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In “Godfather III,” we have to buy that Michael, in the years leading up to 1979, has undergone a change — that in his cold dark staring way he has softened and is looking for redemption.
Michael's final minutes in The Godfather Part III mirror Vito's almost perfectly. Al Pacino's character is retired, relaxing outside in a garden, the sun is shining, and oranges are nearby.
Coppola had a ton of subplots to squeeze into the three-hour Godfather, and he couldn’t get them all in. While we see Michael (Pacino) in Sicily, the big issue with his return appears to be mob ...
Al Pacino's Michael Corleone returned to movie screen 30 years ago on Dec. 25 in "The Godfather: Part III" with a new haircut and a plan to get out of organized crime.
Al Pacino talks guilt and death in the newly edited and renamed final chapter, "Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone." ...
In “Godfather III,” we have to buy that Michael, in the years leading up to 1979, has undergone a change — that in his cold dark staring way he has softened and is looking for redemption.
One of the most important stories in The Godfather II happens between the remaining sons of the Corleone family. Things don’t end well between Fredo (John Cazale) and Michael (Al Pacino).
Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone will be available on Blu-ray & Digital Dec. 8 from Paramount Home Entertainment. It also opens in select theaters on Dec. 4.
The Godfather, Coda follows the end of Michael Corleone’s time as the head of the Corleone family mafia as he tries to find a fit successor to his empire.