Thursday, September 26, 2024

Review of MEGALOPOLIS: Coppola's Cornucopia

September 26, 2024



Architect Cesar Catilina (Adam Driver) was undertaking an ambitious project of recreating the city of New Rome with Megalon, a revolutionary versatile material which he himself invented, and turning it into a sprawling Megalopolis. The incumbent Mayor Franklyn Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito) totally hated Cesar for destroying the old city, but his daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) had fallen in love with her father's nemesis. 

More than the story or the stars, there is a significant buzz surrounding "Megalopolis" because of the filmmaker who wrote and directed it -- Francis Ford Coppola. While "The Godfather" (1972) and its sequel (1974) had already elevated Coppola's name on the Hollywood firmament, his filmography also included "The Conversation" (1974), and "Apocalypse Now" (1979). He was active up to the 1990s, but since then, he had nothing of note anymore.

After a hiatus of 13 years, Coppola finally decided to release this passion project of his this year, which started as an idea that had been percolating in his head since 1977. The story had a grand scale of a Roman epic. The characters had names derived from Roman history, like Catiline, a soldier who staged a coup against Cicero in 63 AD, and Hamilton Crassus, Cesar's wealthy uncle, named after Crassus, once "the wealthiest man in Rome."

For the positives, Coppola went all out in the technical aspects -- the lush and brilliant cinematography by Mihai Mălaimare Jr., the opulent and ostentatious production design by Beth Mickle and Bradley Rubin, the costumes by Milena Canonero that had both retro and futuristic vibes, and special visual effects to complete the illusion Coppola was going for. The rich and vibrant aural backdrop was provided by musical scorer Osvaldo Golijov.

For the negatives, Coppola wanted so much to happen such that the whole thing did not flow like a logical narrative. Characters show up, events happened, yet they were dropped just like that. Adam Driver brooded too much to play Cesar, and his chemistry with Julia was flat. Old man Crassus (Jon Voight) and his bride Wow Platinum (Audrey Plaza) were more interesting. Vengeful cousin Clodio gave Shia La Beouf many outrageous moments to play. 6/10. 


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