POTD: A Page Of Francis Ford Coppola’s Handwritten Notes For ‘The Godfather’
By Russ Fischer/Aug. 25, 2011 6:00 am EST
This gets filed not under ’new stuff’ but under ‘whoa, awesome stuff!’ Those who know their Godfather history have heard of the super-notated novel and script copies that Francis Ford Coppola employed to make the film. (The same sort of highly-notated scripts that a great many directors use, of course.) You may have seen images of the detailed pages in a documentary about the film here and there. But here’s a huge scan of one page from Mario Puzo’s novel, complete with a great many notes by the director. If you’re looking for insight into how someone turns one piece of work into something as enduring as The Godfather, this isn’t a bad place to start.
Click to enlarge.
[RuinAWish, via BuzzFeed]
POTD: A Page Of Francis Ford Coppola’s Handwritten Notes For ‘The Godfather’
By Russ Fischer/Aug. 25, 2011 6:00 am EST
This gets filed not under ’new stuff’ but under ‘whoa, awesome stuff!’ Those who know their Godfather history have heard of the super-notated novel and script copies that Francis Ford Coppola employed to make the film. (The same sort of highly-notated scripts that a great many directors use, of course.) You may have seen images of the detailed pages in a documentary about the film here and there. But here’s a huge scan of one page from Mario Puzo’s novel, complete with a great many notes by the director. If you’re looking for insight into how someone turns one piece of work into something as enduring as The Godfather, this isn’t a bad place to start.
Click to enlarge.
[RuinAWish, via BuzzFeed]
Those who know their Godfather history have heard of the super-notated novel and script copies that Francis Ford Coppola employed to make the film. (The same sort of highly-notated scripts that a great many directors use, of course.) You may have seen images of the detailed pages in a documentary about the film here and there. But here’s a huge scan of one page from Mario Puzo’s novel, complete with a great many notes by the director. If you’re looking for insight into how someone turns one piece of work into something as enduring as The Godfather, this isn’t a bad place to start.
Click to enlarge.
[RuinAWish, via BuzzFeed]