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Post Info TOPIC: Francis Ford Coppola


The Changeling

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Date: 12:57 AM, 08/23/10
Francis Ford Coppola
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This thread is for any news on the work or interests of Francis Ford Coppola, Nic's dear Uncle.

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The Changeling

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Date: 7:35 PM, 08/28/10
Francis Ford Coppola to receive the Irving G Thalberg Memorial Oscar award!
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Found on Comcast.net

Coppola, Godard to receive honorary Oscars

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Directors Francis Ford Coppola and Jean-Luc Godard, actor Eli Wallach and historian Kevin Brownlow are this year's recipients of the Governor's Awards from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Coppola will receive the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, the academy said Wednesday, with Godard, Wallach and Brownlow receiving honorary Oscars. The prizes will be given at a dinner Nov. 13.

Coppola, the 71-year-old director of the "Godfather" trilogy, is already a five-time Oscar winner. Through his American Zoetrope studio, which he established in 1969, he has produced more than 30 films, including "The Black Stallion," "The Outsiders" and "Lost in Translation," which earned his daughter Sofia an Academy Award nomination for best director.

Godard, 79, is a key figure in the French New Wave who wrote about films before making shorts of his own. His 1960 feature debut, the crime drama "Breathless," is a hugely influential example of the movement.

He's credited with helping shape contemporary directors such as Martin Scorsese, Steven Soderbergh and Quentin Tarantino.

Wallach, 94, is a longtime character actor who has appeared in "The Magnificent Seven," "The Misfits" and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly." He's also in Oliver Stone's upcoming "Wall Street" sequel, "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps."

Brownlow, 72, an author and documentarian, is considered the pre-eminent historian of the silent film era and a preservationist.

The Thalberg award, which is a bust of the film executive, goes to "a creative producer whose body of work reflects a consistently high quality of motion picture production," according to the academy.

Honorary Oscars are given for "extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement, exceptional contributions to the state of motion picture arts and sciences, or for outstanding service to the academy."




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"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
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The Changeling

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Date: 12:40 AM, 09/09/10
Francis Ford Coppola heading to HONG KONG
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http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iRYqeFpUvFMhEDFAIf-CzPlDcs7w


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"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls"
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The Changeling

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Date: 12:56 AM, 09/09/10
FFC's reaction to winning the Thalberg Award
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From:    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2010/08/francis-ford-coppola-on-the-thalberg-honor.html

Francis Ford Coppola on receiving the Academy's Thalberg Award: 'I was created by Hollywood'

August 25, 2010 |  2:49 pm

CoppolaFrancis Ford Coppola was nervous when he got a phone call Tuesday night at his home in the Bay Area from producer Sid Ganis in Los Angeles.

“Whenever you get a phone call from some folks from L.A. you haven’t heard from, immediately your heart stops and you say, 'Who died?,'” says the 71-year-old-Coppola, who has directed such seminal movies as those in the “Godfather” trilogy, 1974’s "The Conversation” and 1979’s “Apocalypse Now.” “That was my first thought because Sid Ganis is my connection to lots of friends from L.A.. But they said, ‘This is not bad news.’”

Indeed, it was very good news. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Board of Governors announced Wednesday that Coppola would be this year’s recipient of the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. The Thalberg Award is named after the famed MGM producer who died in 1936 at the age of 37. The award is given to “a creative producer whose body of work reflects a consistently high quality of motion picture production.” Winners over the years have included John Calley, Walt Disney, David O.Selznick, Alfred Hitch****, Walter Mirisch and Steven Spielberg.

The Thalberg and three honorary awards will be handed out at the Academy’s 2nd annual Governors Awards dinner Nov. 13 at the Grand Ballroom at the Hollywood & Highland Center.

Coppola says he’s “very honored indeed” with the award “when you think of the tradition” of the prize. "But when I stop to think about it,” he adds, “I did found a movie company that is still making relevant movies after 40 years. Another thing a producer should be expected to do is to introduce new talent -- both directors and creative people, writers and actors -- and American Zoetrope over the years most notably introduced directors George Lucas and Carroll Ballard…. When you think of the actors, we introduced not only the cast of the films like 'The Godfather' but then there was 'American Graffiti,’ I can’t take credit for all of that, but the producer presides over that. We introduced a lot of innovation. We were among the first to move into the more electronic and digital phase of films.”

Coppola shares a connection with two of the honorary Oscar winners this year -- film preservationist Kevin Brownlow and French director Jean-Luc Godard. Brownlow preserved Abel Gance’s 1927 epic “Napoleon,” which Zoetrope presented on tour in theaters. “Zoetrope made the innovative contribution of putting a live orchestra with a conductor (Coppola’s father Carmine conducted the orchestra and penned the music) and that started another trend.”

Godard, he says, was one of his influences. “And in the days where I owned the old Zoetrope studio on Las Palmas, Godard was wandering around shooting things. I never knew what he was shooting. If you live long enough you tend to be intertwined with everything. That does seem to be a fact.”

 

Coppola earned his first Oscar for co-writing the screenplay for the 1970 best picture winner “Patton.” But he says he wasn’t there at the 1971 ceremony to pick up his statuette. “I was in New York trembling about my situation, whether I was going to be the director of ‘The Godfather’ or not. Winning the Oscar for ‘Patton’ certainly did cement my shaky position."

Even before "The Godfather,” Coppola earned raves with the intimate 1969 drama “The Rain People,” with Shirley Knight and two actors who would go on to earn Oscar nominations for “The Godfather,” James Caan and Robert Duvall.

"That was, in a funny way, what I had wanted to do, and I thought, I was going to do," Coppola says. "I thought I was going to make little films that I wrote and I could learn from and that was my intention. I had no idea that I was going to have this other, grandiose career.”

Coppola is looking forward to coming down to Los Angeles to receive his honor. “I have lots of people I want to see,” he says.

“I know I have often been kind of a rebel and what have you. People say, What do you feel about Hollywood? and I say, I was created by Hollywood. I am their child and one’s child, which I have learned from my own, are the best people to try to suggest change because I was born of that. I am one of the few people in the movie industry today who worked for Jack Warner, who worked for Sam Goldwyn and worked for Darryl Zanuck and the other founders. I feel very much the offspring of the Hollywood tradition and I always loved it. And my efforts were only to try to bring more variety and innovation so that for every five blockbuster movies there might be one more kind of personal or experimental.”

He says that when he created his own studio in 1969, some thought he was crazy. “Well, of course, I have been considered crazy…there hasn’t been a year when that hasn’t been in the case,” Coppola says. “But a lot of good came from it. One of the factors you don’t think about is because we had our own studio up here, we had our own sound mixing and that brought about a whole San Francisco style of sound mixing, which is the basis of what sound is today. The Dolby 5.1 system originated in San Francisco between George Lucas and Walter Murch and myself.”

Coppola, whose most recent film was 2009’s “Tetro,” says he is still as passionate about his craft as when he was a young Turk. “I have always had the makeup of an enthusiastic 6-year-old, so I don’t think that’s ever going to change.”

-- Susan King

 

Photo of Francis Ford Coppola in 2003: Jim Cooper / Associated Press



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"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls"
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The Changeling

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Date: 1:04 AM, 09/09/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Two years ago this October, my hub had a conference to attend in San Francisco.  I had the opportunity to go with him so we made it into a long weekend.  On our last day there we drove up to Sausilito and then up to the vinyards.  Our plan was to start at the northernmost area and drive south as we toured vinyards.  This plan had us starting at the Nieunbaum Coppola Winery and then hit the others as we traveled back south into SF.   We got to FFC's winery and we simply never left.  We made it a day.  The place was so relaxing and beautiful that we just sat there in the shade sipping wines and munching on goodies.  One other tourist was so moved by the place that, to our surprise, he broke out in an operatic voice and entertained the other guests who were relaxing like we were.  What an all around treat!  


From:  http://www.winemag.com/Wine-Enthusiast-Magazine/Web-2010/A-Director-039s-New-Direction/

A Director's New Direction

Francis Ford Coppola's renovated Sonoma winery is fit for kids and adults alike.

Published on Sep 8, 2010
a60c40765854b3f8ae94d158fa14cf50.jpeg

"A wine wonderland…  a place to celebrate the love of life.” That's how film director Francis Ford Coppola envisions his latest creation—a winery that's fun for the entire family to visit. Yes, his newly renovated Francis Ford Coppola Winery in Sonoma County offers tastings, tours and festive events. But that's not all. The property features movie memorabilia (including Coppola's five Academy Awards), plus soon to open bocce courts, a performing arts pavilion, and swimming pools where guests can relax. Overlooking vistas of vineyards and oak-clad hills, the new Rustic restaurant serves Coppola's favorite dishes, including specialties from an authentic Argentinean wood-fired parrilla grill.

Coppola's passion for food, wine, and family inspired his 2006 purchase of the 81-acre Alexander Valley estate (formerly the Chateau Souverain winemaking facility). The property had a restaurant—a huge asset, since eateries generally are not permitted at wineries in Sonoma County. With a dining venue, Coppola's philosophy of how wine entwines with family can play a starring role."To me, wine is an element that takes part in the family gathering," he explains. "Whenever people take a meal, wine or something like it is part of it, and it's a blessing, a sacrament, a unifier."

For the renovation, Coppola enlisted longtime friend and Academy Award-winning production designer Dean Tavoularis, with whom he worked on "The Godfather" trilogy. "A show is a show, be it a resort, a film or an opera," Coppola states. "The elements are similar, and the audience or visitor or guest is paramount. You must give them a large vision, and back it up with countless details."

Speaking of details, since day one Coppola has involved himself in every element of the project, from selecting fixtures to taste-testing recipes at the restaurant. For the towers of the Norman-style chateau, Coppola had visualized copper roofing with a patina like that atop his 1907 Sentinel Building headquarters in San Francisco. When the new metal looked garish, he suggested applying horse urine—the go-to solution for Old World Europe copper work. This process essentially aged copper 100 years in a matter of days.

food.jpgOn the day Rustic restaurant opened, Coppola inspected each plate as it emerged from the kitchen. Spotlighting "Francis's Favorites," the menu reads like edible autobiography, brimming with remembrance of repasts past: the braciole with rigatoni in meat sauce his mother made for Sunday dinner, a lamb tagine he enjoyed at the souk in Marrakesh. A talented chef, Coppola experimented for years to recreate "Mrs. Scorsese’s Lemon Chicken," a specialty cooked by the mother of friend (and fellow Academy Award-winning director) Martin Scorsese. Drowned in lemon juice and cooked slowly, the caramelized fowl celebrates golden juiciness.

The other crucial element in Coppola's concept? Creating a winery where kids can have fun. Coppola recalls sitting in the café at Rubicon, his landmark wine estate in the Napa Valley. He'd see parents admonish their children if they tried to splash in the fountain at the grand chateau, which was built in 1887. "When we began to plan this new winery park, I thought, 'Gee, the kids want to go swimming, let's have swimming pools,'" he says.

Situated in the center of the park plaza of the winery, the two pools connect via a swim-through under a water arch. The pools would have been completed this summer, but because of a construction mix-up, one wing was shallower than Coppola had envisioned. He then ordered the section to be ripped out and rebuilt. "Francis approached the new winery the way he did a big production like "Apocalypse Now," with a large vision and scrupulous attention to detail," observes his wife Eleanor, a documentary maker, writer and artist who chronicled the director's travails while shooting that film in the Philippines. Throughout the year, special events entertain youngsters, from costumed Halloween jaunts through the vineyards to puppet shows at the bandstand styled after the one in "The Godfather II."

Meanwhile, grown-ups can sample a full range of Coppola wines—more than 40 labels—in the chateau tasting room, revamped to showcase stunning vineyard views. Per Coppola's request, tastings of the classic everyday wines, Rosso and Bianco, are free. Several labels are available only at the winery, including the flagship Archimedes, named after the Greek mathematician admired by Coppola’s grandfather. First released in 2010, the wine blends Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc, intense with the dark mysteries of black currant, huckleberry, spice, and tobacco.

One of the most intriguing wine offerings is the Director’s Cut 2007 Cinema, an uncommon blend dominated by Cabernet sauvignon and Zinfandel. It potentially could be Sonoma's answer to Super Tuscans, according to Corey Beck, director of winemaking and general manager of Francis Ford Coppola Winery. "The Cab is grown in Alexander Valley, while the Zinfandel comes from Dry Creek Valley—the regions that do each varietal very, very well. The Cab provides backbone, and you get a little spice from the Zin."

Both adults and kids will enjoy the Movie Gallery filled with Coppola's cinematic mementoes, including costumes from Bram Stoker's "Dracula," Don Corleone's desk from "The Godfather" and the gleaming red Tucker car—one of only 51 made in 1948—that figured in the film about the innovative auto maker. In addition to the five Oscars, a showcase holds other film festival honors, including the Palme d'Or from Cannes and the Golden Lion from Venice. Even more evocative for anyone who ever tingled upon hearing the awards show phrase, "The envelope, please," the display holds the cards that announced his wins for best picture and best director for "The Godfather II."

Coppola sums up his new namesake winery: "It’s a park for love of life. That’s what pleasure, grounds are for, people who are not afraid of pursuing what I jokingly call the 'Independence Lane' of their own lives, just as I have done, and not be told by others what's good and what's bad." 


 

What's Next:

Swimming Pools: The pools are scheduled to open by November and will be complimentary to all guests through 2010, after which a day-use fee will take effect.

Seasonal Tours: The Italian Harvest Tour offers a behind-the-scenes experience of grape harvest at the winery. Activities might include testing the sugar levels of grapes (brix sampling) and punching down grapes in fermentation tanks as well as breakfast and lunch. [Offered Saturdays from September 11 to October 30, 2010; from $199 per person.] 

Rustic Restaurant: On Sundays starting this fall, the restaurant will feature dining a tavola (pronounced a tah-vah-la)—an informal, family-style meal. Guests can have as little or as much as they like, and pay only for what is eaten and drunk. Inside sources confirm that there "will also be a theatrical component''—which might include costumed servers, entertainment, and a story line.

Francis Ford Coppola Winery
300 Via Archimedes
Geyserville, CA 95441
Phone: (707) 857-1400
Toll Free: (877) 590-3329
www.franciscoppolawinery.com



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"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls"
~~~~ Khalil Gibran ~~~~



Nicalicious

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Date: 4:19 AM, 09/12/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Wow, that sounds wonderful, White Fay! What a wonderful trip for you. Did you secretly hope you might catch a glimpse of a certain someone passing through?
I would have.
This place sounds great, and I would like to try that lemon chicken!

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The Changeling

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Date: 5:10 AM, 09/12/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Nah, not really.  I don't harbor any fantasies about running into him anymore.  Those days are long gone.  Still....one day it would be nice.....LOL!

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"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls"
~~~~ Khalil Gibran ~~~~



Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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Date: 12:37 AM, 10/27/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Francis Ford Coppola to make horror thriller starring Val Kilmer?action

http://deadline.com/2010/10/francis-ford-coppola-quietly-shooting-next-pic-and-val-kilmer-is-his-star/

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Nicalicious

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Date: 2:58 AM, 10/27/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Could be a really good movie, with all that talent in it. I used to like Bruce Dern, although I haven't seen him for years. I rarely watch tv so didn't know he was on a show these days.

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The Changeling

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Date: 3:05 AM, 10/27/10
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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This is really cool beans news.  Under the right direction, Kilmer can strike just the right note. 

__________________

"Love one another but make not a bond of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls"
~~~~ Khalil Gibran ~~~~



Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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Date: 8:06 PM, 04/23/12
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Still yet to see Twixt, has anyone?

In the meantime I don't think we have Francis Ford Coppola's 'Inside The Actor's Studio' here yet!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwyVLEIsvBE



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Nic Warrior

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Date: 4:22 PM, 04/25/12
RE: Francis Ford Coppola
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Have you seen this video?? This was back in 1995 when both Sofia and Francis were interviewed by E!. And it's wonderful enought to know that his kids are grew up in this kind of family tight knit environment. ^^



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