Difference between revisions of "The Godfather"
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{{TableBody|[[Season 6|6]]}} | {{TableBody|[[Season 6|6]]}} | ||
{{TableBody|118}} | {{TableBody|118}} | ||
+ | {{TableBody|"[[Homie the Clown]]"}} | ||
{{TableBody|When Homer and [[Krusty]] try to do the bicycle trick in front of the mafiosi Homer's head bumps against a series of wine glasses. The melody that plays as a result is a musical quote of the "Love Theme" from ''The Godfather''.}} | {{TableBody|When Homer and [[Krusty]] try to do the bicycle trick in front of the mafiosi Homer's head bumps against a series of wine glasses. The melody that plays as a result is a musical quote of the "Love Theme" from ''The Godfather''.}} | ||
{{TableBodyTop|}} | {{TableBodyTop|}} | ||
{{TableBody|[[Season 7|7]]}} | {{TableBody|[[Season 7|7]]}} | ||
{{TableBody|147}} | {{TableBody|147}} | ||
+ | {{TableBody|"[[A Fish Called Selma]]"}} | ||
{{TableBody|When [[Fat Tony]] sees Troy McClure walking around alive and well he asks "[[Legs]]" that he told him McClure was dead? Legs answers: "No what I said was: "He sleeps with the fishes." This is a reference to the death of {{W|Luca Brasi}} in "The Godfather" who is thrown in the canal. Later his killers sent a dead fish to {{W|Sonny Corleone}} with the message: "He sleeps with the fishes."}} | {{TableBody|When [[Fat Tony]] sees Troy McClure walking around alive and well he asks "[[Legs]]" that he told him McClure was dead? Legs answers: "No what I said was: "He sleeps with the fishes." This is a reference to the death of {{W|Luca Brasi}} in "The Godfather" who is thrown in the canal. Later his killers sent a dead fish to {{W|Sonny Corleone}} with the message: "He sleeps with the fishes."}} | ||
{{TableBodyTop|}} | {{TableBodyTop|}} | ||
− | {{TableBody|[ | + | {{TableBody|[[Season 11|11]]}} |
{{TableBody|229}} | {{TableBody|229}} | ||
{{TableBody|"[[Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner]]"}} | {{TableBody|"[[Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner]]"}} | ||
{{TableBody|A mafiosi claims he put a horse head in Homer's bed to prevent him from being a food critic ever again. It turns out that Homer simply ate the head and wrote a negative review about it.}} | {{TableBody|A mafiosi claims he put a horse head in Homer's bed to prevent him from being a food critic ever again. It turns out that Homer simply ate the head and wrote a negative review about it.}} | ||
{{TableBodyTop|}} | {{TableBodyTop|}} | ||
− | {{TableRowspan|[ | + | {{TableRowspan|[[Season 14|14]]|2}} |
{{TableBody|300}} | {{TableBody|300}} | ||
{{TableBody|"[[The Strong Arms of the Ma]]"}} | {{TableBody|"[[The Strong Arms of the Ma]]"}} | ||
− | {{TableBody|Moe tells [[Maggie]] the plot of the three Godfather films to entertain her. Moe imitates {{W|Don Corleone}} with an cut-up orange in his mouth, in reference to a similar scene in ''The Godfather''. He later imagines the exact scene from the film when he goes searching for Maggie. Moe seems to know the film by heart, but mistakes | + | {{TableBody|Moe tells [[Maggie]] the plot of the three Godfather films to entertain her. Moe imitates {{W|Don Corleone}} with an cut-up orange in his mouth, in reference to a similar scene in ''The Godfather''. He later imagines the exact scene from the film when he goes searching for Maggie. Moe seems to know the film by heart, but mistakes {{W|Diane Keaton}}'s character Kay Adams with her character Annie Hall from Woody Allen's film ''{{W|Annie Hall}}''. At the end of the episode Fat Tony is emotional about Maggie and says: "I didn't cry so much, since I paid to see ''Godfather III''.}} |
{{TableBodyTop|}} | {{TableBodyTop|}} | ||
{{TableBody|313}} | {{TableBody|313}} |
Revision as of 15:57, December 21, 2011
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- You may be looking for The Godfather (character)
The Godfather is an epic gangster film trilogy consisting of three films, "The Godfather" (1972), "The Godfather II" (1974) and "The Godfather III" (1990), all directed by Francis-Ford Coppola.
References to The Godfather in The Simpsons
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External links