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Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38339
04/25/06 12:55 PM
04/25/06 12:55 PM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 831 New Market, MD
DeathByClotheshanger
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Michael in Parts I and II was a very reserved person. He only spoke when he was required to speak and wasted breath for no one. He was calculated and cruel when needed.
However, by the time Part III roles around, Michael Corleone is more like the typical Al Pacino role. Gravelly voice, some shouting here and there, and he was a much softer person.
We all know that time will wear someone down, and the more time Michael had, the more he was able to reflect on his life and regret the decisions he had made, but is Michael too different in Part III?
They almost don't seem like the same character to me. I mean Pacino looks so much different than he did in Part II and his acting style changed too. Not to mention the character changes Michael went through.
Anyone else agree?
This is probably one of the biggest underlying problems I have with Part III -- outside of the obvious casting and scrpting issues that everyone has. I still believe he is Michael Corleone, but it is hard to make a connection some times.
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38341
04/25/06 04:52 PM
04/25/06 04:52 PM
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 276
Walter Mosca
Capo
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Capo
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Posts: 276
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That is a good question, and I think you may have hit the nail on the head, DBCH. For me anyway.
It is a stark contrast to the transformation of De Niro into Brando. In fact it is one of the great attributes of partsI and II, the similarity between young and old cast. Take the very young Vito and the young micheal for example.
But, could this in fact add to visual effect of the story, emphasising the twisted bitterness inside him? Because you know what? in part III, he ain't so pretty no more.
"Jonny Tightlips... you're shot! - whered' they get you?" "I ain't sayin' nutin'." "But what'll I tell the Doc?!" "Tell'um to suck a lemon."
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38343
04/26/06 03:52 AM
04/26/06 03:52 AM
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Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 24 Israel
Hagit2
Wiseguy
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Wiseguy
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 24
Israel
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I thought that the change in Michael in GF3 is too great but when I watched the movie with my mother she said it does makw sense, that people are becoming much softer with age. Still it is completly different Michael than we used to know in GF1 and GF2. Take for example his attitue to Kay: Michael of GF1 and GF2 would have never forgave her.(personally I think it was a way to keep her in the movie...)
Behind every great furtune there is a crime - Balzac (The Godfather's Moto).
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38346
04/26/06 08:34 AM
04/26/06 08:34 AM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,632 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,632
AZ
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Interesting question, DBCH! How much of the "change" in Michael Corleone is due to script, and how much to the changing of Al Pacino? Al was a relative unknown for GF, but by III, he was a top star, and was the big draw for the movie. Plus, Michael Corleone was the bedrock of his reputation as a big star. He could impose his personality and style on Michael's character far more confidently than in the earlier two films. In other words, he played Michael the way he wanted to portray him. Plus, Pacino was a young "leading man"-type actor in the first two. But by 1990, he was a mature, "serious" actor, no longer playing romantic leads. All of this was expressed in his performance in III. This is not to say that he imposed his interpretation of Michael on FFC and Puzo--probably all three worked together, taking into account that Al was the top box office draw in the film.
Now, did Michael Corleone really change? Outwardly he was what you said: a softer person, reflecting the supposedly changed circumstances of his new "respectability," his "retirement" from organized crime, his stature as a "philanthropist" and as a Papal Knight, his trying to reconcile with Kay, etc. But, as the Don said, "a man has but one destiny." I don't think Michael Corleone really changed. As in the earlier films, he sought respectability on his terms, under his definition. He had not left the Mafia: as Vincent said near the beginning, "Everyone knows that you're preventing Zasa from rising in the Commission." And he presides over a Commission meeting in Atlantic City. He bought his Knighthood, and he tries to buy a position of global business prominence in Immobiliare by secretly bailing a crooked archbishop out of a giant banking fraud. And, when thwarted, he resorts to murder--all the while endangering his family, with the result that his beloved daughter gets killed in an attempt on his life, just as Kay was nearly killed in a similar attempt at Tahoe. A more mellow Michael? Yes. A more vulnerable Michael? Maybe. A changed Michael? No!
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38347
04/26/06 09:01 AM
04/26/06 09:01 AM
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224 New Jersey
AppleOnYa
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224
New Jersey
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Originally posted by Turnbull: ... Plus, Michael Corleone was the bedrock of his reputation as a big star. He could impose his personality and style on Michael's character far more confidently than in the earlier two films. In other words, he played Michael the way he wanted to portray him. ... The very fact that Michael was the 'bedrock' of Pacino's stardom dictated that as a professional actor he should NOT have imposed his own 'personality and style' into Michael Corleone. While again, it is true that people change to a degree and mellow with age...what we saw was far too drastic a shift from the younger, reserved, and by GFII somewhat bitter Michael. The fact that people have been discussing that portrayal as at least one of the reasons it does not stand up to the first two..is indication that Pacino, FFC and Puzo made the wrong decision, if as you suggest they made it and worked on it together. Apple
A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government.
- THOMAS JEFFERSON
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38351
04/26/06 11:01 AM
04/26/06 11:01 AM
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224 New Jersey
AppleOnYa
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 8,224
New Jersey
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DBC, say what you will about GFIII...however 'solid' you consider Pacino's performance, your most recent post seems to be in direct conflict with your earlier one that began the thread (copied below).
Apple
"Michael in Parts I and II was a very reserved person. He only spoke when he was required to speak and wasted breath for no one. He was calculated and cruel when needed.
However, by the time Part III roles around, Michael Corleone is more like the typical Al Pacino role. Gravelly voice, some shouting here and there, and he was a much softer person.
We all know that time will wear someone down, and the more time Michael had, the more he was able to reflect on his life and regret the decisions he had made, but is Michael too different in Part III?
They almost don't seem like the same character to me. I mean Pacino looks so much different than he did in Part II and his acting style changed too. Not to mention the character changes Michael went through. Anyone else agree?
This is probably one of the biggest underlying problems I have with Part III - outside of the obvious casting and scrpting issues that everyone has. I still believe he is Michael Corleone, but it is hard to make a connection some times."
A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government.
- THOMAS JEFFERSON
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38352
04/26/06 11:19 AM
04/26/06 11:19 AM
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 16
Clara
Wiseguy
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Wiseguy
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 16
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I would like to join you in this conversation, if I may.
Michael as being the youngest of the male children of Vito Corleone has been in my opinion always kind of seen as the Benjamin of the family. In GFII it has been portrayed beautifully. Vito never had intentions of drawing him in the family business, not like that, but had big plans for him – Senator Corleone… and even Michael never had intentions in working with the family. Remember when he was telling Kay who his family was, when he said: ‘That’s my family, Kay, not me.”
But life is filled with surprises, crossroads – one tiny decision changes everything. I think Michael was the one who was ‘closest’ to Vito’s character. Sony was way to impulsive and didn’t had the wicked master brain of Vito and Michael. Due to that one decision where he decided he was the one to kill Solozzo and McLusky he doomed himself and got automatically sucked in. He got tutored by the best and became a Don well deserved.
However I don’t believe he was ‘bitter’ in GFII, but then maybe he was. He was trying hard to make his family business legitimate and after 7 years he still didn’t fulfill his whish, his promise. He brought the family business on higher levels, but the higher you get the more complicated and dangerous it all became. He was well aware of it. And I understand it must have been frustrating.
Michael (All) didn’t smile once in GFII – that says it all. The weight of responsibilities he carried must have been hard, almost unbearable, not to forget the fact his little sister became ‘not a typical Italian woman’, his brother betrayed him… his family braking up… family that was his centre of life, Vito’s centre of life.
Times changed! When Vito was becoming a Don – the ‘game rules’ where clear, the code was there. The business was ‘innocent’ – gambling, woman… but later Narcotics became the future and Vito was against it for he new what it brought with it self. I don’t know if Michael was in Narcotic business. Nevertheless…. With new generations, with other nations becoming powerful on the streets the ‘game rules’ changed… the code was going to be forgotten eventually.
In GFIII Michael is a Don for around 30 years! With age comes wisdom and he finally sees an opportunity to completely legitimize his business when he get sucked back in ruthlessly. Did Michael change? Yes and No. He became softer and was consumed by guilt and conscious. It is logical he made peace with Kay, after all she is the mother of his children.
You say that Michael was Al in GFIII – I say Al is Michael. I liked his performance in all 3 films.
"Never tell anybody outside the family what you're thinking"
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38353
04/26/06 12:43 PM
04/26/06 12:43 PM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 831 New Market, MD
DeathByClotheshanger
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DBC, say what you will about GFIII...however 'solid' you consider Pacino's performance, your most recent post seems to be in direct conflict with your earlier one that began the thread (copied below).
Apple I don't believe it does. However different Michael may be from Parts I and II, I believe Pacino puts in his best work in Part III. While it may be a different Michael Corleone, I think Pacino really pulled it off. Sure his performace is a "Pacino" performance as we've come to know them, but it's still great. The silent scream was the topper for me. That is the best acting I have seen. Ever. And no matter how similar Pacino's performances may be, there are always little flourishs in them all that do separate them from the others. That is how I base my opinion when it comes to this.
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38354
04/26/06 12:53 PM
04/26/06 12:53 PM
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Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 831 New Market, MD
DeathByClotheshanger
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Originally posted by Clara: You say that Michael was Al in GFIII – I say Al is Michael. I liked his performance in all 3 films. I don't think that anyone is saying that anything Pacino did in Part III was wrong. I do however, believe that the biggest thing that lead to Part III failing to live up to expectations was the amount of time that passed. Everyone changed, not just Michael Corleone or Al Pacino... we couldn't expect the movie to fit nicely next to Part II after 16 years. I think that is the biggest problem with Part III. Michael's changes are just a bi-product of that time gap. If anything, I think Pacino's work in Part III is the best -- because he was able to get back into that character and then advance him so many years. And I don't think you'll find a bigger Part III supporter around here than me.
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38355
04/27/06 02:59 AM
04/27/06 02:59 AM
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 16
Clara
Wiseguy
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Wiseguy
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 16
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Hello DBC !
I understand completely what you’ve said, and I agree with you too. It is true when you say: “I believe that the biggest thing that lead to Part III failing to live up to expectations was the amount of time that passed.”
In my surroundings I do not know any girl-friends who actually liked the ‘Godfather Saga’, male-friends however do all like it but have doubts about the third one. When I first saw GPIII my mind was blank, I couldn’t decide whether I like it or not… so I watched it a couple of more times, made up my mind – I love it!
Yes, it was a shocker to see Michael changed… but this change was so natural. The darkness Michael possesses which was obvious in GPII was there in GPIII as well. He became older, wiser, softer…. But the essence was still there.
Don’t get me wrong when I say Al is Michael for in my eyes he embodied Michael Corleone into perfection (in all 3 parts).
Un saludo.
"Never tell anybody outside the family what you're thinking"
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38357
04/28/06 10:17 AM
04/28/06 10:17 AM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,632 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,632
AZ
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Originally posted by flucko: I liked how he was trying to redeem himself and how he was an old man with regrets. He was certainly an old man with regrets in the very last scene. But before that, I found him to be basically the same Michael--manipulative, ruthless, striving for "legitimacy" only on his terms, buying respectability, still involved with the Commission, etc.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38358
04/28/06 11:04 AM
04/28/06 11:04 AM
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Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 11,468 With Geary in Fredo's Brothel
dontomasso
Consigliere to the Stars
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Consigliere to the Stars
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 11,468
With Geary in Fredo's Brothel
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You can divide Pacino's career into two parts: The younger Pacino, and the Pacino with the gravel voice. The latter is a master actor at the hight of his game. Compare that to GF I when Pacino came to work every day thinking they were going to fire him.
Michael in GF III is truly the summation of all the choices he made in life. He is wealthy beyond belief,l he is headed into the "legitimate" world, but he is isolated with no firends or family. Really he only has Connie. Perhaps one of the most underestimated scenes in GF III, which I like more each time I watch it, is in the kitchen when he says "every time I try to get out they pull me back in," right after which he has the diabetic stroke, from which he never fully recovers.
By the end of the movie he was old and sick, and he suffered the grief of losing a child.
Put plainly, a man EXACTLY like his father.
"Io sono stanco, sono imbigliato, and I wan't everyone here to know, there ain't gonna be no trouble from me..Don Corleone..Cicc' a port!"
"I stood in the courtroom like a fool."
"I am Constanza: Lord of the idiots."
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Re: Does Michael change too much between Part II and Part III?
#38359
04/28/06 11:18 PM
04/28/06 11:18 PM
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Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 51 USA
flucko
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Originally posted by Turnbull: Originally posted by flucko: [b] I liked how he was trying to redeem himself and how he was an old man with regrets. He was certainly an old man with regrets in the very last scene. But before that, I found him to be basically the same Michael--manipulative, ruthless, striving for "legitimacy" only on his terms, buying respectability, still involved with the Commission, etc. [/b]Sure, he was still manipulative (he was still in the business), but I think he was getting tired and he was having regrets -- how he didn't have the kind of family his father had, how he killed Fredo, etc.
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