What the Nominees Were: Cabaret, Deliverance, The Emigrants, The Godfather, Sounder
Other Movies That Should Have Been Considered: John Huston’s Fat City was a late masterpiece.
What Should’ve Won and Did Win: The Godfather
How Hard Was the Decision: Surprisingly hard. Everybody knows that The Godfather is one of the most worthy winners in Oscars history, but I have even more affection for Cabaret, which would have won most other years in the 70s if I could only move it. I was tempted to take this Oscar away but I just couldn’t bring myself to do it.
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Writers: Coppola and Mario Puzo, based on Puzo’s novel
Stars: Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton
The Story: Mafia don Vito Corleone refuses to take up drug dealing, which ignites a mob war. His son Santino aka Sonny gets shot up at a toll booth. His law-abiding son Michael gets drawn in and volunteers to assassinate a rival boss and a chief of police, then gets exiled to Sicily. Michael comes home to take over the family entirely from Vito, who dies of a heart attack while playing with his grandson. Michael finally orders the assassination of all of the family’s enemies.
Any Other Nominations or Wins: It won Picture, Actor for Brando and Adapted Screenplay. Caan, Duvall and Pacino were all nominated against each other for Supporting Actor and all lost. It also lost Director (to Bob Fosse for Cabaret), Costume Design, Editing and Sound. Nino Rota was nominated for Best Score, but then it was decided that he had borrowed from a previous score and the nomination was revoked.
How It Won: The critics loved it and it was a big hit with audiences, too. The movie became a phenomenon, and thus a shoo-in (but Fosse’s director win means that the Academy also knew that Cabaret was great.)
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Writers: Coppola and Mario Puzo, based on Puzo’s novel
Stars: Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton
The Story: Mafia don Vito Corleone refuses to take up drug dealing, which ignites a mob war. His son Santino aka Sonny gets shot up at a toll booth. His law-abiding son Michael gets drawn in and volunteers to assassinate a rival boss and a chief of police, then gets exiled to Sicily. Michael comes home to take over the family entirely from Vito, who dies of a heart attack while playing with his grandson. Michael finally orders the assassination of all of the family’s enemies.
Any Other Nominations or Wins: It won Picture, Actor for Brando and Adapted Screenplay. Caan, Duvall and Pacino were all nominated against each other for Supporting Actor and all lost. It also lost Director (to Bob Fosse for Cabaret), Costume Design, Editing and Sound. Nino Rota was nominated for Best Score, but then it was decided that he had borrowed from a previous score and the nomination was revoked.
How It Won: The critics loved it and it was a big hit with audiences, too. The movie became a phenomenon, and thus a shoo-in (but Fosse’s director win means that the Academy also knew that Cabaret was great.)
Why It Won:
- Universal wanted a cheapo quickie, so they hired Corman-vet Coppola, but Coppola had a vision. He hadn’t yet distinguished himself as a director, but after he was hired for this movie he won an Oscar for writing Patton, and he clearly decided that a mafia film could rival that one in scope: Longer running time, more epic sweep, more to say about the nature of America. Both movies begin with a fixed camera as a man gives a long speech about believing in America, but this one (delivered by the wronged undertaker Bonasera) is more devastating.
- Coppola had a secret weapon: Casting director Andrea Eastman. Pacino, Duvall, Caan and Keaton, had all made a few film appearances that hadn’t set the world on fire. Eastman saw in them the potential for greatness, when put together in the right combination.
- If the studio had had its way, the movie might have starred Kirk Douglas as Vito and Dustin Hoffman as Michael. Two great actors, but they would have been horrible in these roles. Coppola and Eastman insisted on Italians playing the Italian characters, and that authenticity is crucial.
- The production design is perhaps the greatest of all time. This truly feels like the ‘40s. But, to its credit, it doesn’t look like a movie shot in the ‘40s at all, not only because it’s in color, but because cinematographer Gordon “Prince of Darkness” Willis creates sumptuous blacks that look like nothing seen onscreen before. This feels like real life. (And I love all the incongruous background noises in many scenes, creating a startlingly realistic soundscape as well.)
- This is certainly the most violent movie we’ve looked at, and it’s kind of hard to take for that reason, but you have to hand it to the movie for coming up with so many unique and shocking ways to kill men (or just leave a severed horse head in their beds.)
- There are 13 deleted scenes on the DVD. As is frequently the case with great movies, many of them add interesting elements, but you can see how they were cut for pacing. There’s just one that I really miss, where Vito expresses contempt for Michael’s medals after the wedding and Michael is just as contemptuous back to him. This is key for setting up the gradual transformation of their feelings about each other, but it happened in the middle of a storyline that had to go. The art of filmmaking is as much about what comes out as about what stays in.



























.png)























