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On The Godfather (Interesting analysis)
Lew Rockwell.com ^ | March 19, 2003 | Craig Russell

Posted on 03/19/2003 9:55:35 AM PST by tarawa

On The Godfather by Craig Russell

"To live outside the law, you must be honest."

~ Bob Dylan

The upcoming Academy Awards this weekend reminds me that thirty years ago this month, The Godfather won the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1972. It also won Oscars for Marlon Brando as Best Actor (famously and memorably refused by him) and for Best Screenplay. In addition, it received seven other nominations, including three best supporting actor nods to James Caan, Robert Duvall, and Al Pacino.

In the decades that have passed, many of the other films that received nominations that year – Pete and Tillie, Travels with My Aunt, The Emigrants – have for the most part passed from popular consciousness. But The Godfather remains as alive and vibrant as it was upon its release in March of 1972, and the statement "I’ll make him an offer he can’t refuse" still reverberates with instant recognition. Why has this film endured? Perhaps because its hero, Vito Corleone, was a man of morals, principle, and courage in a world sorely lacking in either – a man who stands throughout the film in stark contrast to the State.

Vito Corleone – his first name means "life," or "alive," and his last means "lionhearted" – is in every way his own man. The logo that you see as the film opens incorporates a hand holding the strings of a marionette. As he says to his son Michael late in the film, "I refused to be a fool dancing on a string held by all those big shots." And he has made his life providing people with things that the State – "those big shots" – has denied the people, among them gambling, women – and justice.

In the opening scene, Bonasera, a funeral director, explains to Don Corleone how the men who beat and disfigured his daughter got suspended sentences: the State has refused him the justice he deserves, and so he "must go to Don Corleone." And that is what he gets. He asks initially for Corleone to kill them, but Corleone points out that "that is not justice. Your daughter is still alive." Bonasera tries vainly to tempt him with money, but Corleone is above that. His only price for supplying justice is friendship. "Someday," he says, "and that day may never come, I'll call upon you to do a service for me. But until that day – accept this justice as a gift on my daughter's wedding day."

Throughout the film, in contrast to the morality of the Don, we see the corruption of the State. In the wedding scene, very early in the film, we begin to see the relationship between the Don and the State when Tom Hagen tells him that a senator and "some of the judges" had called to apologize for not being there, but that "they’ve all sent gifts." This is clarified a little later when Sollozzo, who wants the Don to finance his nascent drug business, tells him "I need a man who has powerful friends…. I need, Don Corleone, those politicians that you carry in your pocket like so many nickels and dimes." They’re for sale, and the Don has purchased them. Later, when the Don is laying in the hospital after an attempt on his life, it’s a New York City police chief, on another family’s payroll, who takes the guards away to make it easier for a second attempt (foiled by Michael, whose jaw is promptly broken by the chief who has his men hold him in place while he hits him). And late in the film, the film speaks very specifically about the State when Michael and Kay have their first conversation upon his return to America. Michael says that his father is "no different than any other powerful man, any man who's responsible for other people, like a senator or a president."

"You know how naïve you sound?" says Kay. "Senators and presidents don't have men killed."

To which Michael replies: "Oh? Who's being naïve, Kay?"

Unlike the State, the Don is not corrupt – violent, yes, but not corrupt. While he buys politicians, he himself cannot be bought. Our indoctrination, however, tells us that, since he uses violence, he is therefore an evil man. But he is not. He’s just a man who has refused to yield to the State, among other things, its desired monopoly on violence, which is the cornerstone of the State’s power. And he uses this violence with restraint. Yes, he persuaded the bandleader who had signed his godson to a personal services contract to release him by making him "an offer he couldn’t refuse" by threatening his life: "He assured him that either his brains or his signature would be on that contract." But don’t forget that he had been there the day before offering ten times the money that he later did, and the bandleader unreasonably refused. The same thing happens with the movie director. The Don first offers friendship and to do him some specific services, but the director refuses reason, and wakes up with a horse’s head in his bed. What’s the difference between what the Don does in these instances and what the State would do if these men had been sued in court, except that the Don’s approach is more direct and more honest?

The Don is the most principled man in the film. He refuses to do "murder for money" in Bonasera’s case, because that would not be justice, and he refuses to participate in Sollozzo’s drug business, because that would not be right. As he tells Sollozzo:

I must say no to you, and I'll give you my reasons. It's true I have a lot of friends in politics, but they wouldn't be friendly very long if they knew my business was drugs instead of gambling, which they view as a harmless vice. But drugs is a dirty business. It doesn't make any difference to me what a man does for a living, understand. But your business is a little dangerous.

It makes no difference to him how much money he stands to make on the deal, in this case, says Sollozzo, "in the first year, your end should be three, four million dollars, and then it would go up." Not only does he refuse the deal on (dare I say it?) moral grounds, he does it knowing that he could be risking his life. For Vito Corleone, his family, his friends, and his integrity are far more important than mere money.

This, then, is why The Godfather endures: its main character is a true man, strong enough, brave enough, and principled enough to stand up to and defy the power of the State. He is, in short, the kind of man we all wish to be. Unlike so many today, Vito Corleone is truly Alive, and truly Lionhearted.

March 19, 2003

Craig Russell lives in upstate New York.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS:
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To: stanz
Funny...I can't remember where my keys are, but trivia like that never escapes me. Must be Senioritis coming on.

Don't worry: Not being able to find your keys, that's NOT an indication of "Old Timers" disease... On the other hand, forgetting what your keys are for ...

Mark

41 posted on 03/19/2003 4:02:58 PM PST by MarkL
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To: tarawa
But I didn't know, until this very day, that it was Barzinni all along.

I got the 4 DVD set for my birthday. I love the Godfather movies. Even the 3rd with its flaws. I have seen them all maybe 40 times.

I enjoyed what you wrote, but would just add that everything the Don did might have been for power, but in his world, from when he was a child, power meant - not money, but safety, for those he loved. That was his priority, and what separates him from the bad guys.
42 posted on 03/19/2003 4:14:21 PM PST by My back yard
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To: stanz
LOL. I have a friend of mine who calls me up with obscure questions. i asked him why he calls me. He said i know more useless sh&t than anyone he knows.
43 posted on 03/19/2003 5:13:40 PM PST by stylin19a (Having a hard time meeting people ? just pick up the wrong golf ball on the golf course.)
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To: DManA
The state has successfully muscled the Don out of the numbers racket. It's now exclusively their "game".
##

Not only did the State muscle the numbers game away from the entrepreneurs who started it, they don’t run it nearly as honestly or as efficiently.

When you could play the numbers on the street, the payoff was 600/1. The state pays 250/1 in some places. The true odds are 999/1.

The private sector ran the game, paid off cops, judges, etc., paid runners who picked up the bets and brought you the winnings, and made a very nice profit for the bookmaker on the 299/1 grind. The State can’t make enough to run the schools on a 749/1 grind.

Of course, this is no surprise. The State is never as efficient, or as honest, as the private sector.
44 posted on 03/19/2003 5:30:02 PM PST by SUSSA
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To: stylin19a
That's funny. My daughter says I'm a storehouse of useless trivialities. She's right.(But some of my little ditties come in handy when she's researching papers.)
45 posted on 03/19/2003 7:26:11 PM PST by stanz
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To: MarkL
How about the fact that each of my keys are color-coded?
46 posted on 03/19/2003 7:29:49 PM PST by stanz
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To: tarawa
mm
47 posted on 03/19/2003 7:30:31 PM PST by The Lake City Gar
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To: mr.pink
My only problem with the picture (And I think this is "Cinamatography) is that it's so dark. So dark in many places that you can't even make-out the actors faces. It really bothers me.
48 posted on 03/20/2003 6:20:14 AM PST by The Lake City Gar
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To: PatriotGames
In 1973 Marlon Brando sent 'Sasheen Littlefeather' to reject his Best Actor award as a protest against Hollywood's portrayal of Native American Indians. It turned out that she wasn't quite as native american as she first appeared, but actually actress Maria Cruz, one time winner of the Miss American Vampire contest and later to appear nude in Playboy Magazine...
49 posted on 03/20/2003 6:27:32 AM PST by The Lake City Gar
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To: The Lake City Gar
My only problem with the picture (And I think this is "Cinamatography) is that it's so dark. So dark in many places that you can't even make-out the actors faces. It really bothers me.

To each his own. I enjoyed that aspect of the film very much. I think that dramatic style of lighting is called "chiaroscuro" (originally a term for a type of painting style...i.e.- Carravagio).
50 posted on 03/20/2003 6:34:54 AM PST by mr.pink
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To: stanz
How about the fact that each of my keys are color-coded?

If you got them color coded AFTER forgetting you were color-blind, then I'd start worrying!

Mark

51 posted on 03/20/2003 4:51:43 PM PST by MarkL (Now where's that damn AARP application?!)
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To: MarkL
Nah. There's hope for me!
52 posted on 03/20/2003 6:31:34 PM PST by stanz
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To: Heyworth
Re:22

Perfectly expressed, every sentence.

53 posted on 03/20/2003 6:47:10 PM PST by Urbane_Guerilla
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