Club Paradise Movie Quotes

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She had lived in eight different countries growing up and had visited dozens of others. To most people, this sounded cool, and in some ways, Ayers knows, it was cool, or parts of it were. But since humans are inclined to want what they don't have, she longed to live in America, preferably the solid, unchanging, undramatic Midwest, and attend a real high school, the kind shown in movies, complete with a football team, cheerleaders, pep rallies, chemistry labs, summer reading lists, hall passes, proms, detentions, assemblies, fund-raisers, lockers, Spanish clubs, marching bands, and the dismissal bell.
Elin Hilderbrand (Winter in Paradise (Paradise, #1))
kitchen as she serves Tony pasta and fills his glass with wine. Within the family structure, Tony, who has no father, is a patriarch who has the role of protecting his sister Cesca’s honour, while Mrs Camonte is the matriarch who guards the family’s morality. Yet the structure of Italian familialism is weakened to the point of being unable to provide a viable social model for American society. Tony is a degraded image of a patriarch whose protection of female honour only leads him to murder Cesca’s new husband Guino. Tony’s actions towards his sister are further represented as a form of incest exemplified in the scene where he rips off her clothes after seeing her dance with another man at the Paradise Club. As Peter Bondanella has noted, in the representation of Tony’s desire for Cesca, the film might even actualize a long Anglo-Saxon tradition of associating Italian cultural heritage with Renaissance duplicity and perverse forms of sexuality evocative of the Borgia family.9 But the film also neutralizes the other dimension of Old World familialism represented by Mother Camonte, whose role as the custodian of the family’s morality fails since she has a son who is a gangster and a daughter whom she cannot protect from her ‘no-good’ boy. Because of the repeated construction of the gangster as an Italian ethnic subject bearing the markers of an ethnicity to be feared for
Dana Renga (Mafia Movies: A Reader, Second Edition (Toronto Italian Studies))