I have officially found the most down to earth and frank actor I've ever seen.
@yes-fq6jd5 жыл бұрын
I love the honesty in this interview
@tonecot89325 жыл бұрын
The only time Vito showed any anger was at Johnny Fontaine in the "You can act like a man.." scene. But that was more tough love for his Godson, and he ended up calming him down and taking care of his "situation."
@countalucard42267 жыл бұрын
Just like us all. Switching channels he comes across Godfather and gets mesmerized with it
@johncooper22655 жыл бұрын
LOL!! Exactly, ..."these two are about as good as you can do". Duh. Absolutely, the two absolute greatest movies ever made are the first two Godfather movies.
@johncater48545 жыл бұрын
Great interview. Lovely insiders view of two of my favourite movies. Such a great actor.
@joesphgallo55346 жыл бұрын
That scene when Tom Hagen told Marlon Brando they just shot Sonny was the best scene in the movie the power of the statement/sonny was killed 😎
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
In the book, you find that Sonny has taken Tom in when a child, who became part of the family. Duval's take on that was perfect, and Brando's response equally spot-on, (and then his immediate response. He knows exactly what to do.) Flawless movie.
@johncooper22655 жыл бұрын
All good scenes. There are no weak ones. But my favorite is when Michael tells Fredo to never, EVER take sides against the family. That whole scene was beyond great. Certainly a tour de force scene by John Cazale (Fredo) & Alex Rocco (Moe Green), but also sublimely played by Robert Duval and Al Pacino, as well. Part of what makes it so spectacular is how it heightens the impact of us seeing Moe Green take a bullet in the eye a bit later in the film.
@armandocuesta8595 жыл бұрын
@YoungD3mon314 I would argue that's the moment, beautifully understated, HE realized his own capability to thrive in that world. He became acknowledged as the Don subsequent to his conversion with Keaton... when Clemenza, Tessio, and Neri stepped into the den and kissed the ring.
@marujob661926 күн бұрын
"Tell me..consiglieri of mine"
@johnnyrocker74956 жыл бұрын
The young Don (DeNiro) did the hard yards. The old Don (Brando) by that stage had reached the top and had others to do it for him. That implies no softening in his philosophy.
@ilirshqiptar5 жыл бұрын
In real life he would be the best lawyer ever . Great actor .
@ibleebinU Жыл бұрын
And after all these years and great movies that I've seen, The Godfather still is my all time favorite.
@mastert43034 жыл бұрын
What a great guy, and great actor, really interesting listening to him, and brando too,
@MagSeven75 жыл бұрын
Duvall played a great part in the Godfather movies and I agree with not doing #3, but to me...he'll always be The Great Santini!
@wapitiben23982 жыл бұрын
Love Robert Duvall
@MrAitraining11 жыл бұрын
Bob was great here. Yes, How many hosts would talk Godfather for 15-20 mins with Robert Duvall? If this was Letterman, he'd be answering about Madonna, global warming or where he went on his last vacation. Costas went right for the cool shit.
@jennifersman79908 жыл бұрын
That's why his show was so great in its day, just a one on one interview and Costas always left the door open for further segments if it went well or they didn't get to cover some subject. I wish NBC would put out a DVD box of the best shows, there were so many
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
@@jennifersman7990 Yeah, Later was the bomb in it's day. Costa got people to talk at length about stuff we all want to ask, (and got them to answer.)
@marcsmilen65655 жыл бұрын
Costas was a lame dumbass when he interviewed van halen
@r.c.reasor48075 жыл бұрын
@@marcsmilen6565 nobody's perfect, Van Halen have pretty much always been that way. Eddie has done alot of dumbass things with the band so which is worse? He's a genius as long as he's got his guitar in his hand. As soon as he puts it down all bets are off.Ask Sammy about that!
@johncooper22655 жыл бұрын
eh, ANOTHER way to look at it was that Costas was always a bit of a lazy & lame hack. Yeah, this was a COOL interview, but an awful lot of what makes it so cool is because Duval was WILLING to go off and talk about the Godfather for as long as he did, and in detail. Now having said that, THIS WAS ACTUALLY COSTAS AT HIS FINEST, because he got all of this started by asking Duval about why he didn't do Godfather, Part III., and then ... most importantly... he shut up and let Duval tell us.
@TecToss8 жыл бұрын
Besides absolutely loving the Godfather, I agree with the criticism of the romantic approach. So very few movies feel authentic and get the balance right between being "gritty" and "real" on one side, while still telling an epic story in those short 1-2 hours. That balance is something that made the first Rocky movie great - all the silent scenes, the awkward pauses, the weird speeches with mistakes in them and the "unnecessary details" like watching rocky make his pure-eggs-breakfast is what made you really feel the incredible discipline that rocky mustered to get to where he got in the movie. It's not even the violence that is missing, it's that those mobsters don't get the time to show their sociopathic side - in real life they are not the slightly melancholic gentlemen. Then again .... those first two movies where masterpieces; it's just an opinion that I didn't know mister Duvall shared :p
@pompiliusangerean91436 жыл бұрын
Well, _Rocky_ was great because it was about the "everyday" American. The mighty US of A was so very fucked-up in the late 70s and the "Rocky" character was something you would immensely like and care about. [BTW, in today's mentality, a movie like _Rocky_ will pass unobserved.] On the other hand, _The Godfather_ (both the book and the movie) after reading/ seeing it makes you to want to join _Mafia_ - and I'm not singular in my opinion.
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
I gotta disagree. Godfather stands out because the violence happens all around him, but he himself is apart from it, (and ultimately imparts that to his son, Michael.) When you see Luca Brasi garroted almost immediately, you understand the native violence of the time. The shooting of the Vito, the violence of Carlo, the shooting of Sonny. All very violent and graphic. The Don is, appropriately, above this, as a general is above the fighting troops. He's not violent, (is controlled, substantive, and a true master of masters.) The opening scene shows him in complete control of his domain, (listen closely to the soundtrack and you will hear the kitten PURRING on his lap.) Whereas other movies may be more realistic, showing the animalistic and sadistic side of the real mafioso, Godfather stands alone as a legitimate and faithful telling of an American immigrant who made good, (at tremendous cost.)
@mellotrongurl82756 жыл бұрын
TecToss, I'm with you and Duvall. You can get the warmest lights, best Panavision cameras and most beautifully written scripts, but there is nothing romantic about the mob life. "I mean that with all due respect" to anyone in that life.
@dzanier5 жыл бұрын
perhaps the difference between mobsters like brando's corleone and someone like john gotti is that the former saw murder as something to be done only when all other avenues had been exhausted. there wasn't a love of violence.
@szahmad24165 жыл бұрын
Reasonable Conservative...anyone who got to where Vito got did would have used tremendous violence personally to get there...or else, be killed or intimidated by someone nearby first.
@antarcticorb91974 жыл бұрын
Coppola has titanium nuts. He went up against Paramount to cast Brando and Pacino.. apocalypse now faced all sorts of issues between typhoons and putting his own money in the film and facing bankruptcy to get it done...no guarantee he'd make his money back...just a Master!
@leejee8811 жыл бұрын
Duvall: they shot sonny he's dead brando : :Sighs,exhales : ..............................WOW i love watching marlon work hes soo poetic .The way he just sums it all up in that sigh its like theirs and book volume behind every word and every gesture brando makes .He is living breathing life i miss that about seeing actors.Stuff like that is rare you dont get it on a consistent basis even in todays actors .No one holds a candle to marlon hes just that good hes on another level completely .
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
Yes, he was. Stunningly effective and watchable. Truly inimitable.
@theweirdthisweek6 жыл бұрын
Can't do it Sally.
@lisalmitchell Жыл бұрын
'The Chase' he mentioned here is cool. Another one of my favorite films that he is in is 'The Rain People' (also Coppola) from 1969-- James Caan was also in. And of course, 'To Kill a Mockingbird.'
@firenze5555 Жыл бұрын
If you've never seen Duvall in the Great Santini, you must watch it. One of my favorite performances of all time. He's such an incredible actor.
@sawyerstone131611 жыл бұрын
That scene was in Godfather II. Vito brutally assassinates Don Fanucci and goes home to play with his kids. A shivering scene in which Vito's true nature is shown
@natalieps23875 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that as he was talking maybe he meant Brando's character but at that point in his life the head don has plenty of hit men to do the dirty work. Did he want brando to flip a table ? The man gets gunned down early on and was weak physically til he died. It's like michael made his bones killing sollozo & mccluskey but he didnt kill anyone else he had others to do it for him. The head of the family doesnt do the dirty work one reason I'm sure is an alibi. Michael had everybody killed during the baptism u know out in public with hundreds of witnesses. Al neri was his right hand man he got his hands dirty a lot killing the hooker killing barzini he killed fredo. It's weird but it's like the only hit man he could trust to kill his brother was neri. I always though al neri became Michael's brother at the end he told him more than even his foster brother tom. Hes the one in a deleyed scene that knew about appolonia and fabritzio I got the impression nobody knew he was married in Sicily other than al and don vito bc in another deleted scene when mike is asking about vengeance asking " what about sonny? What about Sicily " the movie is such a masterpiece many of the deleted scenes should have made the movie. I can forgive certain scenes but the appolonia revenge stuff was not long and I felt very important and satisfying to see fabritzio die in a car bomb. Without the deleted scenes it looks like appolonia s murder was left unpunished and most think appolonia s death was what really killed Michael's soul. Yes sonny died and he heard about it right before appolonia but this was his wife his future and sonny dying was something I'm sure michael was prepared for in their line if work.
@mirazusta20024 жыл бұрын
@@natalieps2387 Brilliantly put. I would like to add to your excellent analysis on Don Vito's, and Michael's distancing or even alienation from the killings commited on their behalf in both part I and part II, the aura of mystery that this gives to their respective roles, almost in a morbid kind of way. The fact that their characters, with their enormous power and influence in the organized crime, are primarily portrayed as examplary family men, makes the whole thing much more interesting.
@FranklinSninsky4 жыл бұрын
Brutally? Don Fat Fuck had it coming tf
@williamwilson64994 жыл бұрын
You missed the point. He meant have the Don get violent in front of his family like the crime figure he was talking about.
@MikehMike012 жыл бұрын
@@natalieps2387 Apollonia died so Michael had no reason to stay in Italy. She doesn't need to be more involved in the plot than that.
@bigfin89911 жыл бұрын
Great clips, thanks for sharing these two interview segments!
@johnpap6753 жыл бұрын
Robert Duval could be easily the most confident bald man i have seen.
@chuckselvage31573 жыл бұрын
Robert Duvall does his research as an actor and has a forthright and intelligent answer for the interviewer.
@brianjensen45685 жыл бұрын
But u needed ur drink first....gold!
@Xardox176 жыл бұрын
Robert Duvall is a brilliant actor. Coppola directed Brando's reaction to Sonny's murder is amazing.
@andrewbarchenger20105 жыл бұрын
What's amazing is when Coppola said he would never allow people to talka like ah dis because no one in his ah family ah talks ah like dis.
@frankgreen98395 жыл бұрын
One of the Greatest Movies of All Time The Movie of Movies can Watch it 7 Days a Wk😊⭐⭐⭐
@louisborrego13905 жыл бұрын
If he's struck by a bolt of lightning, I'm going to blame some of the men in this room. That, I do not forgive. That aside, I swear, on the souls of my grand children, I will not be the one to break the peace we make today. Epic!!
@alansimpson89625 жыл бұрын
Both those. Movies is greatest ever every scene that was filmed was flawless in those movies there is no weak points anywhere in.my.opinion every actor should have won a academy award and that goes behind the camera too just incredible cinema work flawless just perfect
@jimmymac98432 жыл бұрын
I love the beginning of this clip. Good for you Duvall!! It's the truth.
@bfwetzel2 жыл бұрын
Wow..hearing Duvall lay it out. Fascinating.
@rxtsec15 жыл бұрын
Am I missing something, the man won another oscar. The movie is #2 on greatest movies ever made list. He knew what he was doing
@rolandchang53385 жыл бұрын
He loves Marlon Brando’s acting and he really loves the films. He is just uncomfortable with a film that portrays a disgusting mass murder as a gentleman and a hero and everyone can only see him that way. You wouldn’t think he was such a hero if he was real
@MikehMike012 жыл бұрын
@@rolandchang5338 good thing he's not real
@MoniLein-yy2ue Жыл бұрын
I agree with Robert Duvall. The way Brandon played him, Vito Corleone was far too avuncular. People have contrasted Vito with Michael but it’s like comparing apple and oranges because Michael is a realistic portrayal of a mafia don and Vito is a romanticized one. As for the Oscars, they’re irrelevant.
@rxtsec1 Жыл бұрын
@@MoniLein-yy2ue yet Pacino was so happy when he finally won one and Duvall
@rxtsec1 Жыл бұрын
@@rolandchang5338 because he's not real is why I can say it's the greatest acting performance I've ever seen. Give that man a oscar, oh they did
@DSCOBLUE5 жыл бұрын
Great interview...
@sal48563 жыл бұрын
watching himself on tv in one of the greatest all time movies
@ilovebrandnewcarpets9 жыл бұрын
*awkward moment when the owner of Dupont kills someone*
@slmeucalesa16 жыл бұрын
The chemicals, yeah......lol
@MilesBellas6 жыл бұрын
John Eleuthère du Pont (November 22, 1938 - December 9, 2010) was an American philanthropist, heir to the Du Pont family fortune, and a convicted murderer. On February 25, 1997, he was convicted of murder in the third degree for the January 26, 1996, shooting death of Dave Schultz, an Olympic champion freestyle wrestler living and working on du Pont's estate. He was ruled to have been mentally ill but not insane and was sentenced to prison for 13 to 30 years. He died in prison at age 72 on December 9, 2010. He was the only member of the Forbes 400 richest Americans ever to be convicted of murder.
@montauk65 жыл бұрын
ilovebrandnewcarpets “Who’s being naive, Tom” 😎
@snazzle97644 жыл бұрын
John Dupont was never the head of Dupont nor General Motors. He was just heir to the fortune of the Dupont family estate.
@caroldaronch19743 жыл бұрын
“Pop had Genco, look what I got” - Sonny 😂
@PhillyGirl6410 жыл бұрын
I understand what he's saying about the Don being tougher, but I believe he was past that. When he was younger he was that guy, but in the present, he'd already been grooming Sonny to be the head. Ultimately Michael was the right choice.
@matheusbruzzi11563 жыл бұрын
He is still that guy pal
@PorkFrog10 жыл бұрын
I sort of get his thing about the Don being all genteel and diplomatic, but the point is that the Don is always in control and has other people 'flip over the table' and do the dirty work[hence the puppet strings on the cover]. With many top level guys, everything is about business and money, personal favor and vendettas just don't play any part. When Lucky Luciano had Dutch Schultz killed, it wasn't personal, Dutch just wanted Dewey killed, and when the Syndicate refused, he said he'd do it himself. This was against the old code of leaving 'honest cops' alone and more importantly, would bring unwanted heat. What Brando's character did was make cold-blooded tactical decisions, and killing cold-bloodedly is way more evil and frightening than violence born of anger. I really think they got the character right, and 'saintly'? fuck no, that was just his public face and persona--the man had an innocent horse decapitated, and in the book at least, had people's faces deliberately disfigured along with all those mundane shootings just watched a Frank Costello docu, and Frank was a mob boss very similar to the fictional one, vicious and ruthless business decisions born from a cool diplomatic demeanor
@charlesbarboza85915 жыл бұрын
Joe Johnson I think we’re all forgetting that The Don did his violence early in life, in “Godfather part 2”, he cut open Don Chichi and put a bullet through the mouth of Don Funichi during the feast of ST. Genero, if I’m not mistaken. Be well.
@mrmeerkat10964 жыл бұрын
Joe Johnson I agree completely with what you said. Also the Don had alot of political connections and judges he knew, and was very aware of not being associated with drugs or violence directly. So it makes sense he is the way he is. Vito corleone and Michael are smart enough to know that's how you survive by not losing your temper and players it smart.
@antoniobiancofiore23962 жыл бұрын
I disagree - Those large organizations can kill in less honest ways and in have much more larger impact than the mafia one on one
@mark11967AD4 жыл бұрын
Robert Duvall is so honest and unaffected we need more people like him right now, but money has ruined so much and so many people. I agree Godfather I and II are about as good as you can do. Interesting point about Don Corleone Marlon Brando being too nice and antiseptic. I agree actually even though his performance was legendary.
@grawakendream89804 жыл бұрын
Duvall applied this ethos directly to The Apostle which I think he was doing or about to do at this time. Showing the facets of a tortured, righteous southern preacher
@AKFreiman12 жыл бұрын
Sausesi? Sourcezy?
@Vingul4 жыл бұрын
I only just realised he meant Scorsese
@adrianherrera91304 жыл бұрын
That's the actual italian pronunciation of Scorsese
@TheToonMonkey7 жыл бұрын
Not sure he knows who Peter Boyle is there.lol
@RichieRichMD6 жыл бұрын
Mr Duvall has never quite gotten the kudos he deserves for being a great actor, I'm with him and his opinions regarding Part I and II Marlon, of course, the greatest actor who ever lived, and part III not a bad film at all, it holds pretty well as the last chapter of the saga.
@tullymox4 жыл бұрын
My view of Don Vito changed over the years. When I was young, I saw him as a guy who just refused to let so called big shots push him around, and so chose crime vs being a victim. Over time, I see him as a villain - he uses men like Luca Brazzi to threaten bandleaders with death if he doesn't get what he wants. He kills a studio head's horse if he doesn't get what he wants (with the explicit threat that he's next). He creates a family doomed to decay and rot because of the evil choices he made. Good natured Don Vito is so much more subtly sinister than some screaming and yelling mobster - you don't realize you've fallen in love with the bad guy until it's too late to change your sympathies.
@umuta19694 жыл бұрын
Life is about preferences and making them happen. Waltz was mad at Johnny Ola because one of Waltz's main actresses was attracted to Ola and basically dumped Waltz. No one is a saint. Vito is a man of reason. He is not a senseless, ruthless man. You can reason with such guys and find a middle way. He did not prey on poor and helpless. He valued family and respectful relationships. He played the game with other players, not civilians so to speak of. Remember the first guy young Vito killed? He was a vicious bloodsucker. Vito tried to reason with him but the man simply refused and wanted all. Same thing when Sonny died. He did not go for vengeance. I say Vito is neither a villain nor a saint. Just a strong man who made a life for himself and his family.
@tullymox4 жыл бұрын
@@umuta1969 I see your point, but I just want to twist things around. Imagine you own a contracting business and sign a contract with a third-party to do your electrical work. Midway through the project, the 3rd party electrician advises they want to leave because a much larger contractor has offered them a huge deal to do their electrical work. You refuse them - the project would be delayed significantly and might cost you a major business relationship, along with damaging your reputation. You advise them they signed a contract, which is enforceable by law. A few days later, the electrician's Godfather and a very large, scary man show up, hold a gun to your head, and threaten to blow your brains out if you don't release the electrician from his contract. If I am hearing that story from the Godfather's perspective, I might accept that story as part of that world - he's just a strong man doing right by his family. However, if you see it from the other side, the gangster refused to follow the laws of the world in which he resides - he would rather use strength and fear to get what he wants. The contractor was just an obstacle. As another example, watch the first time in the flashbacks that Don Corleone requests a favor for someone - the woman whose landlord is throwing her out. The man initially tells him off, but when he realizes who he offended, he comes back, filled with fear, and agrees to his request - but then, Don Corleone extracts even more concessions from him. I don't think this was in the story to show you how strong he was - I believe it was there to make you realize that the power subtly corrupts even a relatively good person like Don Corleone.
@umuta19694 жыл бұрын
@@tullymox First of all I appreciate your comment. I'm not really against what you're saying but let me put it in another perspective. The electrician scenario seems a bit far fetched to me, since electrician did not stay true to his word and I don't think Godfather would not back him up for no reason, and if he does, would try to compensate me (business owner), if not to the full extent. Coming to the landlord example, at first, Vito approaches him with respect and asks for his sympathy for the old lady, even offering him 10 dollars a month more, paying 6 months up front. At this moment landlord makes up an excuse and takes Vito's money with a grin on his face. That is a concession for Vito's part, and he is willing to do that just to resolve old lady's problem without trouble. If landlord takes the money and leaves, he would not even know the nature of Vito. Instead the man disrespects Vito and even tells him he would kick his ass. At that moment, Vito reveals his identity by offering his name and business card. We don't see it but landlord learns Vito is a tough guy so to speak of, and returns to Genco office with fear. At that moment us the audience knows that landlord is a ruthless man that has no consideration for the old lady and respect for others. Thus he does not deserve respect anymore, and Vito extorts him (well, kind of..). What we are shown as the audience is that such man are not worthy and only understand power and can only be led by fear. That is the justification for Vito's action we are given. Now I have no sympathy for no Don's, Godfather's etc. in real life. But we are given a more positive, optimistic portrayal of Vito in the movie. It's much harder to say that about Michael Corleone though.
@jpgrumbach85624 жыл бұрын
The reason mafia loved this film is because they are shown in a positive and intelligent way. Whereas the reality is more complex. But duvall is wrong in lamenting that brando's role is always cool, reflective. Firstly it is always agreeable not to show the expected. And when you read gay talese's portrait of a real family you will meet sensible men who knew exactly about the importance of controlled emotions. And for violence there are james caan's scenes, bashing his brother in law e.g. There is enough violence, hot or temperated. But brando as an old man is doing it right according to the good (and romantic) script.
@cgabriel12186 жыл бұрын
These actors have their own egos and you can see the chafing under the surface as they’re asked to comment, as so many times before, about the brilliance and talent of another actor.
@gofar51854 жыл бұрын
thank you for robert duvall... he said everything right... nd truly right, part 3 was not as good... though readers/watchers wanted MARIO PUZO novel so hoped yet for a part 4 that then mario puzo cant anymore write...
@TheDriveInGuys4 жыл бұрын
3:29, 3:33, and 3:48 Duvall: "Sorcese" (sic) He left-out first 'c' not once, but THREE times. Just how well does Duvall know Scorcese?
@lordvoldemort57812 жыл бұрын
even HE loves the movie
@steveellery259312 жыл бұрын
you hit the nail on the head.
@alexmccourt70726 жыл бұрын
Interesting and honest guy
@edwardcairejr.35994 жыл бұрын
"You either surf or fight!!!"
@arttailored22276 жыл бұрын
A legend
@519djw64 жыл бұрын
Duvall pronounced Martin Scorsese's last name in the Italian way "Shorsése", but I have always heard "Skorsése." How does he pronounce his own name for Anglophone audiences?
@colonelbuendias6 жыл бұрын
I'm Chinese. I'm gonna make y'all an offer you can't understand.
@darrylbailey83976 жыл бұрын
jan cen - actually, that was pretty funny!
@colonelbuendias6 жыл бұрын
Thx. It's from The Sopranos.
@abosworth6 жыл бұрын
LMFAO
@kennethlatham31336 жыл бұрын
You made me laugh out loud. Thank you.
@pompiliusangerean91436 жыл бұрын
Who you?
@ShaAllahShabazzMBA8 жыл бұрын
I am a thinker. I love the game of chess. So my natural cerebral nature inclines me towards the Godfather. However, I agree with Duvall. The Godfather was romanticized. a more authentic depiction of the Mob would be Goodfellas. I like the Godfather more. But in sincerity, Godfellas is definitely closer to home.
@Number1Dougster8 жыл бұрын
"But in sincerity, Godfellas is definitely closer to home." Most definitely. These guys are just thugs in reality! It amazes me the way celebrities wanted to get their pictures taken with John Gotti. As if he wasn't, at the end of the day, just a fucking criminal.
@cockoffgewgle49937 жыл бұрын
Apples and oranges. Scorsese's movies go for reality, The Godfather films are more in line with a Greek tragedy. Brando's Godfather is romanticised but Pacino's isn't.
@fastfrank73286 жыл бұрын
Thats what Hollywood does
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
Goodfellas, Once Upon a Time in America, Mobsters - all steeped in heavy doses of violence and savagery. But Godfather is different because it's more the story of a family with mobsters as a background. It's much more believable, (though less realistic,) because Coppola knows how to tell a story, (and that's what the movie is - not a documentary.)
@bobmecgeo6 жыл бұрын
I agree, but that makes The Godfather more interesting. Whereas Goodfellas would have shown the severing of the horses head in all its gore, The Godfather just gives a quick glimpse of the ‘end product’ on the bed, concentrating on the movie producer’s reaction, leaving you to imagine the gory details. I prefer a method of presentation that allows the viewer to ‘fill in the details’ while concentrating on the deeper significance of the events.
@royfr81364 жыл бұрын
Completely agree with him...
@indgiu12 жыл бұрын
agree, it's better to suggest and evoke than to explicitly show
@gazebo633311 жыл бұрын
Copola wanted Brando to play Vito like that for a reason. It was the first time the mafia was seen as a sympathetic character.
@LS-ki9ft5 жыл бұрын
This is why Tony Soprano was created. Tony was the epitome of suburban rage. RIP James Gandolfini
@an-tm32505 жыл бұрын
Once shot, killed, its over. Finance murder is long & torturous. Much slower & crushing. The mafia is more merciful. They don't torture you with starvation & ruin.
@tobingallawa33225 жыл бұрын
DuPont does not kill people one to one, they kill an entire village in India and cover it up in an explosion, or dump poison and kill a bunch of endangered animals. It is a question of scale, not a question or evil or good.
@mikegriffin1045 жыл бұрын
Those 2 are about as good as you can do!
@alfiejames812 жыл бұрын
If he'd done it as duvall suggested it would have been a two-dimensionak charicature- such men don't exist. The most wicked are often the most gentle externally.
@el34glo594 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@TheWarStoreMan5 жыл бұрын
The one flaw in Godfather 2 was having Frank Pentangele instead of Clemenza, and they did that because Coppola could be cheap with actors. The actor playing Clemenza couldn't get the money he wanted. I think the movie would have been all the stronger with Clemenza in that spot.
@JustLiftUce5 жыл бұрын
True.. But it was still a great sequel none the less..
@el34glo594 жыл бұрын
I guess. I liked Pantagele
@jaxs23843 жыл бұрын
My favourite character in the GF movie
@CHAARAWTAZA14411 жыл бұрын
a man who doesn't spend time with his wife and kids (family) cannot be a man 0_O
@maxxz74 жыл бұрын
The sayings in the Godfather that we all repeat like "Keep your friends close and your enemies closer" are like Bible and Shakespearean sayings that are now part of American culture.......
@curfimo97934 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, Martin Sorsesy
@gonimysh3 жыл бұрын
Brando, being so intelligent and personally involved with the oppression of native americans not only by the government but also by big corporates, had understood that the head of GM and Dupont are no better than don Corleone and they are even worst. Unfortunately Duvall didn't get that because he watched only the surface. These guys don't kill one to one but one to thousands.
@JacobMichaelC9 жыл бұрын
Duvall does get his digs in here, lol
@pacovl4613 жыл бұрын
@LeCutter that's not what he meant. i agree with robert in terms of that there should've been at least one scene where he should've let the aggressiveness all out, just to spice it up.
@SenorZorrozzz13 жыл бұрын
That violence is something that you don't want to experience for real. If you ever do witness it, imagine living your life with the fear of that happening everyday.
@wufongtanwufong55796 жыл бұрын
My dad was friends with a high ranking marfia guy. One i day i was in a pub after finishing work. I was dirty and sweaty and the barman was ignoring me while serving more affluent looking patrons . Then Vino (Not his real name) walked in a recognized me and started talking and asking how my dad was. He then said to the barman "this is my friend Wu" The barman looked at me almost shitting himself and was like " O, yeah, I know wu. etc, etc" for the rest of the night as soon as my glass was near empty, he would run up asking if i wanted a refill, etc. He couldn't do enough for me. Vino was a great guy. One part he went to the toilet and left all his money on the counter. While he was gone, i ordered myself a fresh beer. When he came back and spotted me with the full glass, he counted his money. When he saw it was all there he asked did i pay for the beer? I said yeah. Then his face went all blank as he said "What's the matter, isn't my money good enough for you?" vino was a scary and intimidating guy
@LaurenThompsonIsMyRealName6 жыл бұрын
I bet!
@wufongtanwufong55796 жыл бұрын
Unlike your average rape accusation. This actually happened
@johndeagle43895 жыл бұрын
Duvall is right. The gangsters are more realistic in Goodfellas.
@moonbeamskies33465 жыл бұрын
If you watch certain scenes in the Godfather they are also realistic, they do the same and act the same as in Goodfellas, EXCEPT for the 2 main characters Vito and Michael who act like saints providing the voice of reason in a world filled with violence and mayhem. But they are really the most brutal ones of all.
@denniscorwin9805 жыл бұрын
Goodfellas is a whole different story. The characters in Goodfellas are street level gangsters. No one in that movie makes the lineup in The Godfather. Both great movies but no where near apples to apples.
@denniscassley99929 жыл бұрын
Did Robert Duvall EVER have hair?
@heirsofthekingdom98108 жыл бұрын
lol
@Gold-oj8do8 жыл бұрын
He had hair in "To Kill A Mockingbird" Boo Radley 1962
@jaysway92517 жыл бұрын
Chris Hagins LMAO
@roarrrist6 жыл бұрын
Marlon Brando had it worse
@avijitjha16146 жыл бұрын
Did he need to
@howlingwaters27416 жыл бұрын
Now "who's being *naive*," Bobby???
@denali96434 жыл бұрын
“They shot Sonny on the causeway. He’s dead.” ...... And HA! I typed this before they showed that clip!!
@ClaudiaVogel2 жыл бұрын
That is why there was a need for young Vito. Young Vito did show violence at its worst.
@tarksen5772 Жыл бұрын
Legends
@111Phoenix7775 жыл бұрын
I prefer the romantic version of mafia movies to the gritty realism of others. I think that's probably why when people think of mafia movies, the first one that comes to mind is "The Godfather".
@danijuggernaut5 жыл бұрын
Ohhhhh, mister Duvall, how times have been changing. After the 90´s only shit movies, like days of thunder or 60 seconds. You should colaborate on Godfather III.
@yuleyboy4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic actor, and incredible performances in the Godfather films. Disagree tho, that Coppola should have portrayed Brando's character as more sociopathic/violent. Most "Dons" from what I know/have read, at that stage in their life, are not violent (personally) and more interested in a low profile, profit-making existence. Not to say a raised eyebrow might lead to something violent! Also, do you think the owners of weapons companies have less blood on their hands?
@jameskane23423 жыл бұрын
Luv duvall
@el61784 жыл бұрын
Tha Good fellas came to fix the administrative look of the God Father..
@57highland11 жыл бұрын
As a representation of organized crime, The Godfather is mostly a fairly tale.
@reasonableconservative44976 жыл бұрын
It's a story, not a documentary. (Work with me here.)
@HLimmen14 жыл бұрын
It's true. Coppola has a more romantic approach, and amplificies moments of family and the way the italian mob works. Whereas Scorcese focusses more on the gritty aspect of the maffia. Good decision of him to pass GF 3.
@CalidrisJZ3 ай бұрын
It's the way it's written in the book.
@masquecagada49075 жыл бұрын
..... Robert Duvall.... what an actor !!... and he is right. 'GF 3' isn't as good as the other two.
@lebarosky13 жыл бұрын
But, of course, this point of view is answered by Godfather II, wherein we see that, clearly, Vito Corleone is a murderous man. Therefore, looking at Godfather I in that light, one sees that Vito, 20 years later, is just keeping his mouth shut. He is keeping his friends close and his enemies closer. Vito is a man who never shows his true nature to anyone.
@michigunsanta86804 жыл бұрын
Wow he really shits on the way Brando plays Sonny but I thought that’s what was different about that movie it’s a different take on the head of a mafia family.
@leejee8812 жыл бұрын
@su79er yes exactly don corleone was a man who great power and respect flying off the handle losing control thats not power. the dupont analogy was spot on there business men corleone was a businessman a smart one.he conducted himself professionally the genius of the second film shows why corleone had become the man he was. he matured from recklessness to complete control.duvall comes just being real as possible theres no transcendence. what brando did was art he went beyond the norm
@shogunMR12 жыл бұрын
he never said fly off the handle run outside guns ah blazing he said he should have a little more attitude and im not gonna disagree with a multi award winning actor thats been acting since the 50's ... either way the movie is probably the best movie or top 5 in history.
@andrewbarchenger20105 жыл бұрын
*Correct:* Score - ses -si. Per the man himself. *Not:* Score-says-e or Score says - he.
@mitchellness81754 жыл бұрын
Brando was right about most things.
@leejee8812 жыл бұрын
exactly ,the second movie illustrates this perfectly it shows a young less mature don vito .when we see the first movie don vito corleone.Is old and worn down by life alot of his character is under thesurface.Which is common of brando's performances its not what he shows you.Its what you dont see,the genius of brando's performances is that his characters are rich with a back story
@qqqTOXICqqq14 жыл бұрын
LOL he's saying SERSAYSAYZY
@gofar51854 жыл бұрын
robert duvall is perfect tom hagen... tom hagen life in "godfather" portrayed the generosity of vito corleone... vito corleone himself know the realities in non-bloodlines... tom hagen is young... vito is reaching sunset life... vito pushing tom hagen to legal fields with a briefcase... is protection to his non-bloodline son... vito corleone is too realistic... that a father could not truly know the future thoughts of his bloodline kids... michael corleone understood... tom hagen genuine sincerity and loyalty deserve a stable way out... to go legal... robert duvall persona as tom hagen is perfect... coppola is truly a genius director...
@AbrahamLechLacha5 жыл бұрын
That smell, that gasoline smell, smelled like... victory...
@steveconn7 жыл бұрын
3:12 the Disney version of The Godfather would be interesting to see.
@johnnyrocker74956 жыл бұрын
Dick Van Dyke as Don Corleone.
@leejee8812 жыл бұрын
Im just adding to what you said about the atitude thing .In duvalls mind he feels don corleone should of been more a brute .This includes the sterotypical strong arming mob boss .The way brando did him is that he's no different then any other person with power and influence
@juanfrinavarro92794 жыл бұрын
Really genius
@davidbernardi341011 жыл бұрын
Is anyone seriously shitting on what Duvall is saying here? Every single thing he said in this interview is dead spot on. (Costas is clueless, though. Duvall is working just to keep things on track.)
@MrAitraining11 жыл бұрын
Give costas a BIG break. I'm digging this too but it wouldn't happen without the questions. What other network talk show would you get 5-6 godfather questions out and answered by Robert Duvall. Not Jay Leno! This was good.
@harrycarrey12256 жыл бұрын
Bob Costas is the most underappreciated actor from the Godfather. His portrayal of Luca Brazzi is the best and nobody gives him credit because of that time he got pink eye at the olympics.