The Godfather The Godfather was released on March 15, 1972. The feature-length film was directed by
Francis Ford Coppola and was based on
Mario Puzo's
novel of the same name. The plot begins with Don
Vito Corleone declining an offer to join the narcotics business with notorious drug lord Virgil Sollozzo, which leads to an assassination attempt. Vito's oldest son
Sonny subsequently takes over the family business, and he conspires with Michael to strike back for the assassination attempt by having him kill Sollozzo and a corrupt police captain, forcing Michael to go to
Sicily in hiding. While in Sicily, Michael travels around the country and meets a woman he marries, but who is killed in a car bombing. Michael returns to America after the news of his brother Sonny's murder and marries his former girlfriend Kay. Vito then turns over the reins of the family to Michael. Michael plans to move the family business to Las Vegas, but before the move, his father dies, and he plots the killing of the heads of the five families on the day of his nephew's baptism. Other subplots include Vito's daughter's abusive marriage, Johnny Fontane's success in Hollywood, and Vito's second son
Fredo's role in the family business in Las Vegas.
The Godfather Part II The Godfather Part II was released on December 20, 1974. The feature-length film was again directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Both films,
The Godfather I and
The Godfather II are based on a single novel written by Mario Puzo,
The Godfather. The film is in part both a sequel and a prequel to
The Godfather, presenting two parallel dramas. The main storyline, following the first film's events, centers on
Michael Corleone, the new Don of the Corleone crime family, trying to hold his business ventures together from 1958 to 1959; the other is a series of flashbacks following his father, Vito Corleone, from his childhood in Sicily in 1901 to his founding of the Corleone family in New York City.
The Godfather Part III The Godfather Part III was released on December 25, 1990. Francis Ford Coppola returned as director for the feature-length film, while also writing the screenplay with the help of the author Mario Puzo. In his
audio commentary for
Part II, Coppola stated it was his belief in the first two films having told the complete Corleone saga with nothing more to add that led him to decline multiple requests from
Paramount to make a third installment for over a decade, until severe financial difficulties caused by the critical and commercial failure of
One from the Heart (1982) compelled him to accept the long-standing offer.
The Godfather Part III completes the story of
Michael Corleone, who is now trying to legitimize his criminal empire, and shows the rise of
Sonny Corleone's illegitimate son
Vincent Corleone as Michael's successor. The film also portrays a fictionalized account of real-life events, including the death of
Pope John Paul I and the
Papal banking scandal of 1981 & '82, linking them together and with the affairs of Michael Corleone. Coppola has stated he intended for
Part III to be an
epilogue to the first two films. The film co-stars
Sofia Coppola as
Mary Corleone, whose performance was received negatively by critics.
Leonard Maltin said of the film that the casting of Sofia Coppola was an "almost-fatal flaw".
Recut version On December 4, 2020, a
recut version of the film titled
The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone was released in a limited number of theatres as well as being released on Blu-ray and streaming platforms. Coppola said the film is the version he and Puzo had originally envisioned, and it "vindicates" its status among the trilogy and his daughter Sofia's performance. ==Cancelled fourth film==