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What It Took to Film the Godfather Trilogy: Behind the Scenes

Francis Ford Coppola almost didn’t direct The Godfather. Paramount Pictures wanted a big-name director, and Coppola was seen as a risky choice with a weak track record. He pushed hard for the job anyway, and once he got it, he fought for nearly every major creative decision the studio tried to take away from him.

Brando Wasn’t the Studio’s Pick

Paramount actively blocked Marlon Brando from playing Vito Corleone. Studio executives considered him box-office poison at that point in his career. Coppola arranged an unofficial screen test — he filmed Brando at home, transforming himself with shoe polish in his hair, cotton stuffed in his cheeks, and a quiet, low voice. When the executives saw the footage, they changed their minds. Brando won the Academy Award for Best Actor and turned it down as a protest against Hollywood’s treatment of Native Americans.

Al Pacino faced resistance too. The studio wanted a bigger star for Michael Corleone and pushed names like Robert Redford and Warren Beatty. Coppola insisted on Pacino. After a difficult early stretch where producers kept threatening to fire both Pacino and Coppola, the dailies from the restaurant scene — where Michael kills Sollozzo and McCluskey — finally proved Pacino was the right choice.

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The Cat Was an Accident

The orange tabby cat that Vito Corleone strokes during the opening scene was not scripted. Coppola found the cat wandering around the Paramount lot and handed it to Brando on a whim right before filming. The cat purred so loudly during Brando’s lines that the sound crew had to loop much of his dialogue in post-production. That one unscripted moment became one of the most iconic images in cinema history.

Shooting in Sicily Was a Logistical Nightmare

For the scenes in Sicily in Part I, the production team scouted locations in the early 1970s and chose the village of Savoca and the town of Forza d’Agrò. Getting equipment to those remote mountain locations required days of planning for each shoot. Locals were cast as extras, some of whom were actual residents whose families had lived in those villages for generations. The church where Michael marries Apollonia is the Chiesa di San Nicolò in Savoca, and it still draws visitors today specifically because of the film.

Part II Was Shot on Three Continents

The Godfather Part II juggled two storylines set decades apart, and the production schedule reflected that complexity. The young Vito sequences required period-accurate sets built in New York, plus location work in Sicily. The modern Michael storyline filmed in Nevada, Miami, and Lake Tahoe. The Cuba scenes were actually shot in the Dominican Republic because the real Cuba was off-limits to American film crews at the time. Coppola was coordinating different cast members, time periods, and countries simultaneously across a shoot that lasted nearly a year.

Robert De Niro learned Sicilian dialect specifically for his role as the young Vito Corleone. Almost all of his dialogue in the film is in that dialect, not standard Italian. He spent months training with a dialect coach and researching the speech patterns of Sicilian immigrants from the early 1900s.

Part III Went Through a Complete Cast Overhaul

The Godfather Part III had a famously troubled production from the start. Winona Ryder was cast as Mary Corleone and dropped out just days before filming began, citing exhaustion. Coppola replaced her with his own daughter, Sofia Coppola, a decision made entirely out of necessity rather than nepotism. The backlash against Sofia’s performance was sharp and public, though she later became an acclaimed director in her own right.

The film also lost Robert Duvall, who had played Tom Hagen across the first two films. Duvall requested a salary equal to Pacino’s. The studio refused, and Hagen was written out of the story entirely. George Hamilton stepped in as a replacement character, Vincent Corleone’s lawyer, but the absence of Hagen remained a visible gap throughout the film.

Nino Rota’s Score Was Borrowed From a Failed Film

The Godfather theme, composed by Nino Rota, was initially disqualified from Oscar consideration because the Academy discovered Rota had used the melody in an obscure 1958 Italian comedy called Fortunella. The disqualification stood. Carmine Coppola, Francis Ford Coppola’s father, shared the scoring credit for Part II and won the Oscar for Best Original Score that year instead.

The three films were made across nearly two decades, with completely different production conditions each time. What remained constant was the tension between studio control and Coppola’s vision — and in most of the important battles, Coppola won.

#1 Francis Ford Coppola considered bringing Marlon Brando back to play Vito Corleone as a young man, convinced that he could play the role at any age. As he worked on the script, though, he remembered Robert De Niro’s exceptional audition for The Godfather and cast him without offering the part to Brando.

#3 Coppola directs Brando and the cast in the wedding scene at the start of The Godfather.

#4 Coppola, center, with cast members James Caan, Brando, Al Pacino, and John Cazale.

#5 Makeup artist Dick Smith turns Brando into Don Corleone.

#7 Marlon Brando, Al Pacino and Francis Ford Coppola during makeup session.

#8 Coppola and Brando work on the choreography of the scene in which Don Corleone is shot.

#11 Don Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) – head of the ‘family business’ which is an Italian mob organization he forged migrating to the United States.

#12 Marlon Brando and Al Pacino on set of The Godfather.

#13 Young Robert De Niro and Al Pacino on set of The Godfather.

#14 Francis Ford Coppola sets up an early scene with Marlon Brando.

#15 Don Vito Corleone: A Man of Reason (Marlon Brando)

#16 Coppola with his two leading actors. The Godfather would launch Pacino’s film career and revitalize Brando’s.

#17 Diane Keaton and Pacino break character between takes.

#18 James Caan takes a break during filming of the tollbooth assassination scene in which his character, Sonny Corleone.

#19 Francis Ford Coppola, Al Pacino, and Diane Keaton filming The Godfather in New York City.

#22 The relaxed cast gets positioned for pictures of Connie Corleone’s wedding party. Notice that Brando and Caan, at center, are out of character and Robert Duvall, far left, is mugging.

#23 Brando betrays amusement at one of his on-set pranks: he added weights to the gurney in order to make it more difficult for his castmates to carry him up the stairs.

#25 Michael (Al Pacino) & Fredo Corleone (John Cazale) in The Godfather.

#31 Producer Albert S. Ruddy confers with Marlon Brando on set.

#32 Marlon Brando getting his hair groomed during filming of the movie ‘The Godfather’ on Mott Street. ,

#34 Marlon Brando (center) crossing Mott St., between Grand and Hester Sts.

#35 Marlon Brando has his hair fixed up for shooting. Brando plays Don Corleone in the movie and is gunned down outside Genco Olive Oil.

#36 Stage blood drips from Brando’s mouth after a take of the shooting scene.

#37 Marlon Brando and Francis Ford Coppola talks about the scene where Marlon Brando plays Don Corleone in the movie and is gunned down outside Genco Olive Oil.

#38 Marlon Brando and Francis Ford Coppola talks about the scene where Marlon Brando plays Don Corleone in the movie and is gunned down outside Genco Olive Oil.

#40 A Little Italy resident watches the production while eating lunch on his fire escape.

#41 Marlon Brando has his hair fixed up for shooting.

#42 The film set in front of 128 Mott Street in New York’s Little Italy.

#43 In the director’s chair: Francis Ford Coppola oversees a script readthrough for The Godfather Part III (1990).

#44 The crew films a street assassination stunt, with John Cazale as Fredo Corleone, the weak link in the Corleone family, watching helplessly from the curb.

#45 Brando and Coppola on the streets of New York. The actor and director would reteam in 1979 for the war epic Apocalypse Now.

#46 Coppola on the ornate bed used in the famous scene in which movie producer Jack Woltz awakes to find a bloody horse’s head lying next to him.

#47 Coppola and Brando with Al Pacino as Michael Corleone, who finds himself drawn inexorably into his father’s murky life of organised crime.

#49 Marlon Brando gets made up as Mafia family patriarch Don Corleone in The Godfather (1972), while director Francis Ford Coppola waits in the background.

#50 Shooting the religious parade during the Feast of San Gennaro in Little Italy. In The Godfather Part II, the procession is the backdrop for the young Vito Corleone’s (Robert De Niro) assassination of local kingpin Don Fanucci (Gastone Moschin).

#51 Coppola in production on a 1950s street scene for The Godfather Part II.

#52 Coppola and Pacino feel the cold of Lake Tahoe, Nevada, where Michael Corleone keeps a lakeside compound.

#53 Following the massive critical and commercial success of the first film, The Godfather Part II followed in 1974. Here’s Francis Ford Coppola examining a scene frame by frame.

#54 Al Pacino, Andy Garcia and Francis Ford Coppola on location for The Godfather Part III (1990).

#55 Costume designer Milena Canonero preps the wedding outfit for Michael Corleone’s daughter Mary, played in the third Godfather film by Sofia Coppola.

#56 Coppola with Andy Garcia, who plays Vincent Mancini, the illegitimate son of Sonny Corleone.

#57 Joe Mantegna (left) as the fated Joey Zasa, sharing a convivial moment with his director between shots.

#58 In a position of power: Coppola with Al Pacino as the ageing Michael Corleone.

#59 Cinematographer Gordon Willis frames a shot. Willis shot all three part of the Godfather trilogy, finally receiving an overdue Oscar nomination for his work on the final part. He lost to Dean Semler for Dances with Wolves.

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Written by Gabriel Thomas

Gabriel Thomas is a Hollywood fanatic and movie industry insider. When he's not busy discussing the latest blockbuster hits, you can find him cuddling with his furry best friend, a loyal dog who never fails to put a smile on his face.

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