THE
GODFATHER (1972)
BY ROGER EBERT
``The Godfather'' is told entirely within a closed world. That's why we
sympathize with characters who are essentially evil. The story by Mario Puzo
and Francis Ford Coppola is a brilliant conjuring act, inviting us to consider
the Mafia entirely on its own terms. Don Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) emerges
as a sympathetic and even admirable character; during the entire film, this
lifelong professional criminal does nothing of which we can really disapprove.
During the movie we see not a single actual civilian victim of organized
crime. No women trapped into prostitution. No lives wrecked by gambling. No
victims of theft, fraud or protection rackets. The only police officer with a
significant speaking role is corrupt.
The story views the Mafia from the inside. That is its secret, its
charm, its spell; in a way, it has shaped the public perception of the Mafia ever
since. The real world is replaced by an authoritarian patriarchy where power
and justice flow from the Godfather, and the only villains are traitors. There
is one commandment, spoken by Michael (Al Pacino): ``Don't ever take sides
against the family.''
It is significant that the first shot is inside a dark, shuttered room.
It is the wedding day of Vito Corleone's daughter, and on such a day a Sicilian
must grant any reasonable request. A man has come to ask for punishment for his
daughter's rapist. Don Vito asks why he did not come to him immediately.
``I went to the police, like a good American,'' the man says. The
Godfather's reply will underpin the entire movie: ``Why did you go to the
police? Why didn't you come to me first? What have I ever done to make you
treat me so disrespectfully? If you'd come to me in friendship, then this scum
that ruined your daughter would be suffering this very day. And if, by chance,
an honest man like yourself should make enemies . . . then they would become my
enemies. And then they would fear you.''
As the day continues, there are two more scenes in the Godfather's
darkened study, intercut with scenes from the wedding outside. By the end of
the wedding sequence, most of the main characters will have been introduced,
and we will know essential things about their personalities. It is a virtuoso
stretch of filmmaking: Coppola brings his large cast onstage so artfully that
we are drawn at once into the Godfather's world.
The screenplay of ``The Godfather'' follows no formulas except for the
classic structure in which power passes between the generations. The writing is
subtly constructed to set up events later in the film. Notice how the request
by Johnny Fontane, the failing singer, pays off in the Hollywood scenes; how
his tears set up the shocking moment when a mogul wakes up in bed with what is
left of his racehorse. Notice how the undertaker is told ``someday, and that
day may never come, I will ask a favor of you. . .'' and how when the day comes
the favor is not violence (as in a conventional movie) but Don Vito's desire to
spare his wife the sight of their son's maimed body. And notice how a woman's
``mistaken'' phone call sets up the trap in which Sonny (James Caan) is
murdered: It's done so neatly that you have to think back through the events to
figure it out.
Now here is a trivia question: What is the name of Vito's wife? She
exists in the movie as an insignificant shadow, a plump Sicilian grandmother
who poses with her husband in wedding pictures but plays no role in the events
that take place in his study. There is little room for women in ``The
Godfather.'' Sonny uses and discards them, and ignores his wife. Connie (Talia
Shire), the Don's daughter, is so disregarded that her husband is not allowed
into the family business. He is thrown a bone--``a living''--and later, when he
is killed, Michael coldly lies to his sister about what happened.
The irony of the title is that it eventually comes to refer to the son,
not the father. As the film opens Michael is not part of the family business,
and plans to marry a WASP, Kay Adams (Diane Keaton). His turning point comes
when he saves his father's life by moving his hospital bed, and whispers to the
unconscious man: ``I'm with you now.''
After he shoots the corrupt cop, Michael hides in
What is important is loyalty to the family. Much is said in the movie
about trusting a man's word, but honesty is nothing compared to loyalty.
Michael doesn't even trust Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall) with the secret that he
plans to murder the heads of the other families. The famous ``baptism
massacre'' is tough, virtuoso filmmaking: The baptism provides him with an
airtight alibi, and he becomes a godfather in both senses at the same time.
Vito Corleone is the moral center of the film. He is old, wise and
opposed to dealing in drugs. He understands that society is not alarmed by
``liquor, gambling . . . even women.'' But drugs are a dirty business to Don
Vito, and one of the movie's best scenes is the Mafia summit at which he argues
his point. The implication is that in the godfather's world there would be no
drugs, only ``victimless crimes,'' and justice would be dispatched evenly and
swiftly.
My argument is taking this form because I want to point out how cleverly
Coppola structures his film to create sympathy for his heroes. The Mafia is not
a benevolent and protective organization, and the Corleone family is only
marginally better than the others. Yet when the old man falls dead among his
tomato plants, we feel that a giant has passed.
Gordon Willis' cinematography is celebrated for its darkness; it is
rich, atmospheric, expressive. You cannot appreciate this on television because
the picture is artificially brightened. Coppola populates his dark interior
spaces with remarkable faces. The front-line actors--Brando, Pacino, Caan,
Duvall--are attractive in one way or another, but those who play their
associates are chosen for their fleshy, thickly lined faces--for huge jaws and
deeply set eyes. Look at Abe Vigoda as Tessio, the fearsome enforcer. The first
time we see him, he's dancing with a child at the wedding, her satin pumps
balanced on his shoes. The sun shines that day, but never again: He is
developed as a hulking presence who implies the possibility of violent revenge.
Only at the end is he brightly lit again, to make him look vulnerable as he
begs for his life.
The Brando performance is justly famous and often imitated. We know all
about his puffy cheeks, and his use of props like the kitten in the opening
scene. Those are actor's devices. Brando uses them but does not depend on them:
He embodies the character so convincingly that at the end, when he warns his
son two or three times that ``the man who comes to you to set up a
meeting--that's the traitor,'' we are not thinking of acting at all. We are
thinking that the Don is growing old and repeating himself, but we are also
thinking that he is probably absolutely right.
Pacino plays Michael close to his vest; he has learned from his father
never to talk in front of outsiders, never to trust anyone unnecessarily, to
take advice but keep his own counsel. All of the other roles are so
successfully filled that a strange thing happened as I watched this restored
1997 version: Familiar as I am with Robert Duvall, when he first appeared on
the screen I found myself thinking, ``There's Tom Hagen.''
Coppola went to
The Godfather (R)
Vito Corleone: Marlon Brando
Michael Corleone: Al Pacino
Sonny Corleone: James Caan
Clemenza: Richard S. Castellano
Tom Hagen: Robert Duvall
McCluskey: Sterling Hayden
Jack Woltz : John Marley
Barzini: Richard Conte
Sollozzo: Al Lettieri
Kay Adams: Diane Keaton
Tessio: Abe Vigoda
Connie: Talia Shire
Carlo Rizzi: Gianni Russo
Fredo Corleone: John Cazale
Cuneo: Rudy Bond
Johnny Fontane: Al Martino
Mamma Corleone: Morgana King
Luca Brasi: Lenny Montana
Paulie Gatto: John Martino
Moe Greene: Alex Rocco
Bruno Tattaglia: Tony Giorgio
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Produced by Albert S. Ruddy.
Screenplay by Coppola and Mario Puzo, based on Puzo's novel.
Photographed by Gordon Willis. Edited by William Reynolds and Peter
Zinner. Music
by Nino Rota. Running time: 175 minutes. Classified R.