What’s odd about this new version is that Coppola doesn’t even take the opportunity to fix some things that were wrong with his original cut. It's only our familiarity with the movie that saves us from getting completely lost. In one minute Michael is laying on his hospital bed, but in the next we see him arriving in Sicily. This is as heartfelt work as any the director has ever done, one that could only have be made by someone who has loved and lost deeply.Ĭoppola’s new edition is a less meandering film, but it still doesn’t always makes sense. The best sign of how well the third film works is that despite all of its flaws, the love that Coppola bestows on his own daughter through his alter ego (Michael) is palpable throughout. In a nutshell, the audience absolutely had to fall in love with with Mary.Īnd yet, maybe it was her father’s obvious love for Sofia that allowed him to create such an affecting result, especially with the film’s conclusion. Sofia had to make a convincing case that Vincent ( Andy Garcia) would leave Bridget Fonda in the rearview mirror and risk everything for her. It's a part in which any actress, no matter how experienced, would have had her work cut out for her. There's still a lack of believability in how Michael’s son goes from novice singer to leading an international opera ensemble in no more than a couple of months, and there's still a problem with Mary, as played by Coppola’s daughter Sofia. The film's weaknesses are the same in both editions. Maybe Coppola changed the focus with this third film because by then Michael had lost most of those close to him, but it seems to me that Coppola simply tried to make a different movie based on his own life experiences at that point in time. While the main theme for the first two movies was the deep bond between siblings and the occasional deep hate that could arise from them, in this third feature it's the even deeper love between a parent and a child that fuels the story, forcing Michael to finally try what he always promised: to leave a world he swore never to join but where he always seemed more than a bit comfortable. Moreover, there is a crucial difference between the third "Godfather" film and its two predecessors. The plot in the third film is also advanced more by way of dialogue than by the action itself, with a now very talkative Michael Corleone. Still, both editions of the third "Godfather" movie have a different feel than Part One and Part Two. The third film is more of a Shakespearean tragedy in which the subtle character reactions of the first two films are a distant memory (just compare Don Corleone’s response upon learning about Sonny’s death to Michael’s when he goes through the same ordeal, or even to that of the woman in Sicily crying hysterically over the murder of Don Tomassino). The film opened with a party where the Don in turn would listen to his guests’ requests, and it ended with the murders of several of his enemies. The original cut of “The Godfather, Part III” was designed with a similar structure to those of its predecessors. But Coppola inexplicably eliminates some memorable moments and lines as well (“Name the person and I will name my price,” or “You were so loved Don Tomassino, why was I so feared?”). As a result, he hurries the pace and gets to the point quicker, a strategy that works well with the Immobiliare Corporation takeover (the MacGuffin and least interesting part of this feature). Instead of aiming to bolster and enrich his film with previously deleted scenes, Coppola simply repositions some of them and takes out several lines from what is the most dialogue-laden, least contemplative entry in his trilogy. The first thing to say about “Coda” is that represents the exact opposite approach to Coppola’s own “ Apocalypse Now /Redux” re-release from years past. But fate and circumstance pull him back in, as he ends up paying the steepest of prices in what director Coppola once described as “the nightmare of nightmares.” The third movie in the "Godfather" saga deals with Michael’s last shot to take his family away from the world of crime.
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