Miles Teller as 'The Godfather' producer Al Ruddy in the Paramount+ series 'The Offer.' (CNN) Considering that one major fight over ...
Evans is also thrown into a tailspin when his wife, Ali McGraw (Meredith Garretson), has a much-publicized affair with Steve McQueen while shooting "The Getaway." A more familiar tension is that Paramount has been on a rocky path, with its impatient owners pressuring Evans to deliver at the box office. No one appears more at risk than Ruddy, who finds Evans to be a mercurial ally, periodically prompting him to stage an end-run by going directly to the head of Paramount's parent company, Charles Bluhdorn (Burn Gorham), who sees flirting with Ruddy's assistant ("Ted Lasso's" Juno Temple) as one of the key benefits to running a movie studio.
Michael Tolkin, who wrote the Hollywood satire The Player years ago, also wrote the new ten-hour Paramount Plus series The Offer, about the making of The ...
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Miles Teller, Juno Temple and Dan Fogler in 'The Offer.' Nicole Wilder/Paramount+. “There are three sides to every story: your side, my side, ...
There is such a rich story to be mined from the creation of a classic tale of family, crime, country, history, and the movies, and such a massive lost opportunity in what the folks behind this series have come up with. No, that maxim about storytelling, memory, and the truth is particularly pertinent in regard to The Offer, because what sounds like an ensemble piece on paper is dominated by the “my side” perspective of one person, and one person only. It is, frankly, impossible to know whether we’re supposed to take those string of words in that order seriously, any more than we are The Offer mocking Paramount lackeys by declaring that a V-shaped composition of Corleones on a poster is a marketing “kiss of death”… and then proceeding to use the exact same formation on their own poster. The only way it genuinely works, however, is as a parody of prestige TV. If the story of The Godfather‘s tumultuous birth and subsequent blockbuster success teaches us anything, it’s that victory can somehow defy the odds and be snatched from the jaws of defeat. A 10-episode megillah that charts the wild, crazy, stranger-than-fiction origin story of one of the greatest (if not the greatest) movies ever made, this Seventies flashback tries to hit a lot of marks at once: a biopic, a no-biz-like-showbiz tell-all, a backstage drama, a workplace farce, a meta-Mob epic, a “difficult men” antihero saga, a female empowerment parable, and a scrappy triumph-of-the-underdog tale slathered in flop sweat and canned spaghetti sauce. This, unfortunately, is not the theme to The Offer. The creators behind the Paramount+ limited series about the making of The Godfather have opted for a bargain-basement redo of the Mad Men opening score, which aims for a ring-a-ding sense of guys behaving badly tinged with vintage glamour.
The Paramount+ miniseries about the making of "The Godfather" stars Miles Teller, Juno Temple, Matthew Goode, and more.
If you're looking for a compilation of The Godfather's greatest hits, you've come to the right place. But it goes further, moving from referencing The Godfather to referencing the creation of other films like Chinatown and Love Story. These moments are treated like big Easter eggs for movie enthusiasts, with eye-rolling results. To appease them, Al insists that The Godfather is a story about family, not about Mafia stereotypes. In fact, there's a constant sense that The Offer would rather be a movie than a TV show, especially given its episodes' occasional lack of cohesion or contained arcs. Ironically, the show's gangsters end up being the kind of stereotypes Joe and his cronies are so upset about. This involves recruiting director Francis Ford Coppola (Dan Fogler) and stars Al Pacino (Anthony Ippolito) and Marlon Brando (Justin Chambers). The rest is history, but there are still many, many bumps along the road.
Frank Sinatra really did let Mario Puzo have it for his perceived likeness in The Godfather, as featured in the first episode of The Offer.
The Offer scene is fairly accurate, but Puzo specifically noted in his New York magazine feature that Sinatra, shockingly, did not use foul language, and the confrontation was only verbal. The late Al Martino played Fontane in the first and third Godfather films. Gallo’s Puzo sees Sinatra (Frank John Hughes) in Chasen’s and tries to meet him.
Wondering if the miniseries The Offer based on how The Godfather got made is available to stream on Netflix? Don't worry, we've got you covered!
The biographical miniseries about how The Godfather got made is not available on the streamer. The story contains run-ins with nefarious study executives as well as real-life mobsters with iconic figures like Marlon Brando, Robert Evans, Francis Ford Coppola, Joe Colombo, Al Pacino, Ali MacGraw, Frank Sinatra and Carlo Gambino. Keep reading to find out that and more!
The Offer, Paramount+'s TV series about the making of The Godfather, boasts an all-star cast portraying the real-life people behind the iconic film.
The Lapidus character is an amalgam of a few executives at Paramount and Gulf +Western who opposed the making of The Godfather. Hanks stars in the Jumanji movies, Dexter, and Fargo. The eccentric, Austrian-born Bludhorn hired Robert Evans, a former failed actor, to run Paramount Pictures. In The Offer, Bludhorn is the boss of Evans and Albert S. Ruddy who struggles to support their vision for the picture while keeping an eye on his company's bottom line. Today, Bart is the vice president and editorial director of Variety. Zuckerman starred in Kyle XY, Desperate Housewives, and he will appear in Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer. Coppola and Puzo collaborated on the screenplay while Ruddy and Evans dealt with the major hurdle of filming in New York City. The Godfather novel was controversial with the Italian-American community and New York mobsters prevented the production from filming in the city. Puzo then worked on The Godfather Part II and Part III with Coppola and he also wrote the screenplay for Superman: The Movie. Gallo appeared in Cold Case, Boardwalk Empire, and The Irishman. Frank John Hughes as Frank Sinatra - Sinatra was violently opposed to The Godfather novel and it being turned into a movie. Robert Evans was Paramount Pictures' head of production from the late-1960s to the early 1970s. Here's who's who in The Offer and in The Godfather's production in real life. Temple has starred in The Dark Knight Rises, Maleficent: Mistress of Evil, and Ted Lasso. The Offer is set between the years 1965 to 1972, with The Godfather's production taking place in 1971 before it was released in March 1972. A 10-episode series streaming on Paramount+, The Offer is "based on the experiences" of Albert S. Ruddy, The Godfather's producer, and it's written by Michael Tolkin, who wrote another famous behind-the-scenes Hollywood film, The Player. Based on the best-selling novel by Mario Puzo, Paramount Pictures' head of production Robert Evans tapped Albert S. Ruddy as the producer of the movie adaptation, which the troubled studio desperately banked on to be a hit.
From Paramount CEO Robert Evans to mafia boss Joe Colombo, here's how the cast of The Offer compares to their real-life counterparts involved in the making ...
Mario Puzo was the son of Italian immigrants, and published The Godfather—his best-known novel, by far—in 1969. He died of a heart attack at age 56 in 1983. “For every character in the film, getting it made or stopping it from being made was at the core of their actions, and it was a matter of life and death to them. Paramount Studios chief Robert Evans, who passed away in 2019, is known for Rosemary's Baby, Love Story, Chinatown, and, of course, The Godfather. As Evans said in 2002, "We didn't strive for commercial. The first three episodes of The Offer premiere Thursday, April 28, and the following seven will drop once a week after that. The Offer centers on Paramount Studios producer Al Ruddy, who was only given the film because he was known for working on a tight budget.
Here's all the info on how you can watch The Offer, the miniseries that explores the making of the classic gangster movie The Godfather.
That makes them the perfect companion piece to The Offer for diehard fans of the Godfather films. The Offer is a Paramount+ original and exclusive to subscribers of the service. The Offer is exclusive to Paramount+ and stands to be one of the most attractive original offerings from the streamer ever. Paramount+ is turning out to be the gift that doesn't stop giving, at least, as far as fans of the original Godfather films are concerned. Today it is considered a cultural milestone in American cinema and a classic tale of family and chasing the American dream. The Godfather has developed a massive following since debuting 50 years ago, and The Offer gives longtime fans a chance to go behind the scenes of what went into creating the classic film.
Al meets a TV writer friend for a drink at L.A.'s Chateau Marmont, and when he sees Evans holding court (and a girl eagerly sits in his own lap), he decides: “I ...
But Joe Colombo and his fellow mobsters are still fuming about the book, and when news of the movie comes out, Sinatra sends them a funeral wreath of flowers with a message: “Hopefully, we can make this thing go away.” Sure enough, after a dinner with Mario and Coppola, Al and Bettye get into their car to drive home… Evans entertains a pair of executives from Paramount’s parent company Gulf + Western, and though Warner Bros. is offering them a million dollars for the rights to The Godfather, he convinces them to say no, pitching the movie as a potential gold mine. Mario says he’s the only one who can write this movie — and even promises to finish the script in three days. When his agent suggests he write a book about the Mafia, he scoffs: “So they can put a bullet in my head?” But he’s racked up serious debts all over town, and his wife encourages him: “F–k art, Mario. Start typing.” He comes up with an idea about a powerful mob family where the youngest son wants nothing to do with the family business but gets pulled in anyway. Al’s movie with Robert Redford flops hard, but Evans puts him on a plane to New York to sell his vision of The Godfather to the Gulf + Western brass. Mario’s book The Godfather becomes a smash hit, with fans lining up down the block to buy it and an option to make a movie.
The new Miles Teller-led series on Paramount+ explores the behind-the-scenes drama of the making of "The Godfather."
The latest edition of " The Frame" uses a matte, anti-reflection display. "The Offer" will have 10 episodes. Factor in a massive, 65-inch screen and you're looking at a $5,000 TV. Luckily, Samsung has a great deal that knocks a hefty $2,000 off the price, bringing it down to $3,000. Paramount+ offers a one-week free-trial period, so if you were thinking of trying the platform, you can watch "The Offer" and more new Paramount+ titles, risk free. Keep reading to check out the best deals on TVs, antennas, TV stands and more. As "The Offer" tells it, Ruddy assembles a dream team, including director Francis Ford Coppola (who co-wrote the script with Puzo) and Hollywood star Marlon Brando, only to see his production challenged by behind-the-scenes tensions -- and a prominent mob boss.
"The film is just genius, and it's just a spectacular example of filmmaking and true storytelling," says Patrick Gallo, who plays the legendary author in the ...
And every bit of it was a love letter to the film that inspired us all. In the scene where he is first introduced in Marlon’s home, there is one moment where he turned profile, and it was like the whole room lit up. The book is good, I don’t think the book is great. That was a great scene to shoot! That was so special because we were able to bring that relationship to set. That he wrote The Godfather to take care of his family and pay off debts. But it really happened — such as Puzo and Frank Sinatra getting into it at Chasen’s. What was that production day like for you? I want to get the hell out of here! I think the book was written so the film could be birthed. For actor Patrick Gallo, it was important that his incarnation of Puzo not be an impersonation, but rather capture the wordsmith’s essence through studying interviews and reading his work. And I don’t think Puzo thought the book was great either. The legendary best-selling author who wrote The Godfather was known for being blunt.
The University of Illinois Division of Intercollegiate Athletics announced today it has committed to providing now-permissible financial support to ...
This announcement further solidifies our commitment to providing the best student-athlete experience in the country, and provides yet another incredible advantage for all current and future Illini to excel on the court and in the classroom." Our players will benefit from this academic-based rewards program and it will continue to enhance our program and the concept of excellence both on the court and in the classroom. It takes time, dedication, and discipline to succeed in the classroom. We are truly thankful for all of the people that have made this happen." It is an incredible statement of value, importance and support to all future and current Illinois soccer players. In Alston, the Supreme Court concluded that NCAA rules restricting education-related benefits to Division I basketball and bowl subdivision football student-athletes were in violation of federal antitrust law.