I previously made a post about how Francis Ford Coppola is a massive fucking piece of shit so naturally I was against this movie from the moment it was announced.

With that in mind, I was genuinely worried that the movie would be good, that it would be a commercial and/or critical success... and I'm happy to report that none of my fears came remotely true.

I could not describe the plot of the film because I was completely unable to get invested in whatever the fuck was going on, you couldn't pay me to give a shit about these characters. There's no real story here anyway, it's basically just a series of scenes and none of them are good. The writing is atrocious, the editing is bad, the music is corny and the actors clearly did not give a shit, because why would they? (this movie's only redeeming quality is that it made a bunch of hotshot celebrities look like total idiots)


(spoilers below)

But basically it's a movie about a bunch of ultra-rich assholes who hate each other. Naturally they're all a bunch of boring perverts. The protagonist, Cesar, is an architect who invents a magic building material with which he plans to build a utopia - because, of course, only the rich can save humanity, with hand-wavy bullshit.

Oh by the way Cesar has an affair with a singer who is supposedly a 16 year-old virgin. He's arrested but it's all okay because it turns out she was lying about her age and is actually 23. This adds nothing to the plot and I don't know why it's in the movie but given Francis' history with child abuse I found it very disturbing.

The whole movie is full of misogyny. The only woman with any characterization is Aubrey Plaza, who plays a gold-digging harlot who marries a rich old man just to manipulate him. Her elderly pervert husband (played by Trump-supporter Jon Voight) murders her with a crossbow and we're expected to cheer. At one point Kathryn Hunter says "womanizer is such an awful word - as if the woman had nothing to do with it!". Francis hides behind this disgusting sentiment by having a woman deliver the line.

Oh yeah, noted abuser of women and dog-murderer Shia Lebouf also stars in the film. Coppola explicitly hired canceled actors to rebel against Woke. Shia plays the villain of the film, and would you be surprised to hear that his character is also an effeminate crossdresser? Yup, we're busting out the queer villain trope, baby!


This movie is, if nothing else, a thorough repudiation of auteur theory. This movie proves that Francis is not the genius that pathetic sycophantic film bros think he is. They will forever treat him like a god for "making" Apocalypse Now and The Godfather but in reality it takes a lot of people to make a film, and it's clear to me that the success of those films has less to do with Francis and more to do with his collaborators. It's very telling that The Godfather is often called a Coppola film and not a film by Mario Puzo, who wrote the script and the novel it's based on.

If you really want to know what kind of artist Francis Ford Coppola is, you can't judge his work by a small number of successful films he happened to direct 50 years ago (all of which had co-writers and were adaptations of novels). You have to judge him by the work he has done since, which has been mostly dogshit. And looking at the two movies where he had the most creative control, Twixt and Megalopolis, it should be clear to everyone that the man is a fraud and a hack, wholly undeserving of his status as a legendary filmmaker.

  • KurtVonnegut [comrade/them]
    ·
    1 month ago

    They will forever treat him like a god for "making" Apocalypse Now and The Godfather

    Important to note that both of those were based on pre-existing and well acclaimed novels. Francis Ford Coppola is not and has never been a good writer. But when he was younger, he was humble enough to recognize when other people had written good things and copy/ accentuate their writing.

    • tombruzzo [none/use name]
      ·
      1 month ago

      The production of Apocalypse Now was also such a clusterfuck there are several versions, endings, and documentaries made about the making of the movie itself. I think half the hype over it is the fact it was ever released and is a cohesive film