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Robert Duvall Is Looking Back at His Life, and Not Just 'The Godfather'
CNET ^

Posted on 04/21/2022 12:03:53 AM PDT by nickcarraway

Robert Duvall Is Looking Back at His Life, and Not Just 'The Godfather' He starred in Apocalypse Now and Lonesome Dove and just celebrated the 50th anniversary of The Godfather, which gets the behind-the-scenes treatment soon in real-life drama The Offer.

Richard Trenholm headshot Richard Trenholm April 17, 2022 5:00 a.m. PT WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA - FEBRUARY 27: Actor Robert Duvall arrives at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party at Mortons on February 27, 2005 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) Robert Duvall, pictured here in 2005, has commanded the screen in a career spanning seven decades.

Frazer Harrison/Getty Images It's an offer you can't refuse. And yet, when I was invited to spend 15 minutes talking to legendary actor Robert Duvall about his part in cinematic milestone The Godfather, I hesitated. What can you ask about the iconic 1972 crime saga that hasn't been answered a million times before? And can you even scratch the surface in such a short time with an Oscar-winning actor whose career has spanned 70 years?

Robert Duvall was born in California in 1931 and has appeared in theater, TV and movies since the 1950s. He was in The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits and Bullitt. He was Boo Radley to Gregory Peck's Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird. He shot it out with John Wayne (in True Grit) and Clint Eastwood (in Joe Kidd), beginning a long association with the Western genre. Whether playing coldly violent soldiers, vindictive executives or gruff but avuncular mentors, Duvall has always specialized in bringing a simmering authority to any part. He won the Academy Award for best actor for 1983's Tender Mercies, but many of his most unforgettable performances have been supporting roles, from The Conversation, Apocalypse Now, M*A*S*H and Network, to Colors, Days of Thunder, Falling Down and Widows. The 91-year-old will soon be seen in Netflix's basketball drama Hustle with Adam Sandler, streaming in June, and a crime drama directed by Ed Harris called The Ploughmen.

And of course, Duvall joined Marlon Brando, James Caan, Al Pacino (and Robert De Niro) in The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, directed by Francis Ford Coppola (Duvall declined to appear in Part III because he was unhappy with the money offered). The first film was released in US theaters on March 24, 1972. The behind-the-scenes story, meanwhile, was also full of drama and is the subject of a new limited series called The Offer, starring Miles Teller as producer Albert S. Ruddy, Matthew Goode as then-Paramount head of production Robert Evans, Dan Fogler as Coppola and Justin Chambers as Brando. It's streaming on Paramount Plus from April 28.

I talked to Duvall for a 50th anniversary restoration and rerelease of the trilogy in 4K UHD and digital format. He greets me enthusiastically over Zoom -- hearing I'm in the UK, Duvall extols Tyson Fury as maybe the greatest heavyweight in history -- and laughs as he remembers talking about The Godfather years ago on the 25th anniversary. Some of his recollections are indeed a little well worn, like his oft-repeated bit about how it would take Marlon Brando a few seconds to get James Caan's jokes.

But although Duvall admits he hasn't seen the films lately, like so many of us, he's stumbled across them on TV. "Sometimes I'll come across Godfather II a quarter of the way through, and I say, let me watch a little bit. And then I watch the whole thing all the way through. It's so intoxicating."

The actor notes that Coppola achieved this masterful filmmaking despite pressure from the suits at movie studio Paramount, who didn't want to cast Brando or Pacino. "Coppola had to work under duress," Duvall notes. "I admired him and gained a lot of respect for him because he feared at any moment he might be fired by the studio. But he kept going to make it his vision."

times, enjoying the freedom he was given. "Coppola wasn't one of these directors -- I've worked with a lot of 'em -- who say, 'Do this, do that,'" Duvall explains. "He wanted to see what you bring, to interpret what he's written down. I call that from ink to behavior: You take what's written, but you got to put it somehow into organized behavior."

For example, Duvall cites how he transformed the character of a cartoonish military officer in Apocalypse Now's script by drawing on his own military experience in the US Army, and on his father, who'd been a rear admiral in the US Navy. The result is the chillingly gung ho Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore, played by Duvall as brimming with specific quirks as he delivers the famous "smell of napalm in the morning" speech.

LOS ANGELES - AUGUST 15: The movie "Apocalypse Now", directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Seen here, Robert Duvall as Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore. Initial theatrical release August 15, 1979. Screen capture. Paramount Pictures. (Photo by CBS via Getty Images) "Smells like... victory!"

Duvall describes Coppola as one of the three biggest influences on his career. So, does he regret choosing not to appear in Coppola's belated and divisive 1990 sequel, The Godfather Part III? "No," Duvall says, with no hesitation. "Not at all."

In the first two Godfather films, Duvall played Tom Hagen, adopted son and considered consigliere to the Corleone family. Even at the time he felt they were onto something. "I knew it about a third of the way through Godfather I," he says, "that we were really into something extremely special. I had a feeling it was gonna be an important film. I've only felt that twice."

And the other important story? The epic and acclaimed 1989 television miniseries Lonesome Dove, also starring Tommy Lee Jones, Danny Glover, Diane Lane and Anjelica Huston. Adapted from the novel by Larry McMurtry, it was a smash hit in the days when movie stars rarely crossed over into TV, and breathed new life into the moribund Western genre. "I went into the dressing room of Lonesome Dove," Duvall remembers, "and I said, 'Boys, we're making the Godfather of Westerns!'"

For some of The Godfather's cast -- notably Pacino and De Niro -- their careers were immediately transformed. But it took a little longer for Duvall, who'd in fact been one of the more established members of the cast before the film was made. "I had things I'd done before that," he says, "Some of it started right then for some of the other guys in Godfather I or II, but it would be 10 years later to start things that meant a lot to me. I've been going over some of my things I've done since then, and lately I've been watching some of them I haven't seen in years and years."

Robert Duvall scooped up the best actor Oscar at the 56th Annual Academy Awards in 1984, for his role in Tender Mercies, written by Horton Foote.

Bob Riha, Jr./Getty Images With so much attention paid to The Godfather over the decades, I ask if this time spent watching his old films has turned up any he'd forgotten, or if he'd seen any in a new light. "Convicts, by Horton Foote," he replies straight away. "Very interesting film." The 1991 latter-day Western was written by Pulitzer- and Oscar-winning Texas playwright and screenwriter Foote, who Duvall credits as another huge influence on his life. Co-starring James Earl Jones and Lukas Haas, Convicts sees Duvall play an increasingly infirm former Confederate soldier struggling to run a plantation in 1902. Like many Westerns, it's a film about aging, about facing the end at the end of an era.

"I played a very rural guy, so far from somebody like Tom Hagen, like maybe one of my uncles in Virginia here," Duvall chuckles. "You always draw from people, you draw from life, and they know you're observing them and even sometimes you let them know you are observing them. You're always out looking, looking, looking for something to propel you into something you can use... from ink to behavior."

Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall) tells Frankie Pentangeli (Michael V. Gazzo), who has betrayed the Godfather, about the noble way treasonous Roman emperors ended their lives with honor in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather: Part II. (Photo by �� John Springer Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images) Tom Hagen makes an offer in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather: Part II.

Duvall has been talking to me from his home in Virginia. "My wife is from Argentina, and she said for her, Virginia is the last station before heaven." I want to talk more about this lovely but portentous statement, and I ask why Duvall has been revisiting his past films. Does he feel he's facing the end? Inevitably, I run out of time before I can ask.

Instead, for my final hurried question, I return to The Godfather -- specifically, the trilogy's piercing opening line. Does Robert Duvall, like the undertaker in the first film's opening scene, believe in America?

"Oh, absolutely," he says, once again with no hesitation. "I always said the United States of America is like a big giant athlete with a lot of potential. Made mistakes, but a lot of talent."

"It's a crazy world now," he adds. "Nuts." Sadly, before I can ask him to elaborate, I really am out of time. But there's always time to watch The Godfather films again, not to mention any of the other classics from Duvall's long career.


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: robertduvall; thegodfather; tomhagen
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1 posted on 04/21/2022 12:03:53 AM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

The best cowboy ever as Gus, in Lonesome Dove. And a damned fine Marine as Bull Durham!


2 posted on 04/21/2022 12:34:38 AM PDT by llevrok (Pronouns: Me/myself/& I)
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To: nickcarraway

TRUE GRIT - shootout
https://youtu.be/J8EbkzlOa5A?t=17

[Rooster confronts the four outlaws across the field]
Ned Pepper : What’s your intention? Do you think one on four is a dogfall?
Rooster Cogburn : I mean to kill you in one minute, Ned. Or see you hanged in Fort Smith at Judge Parker’s convenience. Which’ll it be?
Ned Pepper : I call that bold talk for a one-eyed fat man.
Rooster Cogburn : Fill your hand, you son of a bitch!
,-——————

I have a writ here says you’re to stop eatin’ Chin Lee’s cornmeal forthwith! It’s a rat writ, writ’ for a rat, and this is lawful service of same!
,-——————

[Mattie comes to get Rooster and finds him talking with LaBoeuf]
Mattie Ross : This man wants to take Chaney back to Texas. That’s not what I want.
Rooster Cogburn : He wants him caught and punished - so do you.
Mattie Ross : I want Tom Chaney to hang for killing my father. It’s little to me how many dogs and senators he killed in Texas.
,-——————

Rooster Cogburn : Well, now, what do you drink?
Mattie Ross : I’m partial to cold buttermilk.
Rooster Cogburn : Well, we ain’t got none of that. We ain’t got no lemonade neither!
,-——————

Mattie Ross : Trust you to buy another tall horse.
Rooster Cogburn : Yeah. He’s not as game as Beau, but Stonehill says he can jump a four rail fence.
Mattie Ross : You are too old and fat to be jumping horses.
Rooster Cogburn : Well, come see a fat old man some time!
[jumps the fence and rides away]


3 posted on 04/21/2022 12:44:55 AM PDT by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy gas)
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To: minnesota_bound

We always get a kick out of Rooster Cogburn saying “boogerman”

Mattie Ross:
I’ll walk over there by myself.

Rooster Cogburn:
You scared of the dark?

Mattie Ross:
I’ve never been scared of the dark.

Rooster Cogburn:
Well if I had a big horse pistol like that I wouldn’t be scared of no “boogerman”.

Mattie Ross:
I’m not scared of no “boogerman”.


4 posted on 04/21/2022 1:00:19 AM PDT by gattaca
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To: nickcarraway

Robert Duvall Is hard to remember in most of his roles. His acting is so good he blends into the story and becomes the character.


5 posted on 04/21/2022 1:02:36 AM PDT by Nateman (Xi Jinping is the most diabolical enemy Americans has ever had. 🍊)
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To: nickcarraway

I was thinking of his film The Apostle a few days ago. Amazing movie. No studio would touch the project so Duvall financed, directed and starred in it himself.


6 posted on 04/21/2022 1:08:45 AM PDT by Ciaphas Cain (#notmypedophile)
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To: nickcarraway

OPEN RANGE
With Kevin Costner and Annette Bending!
A great western!


7 posted on 04/21/2022 1:14:31 AM PDT by justme4now (Falsehood flies, and the Truth comes limping after it)
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To: llevrok

Bull Meacham.

‘The Great Santini’

Fantastic movie.


8 posted on 04/21/2022 2:16:01 AM PDT by CTyank
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To: Nateman

One of Duvall’s best for becoming a character was “Second-hand Lion”, IMO.


9 posted on 04/21/2022 2:29:58 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't. )
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To: nickcarraway

I see people bringing up their favorite Robert Duvall movie. The challenge should be when has he made a bad movie? I haven’t found a bad one.


10 posted on 04/21/2022 2:48:31 AM PDT by USAF1985 (Joe McCarthy is a hero...he was absolutely, 100% correct! (Let’s go Brandon!))
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To: justme4now

(Robert Duvall) : Boss Spearman “Man’s got a right to protect his property and his life, and we ain’t lettin’ no rancher or his lawman take either.” ‘Open Range’

Robert Duvall: Prentice Ritter: We’re all travelers in this world - from sweet grass to the packin’ house - birth till death - we travel between the eternities.
:“Women. The habits and ambitions of women are more a mystery to me than Egyptian hieroglyphics. And I ain’t found the Rosetta Stone yet.”
: “God ain’t made a man that could stand up to the power that lays between a woman’s thighs. You see, the hold that little cooter has on a man’s life is unbreakable. It can bring a strong man to his knees.”
:I get rousted out of my sleep sometimes when Nature calls. I find there’s something frightening ‘bout that hour of the night ‘cause there ain’t no foolin’ yourself ‘bout what you done or what you hadn’t done with your life.
:


11 posted on 04/21/2022 2:50:11 AM PDT by Kartographer (“We Mutually Pledge To Each Other Our Lives, Our Fortunes And Our Sacred Honor”)
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To: nickcarraway

Fifty years since The Godfather? Oy!


12 posted on 04/21/2022 2:54:23 AM PDT by MayflowerMadam (When government fears the people, there is liberty.)
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To: nickcarraway
One of the best actor's ever... A couple of my fav's that were not mentioned... " THX 1138 where he plays a character in a dystopian sci-fi directed by George Lucas in 1971, 6 years before Lucas's 'Star Wars' fame... And 'The Great Santini' in 1979 where he play's a US Marine fighter pilot.

He should've won an Oscar for both those films... But given his conservative views, he was lucky to get any award from that bunch of dysfunctional losers.

13 posted on 04/21/2022 3:13:10 AM PDT by jerod (Nazi's were essentially Socialist in Hugo Boss uniforms... Get over it!)
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To: nickcarraway

One of my favorite actors of all time, along with Anthony Hopkins and Jack Lemmon. They talk like regular ppl, not like they’re reading lines from a script. Totally believable.


14 posted on 04/21/2022 3:22:12 AM PDT by Prince of Space ( Let’s go, Brandon!)
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To: llevrok
The best cowboy ever as Gus, in Lonesome Dove. And a damned fine Marine as Bull Durham!

My all time favorite Robert Duvall movie is The Great Santini where Duvall plays Marine Corps Lt. Col. Wilbur "Bull" Meechum.

15 posted on 04/21/2022 3:23:42 AM PDT by Yo-Yo (Is the /Sarc tag really necessary? Pray for President Biden: Psalm 109:8)
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To: nickcarraway

He seems like a good guy, for a Hollywood actor.

I suspect he is one of those “in-the-closet” conservatives, to have lasted this long.

A toast to your fine career, sir.


16 posted on 04/21/2022 3:26:40 AM PDT by Flavious_Maximus (Fauci is a murderer)
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To: nickcarraway
I only recall seeing Duval in two films...The Godfather and To Kill A Mockingbird. IIRC Mockingbird was his first film role...or at least his first role in a major film. I would very,very strongly recommend Mockingbird to all Freepers,for may reason...not least to watch Duval play "Boo" Radley.

And of course Tom Hagen...classic role from two classic films (I have no use for III).

17 posted on 04/21/2022 3:27:27 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Covid Is All About Mail In Balloting)
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To: nickcarraway

for may reason = for many reasons


18 posted on 04/21/2022 3:29:17 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Covid Is All About Mail In Balloting)
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To: Prince of Space

Jack Lemmon was born in the town in which I grew up.


19 posted on 04/21/2022 3:30:16 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Covid Is All About Mail In Balloting)
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To: Ciaphas Cain

I loved that film. He brought so much to the role.


20 posted on 04/21/2022 3:36:56 AM PDT by Chickensoup ( Leftists totalitarian fascists are eradicating conservatives)
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