TS: Godfather vs Godfather II

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Probably get more mileage out of this treatment for De Palma’s Scarface.

circa1916, Friday, 4 February 2022 22:00 (two years ago) link

I always have the same problem with shit like this & Being the Ricardos: "Oh no, will they be successful at making The Godfather??"

nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Friday, 4 February 2022 22:20 (two years ago) link

This could be terrible, yet I'm intrigued.

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 4 February 2022 22:27 (two years ago) link

Lou Ferrigno as Lenny Montana is pretty good casting

jmm, Friday, 4 February 2022 22:32 (two years ago) link

I had to check to see if that was really him, my goodness he has aged well

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Friday, 4 February 2022 22:54 (two years ago) link

three months pass...

update

it is very dumb, often insists on repurposing lines from the movie in different contexts like WE GET IT. PLEASE DON’T DO THAT. also we’re 4 eps in, already up to 4 cannoli references. STAHP.

Michael Goode is great as Robert Evans,
Dan Fogler’s Coppola also great, Burn Gorman does a nice Bluhdorn. The movie-specific story is engaging even with annoying biopic exposition, but there’s a lot of sidestory w Italian American League that is tedious, and Ruddy’s lovelife storyline is kinda deadweight imo.

It’s based on “Albert Ruddy’s experiences making the Godfather” which is weirdly specific & so he takes credit for pretty much everything short of the weather bc everyone else on the studio side is dead & cant sue him. Plus he’s 92 so i guess he wants his flowers.

I am kinda enjoying it now that I have accepted that it is kinda trash, sorta like a vh1 biopic. Hard not to get sucked into the story though bc hey, it’s thd Godfather yknow?

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 8 May 2022 05:56 (one year ago) link

oh and Juno Temple is great, maybe my favorite

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 8 May 2022 06:29 (one year ago) link

five months pass...

is there a scene i'm forgetting or looking at my phone during or something where michael and carlo interact at all between michael's return from sicily and their confrontation during/after the baptism? the structure of 1 is so solid and every little ironic turn (the undertaker payoff-- a weakened don having to buy peace by locking his remaining children into the drug business he fears-- michael's "escape" in sicily and his dreamlike trad marriage only knitting him deeper into the "thing" he will return to imprison kay in, both thru the ritual of the marriage itself and thru its vendetta-driven termination) is so carefully-even-mechanically set-up/paid-off, it is weird that this crime of michael's that is clearly meant to carry all this weight (summoning talia shire for her second big scene etc) doesn't seem to have anything balancing and leading towards it. i guess the sleight-of-mind is to encourage us to project our own feelings about connie/carlo/sonny onto michael, since we were actually there for the whole thing, and not on a different continent.

still prefer 2 for leaning into the epic qualities but 1 is v committed to being a perfect melodrama in a deliberately old-fashioned way that makes tiny questions like this diverting to me in a way they wouldn't be about a sloppier movie.

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 5 November 2022 22:57 (one year ago) link

(not a "plot hole" question about like "why would michael want carlo dead"-- this is plain enough-- just feels like a missing floorboard that he never looks across a room at him and smolders silently or anything.)

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:08 (one year ago) link

Michael is such a genius mastermind that he didn't need to be there to figure out what happened.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:13 (one year ago) link

yeah obviously he (and-- connie says-- everyone) suspects (and then he confirms). i'm not saying how did he know. it's just mostly the kind of movie where we would be able to see him knowing at some earlier point. 2 feels less of an obligation about this kind of thing.

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:18 (one year ago) link

I don't think there's any set-up for Michael ambushing Carlos at the end. I hadn't thought about it before your question, but now I'd say that's one of the reasons that last scene is so scary: it happens out of the blue.

clemenza, Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:21 (one year ago) link

it happens out of the blue

this is true-- a contrast, too, between his actual sudden murder (a decision of michael's) and the slow formal forseen see-off of abe vigoda (advice of the don's). modernist vs postmodernist godfathering

difficult listening hour, Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:26 (one year ago) link

To me, this is the point: nothing gets past him and he is indeed settling ALL scores.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:39 (one year ago) link

Fredo and Johnny Ola got past him in II; it was only Fredo's slip-up at the Cuban club that alerted him.

clemenza, Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:41 (one year ago) link

Different film

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:42 (one year ago) link

yeah, it was the 'keep your friends close, enemies closer', aka, delay the fuck out of your vendettas so people get complacent and don't see them coming.

part of how Michael let the five families, Moe Green, even his own family members think the Corleone family had weakened so that the assassinations take everybody by surprise and he's back at the top of the heap, moving to Nevada with a big 'fuck you' on the way out.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:43 (one year ago) link

xxpost did they, though? I mean he pretty much knew it was Hymen Roth from the beginning, used Pentageli as bait, and I'm sure he had to have some suspicions that the most obvious mark in the family is his doofus brother.

he just has incredible patience and plays the long game in testing his suspicions.

also how dumb is Fredo that he can't remember what he said ten minutes ago.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Saturday, 5 November 2022 23:45 (one year ago) link

I think the scene where Michael declares Carlo his new right-hand man in Nevada provides something like the planking for the assassination scene, but it's only really apparent in hindsight. You don't notice it in the moment since there's so much happening in the scene, but in hindsight, it's obvious that it made absolutely no sense for Michael to promote Carlo to that level (he has no reason to put that kind of trust in Carlo) unless it was to keep Carlo close.

jmm, Sunday, 6 November 2022 00:05 (one year ago) link

which is another thing that baffles Hagen, not only is he fired, but you make THIS prick your partner?

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 00:06 (one year ago) link

but of course he doesn't read between the lines, cos he ain't no wartime consigliere

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 00:06 (one year ago) link

Michael knew about Roth, for sure--figured him out early--but I really believe he had no inclination Fredo was involved. His reaction when Fredo lets Johnny Ola's name slip strikes me as genuine shock and dismay.

clemenza, Sunday, 6 November 2022 00:21 (one year ago) link

https://phildellio.tripod.com/ola.jpg

clemenza, Sunday, 6 November 2022 00:45 (one year ago) link

I think the scene where Michael declares Carlo his new right-hand man in Nevada provides something like the planking for the assassination scene

! yes this is it, tho clem's point still applies imo. thanks to all

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:01 (one year ago) link

there are things being negotiated now that are gonna solve all your problems and answer all your questions

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:03 (one year ago) link

Tessio is also maybe dispatched with a certain amount of honor because Michael really does know it was strictly business, whereas with Carlo he knew it was personal (also Carlo being actually a member of the family of course.)

We don’t see Tessio’s death but we can imagine something quick vs the torturous ugly and not even hidden nature of Carlo’s demise (I hope they didn’t pass any honest cops on the way to the quarry or whatever, with C-man’s legs sticking out the windshield!)

omar little, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:07 (one year ago) link

if you read the book, you were treated to descriptions of each victim's sphincters releasing by Puzo

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:15 (one year ago) link

def but it's also implied that michael (ironically given icy performance and intended grooming for abstracted stringholding legitimacy) kills personally where his father would not right? connie says "you waited until no one could stop you" (revived thread because of this line prob)-- much is made mid-movie of the don's refusal to continue vendetta over the v same crime, sonny's death-- then we are shown these two formally identical "go out to the car" executions w these v diff vibes+meanings-- and it's the business one that follows posthumously from the don's final preoccupation+command and the personal one that is part of some kind of step into new territory for michael?-- (also of course the one that leads him to discover he can lie to kay's face)

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:27 (one year ago) link

it's just mostly the kind of movie where we would be able to see him knowing at some earlier point. 2 feels less of an obligation about this kind of thing.

I feel like Part 1 gets trickier in this respect as it goes along. Initially, we're allowed to follow Michael's thinking very closely, and we see the sequence of events clearly as one thing leads to another. When Michael takes over as Don, he becomes much more of a closed-book, we're given much narrower glimpses into his thinking, at times he's bluffing the audience as much as his associates and his enemies. The scenes feel more fragmentary, and it's only afterwards that they all fall into place.

jmm, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:29 (one year ago) link

yes! all i rly meant by modernist vs postmodernist godfathering was that the last third of this felt way more like 2 than i'd remembered.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:30 (one year ago) link

(in that spirit then i should say leads "us" to discover he can lie to kay's face)

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:31 (one year ago) link

DLH, I forget the more minute and precise differences in the scenes but generally I feel maybe like Hagen handling Tessio’s goodbye vs Michael dealing w/Carlo more personally ties in with that

omar little, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:32 (one year ago) link

yes-- tessio even tries a final futile explicitly personal appeal to tom, but (the conditions do not allow, and) tom is a robot

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:35 (one year ago) link

that was a bit of a ruse, I took Connie's lines to be more reflective of her naivety. The Don's speech wasn't him actually foregoing vengeance, it was a clever sleight of hand. He promised that *he* would not be the one to break the peace made that day (but he made NO promises for his son, when he took over as Don).

Vito had clearly seen Barzini was muscling in on Corleone territory and after acquiring protection of judges, that wasn't likely to stop. The Corleone family was practically getting 'chased out of New York', as Moe Greene said, and the only way the equilibrium-resetting assassination of the 5 heads would work is if the Corleones feigned weakness. Vito going into retirement, transitioning to a peaceful, old wine-drinking man, the Corleones trying to expand into Nevada, which to the untrained eye, looked like them trying to flee New York rather than an intentional business strategy.

Vito was a violent man, no different than any other Don, but he knew if he got his vendetta against Sonny right then and there, the war would continue, and they weren't in a good place to win - next up to be whacked might be Michael, or Tom, or Vito himself. But I have no doubt he wanted revenge.

You even see Vito coaching Michael for what's to come, you just think at the time he's helping him avoid being betrayed by Tessio, but Vito also says there are reasons why Hagen can't be involved with what's to come, which almost certainly means "war and blood is coming". and the reasons Hagen can't be involved, besides "not being a wartime consiglieri", is that as soon as the five heads of the families, Moe Greene, and Carlo are dead, he'll most certainly be reinstalled in his position on arrival to Vegas, and it removes the risk of Hagen being incarcerated along with the other members of the family for these crimes as he has no foreknowledge. it's also possible they thought Hagen would try to shut it down, as it was a crazy idea.

Godfather II was truly the film where Michael broke w/ his father and became ruthless in a way that was positively unhinged, a need to win despite the costs. In a way he was more like Sonny in terms of his rage, but not his recklessness.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:41 (one year ago) link

xxxxpost

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:42 (one year ago) link

what if it was 1977 and Michael was engaged to Annie Halll

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:44 (one year ago) link

Vito also says there are reasons why Hagen can't be involved with what's to come, which almost certainly means "war and blood is coming". and the reasons Hagen can't be involved, besides "not being a wartime consiglieri", is that as soon as the five heads of the families, Moe Greene, and Carlo are dead, he'll most certainly be reinstalled in his position on arrival to Vegas, and it removes the risk of Hagen being incarcerated along with the other members of the family for these crimes as he has no foreknowledge.

I hadn't thought of this. Is this from the novel?

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:46 (one year ago) link

I don't remember, to be honest - I read it in high school. but the book does have a lot more insight into the thinking of the individual family members that kind of fills in gaps.

I always felt that they were protecting him in a way just from the way that scene unfolds.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:49 (one year ago) link

some people have asked me why Michael makes such a quick transition to wanting to join the family's dealings after his long-standing distance and disapproval, and I'm always like "for us Italians, the moment sometime tries to kill your papa, it don't matter what disagreements you had with him prior. people are gonna die."

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:49 (one year ago) link

Your explanation of Michael freezing Tom out makes sense, but I also always thought it just had a lot to do with Michael's vindictiveness; he obviously bears some kind of personal grudge towards Tom at various points in II (e.g., when he confronts Tom about his mistress). He could be channeling Sonny's belittlement of Tom in I ("That's easy for you to say, Tom, he's not your father").

clemenza, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:52 (one year ago) link

i agree that it is hard to imagine even the sainted-via-omission don of these movies being above taking revenge for the murder of his son but i'm just talking about carlo here-- connie says "you all" blamed him for sonny's death and whether she is naive or not i don't think the idea is that michael alone has the insight to figure out he was involved, and presumably the corleones can do what they want with carlo regardless of their position in mob geopolitics. the celebrated baptism montage murders are indeed exactly the kind of thing the don might have done-- then the baptism ends and michael exits the church with one more murder of his very own left to do, set aside special, a denouement.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:54 (one year ago) link

quite possibly, but I'm not sure if that enmity had sunk in yet? he has that tender moment with Hagen after his assassination attempt at the beginning of II, but by the end, he's cold as ice to him. part of that, I think, is him either assuming Hagen helped Kay get the abortion, or at the very least, didn't try hard enough to stop her (or figure out that she was trying to get one).

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:55 (one year ago) link

(xp also of course he says the very same thing to carlo that sonny said to connie-- "you think i'd make my sister a widow?"-- then unlike violent hothead sonny immediately makes his sister a widow.)

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:56 (one year ago) link

some people have asked me why Michael makes such a quick transition to wanting to join the family's dealings after his long-standing distance and disapproval

There's also that beautiful moment after the hospital face-off, where he lights a cigarette for Enzo and realizes that he's stayed steady and calm through the whole thing, where I think he discovers that he has a taste for this stuff

jmm, Sunday, 6 November 2022 16:59 (one year ago) link

forgot xpost for previous post

dlh, I see your point. I don't know that Vito himself would have killed Carlo since he loved his daughter and he'd know what that would do to her, but at the same token, I'm not sure what action he would think was appropriate. Divorce, well, they're Catholic, so that wasn't something he'd approve of (Michael himself gives her shit for getting divorced in II). Stripping him of his participation in the family, definitely.

it's hard to think of Vito allowing Carlo to sit at family dinners knowing he helped kill his son, though. and I doubt Connie would ever believe he was guilty. I'm going to guess he probably died before he could figure it out and Michael decided to deal with it knowing he'd be hated by Connie forever for it.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:00 (one year ago) link

Pacino's concentration is so complete and so masterful that I have trouble thinking this is the same actor in Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, Dick Tracy, Heat, etc. I have trouble even thinking it's the same actor who played Michael a third time.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:01 (one year ago) link

There's also that beautiful moment after the hospital face-off, where he lights a cigarette for Enzo and realizes that he's stayed steady and calm through the whole thing, where I think he discovers that he has a taste for this stuff

― jmm, Sunday, November 6, 2022 11:59 AM bookmarkflaglink

interesting you mention that! my dad and I were watching it for about the 10th time together back in 2010, and he drew the same conclusion, saying he'd never really noticed it before but that's where he makes the emotional move towards joining the family.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:02 (one year ago) link

xpost I don't mind yelly Pacino by any means but it's kind of amazing that his voice never really creeps above a whisper until he yells "NO!" at Kay.

my dad used to always say "this is the moment the Michael Kay knew is completely gone".

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:03 (one year ago) link

it's hard to think of Vito allowing Carlo to sit at family dinners knowing he helped kill his son, though.

oh totally i mean it doesn't make much sense as something this character would "actually" do. just parsing the ~resonance~ of what-we-are-shown here.

difficult listening hour, Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:04 (one year ago) link

btw, you've never seen rage in a movie theatre like the time they brought it back via TCM Cinema Classics, but they mistakenly played the wrong introduction prior to showing the movie, instead showing the intro for Bonnie and Clyde.

dude in front of me kept yelling "WHAT? no, this is Godfather! fix it!", people booing, guy in front of me saying "I believe in America" over and over again until the film started and to everyone's relief, it was the right movie.

Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Sunday, 6 November 2022 17:06 (one year ago) link


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