When I first saw this movie, I thought the time period of the film would be current with the time of its release, considering how old Al Pacino is supposed to look. However, it is set in 1979. Just 20 years after pre-Castro Cuba. Michael was not that old during The Godfather II. If Michael was in his 30s he would just be in his 50s by this point.
Just as they aged Brando in the original to look older than he was in real life, the same was done to Pacino in this film.
Pacino was 49-50 when Godfather 3 was made, yet for the film, Michael is supposed to be a decade older. I feel they should have just stuck to his real life age because turning him into a sickly old man just felt unnecessary.
Yeah, I didn't understand why they had to make him look that old either. In fact, some of the clothing resembles more of the early '90s than the 1970s.
They definitely didn't make any attempts at period authenticity. Had it not been for the "New York 1979" title that shows up at the start, I would have thought this film was set in 1990.
He's got that diabetes problem in the story -- recall that somewhat poor scene where he goes into diabetic shock and the Vatican guys bring him orange juice and candy bars(they have it RIGHT THERE...somebody must have warned them in advance.)
Agreed. He looks too old. And, the hairdo was wrong. I think that the filmmakers later acknowledged that. Maybe Michael looks older because diabetes has run him down. You look at Diane Keaton and Talia Shire and they look 16 years older, but no more. I don't know if Coppola has discussed Michael's advanced aging.
Part 3 has so many inconsistencies working against it. As you pointed out, the LOOK of the characters and the settings don't match the time period. Seems that Coppola and crew figured a little long and greasy hair paired with some dark leathery jackets would suffice to create that grizzled 70s LOOK and FEEL, but if you watch it side by side with New York movies from the 70s like Taxi Driver, Annie Hall, Kramer vs Kramer, and ...and Justice, for All it doesn't match at all.
They should have kept Al's hair style the same as it looked at the closing shot of Godfather 2 where it was suppose to be some dozen years into the future as the camera zooms into his greyed out hair and tired eyes as he reflects. In fact, it would have been a great opening to start Part 3 from that very scene itself.
Another peeve of mine was Francis and the studio's failure to win Robert Duvall's commitment to coming back into the fray. Replacing him with George Hamilton is akin to replacing Chewbacca with Jar Jar Binks or Yoda with Danny DeVito.
Replacing him with George Hamilton is akin to replacing Chewbacca with Jar Jar Binks or Yoda with Danny DeVito.
Indeed. He was a very weak stand-in for Robert Duval/Tom Hagen. I feel it was bad casting all around that hurt this film the most, with no new memorable characters or performances. Even Joe-Joe Mantegna came off as a bit of a hokey, poor man's Sollozzo from Godfather Part I.
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Isn’t it somewhat ironic that the same filmmakers who made iconic films in the 70s were, in the 90s, unable to emulate the very decade that they made their earlier masterpieces in? The fashion styles, production design, makeup for the cast just doesn’t feel 70s at all. You’d think since they all lived through that decade that they’d have no trouble capturing the feel of the period, but they completely failed even at that.
I don't if it's ironic or just incompetence. Marty's production crew did a great job with "Goodfellas" in capturing each era from the 50s all the way to the early 80s. He achieved this again with "Casino" as well.
Where FFC did better with his footage in Sicily but that was more of a convenience as that whole country's infrastructure hasn't really modernized for centuries so all they really had to do was use older cars. The Sicilian Twin body guards looked too good though like right out of an Italy GQ ad.