Friday, November 14, 2025

The Godfather, Part II

Moving through the deep shadows and heavy miseries of his huge manor, Michael Corleone supervises over the destruction of his own spirit in “The Godfather, Part II,” released in 1974. The character we remember from the first movie as the best and smartest of Don Vito’s sons, the one who went to college and joined the Marines, grows into a cold and cruel man, obsessed with power. The film’s ending give us first a memory of a long-ago family dinner, and then Michael at mid-life, cruel, closed, and lonely. He’s clearly implied as a tragic character.

The Corleone story, as created by Francis Ford Coppola and Mario Puzo in two films with a runtime of nearly seven hours, has been a type of success story backwards. Roger Ebert compared in his review, “In a crazy way, “The Godfather” and its sequel belong in the same category with those other epics of immigrant achievement in America, “The Emigrants” and “The New Land.”” The Corleone family worked hard, was ambitious, remembered friends, never forgave betrayal, and started from modest beginnings to become the most powerful Mafia business in the country. If it were not that the family business was crime, these films could be an inspiration for everyone.

Coppola seems to have a certain contradiction toward his work. Don Vito Corleone as played by Marlon Brando in “The Godfather” was a man of honor and dignity, and it was difficult not to sympathize with him, playing with his grandchild in the garden, at peace after a long lifetime of murder, blackmail, and the noises. What exactly were we supposed to think about him? How did Coppola feel toward the Godfather?

“The Godfather, Part II” goes back and forth from the events in “The Godfather,” trying to tell us about the Corleones. Ebert said, “In doing so, it provides for itself a structural weakness from which the film never recovers, but it does something even more disappointing: It reveals a certain simplicity in Coppola’s notions of motivation and characterization that wasn’t there in the elegant masterpiece of his earlier film.”

First off, he gives us the beginning of Don Vito’s life. Ebert described, “His family is killed by a Mafia don in Sicily, he comes to America at the age of nine, he grows up (to be played by Robert De Niro), and edges into a career of crime, first as a penny-ante crook and then as a neighborhood arranger and power broker: a man, as the movie never tires of reminding us, of respect.”

The parts of Don Vito’s youth takes up maybe a fourth of the film’s 200-minute runtime. Coppola spends the rest on Michael Corleone, who has taken over the family’s business after his father passes, has moved out of New York, and merged business in Nevada, and wants to expand in Florida and Cuba. Michael is reprised by, and brilliantly, by Al Pacino, and among the other reprising cast are Robert Duvall as Tom Hagen, the family’s lawyer, Diane Keaton as Michael’s increasingly hopeless wife Kay, and John Cazale as the weak older brother Fredo.

Coppola handles a lot of this material very well. Ebert said, “As in the earlier film, he reveals himself as a master of mood, atmosphere, and period. And his exposition is inventive and subtle. The film requires the intelligent participation of the viewer; as Michael attempts to discover who betrayed him and attempted his assassination, he tells different stories to different people, keeping his own counsel, and we have to think as he does so we can tell the truth from the lies.”

Ebert continued, “Pacino is very good at suggesting the furies and passions that lie just beneath his character’s controlled exterior. He gives us a Michael who took over the family with the intention of making it “legitimate” in five years, but who is drawn more and more deeply into a byzantine web of deceit and betrayal, all papered over with code words like respect, honor, and gratitude.”

However, what was his sin? It was not, as we might have imagined or hoped, that he controlled over an evil business of murder and destruction. No, Michael’s fault is pride. He has lost the common touch, the self-respect he should have received from his father. On top of that, because he has lost his humanity, he must suffer.

Coppola suggests this by contrast. Ebert said, “His scenes about Don Vito’s early life could almost be taken as a campaign biography, and in the most unfortunate flashbacks we’re given the young Vito intervening on behalf of a poor widow who is being evicted from her apartment. The don seems more like a precinct captain than a gangster, and we’re left with the unsettling impression that Coppola thinks things would have turned out all right for Michael if he’d had the old man’s touch.”

The flashbacks give Coppola so much difficulty in maintaining his pace and narrative ability. Ebert said, “The story of Michael, told chronologically and without the other material, would have had really substantial impact, but Coppola prevents our complete involvement by breaking the tension. The flashbacks to New York in the early 1900s have a different, a nostalgic tone, and the audience has to keep shifting gears.” Coppola was reportedly advised by friends to forget Vito’s story and stay with Michael, and that was good advice.

Ebert noted, “There’s also some evidence in the film that Coppola never completely mastered the chaotic mass of material in his screenplay. Some scenes seem oddly pointless (why do we get almost no sense of Michael’s actual dealings in Cuba, but lots of expensive footage about the night of Castro’s takeover?), and others seem not completely explained (I am still not quite sure who really did order that attempted garroting in the Brooklyn saloon).”

Ebert continued, “What we’re left with, then, are a lot of good scenes and good performances set in the midst of a mass of undisciplined material and handicapped by plot construction that prevents the story from ever really building.”

For example, there is the brilliant audacity of the first communion party for Michael’s son, where Coppola directs as contrast to the wedding scene at the beginning of “The Godfather.” There is Lee Strasberg’s (acting coach and director of the Actors Studio) double-sided performance as Hyman Roth, the boss of the Florida and Cuban business. Ebert noted, “Strasberg gives us a soft-spoken, almost kindly old man, and then reveals his steel-hard interior. There is Coppola’s use of sudden, brutal bursts of violence to punctuate the film’s brooding progress.” There is Pacino, suggesting everything, telling nothing.

However, Coppola is unable to bring everything together and make it work in a way of easy, gripping narrative. The fabulous text of “The Godfather” is replaced in “Part II” with prologues, epilogues, footnotes, and good intentions.

You are missing out if you haven’t seen this movie. People have said that this is better than the first, but I still prefer the first one over this. Not to say that I didn’t like this sequel, no way. This is an A+ sequel to one of the greatest movies of all time. This is currently streaming on Tubi, Pluto TV, and Paramount+, so I give it a high recommendation of seeing this sequel if you have seen the first. This film has the famous lines, “Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer,” “I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart. You broke my heart,” (my brother used that line on me so many times as a child, which got old really fast), and “Michael, we’re bigger than U.S. Steel.” This sequel is another one of my favorite films.

Stay tuned next week when I look at the last, and weakest, of “The Godfather Trilogy” in “Francis Ford Coppola.”

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