Oranges are golden in colour and sometimes represent gold, wealth, and by extension, greed.
The Godfather, part 1, employs oranges as a symbol of greed and impending judgment. Consider these shots.
At the start, at the wedding, Tessio the caporegime is seen holding and contemplating an orange.
The Godfather, part 1, employs oranges as a symbol of greed and impending judgment. Consider these shots.
At the start, at the wedding, Tessio the caporegime is seen holding and contemplating an orange.
Immediately before he is shot, Vito Corleone buys some oranges.
The orange card in the b.g., between the greengrocer and the Don, advertises a Jake LaMotta fight at Madison Square Garden. LaMotta's life story was told in the film Raging Bull, which starred Robert De Niro, who also played Vito Corleone in The Godfather, Part II. LaMotta admitted to a US Senate sub-committee in 1960 that he had thrown a fight on the orders of the Mafia, in exchange for $20,000 and a crack at the world title.
The real-lfe LaMotta appears as a barman in the 1961 movie The Hustler. Paul Newman starred in that movie. By a curious twist, Newman – one of the greatest movie actors ever – won his only Academy Award for the follow-up film, The Color of Money, directed by Martin Scorsese in 1986. But that's a digression.
When Vito Corleone is shot, oranges are shown scattered over the roadside behind the gunmen.
At the meeting of the heads of the Mafia families, Barzini is shown with a bowl of fruit in front of him, including a prominent orange. It is at this meeting that Vito first realises that Barzini was the guy behind all the trouble from the start. Barzini is killed at the end of the movie.
The final orange on view is one Vito Corleone uses to make some fake scary teeth for himself. At the end of his life, the Godfather is an old man who frightens a child.
Yeah, I know it was a playful moment, but under that playfulness lies the truth about his character. This is the first time someone in the movie places part of an orange in his mouth. Moments later Vito Corleone dies of a heart attack.
Yeah, I know it was a playful moment, but under that playfulness lies the truth about his character. This is the first time someone in the movie places part of an orange in his mouth. Moments later Vito Corleone dies of a heart attack.
4 comments:
That's amazing. I never even noticed the oranges. Thanks for the analysis.
Thats an interesting thread you've identified and is well conveyed. I like how youve included the relevant scenes for illustration.
Have you ever seen the British drama... Oranges are not the only fruit?
very good!
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