The Godfather is a
1972 American thriller film based on the
novel of the same name by
Mario Puzo and directed by
Francis Ford Coppola from a
screenplay by Puzo, Coppola, and
Robert Towne (uncredited). It stars
Marlon Brando,
Al
Pacino,
James Caan,
Richard S. Castellano,
Robert Duvall,
Sterling Hayden,
John
Marley,
Richard Conte and
Diane Keaton, and features
John Cazale ,
Talia
Shire,
Al Martino , and
Abe Vigoda. The story spans ten years from 1945
to 1955 and chronicles the fictional
Italian-American Corleone crime family. Two sequels
followed:
The Godfather Part
II in
1974, and
The Godfather Part III in
1990.
The Godfather received
Academy
Awards for
Best
Picture,
Best
Actor, and
Best Adapted
Screenplay, and has been selected for preservation in the
United States
National Film
Registry. In addition, it is ranked as the second greatest film
in American cinematic history, behind
Citizen Kane, on the
AFI's
100 Years... 100
Movies list by the
American
Film Institute.
Plot
In late summer 1945, Vito Corleone (
Marlon
Brando), and Tom Hagen (
consigliere) (
Robert Duvall), hear requests for favors
during the Don's daughter Connie's (
Talia
Shire) wedding reception, following a Sicilian tradition.
Singer Johnny Fontane (
Al Martino),
Corleone's godson, asks Vito's help in landing a movie role that
will revitalize his flagging career.
Hagen is dispatched to
California
to meet with studio head Jack Woltz (John Marley). After initially refusing to
cast Fontane, Woltz caves in when he finds the severed head of his
prized $600,000 racehorse in his bed the next morning.
Upon Hagen's return, the family leadership meets with Virgil
Sollozzo (
Al Lettieri), who asks Don
Corleone to protect the rival Tattaglia family's planned
heroin business. Don Vito disapproves of drug
trafficking and feels his political influence could be jeopardized;
he rejects the potentially lucrative proposal. He then sends his
primary enforcer, Luca Brasi (
Lenny
Montana), to infiltrate Sollozzo's organization, but Brasi is
summarily executed.
Don Corleone is shot in an assassination attempt. Sollozzo abducts
Tom Hagen and persuades him to offer Corleone's eldest son, Sonny
(
James Caan), the deal previously offered
to the Don. The youngest son, Michael (
Al
Pacino), whom the other Mafia families consider a "civilian"
uninvolved in mob business, averts a second murder attempt at the
hospital where his father is being treated, but is beaten by
corrupt police Captain McCluskey (
Sterling Hayden). Sonny retaliates by having
Bruno Tattaglia killed.
When Sollozzo meets with Michael in an attempt to settle the
dispute, Michael shoots and kills both Sollozzo and McCluskey. He
then takes refuge in
Sicily, where he soon
marries a young local woman, Apollonia Vitelli (
Simonetta Stefanelli). The third
Corleone brother,
Fredo (
John Cazale), is sent to
Las Vegas, to be sheltered by
casino operators the Corleones have backed financially. Open
warfare erupts between the Corleones and the other members of the
Five Families, while
the police and other authorities begin to clamp down on Mafia
activity. Don Vito is particularly distressed when he learns of
Michael's involvement, since he had planned for Michael to remain
uninvolved in the "family business."
When Sonny impulsively leaves the guarded family compound to
confront Connie's husband, Carlo (
Gianni
Russo), over his wife-beating, he is killed in an ambush.
Michael narrowly escapes death in Sicily, when his wife is killed
by a bomb in their car.
Don Vito meets with the other Five Family dons and settles their
dispute, withdrawing his opposition to the Tattalglia's heroin
business. He deduces from the negotiations that the Tattaglias were
acting on behalf of the more powerful Don Barzini. With his safety
now guaranteed, Michael returns home. More than a year later, he
marries his long time American girlfriend, Kay (
Diane Keaton). As his father withdraws from
active control of the Corleone family, and middle brother Fredo
seen as incapable of shouldering the Don's responsibilities,
Michael takes control of the family. He promises Kay he will
legitimize its businesses within five years.
Biding his time, Michael allows rival families to pressure Corleone
enterprises and eat away at their revenues, disturbing several of
his caporegimes.
He directs them not to retaliate, disclosing
plans to move family operations to Nevada
while
spinning off New York operations to family members who stay
behind. Michael replaces Hagen with a new consigliere; Vito
explains to the upset Hagen that he and Michael have longer-range
plans for him and for the family.
Michael travels to Las Vegas, intending to buy out their casino
partner,
Moe Greene (
Alex Rocco). Greene angrily rejects the proposal,
deriding the Corleones as a failing organization. Michael is
particularly angered when Fredo, under the sway of Greene and his
associates, warns his brother that Greene is too important to be
treated in that fashion.
Vito Corleone collapses and dies while playing with his young
grandson
Anthony in his tomato
garden. At the burial, caporegime Tessio (
Abe
Vigoda) arranges a meeting between Michael and Don Barzini
(
Richard Conte), now seen as the
dominant figure in the New York families. As Vito had warned
Michael, Tessio's involvement signals his shift of allegiance to
the Barzini family; the planned meeting is intended to result in
Michael's execution. The meeting is set for the same day as the
christening of Connie and Carlo's son, where Michael will stand as
his godfather.
As the christening proceeds, Corleone assassins murder the dons
heading the other New York families, as well as Moe Greene. After
the christening, Tessio learns that Michael is aware of his
betrayal, and is taken off to his death. Michael confronts Carlo
over his suspected involvement in setting up Sonny's killing,
promising him safety; after Carlo confesses, he is garotted at
Michael's direction.
Later that day, Connie accuses Michael of murdering the vanished
Carlo as Kay watches. When Kay confronts him privately, he denies
the accusation to her, an answer she appears to accept. As the film
ends, Kay sees Michael receiving gestures of respect from other
mafiosi, paralleling the treatment given his father, just before
the door to his office is closed. Michael goes from not wanting
anything to do with the family to becoming don.
Cast
- Marlon Brando as Don Vito Corleone – the boss (the "Don")
of the Corleone family, Formerly known as Vito Andolini. He is the
father of Santino (Sonny), Federico (Fredo), Michele (Michael) and
Costanzia (Connie) and adoptive father to Tom Hagen. Husband of
Carmella Corleone. A native
Sicilian.
- Al Pacino as Michael Corleone – the Don's and
Carmella's youngest son, recently returned from military service
following the end of World War II. The only college-educated member
of the family (other than Tom Hagen), he initially wants nothing to
do with the Corleone family business. His evolution from doe-eyed
outsider to ruthless boss is the key plotline of the film.
- James Caan as Santino "Sonny" Corleone – Vito's and
Carmella's hot-headed eldest son; he is being groomed to succeed
his father as head of the Corleone family. He is the family's
underboss.
- Robert Duvall as Tom Hagen – an informally adopted son of Vito
and Carmella Corleone, he is also the family lawyer and the new
consigliere (counselor). He is
not Sicilian, but German-Irish.
- Diane Keaton as Kay Adams-Corleone – Michael's
girlfriend and, ultimately, his wife and mother to their
children.
- John Cazale as Fredo Corleone – the middle son of Vito
and Carmella Corleone. Fredo is not very bright and appears to be
the weakest of the Corleone brothers.
- Talia Shire as Costanzia "Connie" Corleone – Vito's
and Carmella's youngest child and only daughter. She marries
Carlo Rizzi.
- Richard S. Castellano as Peter "Fat" Clemenza – a caporegime for the Corleone family.
- Abe Vigoda as Salvatore "Sal" Tessio – a
caporegime for the Corleone Family.
- Al Lettieri as Virgil "The Turk" Sollozzo – a heroin
dealer associated with the Tattaglia family.
- Gianni Russo as Carlo Rizzi – Connie's husband. Becomes an
associate of the Corleone family, and ultimately betrays Sonny to
the Barzini family.
- Sterling Hayden as Captain Mark
McCluskey – a corrupt police captain on Sollozzo's
payroll.
- Lenny Montana as Luca Brasi – an enforcer utilized by Vito
Corleone.
- Richard Conte as Emilio Barzini– Don of the Barzini
family.
- Al Martino as Johnny Fontane – a world-famous popular
singer and godson of Vito.
- John Marley as Jack Woltz – a powerful Hollywood
producer.
- Alex Rocco as Moe Greene – a longtime associate of the
Corleone family who owns a Las Vegas hotel.
- Morgana King as Carmella Corleone – Vito's wife and
mother of Sonny, Fredo, Michael and Connie, and adoptive mother to
Tom Hagen.
- John Martino as Paulie Gatto –
A "button man" (soldier/hit man) under Capo Pete Clemenza and
Vito's driver.
- Victor Rendina as Philip Tattaglia– Don of the Tattaglia
family.
- Simonetta Stefanelli as
Apollonia
Vitelli-Corleone – A stunningly beautiful young girl
Michael meets and marries while in Sicily.
- Louis Guss as Don Zaluchi – Don of the Zaluchi family of
Detroit.
- Tom Rosqui as Rocco Lampone – a soldier under Clemenza
who eventually becomes a caporegime in the Corleone
family.
- Joe Spinell as Willi Cicci – a soldier in the Corleone
family.
- Richard Bright as
Al Neri – Michael Corleone's bodyguard.
He eventually becomes a caporegime.
- Julie Gregg as Sandra Corleone – wife of Sonny.
Production
Coppola and Paramount
Francis Ford Coppola was not the first choice to direct.
Italian
director
Sergio Leone was offered the job first,
but he declined in order to direct his own gangster opus,
Once Upon a Time in
America, which focused on Jewish-American
gangsters. Peter
Bogdanovich was then approached but he also declined the offer
and made
What's Up,
Doc? instead. According to
Robert Evans, head of Paramount
Pictures at the time, Coppola also did not initially want to direct
the film because he feared it would glorify the Mafia and violence,
and thus reflect poorly on his
Sicilian and Italian heritage; on the
other hand, Evans specifically wanted an Italian-American to direct
the film because his research had shown that previous films about
the Mafia that were directed by non-Italians had fared dismally at
the box office, and he wanted to, in his own words, "smell the
spaghetti". When Coppola hit upon the idea of making it a metaphor
for American capitalism, however, he eagerly agreed to take the
helm. At the time, Coppola had directed eight previous films, the
most notable of which was the film version of the stage musical
Finian's
Rainbow — although he had also received an Academy
Award for co-writing
Patton
in 1970. Coppola was in debt to
Warner
Bros. for $400,000 following budget overruns on
George Lucas's
THX
1138, which Coppola had produced, and he took
The
Godfather on Lucas's advice.
There was intense friction between Coppola and the studio,
Paramount Pictures, and several times
Coppola was almost replaced. Paramount maintains that its
skepticism was due to a rocky start to production, though Coppola
believes that the first week went extremely well. Paramount thought
that Coppola failed to stay on schedule, frequently made production
and casting errors, and insisted on unnecessary expenses. Coppola
says he was shadowed by a replacement director, who was ready to
take over if Coppola was fired, but despite such intense pressure,
Coppola managed to defend his decisions and avoid being
replaced.
Paramount was in financial trouble at the time of production and so
was desperate for a "big hit" to boost business, hence the pressure
Coppola faced during filming. They wanted
The Godfather to
appeal to a wide audience and threatened Coppola with a "violence
coach" to make the film more exciting. Coppola added a few more
violent scenes to keep the studio happy. The scene where Connie
breaks crockery after finding out that her husband is playing
around, was added for this reason.
Casting
Coppola's casting choices were unpopular with studio executives at
Paramount Pictures, particularly
Marlon
Brando as Don Vito Corleone. Coppola's first two choices for
the role were both Brando and
Laurence
Olivier, but Olivier's agent refused the role saying 'Lord
Olivier is not taking any jobs. He's very sick. He's gonna die soon
and he's not interested.' (Olivier lived 18 years after the
refusal.) Paramount, which wanted
Ernest
Borgnine, originally refused to allow Coppola to cast Brando in
the role, citing difficulties Brando had on recent film sets. One
studio executive proposed
Danny Thomas
for the role citing the fact that Don Corleone was a strong "family
man." At one point, Coppola was told by the then-president of
Paramount that "Marlon Brando will never appear in this motion
picture". After pleading with the executives, Coppola was allowed
to cast Brando only if he appeared in the film for much less salary
than his previous films, perform a screen-test, and put up a bond
saying that he would not cause a delay in the production (as he had
done on previous film sets). Coppola chose Brando over
Ernest Borgnine on the basis of Brando's
screen test, which also won over the Paramount leadership. Brando
later won an
Academy Award for his
portrayal, which he refused to accept.
The studio originally wanted
Robert
Redford or
Ryan O'Neal to play
Michael Corleone, but Coppola
wanted an unknown who looked like an Italian-American, whom he
found in
Al Pacino. Pacino was not well
known at the time, having appeared in only two minor films, and the
studio did not consider him right for the part, in part because of
his height. Pacino was given the role only after Coppola threatened
to quit the production.
Jack
Nicholson,
Dustin Hoffman,
Warren Beatty,
Martin Sheen, and
James
Caan also auditioned.
Among those who auditioned for other parts were
Bruce Dern,
Paul
Newman and
Steve McQueen, who were
considered for the role of
Tom Hagen that
eventually went to
Robert Duvall.
Sylvester Stallone auditioned for
Carlo Rizzi and Paulie Gatto,
Anthony
Perkins for Sonny, and
Mia Farrow
auditioned for Kay.
William Devane
was seen for the role of Moe Greene.
Mario
Adorf was approached for a role as well. A then-unknown
Robert De Niro auditioned for the
roles of Michael, Sonny, Carlo and Paulie Gatto. He was cast as
Paulie, but Coppola arranged a "trade" with
The Gang That Couldn't
Shoot Straight to get Al Pacino from that film. De Niro
later played the young Vito Corleone in
Part II, winning a
Best Supporting Actor Oscar for the role.
To some extent,
The Godfather was a family affair for
Francis Ford Coppola.
Carmine
Coppola, his father, who had a distinguished career as a
composer, conductor and arranger, wrote additional music for the
film and appeared in a bit part as a piano player, and Carmine's
wife, Italia Coppola, was an extra. The director's sister,
Talia Shire, was cast as
Connie Corleone, and his infant daughter,
Sofia, played Connie's and Carlo's
newborn son, Michael Francis Rizzi, in the climactic baptism scene
near the movie's end. Coppola also cast his sons as Frank and
Andrew Hagen, the two sons of Tom Hagen. They are seen in the
Sonny-Carlo streetfight scene and behind Al Pacino and Robert
Duvall during the funeral scene.
Star salaries
Al Pacino, James Caan and Diane Keaton each received $35,000 for
their work on
The Godfather, and Robert Duvall got $36,000
for eight weeks of work. Marlon Brando, on the other hand, was paid
$50,000 for six weeks and weekly expenses of $1,000, plus 5% of the
film, capped at $1.5 million. Brando later sold his points back to
Paramount for $300,000.
Filming
Most of the principal photography took place from March 29, to
August 6, 1971, although a scene with Pacino and Keaton was shot in
the autumn — there were a total of 77 days of shooting, fewer
than the 83 for which the production had budgeted.
One of the movie's most shocking moments involved the real severed
head of a horse.
Animal rights groups
protested the inclusion of the scene. Coppola later stated that the
horse's head was delivered to him from a dog food company; a horse
had not been killed specifically for the movie.
This scene was shot in
Port Washington,
New York
.
In the novel, Jack Woltz, the movie producer whose horse's head is
put in his bed, is also shown to be a
pedophile as Tom Hagen sees a young girl
(presumably one of Woltz's child stars) crying while walking out of
Woltz's room. This scene was cut from the theatrical release but
can be found on the DVD (though Woltz can still briefly be seen
kissing the girl on the cheek in his studio in the film).
The shooting of Moe Green through the eye was inspired by the death
of gangster
Bugsy Siegel. To achieve
the effect, actor
Alex Rocco's glasses
had two tubes hidden in their frames. One had blood in it, and the
other had a
BB and compressed air.
When the gun was shot, the compressed air shot the BB through the
glasses, shattering them from the inside. The other tube then
released the blood.
The equally startling scene of McCluskey's shooting was
accomplished by building up a fake forehead on top of actor
Sterling Hayden. A gap was cut in the center, filled with fake
blood, and capped off with a plug of prosthetic flesh. During
filming, the plug was quickly yanked out with monofilament fishing
line, making a bloody hole suddenly appear in Hayden's head.
The opening scene of
The Godfather is a long, slow zoom,
starting with a close-up of the undertaker, Bonasera, who is
petitioning Don Corleone, and ending with the Godfather, seen from
behind, framing the scene. This zoom, which lasts for about three
minutes, was shot with a computer-controlled zoom lens designed by
Tony Karp. The lens was also used in the making of
Silent Running.
The scene with Michael driving with McCluskey and Sollozzo avoided
the use of back-projection because of cost. Technicians moved
lights behind the car to create the illusion.
The cat in the opening scene used to hang around the studio, and
was simply dropped in Brando's lap by the propman at the last
minute.
Locations
Locations
around New York City and its environs were used for the film,
including the then-closed flagship store of Best & Company on Fifth Avenue
, which was dressed up and used for the scene in
which Pacino and Keaton are Christmas shopping. At least one
location in Los Angeles was used also (for the exterior of Woltz's
mansion), for which neither
Robert
Duvall nor
John Marley was
available; in some shots, it is possible to see that extras are
standing in for the two actors.
A scene with Pacino and Keaton was filmed in
the town of Ross,
California
.
The
Sicilian towns of Savoca
and Forza
d'Agrò
outside of Taormina were also used for exterior
locations. Interiors were shot at
Filmways Studio in New York.
A side
entrance to Bellevue
Hospital
was used for
Michael's confrontation with police Captain McCluskey. As of
2007, the steps and gate to the hospital were still there but
victim to neglect.
The
hospital interiors, when Michael visits his father there, were
filmed at the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary
on 14th
Street, in Manhattan, New York City.
The scene
in which Don Barzini was assassinated was filmed on the steps of
the New York State Supreme
Court building on Foley Square
in Manhattan, New York City.
The wedding scene (and the Corleone Family compound) was shot on
Longfellow Road in the Emerson Hill section of Staten Island. The
numerous Tudor homes on the block gave the impression that they
were part of the same "compound." Paramount built a Plexiglas
"stone wall" which traversed the street — the same wall where
Sonny smashed the camera.
The wedding scenes were filmed on an open backyard lot which is
still intact today. Many of the extras were local Italian-Americans
who were asked by Francis Ford Copolla to drink homemade wine,
enjoy the traditional Italian food, and participate in the scene as
though it were an actual wedding. Food was catered by "Demyans"
restaurant (which is no longer in existence). The wedding cake was
prepared by a bakery on Port Richmond Avenue.
Two churches were used to film the baptism scene.
The interior shots
were filmed at Old St. Patrick's
in New York. For the baptism,
Bach's
Passacaglia and Fugue
in C minor, BWV 582 was used, as were other Bach works for the
pipe organ.
The exterior scenes
following the baptism were filmed at Mount Loretto Church in
Pleasant
Plains
on Staten
Island
, New York. In 1973 much of Mount Loretto
Church was destroyed in a fire. Only the façade and steeple of the
original church remained, and were later incorporated into a new
structure that was built to replace the structure destroyed in the
fire.
The
funeral scene was filmed at Calvary Cemetery
in Woodside, Queens.
Critical reception
The film is greatly respected among international critics and the
public and is routinely listed as one of the
greatest films ever made.
It was voted greatest film of all time by
Entertainment Weekly, and is now
ranked as the second greatest film in American cinematic
history – behind
Citizen
Kane – by the
American Film Institute. In the 2002
Sight & Sound poll of
international critics,
The Godfather (along with
The
Godfather Part II) was ranked as the fourth best film of all
time. Both
The Godfather and
The Godfather Part
II were selected for preservation in the United States
National Film Registry in
1990 and 1993, respectively.
The
soundtrack's main
theme by
Nino
Rota was also critically acclaimed; the main theme ("
Speak Softly
Love") is well-known and widely used (see
Score Controversy for more
information).
Director
Stanley Kubrick believed
that
The Godfather was possibly the greatest movie ever
made, and without question the best cast.
Previous gangster movies had looked at the gangs from the
perspective of an outraged outsider. In contrast,
The
Godfather presents the gangster's perspective of the Mafia as
a response to corrupt society. Although the Corleone family is
presented as immensely rich and powerful, there is no hint of where
its money comes from, no scenes depicting prostitution, gambling,
loan sharking or other forms of racketeering. The setting of a
criminal counterculture allows for unapologetic gender
stereotyping, considered an important part of the film's appeal.
("You can act like a man!", Don Vito tells a weepy Johnny
Fontane.)
Real-life gangsters responded enthusiastically to the film.
Salvatore "Sammy the Bull"
Gravano, the former Underboss in the
Gambino crime family. stated: "I left
the movie stunned....I mean I floated out of the theater. Maybe it
was fiction, but for me, then, that was our life. It was
incredible. I remember talking to a multitude of guys,
made guys, who felt exactly the same way."
Differences from the novel
One of the primary parts of Puzo's novel which was not used for the
movie was the
flashback story of Vito
Corleone's earlier life, including the circumstances of his
emigration to America, his early family life, his murder of Don
Fanucci, and his rise in importance in the Mafia, all of which were
later used in
The Godfather
Part II.
Many subplots were trimmed in the transition from the printed page
to the screen, including:
- singer Johnny Fontane's misfortunes with women and his problems
with his voice;
- a teenaged Sonny's impulsive dabbling in street crime and his
utterly lacking the tact and coolheadedness possessed in such
abundance by his father;
- Sonny's mistress, Lucy Mancini was a substantial character in
the novel, but only appears briefly in the film. Additionally, the
novel states that Lucy Mancini was not pregnant by Sonny when she
moved to Las Vegas, thus leaving no room for her son, Vincent
Mancini of The Godfather Part
III.
- Dr. Jules Segal who was excised entirely from the film.
- Jack Woltz's increasing pedophilia;
- Kay Adams' home life and her brief separation from
Michael;
- Luca Brasi's demonic past;
- the
Corleone family's victorious rise to power in earlier New York gang
wars in which Don Corleone survives a previous assassination
attempt and Al Capone sends triggermen
from Chicago
in an unsuccessful attempt to aid a rival
gang;
- disgraced former police officer Al Neri's recruitment as a
Corleone hit man;
- Don Corleone's ingenious plan to bring Michael out of exile in
Sicily;
- the detailed savage attack on the two men who assaulted the
undertaker Bonasera's daughter, which was led by Paulie Gatto and
involved retainer thugs (which was only alluded to in the
film).
Connie's confrontation with Michael over Carlo's death is also
portrayed somewhat differently. Although she is initially
distraught, accusing Michael of executing her husband as revenge
for Sonny's brutal murder, in the book she apologizes to Michael a
few days later, claiming she was mistaken, apparently glad to be
rid of the abusive Carlo and that Sonny has been avenged. She also
marries again less than a year later.
Characters with smaller roles in the film than in the novel include
Johnny Fontane, Lucy Mancini, Rocco Lampone, and Al Neri (the last
two are reduced to non-speaking roles). Characters dropped in the
film adaptation besides Dr. Segal include Vito's terminally-ill
consigliere, Genco Abbandando (only spoken of, he appears in a
deleted scene featured in
The
Godfather Saga; he first appears on film in
The
Godfather II), family friend
Nino
Valenti, and Dr. Taza from Sicily. Also, in the book, Michael
and Kay have two sons, but in the movies they have a son and a
daughter.
The novel and film also differ on the fates of Michael's bodyguards
in Sicily, Fabrizio and Calo. The film has them both surviving
(Calo, in fact, appears in the third installment).
In the book, however,
it is stated that Calo dies along with Apollonia in the car
explosion, and Fabrizio, implicated as an accomplice in the
bombing, is shot and killed as one more victim in the famous
"baptism scene" after he is tracked down running a pizza parlor in Buffalo
. Fabrizio's murder was deleted from the film
but publicity photos of the scene exist. (He is later killed in a
completely different scene in
The Godfather Saga which was
deleted from
The Godfather Part II.)
The book's ending differs from the movie: whereas in the film Kay
suddenly realizes that Michael has become "like his family", the
drama is toned down in the book. She leaves Michael and goes to
stay with her parents. When Tom Hagen visits her there, he lets her
in on family secrets for which, according to him, he would be
killed should Michael find out what he has revealed. Kay returns to
Michael in an uneasy compromise; she loves him, holds herself apart
from the details of his work and attends Catholic mass daily with
Mama Corleone to pray for Michael's soul, just as Mama had done for
Vito.
Awards and honors
| Academy Awards |
| 1. Best Actor, Marlon Brando |
| 2. Best Picture, Albert S. Ruddy |
| 3. Best Adapted Screenplay,
Mario Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola |
| Golden Globe Awards |
| 1. Best Picture —
Drama |
| 2. Best Director, Francis
Ford Coppola |
| 3. Best Actor — Drama,
Marlon Brando |
| 4. Best Original Score,
Nino Rota |
| 5. Best Screenplay, Mario
Puzo, Francis Ford Coppola |
|
| BAFTA Awards |
| 1. Best Music, Nino Rota |
The Godfather won the
Academy
Awards for
Best
Picture,
Best
Writing for Francis Coppola and Mario Puzo, and
Best Actor in a Leading Role
for Marlon Brando, who declined to collect the award and sent
Native
American actress
Sacheen
Littlefeather to the Oscars in his place to explain his
reasons. The film had been nominated for eight other Academy
Awards, including Best Supporting Actor for Al Pacino, James Caan,
and Robert Duvall, Best Director, Best Costume Design, Best Film
Editing, and Best Sound Mixing. The film also had a Best Original
Score nomination but was disqualified when found out that Nino Rota
used another score.
The film won five
Golden Globes, one
Grammy, and numerous other
awards.
Score controversy
Nino Rota's score was removed at the last
minute from the list of 1973
Academy
Award nominees when it was discovered that he had used the
theme in
Eduardo De Filippo's
comedy
Fortunella. Although in the earlier film the theme
was played in a brisk, staccato and comedic style, the melody was
the same as the love theme from
The Godfather, and for
that reason was deemed ineligible for an Oscar. Despite this,
The Godfather Part II
won a 1974 Oscar for best original score, although it featured the
same love theme that made the 1972 score ineligible.
Current rankings
- The film is ranked as #1 on Metacritic's top 100 list, and in
the top 10 on Rotten Tomatoes'
all-time best list.
- In 2002, The Godfather and The Godfather Part II reached #2
in Channel 4's "100 Greatest Films"
poll.
- Entertainment Weekly named The Godfather the
greatest film ever made.
- The Godfather was voted in at #1 in Empire
Magazine's "500 Greatest Films Ever" poll in November
2008.
American Film Institute
Cinematic influence
Although many
films about gangsters
had been made before
The Godfather, Coppola's sympathetic
treatment of the Corleone family and their associates, and his
portrayal of mobsters as characters of considerable psychological
depth and complexity was hardly usual in the
genre. This was even more the case with
The
Godfather Part II, and the success of those two films,
critically, artistically and financially, opened the doors for more
and varied depictions of mobster life, including films such as
Martin Scorsese's
Goodfellas and TV series such as
David Chase's
The
Sopranos.
The image of the Mafia as being a feudal organization with the Don
being both the protector of the small fry and the collector of
obligations from them to repay his services, which
The
Godfather helped to popularize, is now an easily recognizable
cultural
trope, as is that of the Don's family
as a "royal family". (This has spread into the real world as well
cf.
John Gotti the "Dapper Don", and his
celebritized family.) This portrayal stands in contrast to the more
sordid reality of lower level Mafia "familial" entanglements, as
depicted in various post-
Godfather Mafia fare, such as
Scorsese's
Mean Streets and
Casino, and also to the
grittier
hard-boiled
pre-
Godfather films.
In the film
Analyze This,
which starred Robert De Niro and Billy Crystal, many references are
made both directly and indirectly to the
Godfather. One
dream scene is almost a shot by shot replica of the attempted
assassination of Vito Corleone (Crystal playing the Don and De Niro
playing Fredo). In the comedy
The Freshman, Marlon Brando
plays a role reminiscent of Don Corleone. And one of those most
unlikely homages to this film came in 2004, when the PG-rated,
animated family film
Shark Tale
was released with a storyline that nodded at this and other movies
about the Mafia. Similarly,
Rugrats
in Paris, based on a
Nickelodeon children's show, began
with an extended parody of
The Godfather.
The
Indian film
Sarkar, directed by
Ram Gopal Varma, with
Amitabh Bachan in the lead role as a "Don"
and his son
Abhishek Bachchan as
the equivalent of Michael, is modeled on
The Godfather
with due credits appearing at the beginning of the film.
In the DVD commentary for
Star Wars Episode
III: Revenge of the Sith,
George
Lucas stated that the interwoven scenes of
Anakin Skywalker slaying separatist leaders
and
Palpatine announcing the beginning of
the Galactic Empire was an homage to the christening and
assassination sequence in
The Godfather.
Adaptations
Chronological versions
In , Coppola edited
The Godfather and
The Godfather
Part II together for TV, putting the scenes in chronological
order and adding some previously unseen footage, but also toning
down the
violence,
sex,
and
profanity. It is rated TV-14. This
version of the story was called
The Godfather Saga. In
1981, Paramount released the
Godfather Epic box set which
combined parts I & II in chronological order, again with
additional scenes not shown in theaters. In 1992, Coppola would
again re-edit all three
Godfather movies (
The
Godfather,
The Godfather Part II and
The
Godfather Part III) in chronological order dubbed
The
Godfather Trilogy 1901-1980. It was released on VHS and
laserdisc in 1993 but has yet (as of 2008) to appear on DVD. The
total run time for this version is 583 minutes (9 hours, 43
minutes). This version spanned five VHS tapes and incorporated new
previously deleted scenes that had not been seen in
The
Godfather Saga. This set also included a sixth VHS tape: "The
Godfather Family: A Look Inside" a making-of documentary.
Additional scenes
None of these releases contains all the additional scenes in one
package. The
Saga contains scenes not in the
Epic
or
Trilogy, the
Epic contains scenes not in the
Saga or
Trilogy, and the
Trilogy
contains scenes not in the
Saga or the
Epic. Fans
have longed for a complete release of the entire series though
Francis Ford Coppola has stated that the films were meant to be
seen in their original form and has not agreed (as of 2008) to a
chronological release.
2001 DVD release
The Godfather was released on
DVD for
the first time on October 9, as part of a DVD package called
The Godfather DVD Collection. The collection contained all
three films with commentary from Francis Ford Coppola and a bonus
disc that featured a 73-minute documentary from 1991 titled
The
Godfather Family: A Look Inside, plus a 1971 documentary. The
package also contained deleted footage, including the additional
scenes originally contained in
The Godfather Saga;
"Francis Coppola's Notebook" a look inside a notebook the director
kept with him at all times during the production of the film;
rehearsal footage; and video segments on Gordon Willis's
cinematography, Nino Rota's and Carmine Coppola's music, Francis
Ford Coppola, locations and Mario Puzo's screenplays. The DVD also
held a Corleone family tree, a "Godfather" timeline, and footage of
the Academy Award acceptance speeches.
The restoration was confirmed by Francis Ford Coppola during a
question-and-answer session for
The Godfather Part III, when he
said that he had just seen the new transfer and it was
"terrific".
The Coppola Restoration
After a careful restoration of the aging first two movies,
The
Godfather movies were released on DVD and
Blu-ray on September 23, under the title
The Godfather: The Coppola Restoration. The work was done
by
Robert A. Harris of the Film Preserve. The Blu-ray
box set (four discs) includes high-definition extra features on the
restoration and film. They are included on disc 5 of the DVD box
set (five discs).
Other extras are ported over from Paramount's 2001 DVD release.
There are slight differences between the repurposed extras on the
DVD and Blu-ray sets, with the HD box having more content.
Paramount lists the new (HD) extra features as:
- Godfather World
- The Masterpiece That Almost Wasn't
- ...when the shooting stopped
- Emulsional Rescue Revealing The Godfather
- The Godfather on the Red Carpet
- Four Short Films on The Godfather
- The Godfather vs. The Godfather, Part II
- Cannoli
- Riffing on the Riffing
- Clemenza
The new DVD boxset was released on June 2, in Europe. It has been
rerated as a "15" by the BBFC. It is unclear whether a
chronological box set will be released.
In the Coppola restoration on Blu-ray (2008), the end credit theme
music for
The Godfather Part II is missing the final chord
(approximately 10 seconds) from the film proper. This missing chord
would be located immediately before the restoration credit music
begins. Robert A. Harris has not publicly commented about
this.
In popular culture
The Godfather along with the other films in the trilogy,
had a strong impact on the public at large. Don Vito Corleone's
line "I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse" was voted as the
second most memorable line in cinema history in
AFI's 100 Years...
100 Movie Quotes
by the
American Film
Institute. The line actually originates in the French novel
Le Père Goriot, by
Honoré de Balzac, where
Vautrin tells
Eugène that he is "making him an
offer that he cannot refuse".
Reports from Mafia trials and confessions suggest that Mafia
families began a "real-life" tradition of paying respect to the
family Don by kissing his ring, in imitation of the ending scene of
the movie. There is no evidence of this custom being mentioned
before the movie.
The scene in which a delivery is made of a pair of pants and bullet
proof vest wrapped around a fish is explained to be an old Sicilian
message, "Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes". This expression has
made it into widespread American parlance.
When Michael proposes a hit on McCluskey and Sollozzo he says.
"It's not personal, Sonny. It's strictly business." This line has
also been much repeated, including in both of the following
Godfather movies.
An indication of the continuing influence of
The Godfather
and its sequels can be gleaned from the many references to it which
have appeared in every medium of popular culture in the decades
since the film's initial release. That these
homages,
quotations, visual references,
satires and
parodies continue to pop up even now shows
clearly the film's enduring impact. In the television show
The
Sopranos, Tony Soprano's topless bar is named Bada Bing after
the line in
The Godfather when Sonny says, "You've gotta
get up close like this and bada-bing! You blow their brains all
over your nice Ivy League suit."
Several television shows have contained references to the film,
including the British film
Twin
Town,
Arrested Development,
Yes Dear,
Seinfeld,
The King of Queens,
Mr. Show with Bob and
David,
That '70s
Show, and
Harvey Birdman, Attorney at
Law, and even the popular kid's shows
Hannah Montana and
Rugrats. The
Simpsons in patricular contains numerous references to
The Godfather, including one scene in the episode
Strong Arms of the Ma that parodies
the Sonny-Carlo streetfight scene, with
Marge Simpson beating a mugger in front of an
animated version of the same New York streetscape, including using
the lid of a trash can during the fight.
On the final season of
Martin, Cole
imitates the Godfather says "Martino, Gino, where the bambino?".
The
Warner Bros. animated show
Animaniacs featured several
segments called "
Goodfeathers," with
pigeons spoofing characters from various
gangster films. One of the characters is "The
Godpigeon", an obvious parody of Brando's portrayal of the
Godfather; however, he speaks in complete
gibberish.
Bay Area rap artist
Mac Dre used the tune of
"The Godfather Waltz" as the beat for his song "Mafioso".
John Belushi appeared in a
Saturday Night Live sketch as
Vito Corleone in a therapy session trying to
properly express his inner feelings towards the
Tattaglia Family, who, in addition to
muscling in on his territory, "also, they shot my son Santino 56
times".
Video game
In March 2006, a video game version of
The Godfather was
released by
Electronic Arts. Before
his death,
Marlon Brando provided
voice work for Vito; however, owing to poor sound quality from
Brando's failing health, only parts of the recordings could be
used. A sound-alike's voice had to be used in the "missing parts".
James Caan,
Robert Duvall and
Abe
Vigoda lent their voices and likenesses as well, and several
other
Godfather cast members had their likeness in the
game. However,
Al Pacino's likeness and
voice (
Michael Corleone) was not in
the game as Al Pacino sold his likeness and voice exclusively for
use in the
Scarface video game.
Francis Ford Coppola said in April 2005 that he was not informed
and did not approve of Paramount allowing the game's production,
and openly criticized the move.
References
Notes
- Kenneth Turan, Robert Towne's Hollywood Without Heroes,
New York Times (November 27, 1988)
- American Film Institute "Citizen Kane Stands the test of Time"
- Frayling, Christopher, 1981. In Spaghetti Westerns. Routledge Kegan
& Paul. p. 215. ISBN 0-7100-0503-2. Google Book Search.
Retrieved on January 6, 2009.
- The Kid Stays in the
Picture (2002), documentary film about Evans' life
- The Godfather DVD Collection documentary A Look
Inside, [2001]
- The Godfather DVD commentary featuring Francis Ford
Coppola, [2001]
- The Godfather DVD Collection documentary A Look
Inside, [2001]
- Sofia
Coppola played roles in the later Godfather movies. In Part
II, she plays a nameless immigrant girl on the ship that
brings Vito Corleone to New York. In Part III, she played
the major speaking role of Michael Corleone's daughter
Mary.
- The Godfathers' Stats
- "Doing the impossible - Part 1 - The Godfather" - - Art
and the Zen of Design
- "Doing the impossible - Part 4 - The final result" - - Art
and the Zen of Design
- THE GODFATHER: Scene Locations
- Photo of Bellevue side entrance
- NY State Supreme Court steps
- Where was Vito Corleone buried in "The
Godfather"?
- Michael Herr for Vanity Fair "He watched The
Godfather again the night before and was reluctantly suggesting for
the tenth time that it was possibly the greatest movie ever made
and certainly the best-cast."
- De Stefano, George, (2007) An Offer We Can't Refuse: The Mafia in the Mind of
America, p. 68. ISBN 0865479623.
- De Stefano, p. 119.
- George De Stefano, p. 114.
- The New York Times: Best Pictures
- Jonny Greenwood's 'Blood' score disqualified by
AMPAS
- 100 Greatest Films: Channel 4 Film
- Empire Features
- CBSnews.com
- The
Godfather Trilogy Website
- DVD review: 'The Godfather Collection' on DVD
Spin Doctor
- The Godfather DVD Collection [2001]
- 'Godfather: Coppola Restoration' on Sept. 23 on
DVD Spin Doctor
- The Godfather Trilogy: Remastered Collection on
Amazon.com UK
- The Godfather Trilogy: Remastered Collection - Limited
Edition Steelbook on Amazon.com UK
- "Frankly my dear..." named number one movie quote, ABC
News (Australia) Online (June 23, 2005)
- Scott Thill, "Pillaging the Cartoon Universe,"
Salon.com, May 29, 2003.
Further reading
- Burr, T, The 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, New
York: Time-Life Books ISBN 1-883013-68-2. Lists The
Godfather as "the greatest film of all time".
- Cowie, Peter, The Godfather
Book, London: Faber and Faber, 1997
- Nourmand, Tony, The Godfather in Pictures, London:
Boxtree, 2007 ISBN 978-07522-2637-8
External links