Wednesday, March 15, 1972

The Godfather released

The Godfather


Released: March 15, 1972


Studio: Paramount


Genre: gangster/epic


Box Office (numbers in millions)

Domestic: 135.00 Worldwide: 245.10


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: 775.72 Worldwide: 1288.50

Directing: Francis Ford Coppola


Screenwriting: Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo


Starring: Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton, John Cazale



Review:

Francis Ford Coppola’s “bravura, genre-defining, epic-length…gangster classic” FS “is considered one of the greatest films ever made and deservedly so.” VD Based on Mario Puzo’s pulp fiction novel of the same name, this “operatic, violent drama” FS “is entertainment raised to the level of art.” RS “The 1970s’ answer to Gone with the WindLM is “a film of epic proportions, masterfully done, and set to Nino Rota’s memorable music. Absolutely irresistible.” LM

This is “a gloriously-detailed – if romanticized – historical look at the ethics of American business, family values and food consumption (all that pasta!).” T98 “This sepia-toned Sicilian saga” TV “evokes the mid and late 1940’s period with powerful character development, lighting, costumes, and settings.” FS “The film follows the fortunes of the fictitious Corleones, a powerful Mafia family with its own family rituals and separate code of honor, revenge, justice, law and loyalty that transcends all other codes.” FS “Don Vito and his three sons are as familiar to us as our own family.” RS “Brando is Don Vito Corleone, the sympathetic head of a New York crime family, whose business it is to make offers people can’t refuse.” A07 When he “is shot by rivals, his sons Sonny (Caan), Fredo (Cazale) and favorite young son Michael (Pacino) assume control, with Michael ascending to a prominent position of power.” FS

“The horror, rage, violence, and paranoia of being in the thick of organized crime is told with brutal realism.” VD “Visually beautiful images of times and locales contrast with the film’s graphic violence” A98 such as the famous “grotesque, severed horse-head scene.” FS Coppola introduced “ that piano/fortissimo style of crosscutting between religious ritual and bloody machine-gun massacre,” T95

The movie was loaded with “career-launching performances. Al Pacino, Robert Duvall and James Caan became household names; John Cazale should have.” TV “Pacino’s performance…is arguably the finest in cinema” RS as the film traces “his rise from white sheep of the family to budding don and fully-fledged bad guy.” T95 This was “Brando’s finest hour, the mannerisms and mouth full of cottonwool not withstanding,” T98 as he “made the most startling comeback Hollywood had ever – make that has ever – seen.” TV

“Coppola had just turned thirty when he started work on the first chapter. Even later (The Conversation, Apocalypse Now), he never topped it. Nobody has.” RS “We remember all the lines, profound (‘I believe in America’) and silly (‘Leave the gun, take the cannolis’) .” RS This film and its two sequels “grow in stature with the years, their power to move us undimmed, their influence as up-to-date as The Sopranos.” RS


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Oscars:

Wins: 3 – Best Picture, Best Actor (Brando), Best Adapted Screenplay

Nominations: 10 – including Best Director, Best Supporting Actor (Caan), Best Supporting Actor (Duvall), Best Supporting Actor (Pacino), Best Sound, Best Original Score


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First posted 7/24/2019; last updated 6/4/2023.

Wednesday, February 2, 1972

A Clockwork Orange, the controversial masterpiece, is released

A Clockwork Orange


Released: February 2, 1972


Studio: Warner Bros.


Genre: sci-fi/cult


Box Office (numbers in millions):

Domestic: 26.59 Worldwide: ?


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: ? Worldwide: 82.82

Directing: Stanley Kubrick


Screenwriting: Stanley Kubrick


Starring: Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee, Adrienne Corri, Warren Clarke


Review:

This “true masterpiece from Stanley Kubrick” VD is “provocatively adapted” FS from the “stunning novel” A07 by Anthony Burgess. This “dystopian mediation on violence and free will” E18 is “truly harrowing, disturbing cinema.” BFI It is “a glossy, stylish, graphically-violent, controversial, futuristic, science-fiction satire about the effects of crime and punishment…on a British teenaged punk.” FS The “Singin’ in the Rain” sequence “remains one cinema’s most deeply upsetting” E18 scenes.

The story centers on Alex (McDowell), a young, violent leader and “his vicious gang of droogs” FS who “terrorize their way through London in this dark social satire with an eye on the cause and effects of ‘ultraviolence.’” A98

After a night of hooliganism…including gang rapes and beatings” FS Alex is imprisoned. He is selected as a candidate for “a grim, unorthodox governmental experiment” FS in which he is brainwashed against violence. However, “he is dehumanized in the process of being cured.” FS When he meets up with some former victims after his release, they “serve up their own form of justice.” VD

Kubrick’s film was still unavailable for screening in the UK at the end of the century “at the request of the film-maker himself. But despite, or perhaps because of, that, it retains an enduring underground popularity.” BFI


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Awards:


Oscars:

Wins: 0

Nominations: 4 - Best Picture, Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Adapted Screenplay


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First posted 5/30/2023.