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‘Megalopolis’ is one from the heart

TORONTO (AP) – Francis Ford Coppola believes he can stop time.

It’s not just a quality of the protagonist of Coppola’s new film Megalopolis, a visionary architect named Cesar Catilina ( Adam Driver ) who, by barking “Time, stop!” can temporarily freeze the world for a moment before restoring it with a snap of his fingers. And Coppola isn’t referring to his ability to manipulate time in the editing suite. He means it literally.

“We’ve all had moments in our lives where we approach something you can call bliss,” Coppola said. “There are times when you have to leave, have work, whatever it is. And you just say, ‘Well, I don’t care. I’m going to just stop time.’ I remember once actually thinking I would do that.”

Time is much on Coppola’s mind. He’s 85 now. Eleanor, his wife of 61 years, died in April.

Megalopolis, which is dedicated to her, is his first movie in 13 years. He’s been pondering it for more than four decades. The film begins, fittingly, with the image of a clock.

“It’s funny, you live your life going from being a young person to being an older person.

You’re looking in that direction,” Coppola said in a recent interview at a Toronto hotel before the North American premiere of Megalopolis.

Director Francis Ford Coppola at the photo call for the film ‘Megalopolis’ at the 77th international film festival. PHOTO: AP

“But to understand it, you have to look in the other direction. You have to look at it from the point of view of the older looking at the younger, which you’re receding from.”

“I’m sort of thinking of my life in reverse,” Coppola said.

You have by now probably heard a few things about Megalopolis. Maybe you know that Coppola financed the USD120 million budget himself, using his lucrative wine empire to realise a long-held vision of Roman epic set in a modern New York. You might be familiar with the film’s clamorous reception from critics at the Cannes Film Festival in May, some of whom saw a grand folly, others a wild ambition to admire.

Megalopolis, a movie Coppola first began mulling in the aftermath of Apocalypse Now in the late 1970s, has been a subject of intrigue, anticipation, gossip, a lawsuit and sheer disbelief for years. What you might not have heard about Megalopolis, though, is that it’s an extraordinarily sincere message from a master filmmaker nearing the end of his life. Giancarlo Esposito, who first sat for a reading of the script 37 years ago with Laurence Fishburne and Billy Crudup, calls it “some deep, deep dream of consciousness” from Coppola.

At a time when many are consumed by bitterly partisan politics and climate change anxiety, Coppola has spent every opportunity this year pleading that we are “one human family”. His movie, a delirious dream of the future, is an unwieldy but heartfelt fable about the boundlessness of human potential. As implausible as optimism may seem in 2024, it’s Coppola’s cri de coeur – one that he connects less to his perspective as an elder statesman than he does to his abiding, childlike sense of possibility.

“I realised that the genius of human invention usually happened when we were playing with our kids. It’s in the act of play that we’re so creative,” Coppola said. “The cave paintings, you see hands but there are big hands and little hands.”

Megalopolis will be released by Lionsgate in theatres, including many IMAX screens, culminating what has been arguably Coppola’s biggest gamble – which is saying something for the filmmaker who plunked down his own millions to shoot Apocalypse Now in the Philippines jungle and plunged his production company, Zoetrope, into bankruptcy to make 1982’s One From the Heart. That title has remained symbolic of Coppola, an eminently personal filmmaker, regardless of the success of The Godfather, who has often done his best work far out on a limb.

“On our first day of shooting, at one point in the day he said to everybody, ‘We’re not being brave enough,” Driver recalled in Cannes. “That, for me, was what I hooked on for the rest of the shoot.”

In the film, Driver’s Cesar is at odds with a backward-looking mayor, Franklyn Cicero (Esposito), but falls for his daughter, Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel). Cesar’s powers as a time-stopper and an architect are derived from a substance called Megalon that could alter the fate of the metropolis dubbed New Rome. A lot is thrown into the mix, including Aubrey Plaza’s TV personality Wow Platinum and Shia LaBeouf’s Clodio Pulcher. Coppola spent years assembling a scrap book of inspirations for the film, though you could wonder if Cesar isn’t ultimately derived from himself.

“I thought about Francis but I wasn’t thinking I’m going to do a version of Francis,” said Driver. “All movies, I kind of feel, are their directors in a sense.” – Jake Coyle 

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