Do you include Part III in the saga?
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Cult_of_Kibner — 9 years ago(July 28, 2016 12:46 PM)
Originally, the title was supposed to be "The Death of Michael Corleone". It was supposed to be a sort of epilogue to the saga, not an equal part.
That's how I've always seen it. Parts I and II are one big movie, Part III is a separate movie. It wasn't even produced in the same era of film making, so it's got a pretty different feel to it. -
Darthmauler_megaa — 10 years ago(May 12, 2015 08:06 AM)
I don't include Part III, except perhaps the very last scene. The rest of the story desperately needed rewrites. So many opportunities wasted or dropped. And completely lacking the subtlety of the previous films. When a movie is that broken, fans are entitled to put it aside. Canon is a fictional concept.
Hate speech is the modern term for heresy."Ayaan Hirsi Ali -
DreTam2000 — 10 years ago(March 06, 2016 07:50 AM)
I couldn't have said this any better myself. I agree completely. The only thing I'm fuzzy on is your last sentence. Canon can be important, like in the case of those
Predator
movies not written by the brothers who wrote the first two. Canon only becomes up-for-grabs when a damn-good writer or director is able to masterfully add to the original artist's material (like Cameron did).
The Godfather III
feels like a cheap gangster thriller. The first two films were patient dramas.
Impeccable
dramas. Like you, I only appreciate that final scene.
I'm not a control freak, I just like things my way -
Hancock_the_Superb — 10 years ago(July 31, 2015 04:57 PM)
I'm not going to exclude a canonical sequel, but it's a very flawed film if not a bad one. Two main complaints:
- Way too much going on. The first two films had a lot of characters but they all fit snuggly into their respective storylines. Part III on the other hand feels overstuffed from start to finish. Besides Michael's decline and abortive redemption, you've also got Vincent's maturation, the romance, the Vatican bank stuff, gang war with Joey Zasa, Don Altobello way too many players cluttering up the story, most given superficial treatment at best. And they tie together messily, at best.
- The violence is extremely over-the-top. Vincent biting Zasa's ear off ten minutes into the movie, for one. The helicopter massacre is ridiculous. The final settling of accounts goes on way too long, unlike the original's baptism and the second film's briefer montage. I did like Vincent's hit on Zasa, there the stylization worked. There's no impact to any of the killings, just flashy bloodshed. It's less a Godfather movie than an action film with Coppola grace notes.
That said, Godfather III has enough good things to recommend a watch: Pacino's at the top of his game, most of the supporting cast is good (with an obvious exception), Coppola's direction is mostly good, Michael's scenes with Kay and confession to the Cardinal are excellent, the finale is heartbreaking. But it's a mixed bag at best, an ambitious failure at worst.
I'm afraid that you underestimate the number of subjects in which I take an interest!
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pfr_77 — 10 years ago(September 06, 2015 12:24 AM)
For now I do. I've only seen it once, and while the tonal shift was incredibly jarring at first, the film turned out to be not-so-bad and was pretty watchable and is sitting pretty well with me after the fact. I think I'm looking forward to watching it again just as much as I do with the others, albeit for vastly different reasons.
Currently, I hold no animosity towards it, nor do I have any reason to. -
Armond_Black — 10 years ago(September 09, 2015 07:33 AM)
The transition from Godfather 1 to 2 is seamless. It's like you're still watching Godfather 1.
I would consider Godfather 3 it's own standalone thing. It's not anywhere near the quality of the first two, it's almost like a fan-fiction of The Godfather. Even though it's technically acomplished, the screenplay is an embarrassment. If you like really campy movies like Scarface then you'll still get a lot of enjoyment out of part 3, but if I'm "watching the godfather movies" - that doesn't mean I'm watching godfather 3. -
DracTarashV — 10 years ago(September 12, 2015 12:50 PM)
The movie is called "Godfather" and it continues the story of Michael and his family, so it's part of the canon whether you like it or not.
Personally, I prefer to think that the events of Part III never happened (except for maybe the cousin lovin' he he).
Hey there, Johnny Boy, I hope you fry! -
degree7 — 10 years ago(January 28, 2016 01:19 PM)
Part III sucks, I watched it again after 10 or so years and realized its excessively worse than I remembered. Nothing about the
Movie redeemable, it's like a bad TV soap opera. Remarkably mediocre sequel to some of the greatest films of all time, and the worst part is it feels like such a cash in. You couldn't even pay me to watch it again. If I got a box set of the trilogy, I'd just throw the third disc away and pretend like it doesn't exist.
Coming off the heels of the first two, it's embarrassing to watch even by myself. It's just a dog of a movie that coasts on the influence if the originals. Without them it wouldn't even be talked about or remembered today.
~ I'm a 21st century man and I don't wanna be here. -
ElMaruecan82 — 9 years ago(April 22, 2016 10:20 PM)
We can make a parallel between the trilogy and the Corleone brothers:
The Godfather
is like Sonny : fierce, brutal, yet tender and good-hearted, it's entertaining and deep in the same time. And we all just love 'Sonny'The Godfather Part II
is Michael : deeper, darker, smoother, yes, even 'boring' sometimes, but it's more implacable and ruthless we can't love it with the same intensity as the first opus, but we respect the cinematic achievement, and it leaves us with an extraordinary feeling. It's not the most entertaining, but certainly the most fascinating.
And of courseThe Godfather Part III
is Fredo : it tries too much, it has a good heart but it's weak and even sometimes 'stupid' but hey, it's still a blood brother of the first two films, we still feel Mario Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola's touch and it features some heartbreaking moments, like Michael's silent scream. Some magnetism was lacking from the very start, but can we really hate 'Fredo'?
I'm sure those who prefer the first film also appreciate the last one and those who love the second film and think it's the best one, identify so much with Michael that they hate
"Part III"
, with the same intensity and severity Michael expressed towards Fredo. They don't forgive any mistake and consider the last film a disgrace for the trilogy, and symbolically disown it.
Darth Vader is
scary and I
The God
father -
TwoThousandOneMark — 9 years ago(October 27, 2016 10:26 PM)
No. I've seen GF3 twice, & that's enough.
I take solace that Coppola fought & lost the fight to title it The Death of Michael Corleone rather than GF3, because even vision as director knew it was uncoupled.
my essential 50
http://www.imdb.com/list/ls056413299/ -
sidgirl — 4 years ago(November 19, 2021 06:11 PM)
To be honest, I never watched Part 3 because of it's reputation.
You missed nothing.
I do not include it. I pretend I never saw it, and that it does not exist. To follow up two of the greatest films/stories ever made with that pile of soap-opera garbage is a travesty.
The scene that, to me, most stands out in pointing out what nonsense trash III is, is the scene where Michael apologizes to Kay, after visiting Apollonia's grave. Michael apologizes to Kay. For what??? For keeping his word to her? For giving her everything she wanted? For her killing their baby? What utter and complete crap.
Kay sure has a lot of nerve being pissed off that Michael killed Carlo–the man responsible for Sonny's death–when she killed their unborn child out of spite.
(And this is not a statement on abortion, btw, so don't get all reflexive, "It's not killing a baby, it's just a clump of cells!" or whatever. We can argue that subject forever, though I don't especially want to. I'm not talking about all abortion here, I'm talking specifically about Kay's abortion, late enough in her pregnancy that they could tell the sex of the baby, and deliberately intended as murder. That's how she herself refers to it, so that is how I am referring to it. Kay killed their innocent unborn baby because it "might" turn out like Michael, which is frankly disgusting. Michael should never have forgiven her for that, and we as viewers shouldn't be asked to see it as totally forgivable and NBD, something that Kay feels no regret or anything over.)