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A Letter from Francis Ford Coppola

Vincent Gallo in Coppola's Tetro

Vincent Gallo in Coppola's Tetro

If you’re on the Landmark Theatres email list, you may have seen a letter from Francis Ford Coppola that went out a few days ago regarding his new film, Tetro .

In his effort to get you to see his film, Coppola insults you, "the film audience," and implicitly compares himself to Michelangelo Antonioni and Ingmar Bergman.

It’s the weirdest thing I’ve seen since this.

Letter after the jump.

Dear Film Club member,

It is a dream come true to be able to make personal films and have them shown in great theatres such as Landmark’s. Tetro is the kind of film I might have been making 35 years ago, had my career not taken an abrupt and sudden turn as it did with The Godfather . Sure, it was exhilarating to find myself an important Hollywood director, with all that came with it. But as the years went on, I found myself trying to avoid becoming a gangster film director, with all that came with that: stabbings, shootings, car crashes and strangulations. It became pretty clear that even if well-paid, a Hollywood director is expected to do what the company who employs him wants. And most times it is a genre film of some type, if not a gangster film, then take your choice between a thriller, a caper film, a romantic comedy (nothing wrong with that) or sci-fi epic (nor that). I found myself dissatisfied, and frustrated over the fact that even though I had made successful films and won plenty of awards, I still would have to go, hat in hand, and beg permission to make something really new.

With Apocalypse Now , I ultimately found I had to finance it myself. Financing movies is a perilous activity, especially when the films are as unusual as I wanted to make. At first Apocalypse Now seemed as if it would bury me—the initial reaction wasn’t good, despite some acknowledged spectacular scenes, but it was deemed too philosophical or worse, ‘arty’—which is the ultimate damning word that can be used on a film. Well, I thought, weren’t most of Ingmar Bergman’ or Michelangelo Antonioni’s films ‘arty but good’? As were the many films of Federico Fellini or Akira Kurosawa? Maybe those films weren’t financial powerhouses, but they stayed with you and were inspirational. And also, they were all different from any other films being made. That in the end is my main criteria for enjoying a film: that I never saw it before or anything quite like it.

Many years went by.

Then, taking inspiration from my daughter who had learned the very same tricks from me, I decided to return to my youth, and realizing that the smaller the budget of a film the greater the ideas of that film could be, began to self-finance the very kinds of films I had hoped to make at the beginning. It was like trying to find my place, after being away a long time. I took a story from Mircea Eliade, Youth Without Youth. When it was done, I found the film audience had ventured even further away from anything other than the pre-made, pre-measured genre films that I had tried to escape from, and now wanted even their independent films to be mini-Hollywood ventures. No matter, I thought, the idea was to find myself and I had done that. Now, the next step was to pick up where I had left off, and write an original story and screenplay, something I hadn’t done for 30 years since The Conversation .

The result is Tetro , which you are about to see soon at a Landmark theatre near you. I hope you will find it moving, as it is drawn from real emotions related to my experiences and life—though not in any way autobiographical. I hope you wish me well on this new career of mine. It was the one I always wanted from the beginning, to be an independent filmmaker, writing stories and making personal films. God knows what will come next!

Sincerely,
Francis Coppola


  • http://mattbriggs.wordpress.com Matt Briggs

    What a let down. Given the build up, I was expecting a really nutty letter. Instead it seems a relatively earnest plea to see his movie. Isn’t he the peer of these other directors? Coppola isn’t Frank Oz or Ron Howard.

  • http://publicola.net/?cat=17 FilmNerd

    But isn’t an earnest plea to see a Francis Ford Coppola movie kind of bizarre in and of itself? I mean, this film just premiered at Cannes. His name is part of the directorial canon. And he’s sending us pleading emails.

    In general–this is also true of the video linked here–Coppola’s self-presentation, which is simultaneously self-pitying and self-aggrandizing, seems very strange. He’s been trying to have it both ways for over four decades, and maybe it’s finally caught up to him?

  • http://publicola.net/?cat=17 FilmNerd

    But isn’t an earnest plea to see a Francis Ford Coppola movie kind of bizarre in and of itself? I mean, this film just premiered at Cannes. His name is part of the directorial canon. And he’s sending us pleading emails.

    In general–this is also true of the video linked here–Coppola’s self-presentation, which is simultaneously self-pitying and self-aggrandizing, seems very strange. He’s been trying to have it both ways for over four decades, and maybe it’s finally caught up to him?

  • http://publicola.net/?cat=17 FilmNerd

    But isn’t an earnest plea to see a Francis Ford Coppola movie kind of bizarre in and of itself? I mean, this film just premiered at Cannes. His name is part of the directorial canon. And he’s sending us pleading emails.

    In general–this is also true of the video linked here–Coppola’s self-presentation, which is simultaneously self-pitying and self-aggrandizing, seems very strange. He’s been trying to have it both ways for over four decades, and maybe it’s finally caught up to him?

  • http://mattbriggs.wordpress.com/ Matt Briggs

    It is difficult to imagine Coppola having self-doubt and being unduly concerned about the reception of his work.

  • http://mattbriggs.wordpress.com/ Matt Briggs

    It is difficult to imagine Coppola having self-doubt and being unduly concerned about the reception of his work.

  • http://mattbriggs.wordpress.com Matt Briggs

    It is difficult to imagine Coppola having self-doubt and being unduly concerned about the reception of his work.

  • http://mattbriggs.wordpress.com/ Matt Briggs

    What a let down. Given the build up, I was expecting a really nutty letter. Instead it seems a relatively earnest plea to see his movie. Isn't he the peer of these other directors? Coppola isn't Frank Oz or Ron Howard.