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Ten Things You Didn't Know About The Godfather Trilogy
AMC TV ^ | 11/25/2010

Posted on 11/25/2010 6:22:07 PM PST by nickcarraway

Everyone knows everything about the Godfather trilogy. Its quotability, alone, is astounding: legions of fans know every line, plot, subplot, and sub-subplot and can mimic the mannerisms of Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, and Robert De Niro. But as familiar as the trilogy may be, there are still plenty of nuggets of Godfather goodness that may surprise you. Here are ten things you may not have known about Francis Ford Coppola's epic triptych.

1. Marlon Brando, James Caan, and Robert Duvall enjoyed mooning the cast and crew. The trio of actors engaged in a mooning competition during the course of the Godfather shoot. Brando pulled the ultimate moon on the 44th day of filming, pulling down his pants in the midst of a giant wedding-reception scene. For his dubious valor, he received a belt buckle with the engraving "Mighty Moon King."

2. Actors researched their roles by hanging out with real mobsters. Brando prepared for his role by meeting with a Bufalino gangster. Pacino, Caan, and Duvall have all acknowledged meetings with mobsters, as well, with Caan becoming especially familiar with Carmine "The Snake" Persico and noting "how they're always touching themselves. Thumbs in the belt. Touching the jaw. Adjusting the shirt. Gripping the crotch."

3. Don Vito Corleone's cat-petting in the opening scene was improvised. When we first meet Don Corleone in the opening scene, he's sitting at his desk with a gray cat in his lap, stroking away as he listens to a plea for help. The effective image was, in fact, purely serendipitous: when a stray cat wandered onto the set, Brando incorporated it into the scene. Another act of improvisation can be found in a later scene: the orange-peel fangs that Corleone bares at his grandson were entirely Brando's own idea.

4. Brando was the studio's last choice for the role of Don Vito Corleone. Executives refused to consider Brando for the role of Don Corleone, given the difficult actor's reputation. Among the other actors considered were Laurence Olivier, George C. Scott, Anthony Quinn, and Ernest Borgnine. But at the insistence of Coppola and Godfather author Mario Puzo, Brando was finally hired on the condition that he work only for a percentage of the profits and that he agree to a screen test -- his first since 1953.

5. The Godfather script was offered to numerous directors before Coppola. Elia Kazan, Arthur Penn, Costa-Gravas, and Richard Brooks are a few of the filmmakers Paramount first approached to adapt Puzo's best-selling novel. The studio finally agreed to offer the job to Coppola, partly because of the director's Italian heritage, and Coppola, whose first impression of Puzo's novel was negative, initially declined. Eventually, though, he agreed, and the rest is history.

6. Michael Corleone was the toughest role to cast. Coppola saw Pacino in a Broadway play and instantly knew he had found his Michael Corleone, but at the time Pacino was an unknown and didn't perform well when he tested for the role. The studio insisted on casting a big name, like Warren Beatty or Jack Nicholson. But options waned, and with the start date looming the studio caved to Coppola's wishes.

7. Coppola didn't want to direct a sequel. Coppola was burned out by The Godfather and resisted the sequel. "It sounded like a tacky spin-off," he later told Playboy. After much coaxing, he agreed on the condition that producer Robert Evans, who had hounded him during The Godfather, stay out of his hair and that he get to name the movie The Godfather: Part II.

8. Al Pacino made peanuts in The Godfather. Given his obscurity at the time, Pacino earned a relatively paltry $35,000 for the first film. However, after the success of The Godfather, as well as lauded performances in Scarecrow and Serpico (for which he received an Oscar nomination), he landed a $600,000 salary for The Godfather: Part II, as well as a 10 percent cut of the movie's adjusted-gross income.

9. Coppola didn't want to cast his sister, Talia Shire, as Connie Corleone Rizzi. Coppola cast various family members in minor roles but was against casting his sister, Talia Shire, as Connie. He thought she was too beautiful to play a woman who was supposed to be homely. But Shire's screen test came off brilliantly, and Coppolla relented, not wanting to deny her the opportunity of a lifetime.

10. The Italian-American Civil Rights League protested The Godfather. At the time, the Italian-American Civil Rights League, which held a lot of sway in New York City, objected to the movie's negative depiction of Italians. As a concession, a producer offered to donate some of the proceeds to the league's hospital fund and to give some of the league's members small roles in the movie. But the offer was withdrawn after negative press.


TOPICS: History; Miscellaneous; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: cinema; godfather; mafia
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To: re_nortex

I had forgotten the name he was called in “The Great Gatsby” although I knew he was based on a real guy.

I will never forget his cuff links.


41 posted on 11/25/2010 7:30:21 PM PST by yarddog
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To: re_nortex

GF 1 & 2 were made just 4 years apart. The characters for 2 were well known and liked by the movie goers. It was easy for the audience to pickup the story with #2, which in turn enhanced the appeal of 1.

GF 3 was made 20+ after 1 & 2. Almost an entirely new cast.

Coming so far after the first two movies, it was difficult for the movie going audience to connect with the characters as they had in 1 & 2. Having said that, the third installment was not up to the level of 1 & 2. The Godfather growing old was not as compelling a story as the choir boy being converted to a hardened gangland boss. Don’t get me started on Sofia Coppola in #3. That was just a mistake.


42 posted on 11/25/2010 7:33:19 PM PST by Delta Dawn (The whole truth.)
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To: yarddog; re_nortex; nickcarraway
Shortly after the first two Godfather films. Francis Coppola wrote a screen adaptation of The Great Gatsby which was eventually made with Robert Redford into a very dull film.
43 posted on 11/25/2010 7:33:25 PM PST by Borges
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To: nickcarraway
You forgot to ping ME? ;)

I do believe, however, that John Cassavetes (who was considered for the role as a compromise if Coppola couldn't get Pacino) would have been a great choice wre it not for his age.

44 posted on 11/25/2010 7:36:22 PM PST by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: yarddog
I had forgotten the name he was called in “The Great Gatsby” although I knew he was based on a real guy.

I will never forget his cuff links.

The shady character with the human molar cuff links was dubbed Meyer Wolfsheim by F.S. Fitzgerald. And Wolfsheim didn't even attend Jay Gatsby's funeral.

45 posted on 11/25/2010 7:38:16 PM PST by re_nortex (DP...that's what I like about Texas...)
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To: nickcarraway; jocon307

In the first one, Sonny’s role is central. When he flies off the handle and starts over-reacting after Don Vito is hospitalized, and when his sister is roughed up, you know that this is not wise, but you don’t know exactly HOW it isn’t wise. The answer is, when you are a hothead, you aren’t careful, and you are easily setup. They KNEW that if they could get sis to call him, that he would drive out immediately and have to go through the toll booth.


46 posted on 11/25/2010 7:39:40 PM PST by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics)
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To: rbg81

Probably one of the most pro-American scenes in movie history..

when the Italian immigrants passed by the Statue of Liberty and they were all in awe, even taking off their hats.


47 posted on 11/25/2010 7:41:02 PM PST by max americana
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To: nickcarraway

More trivia:

The Godfather (1972

Ernest Borgnine, Edward G. Robinson, Orson Welles, Danny Thomas, Richard Conte, Anthony Quinn, and George C. Scott were considered by Paramount Pictures for the role of Vito Corleone.

Burt Lancaster wanted the role but was never considered.

According to an August 1971 article by Nicholas Pileggi in The New York Times, a supporting cast member became so committed to his role that he accompanied a group of Mafia enforcers on a trip to beat up strike breakers during a labor dispute. But the enforcers had the wrong address and were unable to find the strike breakers. The actor’s name was not revealed.

The early buzz on the film was so positive that a sequel was planned before the film was finished filming.

Gianni Russo used his organized crime connections to secure the role of Carlo Rizzi, going so far as to get a camera crew to film his own audition and send it to the producers. However, Marlon Brando was initially against having Russo, who had never acted before, in the film; this made Russo furious and he went to threaten Brando. However, this reckless act proved to be a blessing in disguise: Brando thought Russo was acting and was convinced he would be good for the role.

The movie’s line “I’ll make him an offer he can’t refuse.” was voted as the #10 of “The 100 Greatest Movie Lines” by Premiere in 2007.

Paramount senior management, dissatisfied with the early rushes, considered replacing Francis Ford Coppola with Elia Kazan with the hope that Kazan would be able to work with the notoriously difficult Marlon Brando. Brando announced that he would quit the film if Coppola was fired and the studio backed down. Paramount brass apparently did not know of Brando’s dismay with Kazan over his testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s.
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Marlon Brando wanted to make Don Corleone “look “like a bulldog,” so he stuffed his cheeks with cotton wool for the audition. For actual filming, he wore a mouthpiece made by a dentist; this appliance is on display in the American Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, New York.
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During rehearsals, a false horse’s head was used for the bedroom scene. For the actual shot, a real horse’s head was used, acquired from a dog-food factory. According to John Marley, his scream of horror was real as he was not informed that a real head was going to be used.
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During an early shot of the scene where Vito Corleone returns home and his people carry him up the stairs, Marlon Brando put weights under his body on the bed as a prank, to make it harder to lift him.

Marlon Brando did not memorize most of his lines and read from cue cards during most of the film.

Al Pacino wore a foam latex facial appliance that covered his entire left cheek and was made up with colors to match his skin tone and give the effect of bruising, to simulate the effect of having his jaw broken by Captain McCluskey.
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The name of the traditional Sicilian hat (worn, for instance, by Michael’s bodyguards) is “coppola”.

Apart from as required by his Marine Corps uniform, Michael Corleone does not wear a hat until he becomes involved in the family business.

Director Francis Ford Coppola worked with relatives in this film, (making it a family film in many contexts). In chronological order of appearance:
- his sister Talia Shire portrayed Connie Corleone throughout the trilogy
- his mother Italia Coppola serves as an extra in the restaurant meeting
- his father Carmine Coppola is the piano player in the Mattress sequence
- his sons Gian-Carlo Coppola and Roman Coppola can be seen as extras in the scene where Sonny beats up Carlo, and at the funeral
- and his daughter Sofia Coppola is the baby Michael Rizzi in the baptism (she was three weeks old at the time of shooting).
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There are approximately 61 scenes in the film that feature people eating/drinking, or just food.

Don Vito Corleone’s distinctive voice was based on real-life mobster Frank Costello. Marlon Brando had seen him on TV during the Kefauver hearings in 1951 and imitated his husky whisper in the film.
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In the scene where Sonny beats up Carlo, a truck in the background and a wooden box on the sidewalk are strategically placed to hide anachronistic objects in the background.
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The film makes use of a variety of Italian words:
- Paulie says “sfortunato”, which in Italian means “What a unlucky guy!” (ironic), referring to Carlo (wedding scene).
- Michael explains that Tom is a “consigliere,” or a counselor;
- Vito calls Johnny Fontane a “finocchio,” an offensive term for a homosexual
- Sonny refers to Paulie as a “stronzo,” a term equivalent to “asshole”
- Carlo and Connie both say “vaffanculo” during their fight, which means “fuck you”
- Don Zaluchi calls the sale of drugs to children as an “infamita,” or an infamy
- and both the Dons Corleone use the word “pezzonovante,” which means “.95 caliber,” or more accurately meaning “big shot”.
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Cameo: [Gray Frederickson] the cowboy in the studio when Tom encounters Woltz the first time.
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The movie Michael and Kay were watching before Michael finds out that his father was shot was Leo McCarey’s The Bells of St. Mary’s (1945). McCarey’s name appears outside of Radio City Music Hall.
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The mansion of Jack Woltz was also used as the mansion of Alan Stanwyk in Fletch (1985).
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The three-year-old child actor Anthony Gounaris responded best when his real name was used while shooting the film. That’s why Michael’s son’s name is Anthony.
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During the sequences filmed in Sicily, Michael’s broken-jaw make-up does not match the make-up used during the sequences filmed in New York. This is because Paramount Pictures would not pay the costs of sending makeup artist Dick Smith to Italy with the rest of the crew.

The line “I’m gonna make him an offer he can’t refuse” was selected by the American Film Institute on it’s list as one of the top 100 movie quotes, it was at #2 right behind “Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn” from Gone with the Wind (1939).
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According to Al Pacino, those were real tears in Marlon Brando’s eyes when Michael pledges himself to his father in the hospital scene.
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George Lucas used photos from real crime scenes in the Mattress Sequence. One of the most prominent photos shows two cops kneeling beside what looks like a man sleeping on the ground with his head propped up against a fence. That man is Frank “The Enforcer” Nitti, Al Capone’s right-hand man who had, in fact, committed suicide with a gunshot to the head.
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A young Sylvester Stallone auditioned for the role of Paulie Gatto and Carlo Rizzi, but didn’t get the role. Stallone instead decided to try writing and did the screenplay for the modestly successful The Lord’s of Flatbush (1974). He would later get his break in Rocky (1976), coincidentally alongside Talia Shire (Connie Corleone).
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Francis Ford Coppola turned in an initial director’s cut running 126 minutes. Paramount production chief Robert Evans rejected this version and demanded a longer cut with more scenes about the family. The final release version was nearly 50 minutes longer than Coppola’s initial cut.
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Frankie Avalon and Vic Damone, both established and experienced singers, auditioned for the role of Johnny Fontane. Francis Ford Coppola was most impressed with Damone and gave the role to him, but Al Martino was cast by the producers, and used his organized crime connections to ensure he kept the part. Ironically, Fontane sings “I Have But One Heart,” which was Damone’s first hit song.
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Francis Ford Coppola was hired by Robert Evans to direct the movie after Peter Bogdanovich, among others, turned it down.
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The actor playing Luca Brasi, Lenny Montana, was so nervous about working with Marlon Brando that, in the first take of their scene together, he flubbed some lines. Francis Ford Coppola liked the genuine nervousness and used it in the final cut. The scenes of Brasi practicing his speech were added later.
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According to Francis Ford Coppola, the term “Don Corleone” is actually incorrect Italian parlance. In Italian, addressing someone as “Don” would be like addressing them as “Uncle” in English, so the correct parlance would be “Don Michael” or “Don Vito”. Coppola says that Mario Puzo, who couldn’t speak Italian, simply made up the idea of using “Don” with a person’s last name, and it has now become a pop culture staple.
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The character Moe Greene was modeled after Jewish mobster Bugsy Siegel.
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At the meeting in the restaurant, Sollozzo speaks to Michael in Sicilian so rapid subtitles could not be used. He begins with: “I am sorry. What happened to your father was business. I have much respect for your father. But your father, his thinking is old-fashioned. You must understand why I had to do that. Now let’s work through where we go from here.” When Michael returns from the bathroom, he continues in Sicilian with: “Everything all right? I respect myself, understand, and cannot allow another man to hold me back. What happened was unavoidable. I had the unspoken support of the other Family dons. If your father were in better health, without his eldest son running things, no disrespect intended, we wouldn’t have this nonsense. We will stop fighting until your father is well and can resume bargaining. No vengeance will be taken. We will have peace. But your Family should interfere no longer.”
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When Michael and Kay are having dinner together, the song on the radio is Irving Berlin’s “All of My Life”.
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The scenes in which Enzo comes to visit Vito Corleone in the hospital were shot in reverse with the outside scene shot first. Gabriele Torrei, the actor who plays Enzo, had never acted in front of a camera before and his nervous shaking after the car drives away was real.
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The hospital scenes were filmed in two different locations: the exterior scenes were filmed at a side entrance to the Bellevue Hospital; and the interior shots were filmed at the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary in Manhattan, New York City.
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Mario Puzo gave Vito’s eldest son the nickname of “Sonny” after the nickname given to the son of ‘Al Capone (I)’. The similarities end there. Sonny Capone did not enter his father’s business.
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The film was set and shot in New York, at over 100 locations. Originally the entire film was to be shot in the Hollywood back lots in order to save production costs; however production designer Dean Tavoularis threatened to add two stories to each back lot building in order to replicate the look of New York City, the studio relented and allowed for shooting in New York.
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Because Corleone, Sicily, was too developed even in the early 1970s, the Sicilian town of Savoca, outside Taormina, was used for shooting the scenes where Michael is in exile in Italy.
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This was Joe Spinell’s first film.
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Production began on March 29, 1971, but Marlon Brando worked on the film for 35 days between April 12 and May 28 so he could honor his commitment to the film Last Tango in Paris (1972).
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In the novel, Don Cuneo’s first name is Ottileo, but in the film he was known as Carmine Cuneo as homage to Carmine Coppola.
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Frank Puglia was originally cast as Bonasera but had to back out due to illness.
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Paramount executive Peter Bart bought the film rights to Mario Puzo’s “The Godfather” before it was even finished. It was still only a 20-page outline.
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Along with Mario Puzo’s source novel, Francis Ford Coppola based many of the characters on members of his own family.
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Mario Puzo modeled the character of Don Vito Corleone on New York mob bosses Joe Profaci and Vito Genovese. Many of the events of his novel are based on actual incidents that occurred in the lives of Profaci, Genovese and their families. Puzo based Don Vito’s personality on his own mother’s.
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Paramount’s original idea was to make this a low-budget gangster film set in the present rather than a period piece set in the 1940s and 1950s. Francis Ford Coppola rejected Mario Puzo’s original script based on this idea.
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According to Francis Ford Coppola on the DVD commentary, the intercutting of the baptism scene with the gang killings during the movie’s climax did not really work until editor Peter Zinner added the organ soundtrack.
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According to Al Pacino in The Godfather Family: A Look Inside (1990), he nearly got fired midway through filming. At the time Paramount execs only saw the early scenes of Michael at the wedding and were exclaiming, “When is he going to do something?” When they finally saw the scene where Michael shoots Sollozzo and McCluskey in the restaurant, they changed their minds and Pacino got to keep his job.
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According to Mario Puzo, the character of Johnny Fontane was NOT based on Frank Sinatra. However, everyone assumed that it was, and Sinatra was furious; when he met Puzo at a restaurant he screamed vulgar terms and threats at Puzo. Sinatra was also vehemently opposed to the film. Due to this backlash, Fontane’s role in the film was scaled down to a couple of scenes.
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Francis Ford Coppola insisted on the film being called “Mario Puzo’s The Godfather” rather than just The Godfather (1972), because his original draft of the screenplay was so faithful to Puzo’s novel he thought Puzo deserved the credit for it.
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At one point during filming, Paramount production chief Robert Evans felt the film had too little action and considered hiring an action director to finish the job. To satisfy Evans, Francis Ford Coppola and his son Gian-Carlo Coppola developed the scene in which Connie and Carlo have their long fight. As a result, Evans was pleased enough to let Coppola finish the film.
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Diane Keaton based much of her portrayal of Kay Adams on Francis Ford Coppola’s wife, Eleanor Coppola.
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The scene where Sonny beats up Carlo (Connie’s husband) took four days to shoot and featured more than 700 extras.
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Al Pacino’s maternal grandparents emigrated to America from Corleone, Sicily, just as Vito Corleone had.
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According to Francis Ford Coppola in his “Cigar Aficionado” magazine interview, he had a meeting at his home in 1969 with producers Albert S. Ruddy and Gray Frederickson to discuss The Conversation (1974). He had sent the script to Marlon Brando who called him during the meeting to politely turn it down. Right before the meeting, Coppola took note of a newspaper advertisement for an upcoming novel titled “The Godfather” by Mario Puzo. Just a few months later, all five people would meet to discuss a film version of the novel.
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For the scene where Clemenza is cooking, Francis Ford Coppola originally wrote in the script, “Clemenza browns some sausage”. Upon seeing this, Mario Puzo crossed out “browns” and replaced it with “fries”, writing in the margin, “Gangsters don’t brown.”
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Franco Corsaro filmed a scene as the dying consigliere Genco Abbandando but it was deleted. In the scene, which takes place after the wedding, Vito Corleone and his sons go to the hospital to pay their respects to Genco who is dying of cancer. They attempt to console him and Genco begs Vito to stay with him as he is dying. The scene does appear in some TV airings of the film (in place of edited versions of the murder scenes) and is in “The Godfather: A Novel for Television” (1977).
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The ribbons on Michael Corleone’s Marine Corps uniform are the Silver Star, the Navy and Marine Corps Medal, and the Purple Heart on the top row, and the Asiatic/Pacific Campaign Medal with a service star and an arrowhead, the European/African/Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with a service star, and the World War II Victory Medal on the bottom row. In The Godfather: Part II (1974), however, Michael tells a congressional committee that he was awarded the Navy Cross during the war.
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According to Francis Ford Coppola, the film took 62 days to shoot.
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Originally Francis Ford Coppola was against directing the film, as he felt it glorified the Mafia and violence and would reflect poorly on his Italian-Sicilian heritage. However, he eagerly took the job once he thought of making it an allegory of American capitalism.
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The character of Hollywood mogul Jack Woltz’s was patterned after Warner Bros. chief Jack L. Warner. His personality was based on MGM head Louis B. Mayer, who was a great racing aficionado and owned a racing stable. Mayer abandoned the sport, reportedly after his son-in-law William Goetz, who was his partner in the stable, got involved with the Mafia and fixed a race Mayer’s horse was the favorite to win.
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Olivia Hussey was considered by casting director Fred Roos for the role of Apollonia. Francis Ford Coppola originally wanted Stefania Sandrelli, but she turned it down.
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August 1971: According to an article by Nicholas Pileggi in The New York Times, Paramount planned to release a line of spaghetti sauce bearing The Godfather (1972) logo to promote the film. It also planned Godfather restaurant franchises that would sell pizza, hero sandwiches, Italian ices and Italian breads and pastries. A spin-off television series was also planned but none of these ideas came to fruition.
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1990: This film was selected for the National Film Registry, Library of Congress.
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Francis Ford Coppola wanted to cast actor Timothy Carey but Carey turned the part down so he could film a television pilot.
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After Robert Evans insisted that James Caan be cast as Michael, Carmine Caridi was cast in the role of Sonny. According to Evans, he told Francis Ford Coppola that he could cast Al Pacino as Michael as long as he cast Caan as Sonny. Although Caan had been Coppola’s first choice, he decided that Caridi was better for the role and did not want to recast Caan. Evans insisted on Caan because he wanted at least one “name” actor to play one of the brothers and because the 6’4” Caridi would tower over Pacino on screen. Caridi was later given a small part in The Godfather: Part II (1974). There is a rumor that Burt Reynolds was originally cast as Sonny Corleone but Marlon Brando wouldn’t act with him, considering him more a TV star.
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During filming, James Caan and Gianni Russo did not get along and were frequently at loggerheads. During filming Sonny’s beating on Carlo, Caan nearly hit Russo with the stick he threw at him, and actually broke two of Russo’s ribs and chipped his elbow.
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During the scene in the study when the family decides Michael Corleone needs to kill Sollozzo and McCluskey, Santino Corleone is seen idly toying with a cane. The cane belonged to Al Pacino, who had badly injured his leg while filming Michael’s escape from the restaurant.
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Jewish actors James Caan and Abe Vigoda portray Italian characters (Santino Corleone, Salvatore Tessio), while Italian Alex Rocco, portrays a Jewish character (Moe Greene).
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Although the dark photography of Gordon Willis was eventually copied by many other films, when the developed film came back from the lab, Paramount executives thought the look was a mistake. They ordered a different look but Willis and director Francis Ford Coppola refused.
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James Caan credits the stage persona of “insult comic” Don Rickles for inspiring his characterization of Santino Corleone.
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Martin Sheen and Dean Stockwell auditioned for the role of Michael Corleone. Oscar-winner Rod Steiger campaigned hard for the role of Michael, even though he was too old for the part. Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson, and Dustin Hoffman were all offered the part of Michael Corleone, but all refused. (Beatty was also offered directing and producing duties.) Suggestions of Alain Delon and Burt Reynolds were rejected by Francis Ford Coppola. Paramount production chief Robert Evans wanted Robert Redford to be cast in the part, but Coppola demurred as he was too WASPy. Evans explained that Redford could fit the role as he could be perceived as “northern Italian”. Evans eventually lost the struggle over the actor he derided as “The Midget”. The Irish-American Ryan O’Neal then became the front-runner for the part, though it eventually devolved onto James Caan. Before being cast as Michael, Al Pacino was committed to starring in The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight (1971). Coppola, in a 2003 “Cigar Aficionado” interview, said that Paramount pulled some strings and managed to get Pacino released. The Paramount brass, particularly Evans, were adamantly opposed to casting Pacino, who did poorly in screen tests, until they saw his excellent performance in The Panic in Needle Park (1971). Caan went back to his original role of Sonny when Pacino came on board. Robert De Niro tested for both Michael and Sonny and was almost cast as Carlo before being cast as Paulie. Then, De Niro was offered Pacino’s former role in “Gang”. With Coppola’s blessing, De Niro backed out to take the part. This, in turn, enabled De Niro to star as a young Vito in the sequel, which won him an Oscar and made his career.
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James Caan originally heard the phrase “bada-bing!” from his acquaintance, the real-life mobster Carmine Persico, and improvised its use in the film.
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George Lucas put together the “Mattress Sequence” (the montage of crime scene photos and headlines about the war between the five families) as a favor to Francis Ford Coppola for helping him fund American Graffiti (1973). He asked not to be credited.
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According to Francis Ford Coppola in the DVD commentary, in the scene where Captain MacCluskey confronts Michael in front of the hospital, the officer who balks at arresting Michael (”He’s clean, Captain. He’s a war hero.”) is NYPD Detective Sonny Grosso, one of the detectives made famous by his involvement in breaking the “French Connection” case.
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Al Pacino’s first Oscar nomination marks his first of 4 consecutive nominations, a feat he shares with Jennifer Jones (1943-46), Thelma Ritter (1950-53), Marlon Brando (1951-54) and Elizabeth Taylor (1957-60).
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Ardell Sheridan, who plays Mrs. Clemenza, was Richard S. Castellano’s wife in real life.
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In the scene where Carlo is beaten by Sonny, a poster bearing the name “Thomas Dewey” can be seen on a wall. Thomas E. Dewey was New York City prosecutor who pursued gangsters in the 1930’s.
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The film’s opening scene, a three-minute zoom-out of Amerigo Bonasera and Don Corleone, was achieved with a computer-controlled zoom lens which had earlier been used in Silent Running (1972).
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The only comment Robert Duvall will make about his performance is that he wished “they would have made a better hairpiece” for his character.
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In reality, all the actors who played Marlon Brando’s sons (Robert Duvall, John Cazale, James Caan, and Al Pacino) were only between six and 16 years younger than he was.
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The director’s mother Italia Coppola had a scene as a Genco Olive Oil Company switchboard operator, but it ended up on the cutting room floor.
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Voted #1 On Empire’s 500 Greatest Movies Of All Time (September 2008)
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When Marlon Brando won the Best Actor Oscar for this movie, he sent Sacheen Littlefeather to represent him at the awards ceremonies. The presenters of the award were Roger Moore and Liv Ullmann. When Moore offered the statuette to Littlefeather, she snubbed him and proceeded with her speech about the film industry’s mistreatment of American Indians.
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Of the main cast, four pairs of actors share a birthday: Al Pacino and Talia Shire (April 25), Diane Keaton and Robert Duvall (January 5), James Caan and Sterling Hayden (March 26), and Abe Vigoda and Al Lettieri (February 24).
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According to Albert S. Ruddy’s assistant, Bettye McCartt, Ruddy was warned by police that the Mafia was following his car. Ruddy would switch cars with McCartt in an effort to lose them. One night, McCartt found her car with the windows shot out and a note that read “Shut down the movie or else.”
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During pre-production, Francis Ford Coppola shot his own unofficial screen tests with Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, and Diane Keaton at his home in San Francisco. Robert Evans was unimpressed by them and insisted that official screen tests be held. The studio spent $420,000 on the screen tests but in the end, the actors Coppola originally wanted were hired.
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Jerry Van Dyke, Bruce Dern, Steve McQueen, Paul Newman and James Caan auditioned for the role of Tom Hagen.
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Marlon Brando based some of his performance on Al Lettieri who plays Sollozzo. While preparing for On the Waterfront (1954), Brando became friendly with Lettieri, whose relative was a real-life Mafioso. Brando and Lettieri would later co-star in The Night of the Following Day (1968). Lettieri also helped Brando prepare for his Godfather role by bringing him to his relative’s house for a family dinner.
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Aram Avakian was originally hired as the film’s editor but was fired after disagreements with Coppola.
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According to Gary Fredrickson, Lenny Montana (Luca Brasi) had worked as a Mafia bodyguard, and had also bragged to Frederickson about working for the Mafia as an arsonist.
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Richard S. Castellano ad-libbed the line “Take the cannoli”.
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John Martino ad-libbed the words “Madon’” (Madonna) and “sfortunato” (unfortunate) when Paulie talks about stealing the wedding purse.
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The smack that Vito gives Johnny Fontane was not in the script. Marlon Brando improvised the smack and Al Martino’s confused reaction was real. According to James Caan, “Martino didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.”
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James Caan improvised the part where he throws the FBI photographer to the ground. The extra’s frightened reaction is genuine.
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Francis Ford Coppola was reluctant to let his sister Talia Shire audition for the role of Connie. He felt she was too pretty for the part and did not want to be accused of nepotism. Only at Mario Puzo’s request did Shire get a chance to audition.
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Radio personality Howard Stern has said that he would gladly have any cast member of this film as his guest and they can show up at his studio unannounced. Though over the years cast members such as Robert Duvall and James Caan were pre-scheduled guests, his “just show up” policy was never taken up until Gianni Russo arrived one day. Stern immediately had him escorted into his studio, even though he was in the midst of other guests at the time and interviewed him.
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Orson Welles lobbied to get the part of Don Vito Corrleone in The Godfather (1972). Francis Ford Coppola, a fan of his, had to turn him down because he already had Marlon Brando in mind for the role and felt Welles wouldn’t be right for it.
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According to Ardell Sheridan, Mafia captain (and future boss) Paul Castellano visited the set and spoke with Richard S. Castellano. It was not until after Paul was killed in 1985 did Richard reveal to her that Paul was his uncle.
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According to interviews in the Coppola Restoration DVD set, the film was originally planned with an intermission due to its three-hour length. The intermission would have happened immediately after Michael murders Solozzo and McClusky, which explains the operatic instrumental that begins playing when Michael is shown fleeing the restaurant, as well as the ensuing “newspaper” montage, which would have been the first scene post-intermission.
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The Don’s wife, Carmella Corleone, is seen singing at the wedding. Morgana King, who plays Carmella, is a gifted opera singer.
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Francis Ford Coppola initially offered the part of Don Vito Corleone to retired Maltese actor Joseph Calleia but the offer was turned down by Calleia due to health reasons.
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Although there are many claims of real Mafiosi as cast members Francis Ford Coppola stated in a May 2009 interview with Howard Stern that no organized crime members were cast or used as consultants. Coppola went on to explain there are expectations of reciprocity once one is provided a “favor” by an organized crime member or otherwise involved in a business action with the same. He specifically denied the connection of Gianni Russo to organized crime. The closest Coppola claims to have come to a real gangster during production, at least to his knowledge, was an interaction with Lenny Montana, who played Luca Brasi. Coppola said when he asked if Montana knew how to spin the cylinder of the revolver Montana replied “You kiddin’?”.
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Final Amercican studio film of Richard Conte.
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The British Daily Telegraph newspaper recently described The Godfather (1972) as “a vision of the hollowness of American capitalism and its effect on the family - like Death of a Salesman with spaghetti and a criminal empire.”
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The baptism was filmed in two churches: the interior shots were filmed at St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral in New York; and the exterior shots were filmed at the Mount Loretto Church in Pleasant Plains, Staten Island.
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The casting of Richard Conte was an idea by the mother of Martin Scorsese, who asked Francis Ford Coppola if he could be in the movie.
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Robert Evans apparently screened the films about gangsters that Paramount had released before he arrived at the studio, including The Brotherhood (1968). He noticed that most of the films were unsuccessful and also that they had not been written or directed by Italian-Americans, and said that he hired Francis Ford Coppola in part because he wanted to “smell the spaghetti”.
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In 1974, “The Godfather” premiered on NBC over 2 nights - Saturday November 16th, and Monday November 18th, from 9-11pm. Both nights, at 11pm, New York City’s Municiple Water Authorities had some overflow problems from all the toilets flushing around the same time.
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‘James Caan’ and Al Pacino were only ten years younger than Morgana King who plays their mother. John Cazale was only five years younger.
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Robert De Niro was originally cast as the ill-fated driver Paulie, while Al Pacino had accepted a role in Bang the Drum Slowly (1973). Francis Ford Coppola wanted Pacino so badly for the role of Michael that he persuaded the producers of the other film to release him from his contract. This meant he had to provide a replacement, so De Niro was released from his contract on this film.
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>>> WARNING: Here Be Spoilers <<<
Trivia items below here contain information that may give away important plot points. You may not want to read any further if you’ve not already seen this title.

SPOILER: The presence of oranges in the Godfather trilogy indicates that a death-related event will soon occur (even though production designer Dean Tavoularis claimed the oranges were simply used to brighten up the darkly shot film). In chronological order of such events:
- Hagen and Woltz negotiate Johnny Fontane’s position at a table with a bowl of oranges on it, and later Woltz discovers his horse’s severed head
- Don Corleone buys oranges right before he is shot
- Sonny drives past an advertisement for Florida Oranges before he is assassinated
- at the Mafioso summit, bowls of oranges are placed on the tables (specifically in front of those Dons who will be assassinated)
- Michael eats an orange while discussing his plans with Hagen
- before Don Corleone dies, he plays with an orange
- Tessio, who is executed for attempting to betray Michael, plays with an orange at Connie’s wedding
- and Carlo Rizzi, who wears an orange suit right before Sonny beats him up, causes Sonny’s death and is himself garrotted in retribution. The only deaths in the film that don’t appear to have oranges foreshadowing them are the assassinations of Paulie, Sollozzo, McCluskey and Apollonia.
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SPOILER: Body count: 18 (including the horse).
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SPOILER: Don Corleone’s death scene, while it featured in the novel, was originally not to appear in the film because studio executives felt that the audience would see the funeral and know what had happened. Francis Ford Coppola shot the scene with three cameras in a private residence in Long Island (the makeshift garden itself was created from scratch and torn down immediately after shooting), with Marlon Brando ad-libbing his lines.
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SPOILER: Fabrizio, Michael’s Sicilian bodyguard who planted the bomb that killed Appolonia, was supposed to be found by Michael at a pizza parlor he opens in America and subsequently blown away with a shotgun at the end of the movie as per “The Godfather” novel. This scene was filmed but ultimately cut because the makeup artists plastered Angelo Infanti with so much fake blood that the scene looked ridiculous. Photos of Michael Corleone with a hat, shotgun blazing, appeared in many magazines, despite the scene’s eventual excision. Fabrizio’s death was filmed again, for The Godfather: Part II (1974), this time by car bomb (as the ultimate form of poetic justice), but that scene was also deleted from the theatrical version. It was restored in “The Godfather: A Novel for Television” (1977).
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SPOILER: Francis Ford Coppola shot Sonny’s assassination scene in one take with different cameras positioned at each shot. This was because there were 149 squibs taped onto James Caan’s body to simulate the effect of rapid machine-gun fire, and they couldn’t shoot another take.
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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0068646/trivia


SPOILER: Moe Green’s execution by a bullet through his eye was accomplished by a hidden pellet shooter in the glasses’ frame that smashed the lens outward.
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48 posted on 11/25/2010 7:41:19 PM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: GSP.FAN

Include Superman Trilogy (well, just the 1st 2),
Sniper
Back to the Future’
Star Wars
Toy Story


49 posted on 11/25/2010 7:43:16 PM PST by max americana
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To: nickcarraway; Borges; EveningStar; alwaysconservative; Mr. Blonde; Mr. K; wtc911; swmobuffalo; ...

"I'll make him an offer he can't refuse...."

Cinema Ping

Post here or FR Mail DollyCali
to be added or dropped from this ping list.

If you are receiving this I put you on my list,
no doubt w/o your permission..
so it is okay if you want to dive out



50 posted on 11/25/2010 7:44:23 PM PST by DollyCali (Don't tell God how big your storm is... tell your storm how BIG your God is!)
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To: Borges
Shortly after the first two Godfather films. Francis Coppola wrote a screen adaptation of The Great Gatsby which was eventually made with Robert Redford into a very dull film.

That's an example of a book that just can't translate to celluloid. Fitzgerald's rich writing and imagination is just too rich for the silver screen, IMHO.

Drifting off topic a bit (but yet somehow related), books that fail to convey well to film of television remind me of radio comic's Fred Allen famous quote:

"Television is a new medium. It's called a medium because nothing is well-done."

51 posted on 11/25/2010 7:44:44 PM PST by re_nortex (DP...that's what I like about Texas...)
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To: Borges

I had read a book about Zelda Sayre before seeing the movie “The Great Gatsby” It was clear that Zelda was the character created by Mia Farrow in the image of Zelda. Gatsby’s real girlfriend and that Gatsby had been F Scott Fitzgerald.
The similarities are just too much. Fitzgerald is an army officer at the airfield outside Montgomery Alabama and he meets the most attractive and socially prominent girl in Montgomery. Her Father is chief justice of the Alabama Surpeme court. He falls in love with her but she is above him socially. Yet she seems to love him too.


52 posted on 11/25/2010 7:45:44 PM PST by yarddog
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To: rabidralph

The Italian-American Civil Rights League was run by Joseph Columbo, the Mafia Don of one of the Five Families in New York. Columbo was assassinated by Mafia enemies at a big rally of the League. Richard S. Castellano, who played Clemenza, was the nephew of Big Paul Castellano, another Mafia Don who was publicly assassinated.


53 posted on 11/25/2010 7:47:36 PM PST by Lucius Cornelius Sulla ('“Our own government has become our enemy' - Sheriff Paul Babeu)
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To: nickcarraway

They should have stopped with the first two. The third one really sucked.


54 posted on 11/25/2010 7:48:27 PM PST by Venturer
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To: yarddog

‘The one part of the second one which struck me as totally unbelievable was the stupid Senator’

The character was originally known as Senator Harry Reid, but they changed it.


55 posted on 11/25/2010 7:50:05 PM PST by Lucius Cornelius Sulla ('“Our own government has become our enemy' - Sheriff Paul Babeu)
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To: nickcarraway

I didn’t know any of them nick...thanks for the thread!


56 posted on 11/25/2010 7:52:38 PM PST by DollyCali (Don't tell God how big your storm is... tell your storm how BIG your God is!)
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To: nickcarraway

The only thing missing from Godfather II was Clemenza, I didn’t particularly care for Pentageli.


57 posted on 11/25/2010 7:52:55 PM PST by dfwgator (Congratulations to Josh Hamilton - AL MVP)
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To: Delta Dawn

‘Don’t get me started on Sofia Coppola in #3. That was just a mistake.’

How about Sofia Coppola in #1?


58 posted on 11/25/2010 7:56:03 PM PST by Lucius Cornelius Sulla ('“Our own government has become our enemy' - Sheriff Paul Babeu)
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To: yarddog
The one part of the second one which struck me as totally unbelievable was the stupid Senator.

Actually a smart Senator would be unbelievable.

59 posted on 11/25/2010 7:58:51 PM PST by dfwgator (Congratulations to Josh Hamilton - AL MVP)
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To: yarddog

I think Casablanca is quoted more. At least by us older folks.


60 posted on 11/25/2010 7:59:18 PM PST by BBell
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