Are The Godfather review quotes in Megalopolis trailer fake? Apparently yes
The Megalopolis trailer came under fire after the apparent use if fake critics' quotes.
*Editor's note: this post has been updated in response to Lionsgate pulling the Megalopolis trailer on the evening of August 21.
The Godfather, Francis Ford Coppola's epic tale of a mafia family, is almost universally considered one of the greatest movies of all time. But if you watched the Megalopolis trailer released on August 21 for Coppola's latest movie coming out on September 27 you may be surprised to see it feature quotes from critics of the time disparaging the movie and a voiceover from Laurence Fishburne that says "true genius is often misunderstood." But was that really the case? Were critics not as enthusiastic about The Godfather when it was first released?
No, some digging by many sites (this one included) that could not easily find the quotes attributed to critics for Coppola's The Godfather, Apocalypse Now and Dracula in the trailer, Lionsgate has since recalled the Megalopolis trailer and issued a statement.
"Lionsgate is immediately recalling our trailer for Megalopolis," a Lionsgate spokesperson said in a statement provide to outlets. "We offer our sincere apologies to the critics involved and to Francis Ford Coppola and American Zoetrope for this inexcusable error in our vetting process. We screwed up. We are sorry."
The inclusion of those quotes from supposed detractors of Coppola's movies was clearly an effort for the movie to try and counter the generally mixed reviews that Megalopolis has received to date. As of publication, Megalopolis is rated "Rotten" on Rotten Tomatoes with a score of 53% (I haven't seen the movie yet so I can't weigh in). They want to paint Megalopolis as a movie ahead of its time and that will ultimately be considered in the same echelon of The Godfather and Apocalypse Now.
I was definitely taken aback by the strategy (OK, I laughed out loud), particularly for The Godfather. That's because The Godfather's reputation and the fact it won Best Picture at the Oscars and was the top-grossing movie at the US box office in 1972 made me skeptical that it wasn't widely praised at the time. Intrigued, I did some digging to figure out if a number of critics were truly hard on The Godfather.
I started off with Andrew Sarris, who is quoted twice in the Megalopolis trailer for his take on The Godfather, with them using quotes like calling it "a sloppy self-indulgent movie" and that it "doesn't know what it wants to be." The trailer labels Sarris as a critic from The Village Voice, however, we couldn't find those exact quotes from Sarris in his review from The Village Voice. Aside from some positive notes for the performances (he is not as enthused about Brando's role as Vito Corleone, but was a James Caan fan), Sarris did seem to be more negative about the movie, writing in the review "I am convinced that The Godfather could have been a more profound film."
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The other critic they mentioned to criticize The Godfather was Pauline Kael, quoting her as writing the movie was "diminished by its artiness." Again though, we were not able to find anything in our initial search with that quote. Even more curiously, Kael's original review from The New Yorker read generally positive (Rotten Tomatoes officially rates Kael's review as "Fresh" on their site). Its opening line read, "If ever there was a great example of how the best popular movies come out of a merger of commerce and art, The Godfather is it." She was also very complimentary of Coppola's work on the movie, describing it as "tenaciously intelligent" and praising him for the giving the movie "spaciousness and strength," while comparing it to other classics like On the Waterfront and From Here to Eternity.
Other reviews that I was able to find were also mostly positive, if not enthusiastic. RogerEbert.com has the eponymous critic's initial review of The Godfather on its site, which gives the movie four stars, saying "Coppola has found a style and a visual look for all this material so The Godfather becomes something of a rarity: a really good movie squeezed from a bestseller." The New York Times' Vincent Canby said "Francis Ford Coppola has made one of the most brutal and moving chronicles of American life ever designed within the limits of popular entertainment." And the San Francisco Chronicle's Peter Hartlaub went so far at the time to call it "the best gangster movie ever produced," a claim that many would still agree with.
So the whole concept seemed like a stretch initially, though I think the general concept of saying critics sometimes miss the mark on movies in their initial opinions could have been clever marketing for Megalopolis; the movie is generating divisive opinions, so absolutely try and link it to other great movies that had their fair share of critics. But the fabrication or misattribution of quotes criticizing The Godfather and other Coppola movies makes this a pretty embarrassing screw up.
Megalopolis releases exclusively in movie theaters on September 27 in the US and UK.
Michael Balderston is a DC-based entertainment and assistant managing editor for What to Watch, who has previously written about the TV and movies with TV Technology, Awards Circuit and regional publications. Spending most of his time watching new movies at the theater or classics on TCM, some of Michael's favorite movies include Casablanca, Moulin Rouge!, Silence of the Lambs, Children of Men, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest and Star Wars. On the TV side he enjoys Only Murders in the Building, Yellowstone, The Boys, Game of Thrones and is always up for a Seinfeld rerun. Follow on Letterboxd.