This Was Francis Ford Coppola’s Favorite Movie To Film

Paramount Pictures By Joshua Meyer/Dec. 29, 2021 12:34 pm EST

There’s not always a correlation between a filmmaker’s best movie and the one that was their favorite to make, and Francis Ford Coppola’s career is living proof of that. “Apocalypse Now” and “The Godfather” are the two Coppola films that most frequently top lists of the greatest movies of all time. In Sight & Sound’s once-a-decade poll, the directors of the world ranked those two films at #6 and #7, respectively, making Coppola the only filmmaker with two titles in the top 10. Yet he made both of those movies under difficult circumstances. Producers almost fired him from “The Godfather,” while “Apocalypse Now” nearly broke him, even as it capped his four-movie run of ’70s classics (“The Godfather,” “The Conversation,” “The Godfather Part II,” and “Apocalypse Now.”)

“The Godfather Part II,” on the other hand, provided a much smoother production experience for Coppola. No longer an unproven director, he was coming off the triumph of “The Godfather,” which won Best Picture and won him Best Adapted Screenplay at the 45th Academy Awards. He told Vulture:

“It was the most complicated movie, but it was a production dream. It took 103 days, but it had scenes in Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas, the Dominican Republic, Italy, and in period New York. It was less frantic because I was in control of the production so firmly. We went to Sicily, and the sun never came out. Well, why would you want to shoot Sicily if there’s no sun? For many days, we just sort of said, ‘Well, there’s no sun. Let’s go home.’ It was a very complicated movie — much more complicated than the first Godfather, but there was no interference. I was the producer, and it went very smoothly.”

This Was Francis Ford Coppola’s Favorite Movie To Film

Paramount Pictures

By Joshua Meyer/Dec. 29, 2021 12:34 pm EST

There’s not always a correlation between a filmmaker’s best movie and the one that was their favorite to make, and Francis Ford Coppola’s career is living proof of that. “Apocalypse Now” and “The Godfather” are the two Coppola films that most frequently top lists of the greatest movies of all time. In Sight & Sound’s once-a-decade poll, the directors of the world ranked those two films at #6 and #7, respectively, making Coppola the only filmmaker with two titles in the top 10. Yet he made both of those movies under difficult circumstances. Producers almost fired him from “The Godfather,” while “Apocalypse Now” nearly broke him, even as it capped his four-movie run of ’70s classics (“The Godfather,” “The Conversation,” “The Godfather Part II,” and “Apocalypse Now.”)

“The Godfather Part II,” on the other hand, provided a much smoother production experience for Coppola. No longer an unproven director, he was coming off the triumph of “The Godfather,” which won Best Picture and won him Best Adapted Screenplay at the 45th Academy Awards. He told Vulture:

“It was the most complicated movie, but it was a production dream. It took 103 days, but it had scenes in Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas, the Dominican Republic, Italy, and in period New York. It was less frantic because I was in control of the production so firmly. We went to Sicily, and the sun never came out. Well, why would you want to shoot Sicily if there’s no sun? For many days, we just sort of said, ‘Well, there’s no sun. Let’s go home.’ It was a very complicated movie — much more complicated than the first Godfather, but there was no interference. I was the producer, and it went very smoothly.”

“The Godfather Part II,” on the other hand, provided a much smoother production experience for Coppola. No longer an unproven director, he was coming off the triumph of “The Godfather,” which won Best Picture and won him Best Adapted Screenplay at the 45th Academy Awards. He told Vulture:

“It was the most complicated movie, but it was a production dream. It took 103 days, but it had scenes in Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas, the Dominican Republic, Italy, and in period New York. It was less frantic because I was in control of the production so firmly. We went to Sicily, and the sun never came out. Well, why would you want to shoot Sicily if there’s no sun? For many days, we just sort of said, ‘Well, there’s no sun. Let’s go home.’ It was a very complicated movie — much more complicated than the first Godfather, but there was no interference. I was the producer, and it went very smoothly.”

From The Godfather Part II to Apocalypse Now

The documentary, “Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse,” chronicled Coppola’s struggles making “Apocalypse Now.” He was shooting in the Philippines, and as he told Vulture, “it was a style of movie that [he] had no experience with,” one that required him to film elaborate helicopter sequences and deal with typhoons and other issues. The movie put him at a career crossroads and he would never enjoy the same level of critical and commercial favor after that.