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Coda the death of michael corleone
Coda the death of michael corleone













He's searching for that move that will allow his mind and soul some peace. And yet Michael is also a smart man who knows the futility of some of his choices, especially as he watches his children pull away from him and his business decisions backfire. It’s a film about a man constantly fighting the ghosts of his past, whether he’s trying to reunite with Kay ( Diane Keaton) or basically dismantling his criminal organization. You can feel the weight of his life on his shoulders. The scene in which he confesses to ordering the death of Fredo is stunning, and there’s a bone-deep sense of tragedy that he carries throughout the movie. I found Pacino’s work this time to be among his career-best.

CODA THE DEATH OF MICHAEL CORLEONE MOVIE

The cuts in this version make it feel more somber than I remembered, something reflected in Pacino’s performance (although that could be by virtue of being personally much closer to his age than as a teenager when the movie came out), and that material stands out instead of the admittedly dull stuff about politics, crime, and religion. The oft-quoted line from the film is about “being pulled back in,” referring to the criminal underworld that Michael Corleone is trying to leave behind, but it also refers to the regrets and memories he can’t escape, and the doomed tone of the entire film.

coda the death of michael corleone

“I had a whole different destiny planned.” Even more than the original version, “The Godfather Coda” feels like a film about regret. There are tweaks here and there-some notable-but the biggest change to come is the ending, which has been tightened and then cuts earlier with an on-screen quote that I’m not fully convinced works. From there, “The Godfather Coda” plays out in ways that will be familiar to fans of the 1990 version. Everyone who really matters is at that party, which happened much later in the original cut. And then it dives into an extended sequence that mirrors the wedding from the first film, while also getting Andy Garcia’s Vincent involved more quickly. Instead of dragging its feet, “The Godfather Coda” opens with Corleone doing business to legitimize his family and reputation.

coda the death of michael corleone

Gone is the wishy-washy opening segment of the film that connects it more directly to “ The Godfather, Part II,” as this new version opens in Italy with Michael Corleone ( Al Pacino) meeting with Archbishop Gilday ( Donal Donnelly) to discuss his contribution of $600 million to the Vatican, followed immediately by the after-party.

coda the death of michael corleone coda the death of michael corleone

The biggest change that Coppola makes is to get right to the heart of the story, and it's a drastic improvement. Overall, this version feels even more elegiac-a true coda instead of just another part of the same story. In this interesting endeavor, he hasn’t radically altered the bulk of the film in a way that feels designed to appease critics-his daughter’s performance hasn’t been cut, for example-and yet “The Godfather Coda” does seem different, thanks largely to how he opens and closes the film. The director has a long history of recutting his work with alternate editions of films like with “ Apocalypse Now: Final Cut” and “ The Cotton Club Encore”. The legacy of “ The Godfather, Part III” has largely been reduced to two statements: “It’s not as good as the first two” & “ Sofia Coppola isn’t good in it.” Neither of these declarations are false, but they turn what was always at least a solid film into a footnote, something director Francis Ford Coppola seeks to correct with this month’s “The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone,” a new version of the 1990 film that’s being released in theaters today and on Blu-ray and VOD on December 8 th.













Coda the death of michael corleone