrayed by James Caan in the film.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Contents

[edit] Role in the Godfather saga

Sonny is the most impulsive and violent of Vito's three sons, and, before Michael's rise to power, the most involved in the Corleone crime family. Vito always blamed himself for this, as the boy saw his father murder a rival at the age of 11. (If one checks the dates given in the book, however, Sonny would have been a mere two years old when his father killed his rival, but the novel and movie are known for dates to contradict each other.) Sonny is not without a softer side, however; while 11, he met a homeless boy, Tom Hagen, who now lives with the family. He also acted as a protector to his younger siblings, especially Connie.

The normal course of events in Sonny’s life is upturned when Virgil 'The Turk' Sollozzo comes to Don Vito with an offer of entering the drug business, backed by the Tattaglia family. The Don does not want to enter the drug business, Sonny shows interest in the deal. This led Sollozzo to believe that if the Godfather could be taken out of the way, Sonny would agree to work with him. An assassination attempt on the Godfather is arranged.

The assassination attempt fails but leaves the Godfather near death, although he eventually recovers. Sonny, now acting as the Corleone Family's Don, prepares for an all-out war against the Tattaglias and Sollozzo. Michael, who had previously distanced himself from the family's criminal enterprise, volunteers to kill Sollozzo and his bodyguard, police Captain McCluskey. Sonny is initially against the idea, but Michael eventually talks him into it. Michael kills both Sollozzo and McClusky, and is sent immediately to Sicily to wait out the inevitable crackdown on the Five Families. Bruno Tattaglia, Don Philip Tattaglia's son, is also killed in his nightclub.

In retaliation, Tattaglia's partner and the Don of one of the most powerful of the Five Families, Emilio Barzini, enlists the help of Sonny's brother-in-law, Carlo Rizzi, in setting a trap for the impulsive new Don. To draw Sonny out into the open, Rizzi inflicts a particularly vicious beating on Connie, who telephones Sonny, begging for help. In a fit of rage, Sonny leaves the family compound unaccompanied and heads for Connie's apartment to take revenge upon (and perhaps kill) Rizzi. As Sonny approaches a toll plaza, a number of Barzini's men emerge from the toll booths and car ahead of Sonny's with submachine guns (Thompson 1928 models) and viciously gun him down after spraying his car with lead, forcing the wounded Sonny to make an attempt at a hasty retreat, but he is shot in the head before trying to escape. He is dead at the age of thirty-one, four months short of his thirty-second birthday. Sonny's death persuades Vito to call a truce with the other Families.

After Vito's death, Michael takes revenge by having Carlo Rizzi killed, after promising Connie he would not; she resented him for years afterward, even though Rizzi abused and cheated on her during their marriage. In the novel, however, Connie forgives him a week after his death and later gets remarried in Las Vegas.

[edit] Role in Godfather sequels

Sonny appears in the original Godfather and in its sequel, The Godfather Part II. In the latter film, he briefly appears in a flashback scene portraying the family dinner in which Michael announces he is volunteering to fight in World War II. It is shown that Sonny was the one who introduced Carlo to Connie and the rest of the family, hence their later marriage. He is angered by Michael's decision, and he berates his brother for risking his life "for a bunch of strangers."

In the novel as well as the films, Sonny is portrayed as a womanizer, despite being married. The reason Sonny cheats is explained in the novel due to his very large penis and the pain it causes his wife. Early in the film, Sonny whispers into the ear of a woman who is not his wife. After this scene, his wife can be seen showing the other women at her table how large his penis is with hand gestures. His most prominent dalliance in the saga is with Lucy Mancini, a friend of Connie's. The Godfather Part III reveals that he fathered a child out of wedlock with Lucy (this was invented for the film, as Lucy in the novel does not have any children by him.) That child, Vincent 'Vinnie' Mancini-Corleone, grows up to succeed Michael as Godfather. This is entirely inconsistent with the novel, as in the book Lucy Mancini leaves for Las Vegas, falls in love with a surgeon and gets married.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Family

[edit] Trivia

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
  • Among the actors auditioning for the role of Michael during casting for The Godfather, one unknown off-Broadway actor named Robert De Niro also read for Sonny's part, as well as Michael's, without success. Raw footage of him in the scene where Paulie Gatto offers to kill Carlo can be seen on the DVD. Eventually, Coppola cast Caan in the role and gave De Niro the part of Paulie, but "traded" him to the film Mean Streets for Al Pacino, who soon got the part of Michael. De Niro later starred in The Godfather: Part II as young Vito.
  • The death scene has been parodied several times on The Simpsons, including in the final scene of "All's Fair in Oven War," an episode in which James Caan starred. In that episode, the tollbooth death scene is re-enacted as part of Cletus Spuckler's revenge for James' "stealing" Brandine's heart. The scene where Sonny beats Carlo Rizzi has also been parodied, in the episode "Strong Arms of the Ma".
  • The tollbooth scene was parodied along with the execution montage in the final scene of the "Dabba Don" episode of the series Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law. In this scene the Ant Hill Mob from Wacky Races gun down Judge Mightor from their car. This would explain how the Mightor character was effectively "killed off" as he would no longer preside over any cases in future seasons of the show.
  • The death scene contains a very popular 'movie mistake'. Sonny's car is riddled with bullets and the windshield is blown out. Later, as Sonny lays next to it, the car is seen with its windshield in perfect condition; completely unshattered.
  • In the book, Sonny is known for his large penis (this is also hinted at very briefly in the wedding scene of the movie); his wife said that it was "so big it made her stomach feel like macaroni".
  • For his cameo in Part II, James Caan received the same amount of money he received for the first film. [1]
Spoilers end here.

[edit] References


Films

The GodfatherThe Godfather Part IIThe Godfather Part IIIThe Godfather Saga

Novels

The Godfather (novel)The SicilianThe Godfather ReturnsThe Godfather's Revenge

Corleone family

Vito CorleoneCarmella CorleoneTom HagenSonny CorleoneFredo CorleoneMichael CorleoneConnie Corleone-RizziApollonia Vitelli-CorleoneKay AdamsAnthony CorleoneMary CorleoneVinnie Mancini-Corleone

Other families

Emilio BarziniOttilio CuneoAnthony StracciBruno TattagliaPhilip TattagliaCarlo TramontiVincent ForlenzaLouie RussoJoe ZaluchiFrankie FalconeTony MolinariSam DragoPaulie FortunatoOzzie AltobelloRico Tattaglia

Other characters

Luca BrasiDon CiccioPete ClemenzaDon FanucciJohnny FontaneSenator Pat GearyArchbishop GildayMoe GreeneFrederick KeinszigCardinal LambertoRocco LamponeLucy ManciniAl NeriJohnny OlaFrank PentangeliHyman RothCarlo RizziVirgil SollozzoSal TessioDon TommasinoJack WoltzJoey ZasaWillie CicciPaulie GattoNick GeraciEddie ParadiseTommy NeriJames SheaRitchie NobilioJoe LucadelloMomo BaroneSal NarducciCarmine MarinoDanny SheaBilly Van ArsdaleMickey Shea

Related

Mario PuzoFrancis Ford CoppolaAlbert RuddyNino RotaCrime filmOrganized crimeMafiaLa Cosa NostraFive FamiliesSicilyCorleoneThe Godfather (soundtrack)The Godfather Part II (soundtrack)The Godfather Part III (soundtrack)The Godfather: The GameMark Winegardner

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