Sponsor fans cannot believe that an emblematic moment has been improvised | Films | Entertainment

The emblematic classic Hollywood The Godfather left amazed fans when they discovered that one of the most memorable moments in the film was not scripted. With Hollywood Heroes Marlon Brando and Al Pacino, the film, hailed as a cinematographic masterpiece, the prizes of the bag in bag for the best actor, the best film and the best suitable screenplay.
Surprisingly, viewers were surprised to discover the extent of improvisation in the 1972 success – in particular a first scene featuring James Caan. The legend of Silver Screen, who obtained an appointment to the Oscars for the best support actor for his representation of Sonny Corleone, revealed that the scene took place without prior planning.
On the R / Godfather Subredit, enthusiasts applauded Caan for its moving brilliance of the moment during the sequence. An article read: “So-called James Caan improvised this whole scene. The money launched on the field is such a gangster decision.”
In the scene discussed, Caan breaks a camera against the ground, followed by the launch of a few banknotes to cover the damage. This led an intrigued fan to speculate on the extent of the impromptu performance of Caan.
They posted: “Yes, Sonny speaking to the FBI men outside is in the script, but he badly shooting the photographer while he returns inside is not. So he could have improvised the day.”
Fans remembered the emblematic performance of James Caan as Sonny Corleone, with a fan of comparisons with the role of Andy Garcia in the 1990 suite.
They commented: “What is great with Sonny is this rage to simmer. Always boiling below the surface, 0-60 in the blink of an eye but not with the bomb or to scream or to shout.
“The teeth tight when he pushes Clemenza against the wall after Vito was shot down, the whispering shouting on Tom in the corridor after Vito returned home. Caan underestimated anger but made it even more effective.
“I liked Garcia in GF3 but I felt that he had tried too much to transmit this temperament by shouting in Zaza and in the kitchen by chatting with Michael. Michael mentioned the temperament during the Zaza scene and it was too much on the nose. Caan didn’t need to shout for you to know that it was P *** Ed.”
James Caan himself confirmed that one of his most memorable scenes was actually improvised, revealing years later: “I caught this camera and I broke this camera.”
Caan explained that his impromptu action was because his character “realized that in my neighborhood, I hurt, and I removed $ 20 and I threw him in the street”. Despite being unforeseen, director Francis Ford Coppola has kept this real moment in the film.
Another Reddit user expressed his admiration for the cameraman in the same scene, comparing him to a “stroke of cascade” because of his impressive reaction to the unexpected movement of Caan.
A social media user thought about it: “I wonder if the photographer was a stuntman. He took this blow very well and did not slip the car and on the ground at the end.”




