How Tessio Really Died After Betraying Michael Corleone In The Godfather

The moment upon which Francis Ford Coppola’s epic masterpiece The Godfather really turns isn’t the attempted murder of Vito Corleone while he’s recovering in hospital. It isn’t even when Al Pacino’s Michael Corleone kills his father’s would-be ᴀssᴀssin in the movie’s legendary restaurant scene, or the brutal ᴀssᴀssination of his brother Sonny in a haze of bullets. It’s actually when the prophecy Vito made to Michael actually comes to pᴀss, via the lips of Vito’s lifelong friend and caporegime Salvatore Tessio.

Whoever comes to you with this Barzini meeting,” Vito told his son before he died, “he’s the traitor. So when Tessio approaches Michael at Vito’s funeral to arrange a meeting with rival mafia boss Emilio Barzini, the new head of the Corleone family knows what it means. Despite his decades working as one of the Corleone Godfather’s most trusted mobsters, Tessio has betrayed Michael and his family. Michael acts swiftly and mercilessly, ordering his enforcers to execute Tessio on the day of the proposed meeting.

How Tessio Was Executed In The Godfather, According To The 2004 Sequel Novel

It Was A Bloody End Befitting A Traitor To The Corleone Family

Tessio’s final scene in The Godfather sees him surrounded by a group of enforcers and walked to a car without Michael, the Corleone family’s adopted son Tom Hagen, or fellow caporegime Peter Clemenza. “Tell Michael it was only business,” he pleads, but at this point, it’s too late to change his fate. Perhaps as a mark of respect for Tessio’s seniority in the Corleone family hierarchy, however, his actual death isn’t shown in the movie.

However, Mark Winegardner’s 2004 novel The Godfather Returns, which serves as a direct sequel to the events of the saga’s first book and film, paints the full picture of how Tessio was executed in graphic detail. He’s driven to an abandoned service station near Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn, where he waits with The Godfather’s most overlooked character, Michael Corleone’s chief enforcer, Al Neri. Yet it’s not Neri who kills him, but Nick Geraci, an enforcer who doesn’t appear in any of the Godfather movies.

When Geraci arrives on the scene, Clemenza is there to greet him, and ensure the execution goes smoothly. The caporegime then departs, unable to watch his old friend take a bullet to the head. Geraci finds Tessio and Neri in a closed service bay, at which point Neri hands him a large handgun and instructs him to shoot Tessio in the face.

Look him in the eyes,” the senior enforcer orders. When Geraci hesitates, Tessio eggs him on. “What are you waiting for?” he tells his ᴀssᴀssin. “Sono fottuto. Shoot me. You pussy.” Geraci shoots, and Tessio’s body flies backwards as a piece of his skull separates from his head.

Tessio’s Death Is More Powerful Because You Don’t See It In The Godfather

Such A Close Friend Of Vito Corleone Deserves To Go Out With Dignity

This morbid spectacle is described with grisly precision by Winegardner. In this sense, it serves its purpose of placing a brutal punctuation mark at the end of a chapter that many Godfather fans want to hear about in full. But the real power of Salvatore Tessio’s tragic death in The Godfather comes from Mario Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola’s less-is-more approach in the original novel and movie.

Tom, can you get me off the hook? For old time’s sake.” – Salvatore Tessio, The Godfather

Tessio cuts a pathetic figure as he realizes his fate. In reality, he’s ᴅᴇᴀᴅ the moment the enforcers surround him outside the Corleone mansion on Staten Island. He begs Hagen to get him “off the hook”, in a desperate attempt to cash in a favor “for old time’s sake.” Hagen’s refusal to help him rings more loudly and painfully around the mansion grounds than any gunsH๏τ could. In the look which the two exchange, we see years of comradeship and decades of mutual service to the money-making crime family of Don Corleone, a master who loved them both.

Only a scene illustrating Tessio’s execution in this kind of indirect manner could be laden with such pathos. As impressively shocking and brutal as the shooting of Tessio itself would appear on-screen, it would lack the emotional resonance that the death of a character so important to the history of the Corleone warrants. Tessio isn’t just one of Michael’s caporegimes. He’s been the friend of a lifetime to The Godfather’s primary hero Vito Corleone. The rules of the mob dictate that he has to die, but he was allowed to die with at least some of his onscreen dignity intact.

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