Everything I do is personal. I have never made a movie that didn't have very strong personal resonance.

We support each other in the Coppola family. We love the idea of everyone getting his place in the sun.

I was raised as a Catholic, but I didn't like the Catholic Church at all. I thought the nuns were mean.

Films and hotels have many aspects that are the same. For example, there is always a big vision, an idea.

Some critics are stimulating in that they make you realise how you could do better, and those are valued.

I had been a kid that moved so much, I didn't have a lot of friends. Theater really represented camaraderie.

You ought to love what you're doing because, especially in a movie, over time you really will start to hate it.

I've been offered lots of movies. There's always some actor who's doing a project and would like to have me do it.

Lots of people have criticized my movies, but nobody has ever identified the real problem: I'm a sloppy filmmaker.

The time a movie is made is unique, not only from the talent that is available but if the public was ready for it.

In a sense, I think a movie is really a little like a question and when you make it, that's when you get the answer.

I was interested in the idea of succession - showing a father and a son both in their own time and drawing a contrast

I became quite successful very young, and it was mainly because I was so enthusiastic and I just worked so hard at it.

Sequels are not done for the audience or cinema or the filmmakers. It's for the distributor. The film becomes a brand.

I was always the black sheep of the family and always told that I was dumb, and I had a low IQ and did badly in school.

If the movie works, nobody notices the mistakes... If the movie doesn't work, the only thing people notice are mistakes.

A number of images put together a certain way become something quite above and beyond what any of them are individually.

I had a number of very strong personalities in my family. My father was a concert flutist, the solo flute for Toscanini.

I had been a kid that moved so much, I didn’t have a lot of friends. Theater really represented that kind of camaraderie.

If you're a person who says yes most of the time, you'll find yourself in the hotel business and the restaurant business.

If I have to be remembered for something, I want it remembered that I really liked children and was a good camp counselor.

'The Godfather' changed my life, for better or worse. It definitely made me have an older man's film career when I was 29.

I associate my motion picture career more with being unhappy and scared, or being under the gun, than with anything pleasant.

I think cinema, movies, and magic have always been closely associated. The very earliest people who made film were magicians.

Listen, if there's one sure-fire rule that I have learned in this business, it's that I don't know anything about human nature.

Wine is so much more than a beverage. It's a romance, a story, a drama-all of those things that are basically putting on a show.

The things you get fired for when you’re young are the same things that you get lifetime achievement awards for when you’re old.

George Lucas doesn't have the most physical stamina. He was so unhappy making Star Wars that he just vowed he'd never do it again.

I realized I probably wouldn't make another film that cuts through commercial and creative things like 'Godfather' or 'Apocalypse.'

I know that if a film is ready to emerge out of what I write, I'll be able to go off and make it without asking anyone's permission.

I gladly, I voluntarily gave up the kind of commercial film career I had going as soon as I had enough money to finance my own films.

When I was 13, I worked for Western Union. When the telegrams came in, I would glue them on the paper and deliver them on my bicycle.

I'm no longer dependent on the movie business to make a living. So if I want to make movies as other old guys would play golf, I can.

Anyone who's made film and knows about the cinema has a lifelong love affair with the experience. You never stop learning about film.

Music is a big factor in helping the illusion of the film come to life. The same way music brings back different periods of our lives.

I made this movie for $40,000, which was this little black-and-white horror film called Dementia 13, which we made in about nine days.

You don't have to specialize - do everything that you love and then, at some time, the future will come together for you in some form.

'Godfather' was very classical, the way it was shot, the style, the whole driving force of it was more classical, almost Shakespearean.

The internet in hotels should be free - and I really resent it when they charge you five dollars for a bottle of water beside your bed.

I remember growing up with television, from the time it was just a test pattern, with maybe a little bit of programming once in a while.

I never went to a psychologist or psychiatrist in my life. Never. You know, Italians are a little prejudiced against that kind of thing.

'Godfather' was very classical - the way it was shot, the style - the whole driving force of it was more classical, almost Shakespearean.

The most adventurous thing I've done is learn how to fly a helicopter in the Philippines. One night we landed on a beach and slept on it.

I just admire people like Woody Allen, who every year writes an original screenplay. It's astonishing. I always wished that I could do that.

To make great movies, there is an element of risk. You have to say, 'Well, I am going to make this film, and it is not really a sure thing.'

Ten Days That Shook The World, by Eisenstein, I went to see it, and I was so impressed with this film, so impressed with what cinema could do.

Frank Capra was a prop man, I think. John Ford was a prop man. It was a little bit of a father and son thing, and you kind of worked your way up.

By working in the morning, I find a sense of peace; it's isolated peace, but I can definitely be in touch with my feelings, and then I just start.

Roger Corman exploited all of the young people who worked for him, but he really gave you responsibility and opportunity. So it was kind of a fair deal.

I had to get a job, and of course, the job was 'The Godfather.' That made me be something I didn't know I was going to be. I became a big-shot director.

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