![]() This is the greatest feat this film managed to pull off-set apart good guys and bad guys in a world filled with bad guys. For us, they are the good guys, the rival families are the bad guys. Crime is done simply because it is the nature of their business, and we are put on a chair alongside them, so we easily relate. Inside, Coppola exposes the family to us fully, with a bold personal approach and we witness every discussion, every methodically calculated choice. If they survive it, they are drawn in as well as we are as viewers. As we get further in the film, the change is shocking and every outsider who ever got close to him is tainted in one way or another. At first, he avoids this underworld, but necessity, first-hand exposure and just its sheer devilish appealing nature draws him in. He returns home for his sister's wedding as a war hero dressed the part with his long-time girlfriend, Kay Adams (Diane Keaton). The best example is Corleone's youngest son, Michael (Al Pacino). The more I watched the more I realized just how incredibly complex and ruthless this society is and how it has the power to corrupt anyone to come in contact with it. Not to even mention that Lenny Montana was an actual mob hit-man and that he was actually nervous as he said that line. I could not help but sympathize both of them only to realize that I am feeling warmth for two mobsters. The scene with these two is funny and almost adorable. ![]() There is a scene at the beginning, in which, during his daughter's wedding day, one of his associates, Luca Brasi (Lenny Montana) practices his speech that he is going to give to the Don when he meets him. He avoids conflict until it is absolutely necessary. But for people like him, who do not fully embrace this world, it's not easy. He is the most honest of these men, sitting right on the edge. It all revolves around the Corleone family led by Don Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando). From the outside, we would only witness the horrifying, disturbing manifestations of their well-thought out actions. We are surrounded by its inhabitants-cold-blooded murderers, men who see crime like a 9 to 5 job masquerading as honorable men. It is also the reason why it's so welcoming. Coppola puts us straight in the smack-dab center of what is, admittedly, a society made by criminals for criminals. This film works so well because it takes place in an underworld in which we are so embedded that we do not even observe it. ![]() Now that I have seen it three times, the opportunity of sharing my thoughts and refreshed insights are too much of a good offer to sit on. But not early enough to postpone writing these lines. It's late and tomorrow I have to wake up a bit early. It is now past 1 PM and I just finished watching Francis Ford Coppola's "The Godfather".
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |