NEW YORK, NY.- After 50 years, Francis Ford Coppola still isnt finished with The Godfather and it isnt finished with him, either.
Coppola made his bones with that crime epic, which won three Academy Awards, including best picture; made untold millions of dollars for Paramount Pictures; and influenced a half-century of filmmaking in the process.
But times have changed. Its not like the old days. And yet The Godfather continues to age like a satisfied don sitting blithely in his garden.
In efforts to preserve The Godfather for future generations, Paramount, Coppola and his colleagues at American Zoetrope previously worked together on repaired and revitalized versions of the film as recently as 15 years ago, in what was then billed as The Coppola Restoration.
Now for the 50th anniversary of The Godfather, which opened in New York on March 15, 1972, Coppola and these studios have produced a new restoration. This latest edition was created with higher-quality sources of the film, improved digital technology and some 4,000 hours spent repairing stains, tears and other flaws. (It will be released in theaters Friday and on home video March 22.)
As Coppola explained last week, The whole thing is trying to get it to look like it did at the original screening of The Godfather, when it was only two weeks old, not 20 years old or 50 years old.
Coppola, now 82, said he never tired of scrutinizing of the film. But naturally any time he spends reflecting on The Godfather brings back a range of emotions and memories the pain of its fraught production and the pride of its runaway success.
You have to understand, as a filmmaker, I didnt really know how to make The Godfather, he said. I learned how to make The Godfather making it.
Speaking in a video interview alongside James Mockoski, the film archivist and restoration supervisor for American Zoetrope, Coppola discussed the new work on The Godfather, the scenes he wanted to keep dark and the scenes that almost got cut and even worked in a plug for his latest film in progress, Megalopolis. These are edited excerpts from that conversation.
Q: Why was a restoration effort like this necessary?
COPPOLA: The studio system, which was so good at doing so much, was always weak at this question of preservation. The Godfather was uncannily successful in its time. But Paramount was very unprepared for that success. Suddenly it found itself showing in New York in five theaters, because there was such a demand to see it, and then in other places all over the world. Instead of saying, lets preserve the original negative because its going to be a valuable asset, they basically wore it out something awful because they used it to make so many prints. The prints started to be so unlike what the movie really should look like.
MOCKOSKI: There isnt a great print of The Godfather from the original release. So what we relied on was Gordys [the films cinematographer, Gordon Willis] approved restoration. Other than that, we wouldnt have a clue of how the film really looked when it was originally released.
COPPOLA: And this is further complicated by the fact that Gordy Willis deliberately used a creative technique that was extremely dangerous. He flirted with it being underexposed which is a sin in parts of the frame. If the actor was not on his mark, if he was 2 feet away from where Gordy had thought he was going to be, he might be in total darkness. It made it beautiful, but it was very unforgiving.
Q: How did you seek out the portions of film that were used in this restoration?
MOCKOSKI: We found a bit more since previous restorations. Paramount found it in other [film] cans. They did an effort to cobble together the first two films [made for television and titled The Godfather Saga], and when they cut the film, it wound up in other cans.
Q: Is there any unused footage from The Godfather that youve never been able to locate?
MOCKOSKI: Godfather, because of its success, they did keep everything. Paramount had control of films like The Conversation [the 1974 Coppola drama]. And when that was locked and in distribution, they took everything he shot that didnt wind up in the film, and they sent it to the stock footage department. So we dont have anything other than what you see. Later on, we kept everything from Apocalypse Now, One From the Heart and everything in our vaults.
[A spokesperson for Paramount confirmed this, adding that the studio has 36 shots from The Conversation in its stock library.]
Q: Anything in this restoration that youre still not completely satisfied with?
MOCKOSKI: Theres still stuff in the wedding scene that was of degraded quality. But overall, in this restoration, you can hardly tell that.
Q: What is it like to scrutinize every single frame of The Godfather?
MOCKOSKI: Its fun to see things frame by frame, because youll see things that no one actually sees. When they do a fade or dissolve, youll see someone with a clapboard. Theres one scene the old gentleman singing the song at the wedding, his dentures start falling out.
Q: This is a movie that, by design, is supposed to be very dark. How do you know when youre looking at an image thats too dark or not dark enough?
COPPOLA: We had an early meeting between myself, Gordy Willis, Dean Tavoularis [the production designer] and Anna Hill Johnstone [the costume designer] on what the style was going to be. We talked about the use of dark and light. [In the first scenes] Don Corleones office would be really dark, compared against the almost overexposed, magazine-bright photography of the wedding. That was deliberate. I know, and any really thoughtful person knows, whats important in the frame.
MOCKOSKI: Thats also a danger when we retransfer it. Everyone wants to put their fingerprint on it and do something new. With the new technology, its trying to put more light in it. Youve got this beautiful opening, and they want to see all the details and the wood paneling. Well, thats not the point. Thats not Godfather.
Q: Were these the kinds of things you were paying close attention to during the making of the original film?
COPPOLA: I cant say that it was my nature to be worried about photographic detail. The Godfather was a very tough experience for me. I was young. I got pushed around, and I pushed back. There was a lot of bluffing I did. I was just glad I had survived the experience of The Godfather, and I wanted nothing more to do with it. I didnt even want to direct Godfather II.
Q: Do you ever get tired of watching The Godfather?
COPPOLA: No. Never.
MOCKOSKI: Im always nervous to show him because maybe hell say, Ah, but you know what Id like to do that I wasnt able to is make these changes and here comes a different cut. But he would sit there and watch it. He never gets tired of it, and hell have the greatest stories. [To Coppola] You told me when we did the last review that they didnt want you to shoot the scene where Brando has a heart attack.
COPPOLA: That was cut from the script. Paramount figured, when you cut to the cemetery, youll know he died. But I stole that [scene] by getting a little early at the wedding and having the tomatoes in the same place. Brando said, let me do this trick that I do for my own [children]. And he did the orange-peel trick. It was his idea, and he saved me. Thanks to Marlon Brando and Dean Tavoularis for getting the tomatoes. We had to fly them in from some other place, and it was a big scandal of how much they had cost for a scene that was cut from the script.
Q: Do you have any desire to reedit The Godfather in the way you reshaped The Godfather Part III into The Godfather, Coda?
COPPOLA: Godfather, I would say theres no changes I want to make. There are some pictures that I have and am changing and some I wont touch. But theres no rule of thumb as to which those are. Ask me now, a movie, if Im going to change it or not. You have a movie of mine you want to ask me about?
Q: I just rewatched Bram Stokers Dracula a few weeks ago. How about that?
COPPOLA: There are no changes to Dracula. That is the cut. Dracula is a finished movie.
Q: The Godfather has already endured for 50 years. If it should turn out to be the movie youre best known for, are you at peace with that?
COPPOLA: I think its already the movie Im most known for. If you ask everyone to name why I should be at all even considered of importance, theyll say The Godfather. Maybe Apocalypse Now is a close second. Apocalypse Now is a more unusual and more interesting movie, in some ways. But I was always making films that I actually did not know how to make and learning from the film itself. Thats why my career is so weird. I assure you, Megalopolis is the most ambitious, the most unusual and the weirdest film Ive ever attempted, and I have no idea how to make it. And I love that, because I know it will teach me.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.