Description
Based on the bestselling novel by Mario Puzo (who co-wrote the screenplay with director Francis Ford Coppola), THE GODFATHER tells an epic tale of Mafia life in America during the 1940s and '50s. Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) is the family patriarch balancing a love of his family with an ambitious criminal instinct. At the wedding of the Don's daughter, Connie (Talia Shire), youngest son Michael (Al Pacino) is reunited with his family. A subsequent assassination attempt leaves the Don too ill to run the family business, forcing Michael and Sonny (James Caan), with the help of consigliere Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall), to lead the Corleones into a vendetta-filled war with other mob families. Violent revenge ensues as the family tries to change from its old criminal ways into legitimacy.
Coppola's certified masterpiece, which won three Oscars (including Best Picture) and spawned an Oscar-winning sequel (THE GODFATHER PART II), set a new screen standard for merging blood-soaked violence with intimate family drama. In the process, Coppola single-handedly established the Mafia as an industry in film and television (GOODFELLAS, THE SOPRANOS). Featuring truly unforgettable performances, including the Best Actor-winning Brando, the riveting Pacino, and an unexpectedly dramatic Diane Keaton, THE GODFATHER is the pinnacle of Hollywood cinema in the 1970s.
Synopsis
Based on Mario Puzo's best-selling novel, THE GODFATHER is Francis Ford Coppola's Mafia masterpiece. The film tells the story of the powerful Corleone family, headed by patriarch Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando). Coppola sets a new standard for cinematic violence intercut with Italian-American family life. Al Pacino, in his breakout role, is riveting as youngest son Michael, a war hero turned ruthless gangster. The musical score by Nino Rota along with such classic lines as, "I made him an offer he couldn't refuse," make this epic mobster movie unforgettable.
Entertainment Weekly, p.67: 05/31/1996 Rating: AChicago Sun-Times, p.5: 03/16/1997 "...Gordon Willis' cinematography is celebrated for its darkness; it is rich, atmospheric, expressive..."Premiere, p.11: 12/01/2003 "[A] superlative achievement....[With] Gordon Willis's exquisitely dark Technicolor cinematography..."Total Film, p.5: 03/01/2004 "[Brando] astounded just about everyone with his performanceEntertainment Weekly, p.31: 07/16/2004 "Brando turns from Method to myth, with an Oscar-winning performance so calculatedly eccentric and full of inspired surprises that his character stands apart from all the others..."
CAST
| Robert Duvall | American Actor/Director |
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| Al Pacino | Oscar winning actor, THE GODFATHER, SCENT OF A WOMAN |
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| James Caan | American Director, actor, THE GODFATHER (1972) |
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| Diane Keaton | American actress/director, LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR |
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| Marlon Brando | Oscar winning american actor/director, THE GODFATHER (1972) |
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| Talia Shire | American Actress, ROCKY (1976) |
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| Al Lettieri | Character Actor/Producer |
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| Julie Gregg | |
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| Alex Rocco | American Supporting Actor |
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| John Marley | American Actor |
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| Franco Citti | Actor |
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| Gianni Russo | Actor/"The Godfather" |
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| Joe Spinell | American Actor |
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| Abe Vigoda | Detective Phil Fish of TV's "Barney Miller" |
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| Morgana King | Actress/"The Godfather" |
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| Saro Urzi | Italian Actor |
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| Angelo Infanti | Actor |
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| Vito Scotti | TV/Film Actor |
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| Richard Castellano | American Character Actor |
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| Richard Conte | American Actor |
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| Tony Giorgio | Actor, THE GODFATHER (1972) |
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| Rudy Bond | Character Actor |
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| John Cazale | American Actor |
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| Sterling Hayden | American actor, DR. STRANGELOVE (1964) |
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| Richard Bright | American Character Actor |
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| Sofia Coppola | American Actress/Screenwriter/Director |
CREW
| Screenwriter | Francis Ford Coppola (American Director, THE GODFATHER SAGA) |
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| Editor | William H. Reynolds (Editor, AUTHOR! AUTHOR! (1982)) |
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| Costume Designer | Anna Hill Johnstone |
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| Special Effects | A. D. Flowers (Special Visual Effects) |
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| Source Writer | Mario Puzo (Oscar-winning novelist, screenwriter, THE GODFATHER) |
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| Music Director | Carlo Savina (Italian Composer) |
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| Composer | Nino Rota (Composer, AMARCORD, THE GODFATHER) |
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| Set Designer | Philip Smith (Set Decorator) |
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| Art Director | Warren Clymer (Production Designer) |
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| Director of Photography | Gordon Willis (American cinematographer) |
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| Special Effects | Sass Bedig (Special Effects) |
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| Production Designer | Dean Tavoularis (Production Designer) |
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| Editor | Peter Zinner (Oscar winning American Editor/Director, THE DEER HUNTER) |
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| Special Effects | Joe Lombardi (Special Effects) |
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| Makeup | Philip Rhodes (Makeup Designer) |
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| Producer | Albert S. Ruddy (American Producer) |
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| Special Effects | Dick Smith (Hollywood Make-Up and Effects, THE EXORCIST, LITTLE BIG MAN) |
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| Stunts | Paul Baxley (Stunt Coordinator/Second Unit Director) |
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Video: Color
Original release:
177 min
, English (Original)
Weight factor: 1 item(s)
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| Area |
Runtime |
Box |
| USA |
177 min |
(normal) |
| Rating |
R (MPAA)
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Catalog #: 3994269
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UPC: 097360756647 |
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Release NotesBlu-ray Disc Features: Region [unknown] Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English, French, Spanish Dolby True HD 5.1 - English, French, Spanish Subtitles - English, French, Spanish
Title NotesTheatrical release: March 11, 1972
THE GODFATHER is number three on the American Film Institute's list of America's 100 Greatest Movies.
THE GODFATHER was added to the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1990.
The baby in the baptism scene is the director's daughter, Sofia Coppola, who later starred in THE GODFATHER, PART 3. The scene was shot at the St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan's Chinatown. (Also, part of Martin Scorsese's MEAN STREETS was filmed in the cathedral's cemetery.)
Singer Vic Damone was originally cast in the role of Hollywood crooner Johnny Fontane, eventually played by Al Martino. The character is supposedly based on Frank Sinatra.
Marlon Brando was a no-show at the 1972 Academy Awards and sent a stand-in, an "Apache" woman, who came with a 15-page speech to read if the star won. Howard Koch, the show's producer, said that if she went over 40 seconds, he would forcibly remove her from the stage. When Brando's name was called, the woman, Sacheen Littlefeather, explained that Brando would not accept the award, as he was protesting the treatment of American Indians by the film industry. The speech met with a mixed reaction, and certainly left most of the audience stunned. Jane Fonda told the press, "I think what he did was wonderful." Actor Michael Caine said, "If you're going to make a humanitarian gesture, I think a man who makes $2 million a picture should at least give half of it to the Indians." Coppola's response was "I was so sure I was going to win Best Director." (He didn't.)
The film was shot on location in New York and Sicily. The estimated budget was $6 million. The film was originally 177 minutes but was cut by six minutes when it was released theatrically. The film was released with its two companion pieces on video as part of the reedited 450-minute THE GODFATHER SAGA.
Jack Woltz's horse, which ends up decapitated in his bed, is named Khartoum.
Louis Malle did the English-French translation of the film for its release in France.
Marlon Brando was only 47 when he played Vito Corleone, whose age ranged from 53 to 62 in the film.
Titles
| Title |
Category |
Language |
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Mario Puzo's The Godfather
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Also Known As |
English |
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