Showing posts with label il capo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label il capo. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2013

King of New York Tee

SCUSA Summer 2013 Preview
"King of New York" limited edition v-neck T-Shirt in "Frank White". Material: 95% cotton / 5% Lycra. Muscle fit. Hidden "Contraband Pocket" and subtle "MADE BY SCUSA" print on back. Certificate of authenticity doubles as "illegal lottery ticket". Recommended retail price: € 49,99


- MADE by SCUSA -

Exclusive designs (c) SCUSA International BV 2012.



"If you think your boss is stupid, remember: You wouldn't have a job if he was any smarter" - John Gotti, head of the Gambino Family in NYC.

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Coming Soon on Kickstarter: GAMBONI: King of New York
The Godfather of all Board Games www.GamboniGame.com


Tuesday, April 10, 2012

CAPO DI TUTTI CAPI


CAPO DI TUTTI CAPI muscle fit tee in Sonny Black / Sterling Silver

available now at DefShop;



 CAPO DI TUTTI CAPI muscle fit tee in Frank White / Sterling Silver
available now at DefShop;



CAPO DI TUTTI CAPI muscle fit tee in Carabinieri Blue / Ferrari Red
available now at DefShop;


Boss of all Bosses, The BOSS, Capo dei Capi, Top Dog, The Big Kahuna, The Man, da Man, Commander in Chief, IL Capo. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capo_di_tutti_capi


 
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Coming Soon on Kickstarter: GAMBONI: King of New York
The Godfather of all Board Games www.GamboniGame.com

Friday, March 16, 2012

Godfather Wiki

The Anniversary You Can't Refuse: 40 Things You Didn't Know About The Godfather

On March 15, 1972, The Godfather hit movie screens. In the four decades since, it has become acknowledged as one of the greatest movies of all time. TIME has compiled the most interesting stories, anecdotes and tidbits from the film's production



It could be said of so many movie moments, but describing the horse-head scene as one of the most iconic in American film history is no exaggeration. It was already famous from the book — only in Mario Puzo’s novel, the horse’s head was on the bedpost when Jack Woltz wakes up. Audiences rose up in anger over the death of the horse, and many asked if it were a real animal head.
Yes, it was. The studio had encouraged Francis Ford Coppola to use a fake horse head, but he didn’t like the mock-up. His scouts found a horse ready for slaughter at a dog-food plant in New Jersey. The art director picked one that looked like the horse in the film and said, “When that one is slaughtered, send us the head.” Coppola later remembered, “One day, a crate with dry ice came with this horse’s head in it.”