Sayonara Salvatore and An American Divorce: Difference between pages

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{{infobox mission
'''An American Divorce''' is a film in the [[HD Universe]] that is released in [[1977]] by the [[Richards Majestic]] film studio. The film stars [[Jack Moore]] and [[Sally Sherman]] with [[George Kozielski]] directing and [[Solomon Richards]] producing. The film was based upon a novel by [[Ronaldo Young]].
|name = Sayonara Salvatore
|image = SayonaraSalvatore-GTAIII.jpg
|size = 300px
|caption = [[Asuka Kasen]] telling [[Claude]] that she wants him to prove his ties to the [[Leone Family|Mafia]] are over by killing [[Salvatore Leone]] as he leaves [[Luigi's Sex Club 7]], as Salvatore's estranged wife [[Maria Latore]] relaxes.
|game = III
|for = [[Asuka Kasen]]
|location = [[Newport]], [[Staunton Island]], [[Liberty City in GTA III Era|Liberty City]]
|target = [[Salvatore Leone]]
|fail = Salvatore returns to [[Luigi's Sex Club 7]]<br>Salvatore arrives at [[Salvatore's Gentlemen's Club]]
|reward = [[Money|$]]25,000
|unlocks = [[Under Surveillance]]<br />[[Bling-bling Scramble]]
|unlockedby = [[Last Requests]]
}}


'''Sayonara Salvatore''' is a mission in [[Grand Theft Auto III]], given to [[protagonist]] [[Claude]] by [[Yakuza]] [[Gang Leaders|co-leader]] [[Asuka Kasen]] from her [[Asuka Kasen's Condo|condominium]] in the [[Newport]] district of [[Staunton Island]], [[Liberty City in GTA III Era|Liberty City]]
== Cast and crew ==
; Cast
* [[Anna Catinski]]
* [[Sherman Fischer]]
* [[Jack Moore]]
* [[Sally Sherman]]
* [[Minnie Stapler]] as [[Clancy]]


==Mission==
; Crew
[[Salvatore Leone]] recently set Claude into a trap and betrayed him. Claude now wants revenge and is going to work for the [[Yakuza]]. But the Yakuza leader Asuka wants Claude to show his loyalty and that his ties with the [[Leone Family]] are broken by asking him to kill Salvatore who is leaving [[Luigi Goterelli|Luigi Goterelli's]] [[Luigi's Sex Club 7|club]].
* [[George Kozielski]] (<small>director</small>)
* [[Solomon Richards]] (<small>producer</small>)
* [[Ronaldo Young]] (<small>screenplay</small>)
* [[Sheldon Walker]] (<small>executive producer</small>)
* [[Barry Wheatsheaf]] (<small>screenplay</small>)


Claude gets a car and starts driving over to Luigi's Sex Club 7 in the [[Red Light District]] of [[Portland]] where Salvatore is. Upon arriving he waits until Salvatore exits the club and finishes him off while avoiding any possible attack from the Leone bodyguards.
==Classicvinewood.com's description==
{{quote|"In the age of free love, everything has a price."<br />


==Script==
A tear-jerky, pseudo-feminist melodrama about "ordinary people" (i.e. bored rich socialites in [[Liberty City in GTA IV Era|Liberty City]]) having cowardly affairs, doing coke in disco boots, getting divorced and fighting for custody of their over-privileged, one-dimensional children in the 1970s. "An American Divorce" won lots of awards because it captured the zeitgeist of a decade that completely threw in the towel on moral responsibility and musical taste. After an hour and a half of watching upper-middleclass white people with enormous afros weep in [[Algonquin]] cafes and spurting mawkish dialogue like "But my kids are my life!" and "It's time I did something for myself!", the inevitable happy ending can't come fast enough. We won't ruin it for you, but everyone dies, thank God.}}
'''Asuka Kasen''': We have certain issues to clear up before we can continue any form of relationship, business or otherwise. Let's lay our cards on the table. I am Yakuza and I know you've been working for Salvatore Leone's family. I can give you work with our organization. But first you must prove to me that your ties with the Mafia are truly broken. Salvatore Leone will be leaving Luigi's in about three hours time. Make sure he doesn't reach his club alive. Meanwhile Maria and I will catch up on old times.


'''Maria Latore''': Oh.. Asuka, you've got a massager.
==Classicvinewood.com's comments==
*flirtythirty17 (2/10): This actually seemed longer and more boring than my own divorce.
*wymanhater (4/10): How the hell did this win best screenplay?
*catshagger (7/10): Nobody does over-sentimentality like Solomon Richards.
*givegoodfoot (2/10): I've seen [[Mexico|Mexican]] telenovelas less sappy than this.
*happyspin9 (9/10): The best divorce movie of all time. And I've seen them all.
*noonoo67 (8/10): This was the movie that made divorce cool. Look what happened in the 80s and 90s. Everyone started doing it.
*lopoffthetip (6/10): What an amazing twist at the end! They share custody of the kids and return to their lives!


'''Asuka Kasen''': That's not a massager.
[[Category:Films]]
 
[[Category:Media in GTA V]]
(''If the Mafia sees Claude.'')
 
'''Leone Family mobster''': There he is! Waste him!
 
==Reward==
The reward for completing this mission is [[Money|$]]25,000 and the unlocking of the next mission, [[Under Surveillance]]. The Leone Family also become violent towards Claude when visiting their turf on Portland. The mission [[Bling-bling Scramble]] for [[King Courtney]] will also be unlocked once the player enters Staunton Island.
 
==Trivia==
*The name of this mission has an ironic meaning on [[Salvatore Leone]], since Claude has started working for the [[Yakuza]]. "Sayonara" (さよなら) means "goodbye" in Japanese.
*When Maria says to Asuka "Oh.. Asuka, you've got a massager.", she is in fact referring to Asuka's vibrator.
*The Leone motorcade is somewhat reminiscent of the first car chase in the film ''[[wp:Ronin (film)|Ronin]]''. It is also modeled after real-life motorcades for important politicians and heads of state. The "secure package" of the VIP-carrying car will break from the convoy, while the escort vehicles will hold off the assailants.
*After this mission, the Leones will be armed with [[Pump Action Shotgun|shotguns]] which can blow up a car in two shots, making [[Saint Mark's]] a very dangerous place from now on. If they player has any side missions left on Portland, it is strongly recommended they are done before this mission.
*Salvatore can be killed by his own men simply by making them shoot at your car, causing an explosion that also destroys the car in which Salvatore is escaping.
 
==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:SayonaraSalvatore-GTAIII2.jpg|[[Claude]] waiting at the back of [[Luigi's Sex Club 7]] for [[Salvatore Leone]] to leave the club.
File:SayonaraSalvatore-GTAIII3.jpg|Mission passed screen.
File:SayonaraSalvatore-GTAIII4.jpg|[[Claude]] looking down at the corpse of [[Salvatore Leone]].
</gallery>
 
==Video walkthrough==
<center>
{| class="wikitable"
![[Personal Computer|PC]] Version - GTASeriesVideos
![[iOS|iPad 2]] Version - GTASeriesVideos
|-
|{{youtube|video1=E-XlbTxrCEo}}
|{{youtube|video1=-ZhBWr35UQ8}}
|}
</center>
 
[[de:Sayonara Salvatore]]
[[Category:Missions in GTA III]]

Latest revision as of 13:51, 11 March 2017

An American Divorce is a film in the HD Universe that is released in 1977 by the Richards Majestic film studio. The film stars Jack Moore and Sally Sherman with George Kozielski directing and Solomon Richards producing. The film was based upon a novel by Ronaldo Young.

Cast and crew

Cast
Crew

Classicvinewood.com's description

"In the age of free love, everything has a price."

A tear-jerky, pseudo-feminist melodrama about "ordinary people" (i.e. bored rich socialites in Liberty City) having cowardly affairs, doing coke in disco boots, getting divorced and fighting for custody of their over-privileged, one-dimensional children in the 1970s. "An American Divorce" won lots of awards because it captured the zeitgeist of a decade that completely threw in the towel on moral responsibility and musical taste. After an hour and a half of watching upper-middleclass white people with enormous afros weep in Algonquin cafes and spurting mawkish dialogue like "But my kids are my life!" and "It's time I did something for myself!", the inevitable happy ending can't come fast enough. We won't ruin it for you, but everyone dies, thank God.


Classicvinewood.com's comments

  • flirtythirty17 (2/10): This actually seemed longer and more boring than my own divorce.
  • wymanhater (4/10): How the hell did this win best screenplay?
  • catshagger (7/10): Nobody does over-sentimentality like Solomon Richards.
  • givegoodfoot (2/10): I've seen Mexican telenovelas less sappy than this.
  • happyspin9 (9/10): The best divorce movie of all time. And I've seen them all.
  • noonoo67 (8/10): This was the movie that made divorce cool. Look what happened in the 80s and 90s. Everyone started doing it.
  • lopoffthetip (6/10): What an amazing twist at the end! They share custody of the kids and return to their lives!