Orlando Sentinel

Dig into these Mafia picks beyond the usual suspects

- By Katie Walsh

If you happen to be a fan of “The Godfather,” “The Sopranos,” “Boardwalk Empire” or any other Mafia-related content, Netflix has you covered with a new docu-series that dropped Wednesday. The three-part “Fear City: New York City vs. the Mafia” is directed by Sam Hobkinson and follows the FBI’s journey to take down the Mafia Commission in New York City, including the godfathers of the Five Families who ran New York during the majority of the 20th century.

The series features never-before-seen surveillan­ce footage and recordings from the FBI investigat­ion, as well as interviews with mobsters who were on the ground at the time, including Michael Franzese and John Alite. The first episode paints an incredibly vivid picture of what New York was like at the time, as well as the flashy disco-era lifestyle of the gangsters, funded by gas schemes and bloodied by murders in the streets.

The second and third episodes dig into the details of how the FBI finally used RICO (the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons Act) to take down the organizati­ons for racketeeri­ng, through years of careful surveillan­ce, wiretappin­g and informants.

It’s a fascinatin­g series, especially from an investigat­ive angle, and if it puts you in the mood to dig into more Mafia and gangster epics, there’s of course plenty of TV and movies to check out, even beyond the usual suspects.

First, my quarterly reminder to watch David Simon’s HBO epic, “The Wire,” on HBO, as the wiretappin­g and surveillan­ce element is incredibly similar, even if it takes place among African American Baltimore drug gangs.

Watching “Fear City,” there are many familiar names to make connection­s to characters in other films and TV shows. One of the major characters of the docu-series is “Fat Tony” Salerno, the godfather of the Genovese crime family. He appears briefly in “The Irishman” (on Netflix), played by Domenick Lombardozz­i, and he has also been portrayed by Paul Sorvino in the 2011 film “Kill the Irishman”

(on Amazon Prime Video), a film about Danny Greene, a Cleveland longshorem­an (Ray Stevenson), who became involved in the criminal underworld and fought the Mafia in the 1970s. Colombo underboss and “Fear City” interviewe­e Franzese was played by Joseph Bono in “Goodfellas” (on Sling or $3.99 digital rental), and as an author and speaker, he has been in many documentar­ies about the mob, including the Nat Geo series “Inside the American Mob,” which is on YouTube for $1.99.

One of the major murders in the docu-series is the lunchtime hit of Carmine Galante, whom the notorious hitman Richard Kuklinski took responsibi­lity for. Michael Shannon played the assassin in “The Iceman,” which is available on many streaming platforms for free or with ads, including IMDBtv, Tubi, Roku Channel, Crackle and Vudu.

Around the same time that the Mafia Commission trial was going down in New York in 1985, the Italian government was cracking down on the Sicilian Mob too. In 1986, they conducted the massive Maxi Trial in Palermo, in which 475 mafiosi were indicted. The recent Italian film “The Traitor” depicts the life of Tommaso Buscetta (played by Pierfrance­sco Favino), one of the mobsters who testified against his former compatriot­s (on Starz, free on Pluto TV with ads or a $6 rental).

An even more fascinatin­g film about that era in Sicily is the 2019 documentar­y “Shooting the Mafia,” which is available for free on Kanopy or a $4.99 rental. The documentar­y follows the remarkable life of Letizia Battaglia, Italy’s first female photojourn­alist, who photograph­ed the most notorious mafiosi, murders and mayhem. Her story is a different angle than most on the Mafia, and it’s utterly absorbing and inspiring.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Jim Kossler, a former supervisor with the FBI’s New York office, appears in “Fear City: New York vs. the Mafia.”
NETFLIX Jim Kossler, a former supervisor with the FBI’s New York office, appears in “Fear City: New York vs. the Mafia.”

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