First Time Watching THE GODFATHER (1972) - PART 1/2 Reaction
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- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- HEY, benvenuti a casa nostra! Don't forget the cannoli! Haha, this is PART 1 of my reaction to The Godfather I (yes, i made two videos of the first one). I hope you have fun watching this video, please let me know what you think of it in the comments below and have a nice evening/rest of your day. See you soon, ciao! :)
#reaction #thegodfatherreaction #thegodfather
Johnny Fontaine is based on Frank Sinatra who wanted the role of Maggio in “From Here to Eternity”. The director didn’t want to give him the part because he knew it would revive his career. Sinatra got the part and won an Academy Award for Best supporting Actor.
Not to mention that Frank Sinatra got help boosting his career from the Jewish mobster Mickey Cohen
lmaaaoooo i had no idea. Thanks for sharing this 👌
"allegedly"
@@mataneren3852Willie Moretti actually.
Ol' Blue Eyes was not at all happy with the character of Johnny Fontaine. Word is that Frank wanted Francis Ford Coppola dead.
That cat walked onto the set, looking for attention. Marlon picked him up and became part of the scene.
Close, but actually Coppola picked the cat up and plopped him in Brando's lap. It makes the scene, either way.
The cat is vulnerable in his lap. And he's gentle with it while talking murder.
And that cat is also a predator.
The scene at the hospital with Enzo the baker was really a killer scene. If you remember, at the wedding, the man who baked the cake spoke to Don Corleone about Enzo who was about to be repatriated to Italy, so he asked The Godfather for help so that Enzo could stay in America and marry his daughter. That's why Enzo insisted on staying with Michael, though he was frightened to death about what may have happened.
You’re a legend for making this such a long reaction. This movie deserves it and seeing more of you is always a good thing!
Aaw thanks! Great seeing you here in the comments. I do have to give credit to my Instagram followers who suggested me to do two parts for each movie 😬
@@amandamiquilena you’re taking too long on the second part
@@mem1701movies Always there’s one critic.
I'll tell you this: this is the best INTRO for a Godfather reaction I can think of! You set the scene for the perfect viewing environment: a rainy day! You include a great montage of pop culture references to the movie. Loved it. I'm basically one minute into the video and I already had to comment! Very cool!
Sweet! I love and appreciate when people pay attention to those things 😄
I literally searched for this comment. 💯💥👆🏽
@@sonyabyrd8739 I'm searching for Part 2 of this reaction! 🤣
When Solotzo comes to the Godfather it was 1945, and so even though it seems strange that he would refuse the deal, back then organized crime was just getting into widespread narcotic sales.
GREAT reaction!
And that brought organized crime a hell lot of trouble. Part of the reason what brought it down.
My mother was born and raised in Spain and she told me she could understand most of what a person speaking Italian said so the languages have a lot of similarities. As for the reactions, there are always people who will find a reason to dislike something, don't worry about them because the people who like your videos enjoy your honest reactions. This movie is a masterclass in framing, lighting and camera shots. There are videos on youtube that break this down and you can learn a lot about why particular shots are made in particular circumstances with specific lighting in this movie that helps you to understand why this movie is so admired and studied by film students and directors.
If you look at most west european languages (italian, english, spanish, french, potugues), they have a lot in common. And come from a similair origin.
@@VeryFastRodi yes they all come from Latin
@@VeryFastRodi Spanish, Italian and Portuguese area lot more similar to each other than to English or French, though.
@@oslafoirausuebutuoy5457 That is tru, but if you look at spanish in general.
It has a lot of similair french, italian, english sounding words. Sometimes just spelled or pronounced different.
And Spanish and Portugues of course being way more similair is the same with Dutch and German. With being neighbouring countries
I'm venezuelan, my Mother also understands italian and portuguese even if she dosen't fully speak those languages.
"Why is it so dark in there?" There was a big argument during filming between the director and the lighting guy. The director thought the shadows were more important than clearly seeing faces. It was his movie, so he won the argument.
I think in my opinion a dark room also adds a level of suspense and mystery making you think well who is this guy why is he so feared yet respected darkness also imo makes the conversation seem more serious but yeah I guess you may be right to
The man they had playing Luca Brazi was a legitimate scary person. He was a bodyguard for a capo in one of the families. As I understand it he spent some time in prison for arson. This was actual the start of a movie career for him. Also Luca was the primary enforcer for Vito Corleone. He was his primary enforcer. According to Michael Franzese who was a capo in the 70s dealing in drugs was frowned upon. He was told that if he got involved with drugs he would be killed. Although some did get involved you were ok as long as you didn't get caught and kicked up to the higher ups would look the other way. This is different than in Italy where they were heavily involved. Michael Fanzese is the only member of the Cosa Nostra that successfully left without going into witness protection.
Yep -- I always believe the word of (former) criminals whose lives were a living lie.
Your English is superb. I wish I had similar comprehension of Spanish. And I really appreciate your reactions: fresh and authentic to a film I thought I knew inside out. You brought new perspectives to a classic film.
I agree with you. A shame some of my comrades at work don't speak English as good.
I love that you showed a lot of the movie compared to some other reactors and you didn't talk over all of it. You def took it all in.
Thanks! but i do have to say that my followers on Instagram suggested me to split this reaction and that's the main reason why the video is long, haha. On another note, I appreciate that you liked my take on it but part of our "job" as reactors is to talk over the movie, it also helps to avoid copyright issues. We shouldn't just sit there and make faces while streaming the movie cause that's actually illegal lol
The fact that they strangled Luca meant that they knew he was wearing a vest. That's the first sign there was a traitor in the family.
That’s possible, but not certain. They garroted Carlo, too, and he didn’t wear a vest. They might have known about the vest just because Luca Brasi was Luca Brasi and was known to wear one.
This reaction is FANTASTIC!!!!!! You have given us a very generous, very thorough cut and your reactions are priceless, even to just the tiniest little details. Your appreciation and understanding of Italian culture makes this reaction very, very special (you are completely correct: Italian and Spanish culture are very similar). I'd have to look at your full video list, but I think this may be my favorite Amanda Miquilena reaction yet!!! Very, very special reaction!!!! YES: Brando is wearing makeup, he did not look like that at all! He was the Brad Pitt of his day! If you look at pictures of him in "Last Tango In Paris", it's the same year, that's what he looked like. (Also "The Nightcomers"; he did three completely different characters in one year. No one ever mentions that!). "The Godfather Part 2" is fantastic as well. And then after that, you should hit "Goodfellas", the other masterpiece mob movie.....very different, just as great, though! Also "The Freshman" with Marlon Brando, a classic 90s comedy where he parodies his Godfather performance! You'll be able to get all the jokes!
The Godfather was filmed in 1971, so Brando was 47 years old then. You are absolutely right about his appearance.
Last Tango in Paris is a fantastic movie, directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. As I grow older, I have come to interpret it as a dark comedy disguised as a romantic drama. A very sexy romantic drama. 😅 Bertolucci deconstructs his own fantasy. I won’t say anymore because that might spoil it, but Brando’s acting is exquisitely tragic and deep.
Amanda, if you read this comment, please do Last Tango in Paris!!
That "Oh Honeeyyyy" 😂 Gurl you weren't ready!
My favorite movie of all time. Just a masterpiece. Fun fact: that cat on the lap was completely off script. It was just a cat on the set and it jumped in his lap. Marlon Brando just rolled with it and it added a lot to the scene I think.
Can't wait for part 2!
You're forgetting that this drugs thing is taking place just after WW2. (And the Frank Sinatra reference is anachronistic because it -- the rumour of it -- took place in the early 1950s, years later.)
Good job Amanda! Put part 2 out sooner. I'll make you an offer you can't refuse!
Your reactions are great! This movie is probably the second or third best movie ever made. The first is Casablanca( you must react to it) and the other is The Godfather Part II. Keep it up! You do a great job!!
Idk about Casablanca being the best movie of all time. Arguably the best script alongside The Godfather and a few others, and it has an utterly phenomenal cast, but other than that I haven't seen anything else from the movie that would put it at the #1 spot. Now, The Godfather Part 2, that's way harder. I personally think Part 1 is the more balanced movie hence why it's #1 for me, but Part 2 is a brilliant film
@@errwhattheflip, all valid points. Once upon a time I felt Citizen Kane was the GOAT, then Apocalypse Now, then Raging Bull, and later The Godfather. All are some of the best ever but I'll stick with Casablanca currently
@@thomascrays4200 Casablanca is for sure a brilliant movie. I could definitely see why people would call it the best of all time. I don't personally agree, but that's the beauty of great movies. It's all subjective
@@errwhattheflip I have a top ten rotation of “best movies”. Casablanca was my most favorite when I was a young man. To be honest, I was inspired by Bogart’s character, probably to an unhealthy extent. When I got over idolizing Bogart, I started seeing a lot of problems with the movie that knocked it from the top ten. Now that I’m even older, I think I appreciate it more despite the problems.
True fact: 'Luca Brasi' was played by Lenny Montana, a bodyguard for the Colombo crime family. The mafia sent him to the movie to watch it get made, and Coppola worked him into the movie as Luca.
30:19 - just noticing that shot of Michael on the phone and Kay behind the glass looking in. It's a recurring motif - while the men of the family conduct their business, the women are constantly being shut out (and sure enough, in the next shot we see Sonny on the phone and his wife standing in the background). And, of course, the last shot of the film is the door of Michael's office closing on Kay, shutting her out once again...
What always gets me is how people think these are films about a "crime family" when this is just how the halls of power work in the US. It's all who you know, corruption, threats and violence. If anything Don Corleone is a bit of a saint as depicted here.
"After all, we are not communists." (Still waiting for a reactor to pick up on that line...Perhaps this one?)
@@flarrfan communism works the same way, same corrupt oligarchs, except instead of families it's the party. Power attracts corruption and no "perfect system" can change that.
I couldn't agree more. Many years ago a very wise friend of mine was scornful of the lurid fascination with Italian gangsters. "They haven't done anything that every other power group in the country has done," he remarked. I realized that he was absolutely right.
It is such a blessing, that even 50 years later, there are people watching The Godfather for the first time, and it still leaves such an astonishing effect on people. It's one of my all-time favorite movies, and hopefully, you get a chance to watch another incredible Francis Coppola film: Apocalypse Now.
You have a beautiful spirit, great reaction, big love from Britain🇬🇧🏴
the detective who said Michael was a war hero was Sonny Grasso who was one of the lead detectives who broke up The French Connection
Tears are definitely running down my face. Good luck girl.
Amanda Miquilena, I like that you're alotting more than one youtube video to this film.
If you read the book, you won't feel bad at all for what happened to Luca. People dreaded him for a reason.
That’s some Luca
If it's not in the film, explicitly or implicitly, it didn't happen. Film and book... separate entities, in all cases.
The cat in the opening scene was not part of the script.
It was hanging around the set. Marlon Brando befriended it and ended up in the movie. It is set in 1946
The story of the horse's head:
There was a dog food factory in Mexico that the producers scouted and they found a living horse there which was going to be slaughtered for dog food. It was the right color, and when it was time for the scene they brought out that horse's head and applied that white spot to its forehead. So yes, it was real.
And yes, Marlon Brando wore an appliance in his mouth as part of his makeup. Dick Smith, one of the greatest makeup artist who ever lived (THE greatest, in my opinion) designed the makeup. I found severs images on Yahoo of the makeup process.
I first that story about a year ago. After I had seen this incredible film two dozen times.
This is the first time that I see one of your videos. You are so awesome and very beautiful!
As an Italian-American who like The Godfather, has ancestors that came from Italy, I can tell you with certainty that to hold up your hand while opening and closing your fingers, then going wow “Wawa Wawa Wawa”is not offensive to us as a culture. 😎
😂😂😂 "I thought he was just a fan of toilets" 😂😂😂😂
The scene where Sonny smashes the Federal Agent's camera, the actor, James Caan, said in an interview that the paying the money was improvisation on his part because the way he was raised was that if you broke something then you paid for it.
First time seeing your videos, your editing is awesome 👌 👏
The Godfather is one of the first violently mature films my parents let me watch growing up.
It's definitely one of the greatest film franchises of all time.
Seeing so much civilized (and uncivilized) politicking in the world of organized crime intrigued me and has been the center of many "What if" discussions with my father over the years, over how things could've played out differently.
Corleone / " Corleon' " would depend on the dialect. Early in the movie they use the term "paesan," meaning a fellow Italian or Italian-American, a variant of paesano (countryman).
Arguably the greatest movie ever made......may be Brando’s best performance
Yes! Brando stuffed cotton in his mouth, and his make-up made him look 20 years older.
"I though he was just a fan of toilets."
You mention that it's a shame that they don't show the beating the two punks who assaulted the undertaker's daughter receive. It is described in the novel and the boys get the treatment they deserve. Paulie and a couple of big ex-boxers give them a thorough beating and they have to spend q month in the hospital afterwards (and may have some permanent scars, etc. to remind them of their crimes).
19:00 yes. Marlon Brando has prostetics in his face to make him look older. The actor was only 47 when they film the movie.
The scene where Micheal tells his father in the hospital that he will take care of him is wher eMichael goes to the dark side. It's like Frodo keeping the Ring. That's why his father weeps, because he didn't want that for Michael.
Amanda.... YOUR WAY TO 😍BEAUTIFUL😍 TO CRY! And yes i just subscribed! ✌
It was my 30th birthday yesterday and I hadn't watched The Godfather until I was like 27 or 28. It's wild because so many people love it, even in my own family, yet I just never gave it a chance until more recently. I've watched the trilogy through like 4 times since then. It's really good, isn't it? People weren't lying jaja
What a great movie! The Frank Sinatra (the Johnny Fontaine character) history is perfect, just like it really happened. The movie he got was "From Here to Eternity", first he didn't sing and he got an Oscar for it.
The wedding takes place in 1945. The movie covers the years from 1945-50, or so.
Hi, Amanda. New subscriber, first time watching, ready to watch more! Yes, sometimes, with some people, something simply must be done. But "happy endings" did make me laugh, LOL! 😂
Really enjoyed your first half review of The Godfather.
Looking forward to part 2.
What the guys laughing at Michael (when he said he'd "kill 'em both") didn't understand was that he fought in WWII. And not in Europe; he fought in the Pacific, which was intimate, brutal combat. Especially for the Marines.
This woman is like my wife she thinks she knows what's going on and tries to guess what's next and is always wrong . 😂
"Leave the Gun, Take the Cannoli"
Kinda sums it up
12:32 in this situation you don't pay in cash. If you were cool in his book the Godfather gives you whatever you want on his daughter's wedding. In any other situation it wouldn't be free. In the book he won't take your cash, but he'll take your "friendship"
@25:41 Santino talking out of order here (his father stopped him), gives Solozzo (with the Tattaglias & Barzinis holding his strings) *the impression Sonny is interested enough* to be far less reluctant to ttake his project, that Solozzo so much needs, than his father Don Vito Corleone. That's the reason *why Solozzo will shortly make an attemot at Vito Corleone's life.*
I’m from NY. A lot of friends fathers were in. My dad grew up with them in Brooklyn. Rule is don’t owe then anything, and your ok.
Your facial expressions are so cool-you’re so pretty!
GF1 and GF2 are masterpieces. I wish I was watching these classic films for the first time again, too. 😊
Tell the people who dislike your videos that you're gonna make them an offer they can't refuse.
Now that's a movie everyone should watch! The Godfather trilogy is a true classic.
Well... the first two at least
As someone who loves history, I love the first half hour of this movie. I'm with you, the music and party scene is amazing.
Drugs were actually forbidden in the mafia. Those on drugs were more likely to become informants to the feds if/when pressured.
You’re going to love how this story progresses. And Godfather II, even better.
14:35 It is Corleone but, in informal or colloquial Italian, words/names can sometimes be abbreviated, so he's sometimes referred to as "Corleon".
YAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY. I watch this like history lol - I am Italian. My family moved to America in 1920.
Same here. My dad's family came here from Sicily to Ellis Island in 1920. Dad was born 6 years later.
In the scene at the beginning The Godfather does you a favor but now you're in his pocket and he can ask you to do anything and you can't refuse
It’s sort of like Olive Garden. You eat one lousy breadstick and they think you’re part of the family.
You should also note that by custom the Godfather cannot refuse a reasonable request on the day of his daughter’s wedding.
This is reaction + asmr combined. Love eeeet
Hey Amanda, can't wait to see your Part 2 reaction of The Godfather...
Sharing some of my outlook on the movie.
10:46 - The music gets me too especially after the intense opening dark scene of the movie.
22:30 to 22:35 - Thought same for Woltz but it was his precious horse that met fate.
22:41 - Sharp observation (seeing the Oscar status). Some will miss it on first viewing.
24:29 - It means Don Corleone (Marlon Brando's) character is insulted.
37:01 - Hahaha **jump scare moment**
I didn’t fully catch the gesture at 24:29. Thanks for the insight!
Great reaction, as usual, for a great movie, Amanda! However, I'm with most critics in thinking that Godfather 2 is even better than this...
btw, the actress that plays Mike's gf is Diane Keaton, who went on to make a series of famous films with Woody Allen, and even win a
Best Actress Oscar!!!
You should mention the name of the movie, Annie Hall. (Although maybe you’re also thinking of the movie Manhattan.)
Annie Hall also has a frikkin great cameo by a young Christopher Walken! I don’t think he had developed his distinctive speech rhythm yet.
have even eagerly awaiting another upload!
Amanda has the most beautiful smile i have ever seen. Good lord.
Don Corleone's office is dark because the filmmakers wanted to show the contrast of the evil things happening there with the bright light of the happy wedding outside.
A lot of people miss the message of the Godfather surprisingly. The point of the first scene... and many after... is that the Godfather doesn't do things purely for money. Quite the opposite in fact. He wants friendships and connections with people that supersede the influence of money. Bonsera at the beginning of the movie wants to pay him to kill thugs, Vito asks him why he treats him so disrespectfully. You see Vito use his fingers to wipe something invisible from his face in that scene and the scene with Solazzo. When these people try to persuade Vito by the monetary aspect of a situation. Vito's own father was killed because of a monetary situation and his mother also killed and he had to flee to the USA... you see this more in Godfather 2. In Godfather 2 you see another Don basically bullying people to get money from them. Vito builds friendships that are based on something more solid than money. Real friendship and trust. Whenever it seems like he's a corrupt gangster, you have to remember at the time even police and politicians were persuaded by money to ignore truth or integrity. Vito builds real connections and friendships by avoiding monetary influence and even pushes violently when an issue is more about money gain than integrity. He teaches Bonsera about this in the beginning. He tries to teach Sonny about it with the Solazzo deal. He tries to appeal to the other Dons with the drugs issue. Don't bring bad things into the world you are overseeing whilst still trying to maintain some control and power over your community... because... other people gaining control may not care about the community and people as much. In Godfather 2 we see Micheal trying to maintain this connections dynamic but he isn't capable of maintaining the heart of it. Vito asks Sonny if he spends time with his family... because a man who doesn't spend time with his family isn't a real man. Micheal sadly didn't follow in his father's footsteps in that regard and ends up becoming very distant from all of his family where as Vito kept trying to keep them close. Because.... in life... even if you are very rich and powerful... it wont mean anything if you feel alone... like Vito was as a child in the USA after his mother and father and brother were killed in Italy. Build something more powerful in life than money. Build a family.
Solving problems in exchange for loyalty.
ha! you thought "he was just a fan of toilets." aren't we all? especially the new fangled in-door kind.
As a 2nd generation Italian American New Yorker, my grandparents were from Calabria, we don’t find anything offensive!
I've probably seen this movie 20 times, and I am looking forward to watching you see it for the first time. Should be fun. 😀
I am glad you are taking your time reacting to this film Amanda. I hate when YTers watch a classic two hour film and give it all of 25 minutes. My only quibble is that you talked over the scene where Michael tells the nurse that "people are coming to kill my father", which I think is one of the movie's most powerful. Also, as far as reacting, your natural reactions are just fine. I also hate it when YTers ham it up with their reactions. EVERY damned movie is the "funniest!" or the "saddest" or whatever. They either have poor tasted or worse, they are lying to please gullible viewers. Keep up the good work!
Brando put gauze in his jowls because that’s how he saw the part. You should check out the movies On The Waterfront and A Streetcar Named Desire to see Brando at his physical and acting peak. He was generally considered to be the greatest American actor. Duvall, Hackman, Pacino, Hoffman, et al considered him to be the best.
Marlon Brando was wearing a mouthpiece to look more like a bulldog. He was also wearing makeup to make him look older. He was only 47 when the movie was filmed. If you look up "Marlon Brando No Makeup" or something like that, you'll see. He looks way younger without it.
Italian is such a musical language!
In the book, it explains Mike and the caporegimes laughing.
The Caporegimes Tessio and Clemenza laughed taking Sonny's lead BUT they thought Sonny disbelieved Mike. Mike thought all three were disrespecting him.
Sonny was in a holding pattern. He was a very good acting don and he held the other families to a standstill. But he was limited. He was not a great Don like Mike or Vito. He was cunning but not brilliant. He needed Mike to stop being a civilian. He KNEW with Mike on his side he could win. He was smart enough to know that and was waiting and FINALLY, a tap on the jaw got him to finally join Sonny. He thought it was hilarious. He was laughing with relief as much as anything. The caporegimes misjudged him and so did Mike.
I think they should have spelt this out better as it underplays a lot of Sonny.
Sonny in the novel was very smart, very violent and emotionally driven and it did make him a little reckless and unreliable he pays for that but is also loyal, tough and loves his family. Very complex character. In the movie, he is not as smart and a thug mostly.
Regarding the question wondering why you don't cry: this is your channel and we want you to react honestly. The reason you haven't cried is because a movie hasn't made you cry. It's up to the movie to make you cry. It never even crossed my mind why you do or don't cry. What a stupid - and offensive - question.
There is NOTHING wrong with your reactions. Don't change a thing. You react however you feel, whatever you are comfortable with. I wonder if the guy who asked you that question asks the same thing from male reactors, you know what I mean?
Always be yourself!
Simpson’s reference!?!? I LOVE YOU
The war reference "take it to the mattresses" is also from this. At 18:45
P.s. Robert Duvall killed it as Tom Hagen.
29:43 - Nice attention to detail - the movie playing at Radio City Music Hall is "The Bells of St. Mary's" (with Bing Crosby and Ingrid Bergman). I looked it up and that movie did indeed come out in December of 1945. So, it's Christmas time in the movie and a bit later Tom Hagen says "it's almost 1946." (Also, earlier when Nazorine the baker was asking The Godfather to arrange for his daughter to marry Enzo he said, "Now that the War is over, this boy Enzo, they want to re-patriate him back to Italy.")
Which makes sense since Michael fought in WWII and came back recently enough to still be in uniform
29:27 "He's wearing protection...right?" that caught me so off-guard 💀💀💀💀
Awesome reaction to the masterpiece movie ;)
That Simpsons reference (Don Homerone) is to a character from the second movie.
YES, Marlon Brando put something in there! Dunno what, some gum pieces or something. A buddy of mine once put used earplugs into his lower gums, then started talking like Corleone.
Btw, no fault for not getting it, since so many names fly around, but ENZO (the young man at the hospital, helping Michael out) is the son of the *second man* to speak to Corleone, during the intro - the baker's apprentice, hot for the baker's daughter! Corleone hooked them up, they got married, Enzo's living the life! He truly arrives at the hospital with flowers and true intentions, and when he realizes Corleone's in trouble, he eagerly assists (and with a thick Italian accent, he's _from_ Italy, after all _"I 'elp you, I 'elp!"_ ), even to the point of risking his life on the stairs, shaking like a leaf afterwards.
Enzo's a real lad!
Brando stuffed his cheeks with cotton balls. I was impressed that she noticed that.
@@brettv5967 For the movie they actually used a latex insert (or possibly a wax and cotton insert), but Brando came up with the look during an informal screen test. Coppola talks about it in an interview. The reason you wouldn’t use cotton balls is they won’t keep a consistent shape over the course of a shooting day.
For your fadda, for your fadda!
You might want to change your comment to read son-in-law, by the way! 😉 Although technically they were impegnatos not sposatos. What would you call Enzo in Italian? Futuro genero? (Yes, I looked those up. The Italian words are very different from the Spanish ones.)
18:54, yes, Amanda..that's where the saying came from..this film! So cool how Brando played the Don, even though he wasn't Italian! 24:20..Ironic how the Mafia was so anxiuos to get into the drug biz in the 40's, then 60 years later couldn't get out of them fast enough, "Franchising'" it out to the Russians, Traids, etc. "Too big of a liability" said a local Chicago boss. They then invested in legal income like online sports betting, payday loans and banking.
Ahhh "The Godfather".... we are 3 brothers in the family and it's our favorite movie... its our father's favorite movie as well, he made us discover it. My biggest regret is that I didnt watch it for the first time with my Dad... it was a Friday night... I had school on Saturday and a biology exam to prepare and so he saw it with my younger brother and I watched it on Sunday afternoon, with my Mom... it was a crappy VHS everything looked blacka and white but I was mind blown... it was 25 years ago...
so great reaction
Wow, I thought this video was going to end with the meeting of Michael, Sollozo and McCluskey, a very imporant scene, the way you cut it lives up to the suspense, even if I had already seen the movie like +10 times, but it gets better after that, raI send thanks to Sterling Hayden, who played Captain McCluskey, excellent actor from Hollywood's Golden Age, also worked in The Killing and Dr. Strangelove, two of Stanley Kubrick's first films, who in fact said that The Godfather was one of the best movies ever).
I like that you recognized Al Pacino when he was young, because everyone knows this is the movie that launched him into fame, Marlon Brando was the BIG STAR, but some of the young main actors, Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton, James Caan (who played Sonny, he passed away in 2022 at 82 years old, R. I. P.), they were all young and promising stars back then, they became LEGENDS, the 70s paved the way into Hollywood nowadays, that's why it was called "The New Hollywood" back then, some of the directors and actors from that time are still alive and working, also the movie is now 50 years old so I think you came up at time to watch it.
And don't worry, I'm venezuelan and I don't care if you speak spanish a bit, I find it cute, especially mexican accent, my Godfather (literal) he referenced the film, also the references in other media like The Simpsons help me to watch the movie (I already did watch some scenes in RUclips, yeah I did some spoilers to myself but I don't care) and understood it better, as I rewatched I always finded new things, he's now living in Mexico with my cousin and my Godmather (who in fact, got italian nationality, she knows to speak italian and also german).
My mother also understands italian because as you mentioned, it's somehting similar to spanish and she even tried to traduce some scenes, she also fully understands portuguese, I mean, Brazil is a neighbor country and the biggest one, even if she dosen't speak those languagues fully.
Gracias por tu video-reacción, veré la 2da parte de este video😎🤌👌👋👈
Thanks! You are very charming and funny.
Aaaw, thank you!
Vito's name was actually Andolini from Corleone Sicily, where Pacino's grandparents were from
RIP James Caan.
I think part 2 is better, but this movie was ahead of it's time. The guy who plays Carlo, has been a real life mob associate his whole life, and has the truth about Marilyn Monroe and the Kennedys!
Many people feel this way, and I think it’s mostly because of the Robert Deniro storyline, which is charming and warm despite the violence. It’s about growth. The Al Pacino storyline is cold and dark. It’s a testament to Corolla’s abilities that he knit these two stories into a unity of growth and dissolution. Personally, I think the first is the better movie, even if I like the second one more on an emotional level. Capisce?
You're wise and it was evident in the first video on this Channel I watched. Kudos to you for wanting to stay authentic and not pressuring yourself. We've seen too much of that in the digital age and it is not a requirement for success. People also define success differently, and that is ok. I would also rather be happy doing this than sad and "more successful."
This is set in the 1940s; Michael is still in uniform.
no other movie in history have so many academy award winners in it like The godfather franchise
Much Love!