
Coppola’s lack of creative resistance was not due to having a mutually shared vision with Lucas. “I’d lost some of my confidence,” confessed the director. “I knew George had a marketing sense of what the people might want. He wanted to candy-apple it up a bit, make it like a Disney film. He was at the height of his success, and I was at the height of my failure.” Midway through the production Paramount Pictues agreed to cover most of the costs for the picture which stars Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart), Martin Landau (Ed Wood), Joan Allen (Manhunter), Frederic Forrest (The Two Jakes), Elias Koteas (The Thin Red Line), Christian Slater (Heathers), Nina Siemaszko (Jakob the Liar), Dean Stockwell (Blue Velvet), Lloyd Bridges (Airplane!) and Peter Donat (The Game). Grossing $20 million domestically, Tucker: The Man and His Dream received Oscar nominations for Best Supporting Actor (Martin Landau), Best Art Direction & Set Decoration and Best Costume Design; it also contended for Best Supporting Actor (Martin Landau) at the Golden Globes and was lauded with the BAFTA Award for Best Production Design.
Collaborating with filmmakers Woody Allen (Annie Hall) and Martin Scorsese (Raging Bull), Francis Ford Coppola contributed one of the three stories featured in the movie anthology New York Stories (1989). Co-writing with his daughter Sofia Coppola (Lost in Translation), Coppola directed the segment titled Life without ZoĆ« about a wealthy and mature twelve year old girl (Heather McComb) who attempts to reconcile her divorced parents (Giancarlo Giannini and Talia Shire). The title character is loosely based on Sofia Coppola and described by her father as being “like one of those rich kids you see in New York who have their own credit cards and have lunch at the Russian Tea Room.” The picture which features the screen debut of Adrian Brody (The Pianist) was screened out of competition at the Cannes Film Festival. Produced on a budget of $15 million, New York Stories earned $11 million domestically.

A major rewrite resulted from a salary dispute with actor Robert Duvall (Something to Talk About) whose character of Tom Hagen was to be the pivotal figure in the tale. “The character he portrayed so subtly and vividly had such a place in those two pictures,” marvelled Al Pacino who missed working with his Oscar-winning co-star. To compensate for the absence of Duvall, a new role was created with George Hamilton playing B.J. Harrison, the lawyer who represents Michael Corleone. More casting problems followed for the production. Julia Roberts was originally cast as Mary Corleone (Michael’s daughter), however, the actress dropped out because of scheduling conflicts; Winona Ryder (Reality Bites) was hired in her place but after shooting three movies back to back she left the project because of exhaustion. To solve the situation, a controversial and much criticized choice was made by the director. “There is no way to predict what kind of performance Francis Ford Coppola might have obtained from Winona Ryder,” remarked film critic Roger Ebert. “But I think Sofia Coppola brings a quality of her own to Mary Corleone. A certain up-front vulnerability and simplicity that I think are appropriate and right for the role.” Coppola was unapologetic about his casting decision and fumed that movie reviewers were “using [my] daughter to attack me.”
“Having your back to the wall can make you do some great things that you otherwise wouldn’t have done,” stated Francis Ford Coppola who was still rewriting the script with Mario Puzo when principle photography commenced in November of 1989. “I would have enjoyed working on [the movie] more, but at the same time I felt it had taken on a life of its own.” Shot over a period of one hundred and twenty days, the picture which stars Diane Keaton (Reds), Talia Shire (Kiss the Bride), Andy Garcia (The Untouchables), Eli Wallach (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly), Joe Mantegna (Searching for Bobby Fischer) and Bridget Fonda (City Hall) was originally going to be called The Death of Michael Corleone as it was intended to be the epilogue to the series; the title was nixed by Paramount Picture executives. At the Oscars, the movie franchise became the first trilogy to have all three parts nominated for Best Picture; The Godfather: Part III also contended for Best Supporting Actor (Andy Garcia), Best Art Direction & Set Decoration, Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Editing and Best Original Song. The film, which was made for $54 million and earned $137 worldwide, was nominated at the Golden Globes for Best Director, Best Picture – Drama, Best Original Score, Best Original Song, Best Actor – Drama (Al Pacino), Best Supporting Actor (Andy Garcia) and Best Screenplay. The Directors Guild of America handed out a nomination to Francis Ford Coppola while Sofia Coppola won Razzie Awards for Worst New Star and Worst Supporting Actress.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula, which features Anthony Hopkins (Magic), Keanu Reeves (The Matrix), Richard E. Grant (Gosford Park), Cary Elwes (The Princess Bride), Bill Campbell (Ghost Town), Sadie Frost (Empire State), Tom Waits (Mystery Men) and Monica Bellucci (Irreversible), was dubbed by journalists as the “The Bonfire of the Vampires” in reference to the decibel surrounding Brian De Palma’s The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990). Empire film critic Tom Hibbert was in agreement with his press colleagues. “Has a film ever promised so much yet delivered so little?” asked the film critic in his review. “There was so much potential, yet when it came down to it, Coppola made his Dracula too old to be menacing, and gave Keanu Reeves a part and took out all of the action. So all we’re left with is an overly-long bloated adaptation, instead of what might have been a gothic masterpiece.” Richard Corliss of Time magazine was of a different opinion. “Coppola brings the old spook story alive,” wrote Corliss. “Everyone knows that Dracula has a heart; Coppola knows that it is more than an organ to drive a stake into. To the director, the count is a restless spirit who has been condemned for too many years to interment in cruddy movies. This luscious film restores the creature’s nobility and gives him peace.”
Made on a budget of $40 million, Bram Stoker’s Dracula was a commercial hit which grossed $216 million worldwide and saved Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios from bankruptcy; it spawned a board game, a pinball game, a video game and a four-issue comic book adaptation with a hundred collectible cards. The Academy Awards presented the Gothic vampire story the Oscars for Best Costume Design, Best Sound Effects Editing, and Best Makeup along with a nomination for Best Art Direction & Set Decoration. At the BAFTAs, the picture contended for Best Costume Design, Best Makeup, Best Production Design and Best Special Effects; while the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films lauded it with Saturn Awards for Best Actor (Gary Oldman), Best Costumes, Best Director, Best Horror Film, and Best Writing as well as nominations for Best Actress (Winona Ryder), Best Makeup, Best Music, Best Special Effects and Best Supporting Actor (Anthony Hopkins).


Francis Ford Coppola was recruited to reedit the science fiction movie Supernova (2000) directed by Walter Hill (Red Heat) and featuring the acting talents of James Spader (Stargate), Angela Bassett (Strange Days), Robert Forester (Jackie Brown), Lou Diamond Phillips (La Bamba), Peter Facinelli (Can’t Hardly Wait) and Robin Tunney (Vertical Limit). Unfortunately, Coppola could not save the troubled production which grossed $15 million worldwide and cost $49 million to make. It would not be until seven years later that Coppola would return behind the camera to produce his own sci-fi tale set in the period prior to World War II.
Continue to part five.
For more on Francis Ford Coppola and his body of work visit the online home of American Zoetrope.
Movies... For Free! Dementia 13 (1963)
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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