Which of these films has Vincenzo Coccotti working as a Sicilian consigliere for a local mobster?
Vincenzo "Vincent" Coccotti (Christopher Walken) is the main antagonist in the 1993 action-romance film "True Romance". Coccotti is a Sicilian consigliere for local Detroit mobster "Blue" Lou Boyle. Coccotti and men in his crew go to the home of Mr. Clifford Worley (Dennis Hopper), a elderly cop and the estranged father of Clarence Worley whom they tracked down by Clarence's driver's license, accidently left behind at Drexl Spivey's (Gary Oldman) house.
In a big scene from Tony Scott's film, Hoppers son (played by Christian Slater) has taken something the gangsters want, which is why they are interrogating Clifford (Hopper). Hopper explains to Walken how Sicilians, or modern day Sicilians came to be. The scene has racial slurs (the N word); they are used in a derogatory manner. They enrage Walken' character and drives him to kill Hopper; Hopper's character (Clifford) cannot now give any information regarding his son.
This film is a romantic black comedy crime film that was written by Quentin Tarantino and produced by Samuel Hadida, Steve Perry, and Bill Unger. Besides featuring an ensemble cast led by Slater and Patricia Arquette, it includes Hopper, Oldman, Walken, Val Kilmer, and Brad Pitt. In their roles, Slater and Arquette portray newlyweds on the run from the Mafia after stealing a shipment of drugs.
Upon release by Morgan Creek Productions and Warner Bros., the film got positive critical reviews. Critics praised its dialogue, characters, and off-beat style.
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