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The Godfather (1972) - movie plots

The Godfather (1972)

User Rating
99%
(795 votes)
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Directed by
Francis Ford Coppola

Written by
Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo

Cast
Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Richard S. Castellano, Robert Duvall [more]


Release Date
Mar 15, 1972 (USA)
DVD Release Date
• R1: Oct 9, 2001
• R2: 8 Oct 2001

Budget $6,000,000

MPAA Rating
R

Running Time
2 hours, 55 minutes

Country USA

Studio Paramount

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• The Godfather
• Mario Puzo's The Godfather (1972)
• Der Pate (1972)



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 Synopses for The Godfather (1972)
1.Don Vito Corleone is the head of a New York Mafia "family". Problems arise when a gangster supported by another Mafia family, Sollozzo, announces his intentions to start selling drugs all over New York. Don Vito hates the idea of drugs, and he is quite happy with the gambling/protection etc. that make him money, so an attempt is made on his life. Sollozzo then kidnaps one of Don Vitos advisors, and tries to make him force Don Vitos son to agree to sell drugs, but the plan goes wrong when Sollozzo finds out that Don Vito is still alive.   
64.090909090909%
(88 votes)

2.Based on the best-selling novel by Mario Puzo (who cowrote the screenplay with director Francis Ford Coppola), THE GODFATHER is 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), a decorated war veteran, is reunited with his family. After an assassination attempt leaves the Godfather too ill to run the family business, sons Michael and Sonny (James Caan), with the help of consigliere Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall), lead the Corleones into a vendetta-filled war with the other mob families. Violent revenge ensues as the family tries to change from its old criminal ways into legitimacy. Diane Keaton, in a stark departure from her usual comedic roles, plays Kay, the long-suffering wife of Michael Corleone. Brilliant casting, music, and storytelling help make THE GODFATHER a classic.
  
61.204819277108%
(83 votes)

3.

Generally acknowledged as a bona fide classic, this Francis Ford Coppola film is one of those rare experiences that feels perfectly right from beginning to end--almost as if everyone involved had been born to participate in it. Based on Mario Puzo's bestselling novel about a Mafia dynasty, Coppola's Godfather extracted and enhanced the most universal themes of immigrant experience in America: the plotting-out of hopes and dreams for one's successors, the raising of children to carry on the good work, etc. In the midst of generational strife during the Vietnam years, the film somehow struck a chord with a nation fascinated by the metamorphosis of a rebellious son (Al Pacino) into the keeper of his father's dream. Marlon Brando played against Puzo's own conception of patriarch Vito Corleone, and time has certainly proven the actor correct. The rest of the cast, particularly James Caan, John Cazale, and Robert Duvall as the rest of Vito's male brood--all coping with how to take the mantle of responsibility from their father--is seamless and wonderful. --Tom Keogh
  
63.013698630137%
(73 votes)

4.THE GREATEST MASTERPIECES IN CINEMA HISTORY AVAILABLE IN ONE COLLECTOR'S GIFT SET! THE GODFATHER MOVIES COME TO DVD THIS FALL! Features: The Godfather The Godfather Part II The Godfather Part III Plus A Bonus Disc Containing Over 3 Hours of Exclusive Features THE GODFATHER (Disc 1) 1972, 175 Min) Winner of 3 Academy Awards®! Starring: Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton and Talia Shire < THE GODFATHER PART II (Disc 2 & 3) (1974, 200 Min) Winner of 6 Academy Awards®! Starring: Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Robert DeNiro, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire and Lee Strasberg THE GODFATHER PART III (Disc 4) (1990, 160 Min) Starring: Al Pacino, Andy Garcia, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire and Sofia Coppola THE GODFATHER BONUS MATERIALS (Disc 5) A Documentary on the Making of the Films Additional Scenes Cast Rehearsals Cinematography of The Godfather Filming Locations Featurette - Never-Before-Seen Storyboards - Never-Before-Seen The Music of The Godfather - Never-Before-Seen The Corleone Family Tree - Never-Before-Seen The Godfather Historical Timeline and Much More...   
57.777777777778%
(72 votes)

5.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.   
63.125%
(64 votes)

6.Despite making many other distinguished films in his long, wandering career, Francis Ford Coppola will always be known as the man who directed The Godfather trilogy, a series that has dominated and defined their creator in a way perhaps no other director can understand. Coppola has never been able to leave them alone, whether returning after 15 years to make a trilogy of the diptych, or re-editing the first two films into chronological order for a separate video release as The Godfather Saga. The films are an Italian-American Shakespearian cycle: they tell a tale of a vicious mobster and his extended personal and professional families (once the stuff of righteous moral comeuppance), and they dared to present themselves with an epic sweep and an unapologetically tragic tone. Murder, it turned out, was a serious business.

The first film remains a towering achievement, brilliantly cast and conceived. The entry of Michael Corleone into the family business, the transition of power from his father, the ruthless dispatch of his enemies--all this is told with an assurance that is breathtaking to behold. And it turned out to be merely prologue; two years later The Godfather, Part II balanced Michael's ever-greater acquisition of power and influence during the fall of Cuba with the story of his father's own youthful rise from immigrant slums. The stakes were higher, the story's construction more elaborate and the isolated despair at the end wholly earned. (Has there ever been a cinematic performance greater than Al Pacino's Michael, so smart and ambitious, marching through the years into what he knows is his own doom with eyes open and hungry?) The Godfather, Part III was mostly written off as an attempted cash-in but it is a wholly worthy conclusion, less slow than autumnally patient and almost merciless in the way it brings Michael's past sins crashing down around him even as he tries to redeem himself. --Bruce Reid, Amazon.com

On the DVD: Contained in a tasteful slipcase, the three movies come individually packaged, with the second instalment spread across two discs. The anamorphic transfers are acceptable without being spectacular, with Part 3 looking best of all. Francis Ford Coppola--obviously a DVD fan--provides an exhaustive and enthusiastic commentary for all three movies, although awkwardly these have to be accessed from the Set Up menu. The fifth bonus disc is a real goldmine: the major feature is a 70-minute documentary covering all three productions, which includes fascinating early screen-test footage. There's also a 1971 making-of featurette about the first instalment, plus several shorter pieces with Coppola, Mario Puzo and others talking about specific aspects of the series, including a treasurable recording of composer Nino Rota performing the famous theme. Another section contains all the Oscar-acceptance speeches and Coppola's introduction to the TV edit, plus a whole raft of additional scenes that were inserted in the 1977 re-edited version. Text pieces include a chronology, a Corleone family tree and biographies of cast and crew. Overall, this is a handsome and valuable package that does justice to these wonderful movies. --Mark Walker

  



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