logo
Robert De Niro Thanks Francis Ford Coppola 'For Not Casting Me' In ‘The Godfather' At AFI Life Achievement Tribute — Watch

Robert De Niro Thanks Francis Ford Coppola 'For Not Casting Me' In ‘The Godfather' At AFI Life Achievement Tribute — Watch

Yahoo15-05-2025
Although Robert De Niro was passed over for The Godfather, his starring role in the sequel turned out to be the offer he couldn't refuse.
While paying tribute to director Francis Ford Coppola with the AFI Life Achievement Award, he and co-star Al Pacino reminisced about their time with the filmmaker on his seminal mafia film franchise.
More from Deadline
Francis Ford Coppola's Career In Photos, From 'Apocalypse Now' To 'The Godfather'
AFI Life Achievement Award Red Carpet: Elle Fanning, Ron Howard, George Lucas, Spike Lee & More Honor Francis Ford Coppola
The 50th AFI Life Achievement Award Dinner For Francis Ford Coppola Is One Of The Starriest And Most Heartfelt Tributes Of Them All
'Francis, thank you for not casting me in The Godfather,' said De Niro during Saturday's gala at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. 'It was the best job I ever, never got. And it meant I was available for The Godfather Part II. Francis, you changed my career, you changed my life. We're all here tonight because of you. We love you.'
Following Pacino's breakout performance as Michael Corleone in 1972's adaptation of Mario Puzo's book, the 1974 sequel followed the parallel paths of father and son with De Niro as a young immigrant Vito Corleone (portrayed in the first film by Marlon Brando). The performance won the actor his first Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.
Pacino prefaced his tribute with a quote from Coppola himself. ''The things you do when you're young that you get fired for, are the same things that years later, they give you lifetime achievement awards for,'' he said.
'You know, none of us were fired from The Godfather, but some of us got pretty close,' added Pacino as the audience laughed at his self-deprecating nod. 'I got the closest. And Francis just fought for us all the time. He fought for his film and his vision, which he always does. Yet, it could have gotten him fired. Everything was a firing threat. It could have had all of us fired, but it didn't. Now, years later, here we all are to celebrate him for it. So, thank you Francis. Thank for believing in me even more than I believed in myself. I am eternally grateful in kind to be part of your Godfather family.'
Filmmaking peers like Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Spike Lee and more were also on hand to celebrate Coppola, as well as collaborators like Adam Driver, Elle Fanning and Diane Lane.
The Life Achievement Award is AFI's highest esteem for a career in film. Coppola's predecessors include Nicole Kidman, Julie Andrews, Denzel Washington, George Clooney, Diane Keaton and John Williams.
Coppola's The Godfather, The Godfather Part II and Apocalypse Now are ranked among history's greatest films in AFI's 100 Years…100 Movies list. A six-time Academy Award winner, his other iconic feature credits, as writer, director and/or producer, include Patton, American Graffiti, The Conversation, The Outsiders and Bram Stoker's Dracula, to name just a few.
The evening earned a record $2.5 million for AFI and will be broadcast on TNT on June 18 at 10pm ET/PT with an encore on TCM July 31 at 8pm ET/PT.
Best of Deadline
Francis Ford Coppola's Career In Photos, From 'Apocalypse Now' To 'The Godfather'
Everything We Know About The 'Hunger Games: Sunrise On The Reaping' Movie So Far
Everything We Know About Netflix's 'The Thursday Murder Club' So Far
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ted Lasso fans told they're ‘gonna love' Season 4 of hit show as Jason Sudeikis moves American coach into the women's game
Ted Lasso fans told they're ‘gonna love' Season 4 of hit show as Jason Sudeikis moves American coach into the women's game

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Ted Lasso fans told they're ‘gonna love' Season 4 of hit show as Jason Sudeikis moves American coach into the women's game

'Reboot' mooted for Apple TV+ production New characters & storylines to be introduced Excitement building for global fan base Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱 WHAT HAPPENED? From the moment that rumours of a comeback for the Apple TV+ production began to surface there was talk of a 'reboot' taking place. Jason Sudeikis has confirmed that, as the leading man and part of the writing team, he will be taking things in a different direction. DID YOU KNOW? New characters and storylines are being promised, with Lasso having headed home to the United States at the end of Season 3 on the back of an eventful spell in England with AFC Richmond. THE GOSSIP Filming is due to begin this summer, with many familiar faces on board, and viewers have been promised an 'exciting' script that may yet see the show run for several more series. WHAT APPLE TV+ CHIEF SAID Apple TV's head of development Matt Cherniss is giving little away, but has told Deadline: 'I have high hopes for season four of Ted Lasso, we're just getting down that road. I don't know what more can be said about Ted Lasso that hasn't already been said, and we're so excited that it's coming back.' He added when asked if the show will be reinventing itself: 'I don't think I want to say anything about the direction that the show is going, only that I think if you love Ted Lasso you're gonna love the next season.' WHAT NEXT FOR TED LASSO? No release date for Season 4 of Ted Lasso has been revealed as yet, with a return to streaming services around the world seemingly some way off. Excitement is building, though, around a production that has already collected prestigious Emmy Awards.

Watch: Blackpink's 'Jump' music video inspired by the group's 'fervor'
Watch: Blackpink's 'Jump' music video inspired by the group's 'fervor'

UPI

timean hour ago

  • UPI

Watch: Blackpink's 'Jump' music video inspired by the group's 'fervor'

Blackpink shared the behind-scenes-footage from their most recent music video on Monday. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo July 21 (UPI) -- South Korean girl group Blackpink is giving fans a behind-the-scenes glimpse at the making of the music video for "Jump," their first single of 2025. An approximately 8-minute video shows K-pop stars Lisa, Rose, Jennie and Jisoo as they run through a city street and dance while suspended in the air, before a green screen. "There are a lot of green screens here. It's a lot of post," says director Dave Meyers in the featurette. "Sometimes the post allows you to keep up with the pace of the song." "Some of these setups were inspired by the fervor of Blackpink coming back together," he added. "You know, it's exciting and the fans are gonna freak out and that's because they've got Blackpink on the mind, because they're back. It's very exciting to have them all together. It's an exciting moment." The "Jump" music video, released earlier this month, shows the pop stars appear on billboards, and the song overtakes the entire city as everyone begins dancing. Blackpink, currently on their Deadline tour through January, released their album Born Pink in 2022. Separately, the singers have released solo projects. K-pop stars walk the red carpet Lisa, of Blackpink, arrives on the red carpet at the MTV Video Music Awards at the UBS Arena in Elmont, N.Y., on September 11, 2024. Lisa recently released a performance video for her solo single "Moonlit Floor." Photo by Derek C. French/UPI | License Photo

James Cameron calls Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer "a bit of a moral cop out"
James Cameron calls Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer "a bit of a moral cop out"

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

James Cameron calls Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer "a bit of a moral cop out"

Of the very small number of currently working Hollywood directors who could be said to be at, or even above, the level of Christopher Nolan in terms of both producing power and name recognition, James Cameron is almost certainly the one most willing to talk a little shit. Cameron has many laudable traits as both a filmmaker and an interview subject, but holding his tongue isn't one of them—something that became obvious in a recent conversation he had with Deadline, about a new film centered on the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and where Nolan came in for some genuine critique over his blockbuster biopic Oppenheimer. Cameron was speaking at length about Ghosts Of Hiroshima, his planned film adaptation of the book of the same name, soon to arrive from his old buddy (and fellow Titanic and nuclear war obsessive) Charles R. Pellegrino. As with underwater travel, the intricate hair-bonding rituals of the Na'vi, and basically everything else he sets his moviemaking mind to, Cameron has thought and researched about this topic a lot, it is very clear, and he sounds really excited/horrified to tell the story of the bombs dropping. And that includes doing his damnedest to center the conversation in the viewpoint of the people the bombs were actually dropped on, something he (as Spike Lee did a few years back) criticizes Nolan's movie for flinching away from. 'It's interesting what he stayed away from,' Cameron noted of Nolan's film, after being reminded of the implausibility of turning Robert Oppenheimer's life story into a massive box office property. 'Look, I love the filmmaking,' Cameron acknowledges. 'But I did feel that it was a bit of a moral cop out. Because it's not like Oppenheimer didn't know the effects. He's got one brief scene in the film where we see—and I don't like to criticize another filmmaker's film–but there's only one brief moment where he sees some charred bodies in the audience and then the film goes on to show how it deeply moved him. But I felt that it dodged the subject. I don't know whether the studio or Chris felt that that was a third rail that they didn't want to touch, but I want to go straight at the third rail. I'm just stupid that way.' (When told that Nolan felt it wasn't the place of his particular film to tackle the effects of the bombs from the perspective of the people they were dropped on, Cameron quipped, 'Okay, I'll put up my hand. I'll do it, Chris. No problem. You come to my premiere and say nice things.') Cameron has been on this particular topic for multiple decades at this point—this is the man who filmed that sequence from Terminator 2, so take it as read that he thinks about nuclear bombs more than most people—including traveling to Japan with Pellegrino to meet with Tsutomo Yamaguchi, one of the only people to have survived both bombings. (And who ultimately died of stomach cancer in his 90s.) Cameron is, among other things, un-shy about admitting he has limits on the story he wants to tell, too, saying he has no interest in using the film to discus the politics that led to the dropping of the bomb, and simply wants to capture its effects on the people who were at literal ground zero: I don't want to get into the politics of, should it have been dropped, should they have done it, and all the bad things Japan did to warrant it, or any of that kind of moralizing and politicizing. I just want to deal in a sense with what happened, almost as if you could somehow be there and survive and see it… I just think it's so important right now for people to remember what these weapons do. This is the only case where they've been used against a human target. Setting aside all the politics and the fact that I'm going to make a film about Japanese people…I don't even speak Japanese, although I have a lot of friends there. I've been there a million times, and I may need to work with a Japanese writer, a Japanese producer, so that I am not a complete outsider to their cultural perspective. I want to keep it as a kind of neutral witness to an event that actually happened to human beings, so that we can keep that flame alive, that memory. They've only died in vain if we forget what that was like and we incur that a thousand fold upon ourselves and future generations. More from A.V. Club Podcast Canon: Making Gay History is a treasure trove of archival recordings 3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekend NASA Plus launches on Netflix this summer Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store