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{{Short description|1979 epic war film directed by Francis Ford Coppola}} | |||
{{Infobox Film | |||
{{Other uses}} | |||
| name = Apocalypse Now | |||
{{Use American English|date=December 2023}} | |||
| image = ApocalypseNowBlack.JPG | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2023}} | |||
| imdb_rating = ] <br>8.5/10 (78,835 votes) | |||
{{Infobox film | |||
| imdb_id = 0078788 | |||
| name = Apocalypse Now | |||
| producer = ] | |||
| image = Apocalypse Now poster.jpg | |||
| director = ] | |||
| caption = Theatrical release poster by ] | |||
| sound designer = ] | |||
| director = ]<!-- Credited in the film as "Francis Coppola" --> | |||
| writer = '''Novella:'''<br>]<br>'''Screenplay:'''<br>]<br>] | |||
| producer = Francis Coppola<!-- Credited in the film as "Francis Coppola" --> | |||
| starring = ]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/>]<br/> | |||
| writer = {{Plainlist| | |||
| music = ] & ] | |||
<!-- Field is for those credited under "Written by" --> | |||
| cinematography = ] | |||
* ] | |||
| editing = ]<br>] <br>] | |||
* Francis Coppola<!-- Credited in the film as "Francis Coppola" --> | |||
| distributor = ] | |||
}} {{Infobox|decat=yes|child=yes|label1=Narration by|data1=]}} | |||
| released = {{flagicon|France}} ], ] (premiere at ])<br>{{flagicon|USA}} ], ]<br>{{flagicon|UK}} ], ] | |||
| based_on = <!-- The film does not officially credit any source material. Per ], "Do not use this field where the source material is ambiguous, i.e. in cases of films that are not clearly or officially based on one original work." --> | |||
| runtime = 153 min.<br />202 min. (Redux) | |||
| starring = {{Plainlist|<!-- Per poster billing block --> | |||
| country = United States | |||
* ] | |||
| language = English | |||
* ] | |||
| budget = $31,500,000 | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ]<!-- Credited as "Larry Fishburne" on poster and closing credits. Don't change, his real name is already addressed in cast section and article body. --> | |||
* ] | |||
}} | }} | ||
| music = {{Plainlist| | |||
'''''Apocalypse Now''''' is a ] ] drama ] set during the ]. It tells the story of Army captain Benjamin L. Willard who is sent into the jungle to assassinate ] Colonel Walter Kurtz, who has become ]. As Willard's journey upriver becomes increasingly surreal and bizarre, he begins to lose sight of his purpose in the jungle. The film has been read as a metaphor for the United States' war in Vietnam, but it can also be read as a journey into the darkness of the human ]. | |||
* ] | |||
* Francis Coppola<!-- Credited in the film as "Francis Coppola" --> | |||
}} | |||
| cinematography = ] | |||
| editing = {{Plainlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
| studio = ]<!--known as Omni Zoetrope from 1977 to 1980--> | |||
| distributor = ] | |||
| released = {{Film date|1979|05|19|]|ref1=<ref name=var/>|1979|08|15|United States}} | |||
| runtime = {{Plainlist| | |||
* 147 minutes (70 mm) | |||
* 153 minutes (35 mm)<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.bbfc.co.uk/releases/apocalypse-now-1970-4 | title=Apocalypse Now | work=] | access-date=December 20, 2014 | archive-date=April 2, 2015 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402170259/http://www.bbfc.co.uk/releases/apocalypse-now-1970-4 | url-status=live }} Retrieved December 3, 2017</ref> | |||
}} | |||
| country = United States | |||
| language = English | |||
| budget = $31.5 million<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/02/02/movies/coppola-risks-all-on-22-million-movie.html |title=Coppola Risks All On $22 Million Movie |first=Aljean |last=Harmetz |work=The New York Times |date=February 2, 1981}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |first=Tim |last=Appelo |title=Telluride: Francis Ford Coppola Spills 'Apocalypse Now' Secrets on 35th Anniversary |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/telluride-francis-ford-coppola-spills-729281 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140902041711/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/telluride-francis-ford-coppola-spills-729281 |website=] |date=August 30, 2014 |access-date=August 5, 2019 |archive-date=September 2, 2014 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Apocalypse-Now#tab=summary |title=Apocalypse Now (1979) |work=The Numbers |access-date=September 27, 2024}}</ref> | |||
| gross = $104.8–150 million{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=132}}<ref name=HOD>{{cite news |first=Hal |last=Hinson |authorlink=Hal Hinson |title='Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse' |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/heartsofdarknessafilmmakersapocalypserhinson_a0a731.htm |newspaper=] |date=January 17, 1992 |access-date=August 1, 2021 |archive-date=October 4, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201004150418/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/heartsofdarknessafilmmakersapocalypserhinson_a0a731.htm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-features/francis-ford-coppola-apocalypse-now-megalopolis-cannes-1235878320/ |title=For Francis Ford Coppola's Go-for-Broke Movies, All Roads Lead to Cannes |first=Thomas |last=Doherty |work=The Hollywood Reporter |date=April 22, 2024}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
'''''Apocalypse Now''''' is a 1979 American ] ] produced and directed by ]. The screenplay, co-written by Coppola, ], and ], is loosely inspired by the 1899 novella '']'' by ], with the setting changed from ] to the ]. The film follows a river journey from ] into ] undertaken by Captain Willard (]), who is on a secret mission to assassinate ] (]), a renegade ] officer who is accused of murder and presumed insane. The ] also features ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
Milius became interested in adapting ''Heart of Darkness'' for a Vietnam War setting in the late 1960s, and initially began developing the film with Coppola as producer and ] as director. After Lucas became unavailable, Coppola took over directorial control, and was influenced by ]'s '']'' (1972) in his approach to the material. Initially set to be a five-month shoot in the Philippines starting in March 1976, a series of problems lengthened it to over a year. These problems included expensive sets being destroyed by severe weather, Brando showing up on set overweight and completely unprepared, and Sheen having a breakdown and suffering a near-fatal heart attack on location. After photography was finally finished in May 1977, the release was postponed several times while Coppola edited over a million feet of film. Many of these difficulties are chronicled in the documentary '']'' (1991). | |||
The film was directed by ] from a script by Coppola, ] and ], which drew elements from ]'s ] '']''. It was also heavily influenced, both stylistically and substantively, by ]'s '']'' (1972).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artic.edu/webspaces/siskelfilmcenter/2007/february/2.html|last=Rubin|first=Martin|title=Werner Herzog:Visionary at Large|publisher=] Film Center|accessdate=2007-03-14}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.channel4.com/film/reviews/film.jsp?id=100264|last=|first=|title=Aguirre, the Wrath of God|publisher=] Film|accessdate=2007-03-14}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.davidsterritt.com/coppola.html|last=Sterritt|first=David|title=Coppola, 'Apocalypse Now,' and the Ambivalent 70's|publisher=DavidSterritt.com|accessdate=2007-03-14}}</ref> Coppola himself has noted, "''Aguirre'', with its incredible imagery, was a very strong influence. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention it."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geraldpeary.com/interviews/abc/coppola.html|last=Peary|first=Gerald|title=Francis Ford Coppola, Interview with Gerald Peary|publisher=GeraldPeary.com|accessdate=2007-03-14}}</ref> | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' was honored with the ] at the ], where it premiered unfinished. When it was finally released on August 15, 1979, by ], it performed well at the box office, grossing over $80 million in the United States and Canada and over $100 million worldwide. Initial reviews were polarized; while ]'s cinematography was widely acclaimed, several critics found Coppola's handling of the story's major themes anticlimactic and intellectually disappointing. The film was nominated for eight ], including ], ] (Coppola), and ] (Duvall); it went on to win ] and ]. | |||
The film stars ] as Captain Benjamin L. Willard (based on Marlow in Conrad's novel), ] as Colonel Kurtz, ] as a perpetually-] photojournalist, and ] in an ]-nominated turn as the ] Lt. Colonel Kilgore. The movie became notorious in the entertainment press due to its lengthy and troubled production. In the end, the director had to finance the film with his own money. | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' is retrospectively considered ]; it has been assessed as Coppola's '']'' and appeared on various best-of films in 20th-century and of all time lists. In 2000, the film was selected for preservation in the ] by the U.S. ] as "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant." | |||
==Synopsis== | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' has been released with several different endings and, more recently, in an extended version. | |||
{{spoiler}} | |||
===1979 theatrical release=== | |||
== Plot == | |||
The film, which opens with no title or credits, begins with the muffled sound of a helicopter and images of bombs exploding in a tropical forest. As "]" by ] plays, the scene shifts to a hotel room in ], where a deeply troubled ] Captain, Benjamin Willard, is drinking alone. Despite Willard's psychological problems, ] officers send him on a mission deep into the remote ]n jungle to find a ] Colonel who has gone out of control. | |||
<!-- As WP:FILMPLOT requires, the word count in this section should be 400-700 words. --> | |||
{{Hatnote|''This summary excludes events only seen in the'' ] ''or the'' Final Cut.}} | |||
In 1969, during the ], jaded ] operative ] Benjamin L. Willard is summoned to ] headquarters in ]. The officers there tell him that ] ] ] is waging a brutal war against ], ], and ] forces without permission from his commanders. He is based at a remote jungle outpost in eastern ], where he commands American, ], and local Khmer militia troops. These troops view him as a ]. Willard is ordered to "terminate Kurtz's command... with ]." He joins a U.S. Navy ] (PBR) commanded by ] Phillips, with crewmen Lance, "Chef," and "Mr. Clean" to quietly navigate up the Nùng River to Kurtz's outpost. | |||
Before reaching the coastal mouth of the Nùng, they rendezvous with the ], ]—a helicopter-borne air assault unit of the elite ], commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore—to discuss safe entry into the river. Kilgore is initially inattentive, as he has not received word about their mission through normal channels. However, he becomes more engaged after discovering that Lance is a well-known surfer. Kilgore, an avid surfer himself, agrees to escort them through the Nùng's ]-held coastal mouth. The helicopter squadron, playing "]" on loudspeakers, raids at dawn with a ] strike. | |||
Colonel Walter E. Kurtz, a decorated officer, has gone ] and is commanding a legion of his own ] troops deep inside the forest in ] Cambodia. Willard is ordered to undertake a mission to find Kurtz and "terminate his command... with extreme prejudice." There, Willard learns that Kurtz has assumed the role of a warlord and is worshipped by the natives and his own loyal men. Another officer named Colby, sent earlier with the same orders, may have become one of his lieutenants. | |||
] | |||
Willard begins his trip up the fictional Nung River, based on the ], on a PBR (]) named ], with an eclectic crew composed of by-the-book ] Phillips, a black Navy boat commander; ] Lance B. Johnson, a tanned all-American ] surfer, the ] Engineman, Jay "Chef" Hicks, and GM3 Tyrone, also known as "]", a black 17-year-old from "some ] shithole". | |||
Resisting Kilgore’s attempts to convince Lance to surf with him on the newly conquered beach, Willard gathers the sailors to board the PBR and continue on their mission. Tension arises as Willard insists on the priority of his mission over the Chief's usual patrol objectives. | |||
The PBR arrives at a ] (LZ) where Willard and the crew meet up with ] ], the eccentric commander of the "First of the Ninth, an old cavalry unit which had cashed in its horses for choppers and gone tear-assing around 'Nam" ] (]), following a massive and hectic mopping-up operation of a conquered enemy town. Kilgore, a keen surfer, befriends Johnson. Later, he learns from one of his men, Mike, that the beach down the coast which marks the opening to the Nung River is perfect for ], a factor which persuades him to capture it. Kilgore orders his men to capture the town and the beach. Riding high above the coast in a fleet of ] accompanied by ], Kilgore launches an attack on the village. The scene, which uses ]'s epic "]", ends with the soldiers surfing the barely claimed beach amidst skirmishes between infantry and VC. After helicopters swoop over the village and demolish all visible signs of resistance, a giant ] strike in the nearby jungle dramatically marks the ] of the battle. Kilgore exults to Willard: | |||
] | |||
{{cquote| You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end.."}} | |||
Slowly making their way upriver, Willard partially reveals his orders to the Chief to convince him that the mission is important and should proceed despite the difficulties they’ve encountered. As Willard studies Kurtz's dossier, he is struck by the mid-career sacrifice Kurtz made by leaving a prestigious Pentagon assignment to join Special Forces, with no prospect of advancing beyond the rank of colonel. | |||
The lighting and mood darken as the boat navigates upstream and Willard's obsession with Kurtz deepens. Incidents on the journey include a stop at a ] outpost where GIs watch a show featuring three ] ]s, a run-in with a ], an impromptu inspection of a Vietnamese ] that leads to a massacre, a surreal stop at the last American outpost, and the deaths of both Clean and Chief Phillips. | |||
At a remote U.S. Army outpost, Willard and Lance seek information on what is upriver and receive a dispatch bag containing official and personal mail. Unable to find any commanding officer, Willard orders the Chief to continue. Willard learns via the dispatch that another MACV-SOG operative, Special Forces Captain Richard Colby, was sent on an earlier mission identical to Willard's and has since joined Kurtz. | |||
In addition, the further up the river and towards the front lines the PBR goes, the more anarchaic the situation becomes. At the start of the movie in Saigon, you would never know a war is taking place. The base where Willard receives his orders is a calm military installation. Kilgore is fighting in territory in which the United States and South Vietnamese still have a tremendous advantage in. Further up the river, however, the odds even out, and each encounter becomes more perilous. By the time the PBR reaches the actual front lines there is nothing but total chaos. Going ashore, Willard encounters a squad of soldiers guarding a bridge installation that is blown up by the NVA every night and rebuilt each day by the Americans. Most of the soldiers seem scared and confused; those that are not appear to be high on drugs. When Willard asks one of them if he knows where the CO (commanding officer) is, the grunt smiles and says "yeah" and then just walks away, clearly signaling that there is no commander giving orders that far up the river. | |||
Lance activates a smoke grenade while under the influence of ], attracting enemy fire, causing Mr. Clean's death. Further upriver, the Chief is impaled by a ] thrown by ] and attempts to kill Willard with the spear point protruding from his chest, but Willard overpowers him. | |||
Once past the front-lines, however, the PBR crew is surprised to find a sense of calm, almost like being in the eye of a hurricane. It is clear that even the NVA and VC don't dare venture near Kurtz's encampment, and an unnerving quiet descends over the rest of the journey (interspersed with the PBR being attacked by unseen assailants who throw sticks and a spear at the boat, killing Chief). | |||
Willard reveals his mission to Chef, who is now in charge of the PBR. The PBR arrives at Kurtz's outpost, a ] ] teeming with Montagnards and strewn with remains of victims. Willard, Chef, and Lance are greeted by an American ], who praises Kurtz's genius. Willard encounters Colby and two other soldiers among the Montagnards. He sets out with Lance to find Kurtz, leaving Chef with orders to call in an airstrike on the outpost if the two do not return. | |||
Willard, Johnson, and Chef eventually arrive at Kurtz' compound. It is almost unimaginable: rotting bodies and the stench of blood and decay are everywhere, yet Kurtz's followers seem oblivious to the horrors around them. Willard is met by a burned-out hippie freelance photographer (Hopper) who defends Kurtz, arguing that he is a great man with profound ] insight. Willard leaves Chef behind with orders to call in an ] on the village if he does not return. Chef remains on the PBR while Johnson, who has been high on LSD for much of the second half of the movie, mingles with the natives, eventually just blending in with them. While Willard initially walks freely among Kurtz's men and followers, they eventually seize him and bring him to Kurtz. It is apparent that Kurtz fully expected someone like Willard to be sent again and he accuses him of being an assassin. Kurtz also lectures him on his bizarre theories of war, ], and ]. | |||
In the camp, Willard is bound and brought before Kurtz, after which he is locked in a bamboo cage. One night Kurtz appears and drops Chef's severed head into Willard's lap. Willard is released, and warned not to attempt escape from the camp or he will be shot. Kurtz lectures him on his theories of war, praising the ruthlessness of the Viet Cong, and asks him to tell his son the truth about his mutiny. Later, as the Montagnards ceremonially kill a ], Willard assassinates Kurtz with a ]. Everyone in the camp sees Willard departing, carrying a collection of Kurtz's writings, and bow down to him. Willard finds Lance, leads him back to the PBR, and they depart back down the river, away from Kurtz’s outpost. | |||
Willard is imprisoned and bound uncomfortably in a bamboo tiger cage, and it is suggested that he has resigned himself to die in the airstrike that Chef should be calling in. That night, Kurtz comes to the still-bound Willard and places the severed head of Chef in his lap. At that point, Willard breaks down with the knowledge that he could be held and made to suffer by Kurtz forever. | |||
== Cast == | |||
Soon thereafter something unexpected happens: Willard is released from the cage and brought back to Kurtz's temple. There he remains for days, still watched, but essentially unguarded. Willard sits and listens to Kurtz read poetry and speak of war like a disciple at the feet of the master. Previously in the movie, while on the river, we had been fed bits of pieces of information about Kurtz via the narration of a dosier on Kurtz provided by US Army Intelligence which was being read by Willard. The picture that emerged was of a brilliant soldier who was being groomed to be a general, or even higher, but who became mentally unbalanced and brutal. To this, we now add the cause of Kurtz's eventual break from reality: the nature of how the Vietnam conflict was fought (allowing political concerns to trump military decisions and knowingly allowing soldiers to die as a consequence) caused Kurtz to become disillusioned with the military. Kurtz reveals that months earlier, while he was still following orders, he had taken his battalion to a South Vietnamese village to inoculate the local children for Polio. Soon after they left, the battalion was called back by a crying old man from the village. What had happened was horrifying: the VC had come and cut off the arms of every child who had been inoculated. But after crying, Kurtz, already mentally unstable, finally broke. He admired the will and brutality of the VC troops and realized that the Americans could never win the war against this kind of enemy unless they became equally as brutal. Willard realizes that Kurtz is fully conscious of the horrors he had committed, and how horrible a person he himself has become. What Kurtz lacks, however, is the internal strength to stop himself. He had died inside long ago, and had just become an animal in the jungle like any other. Willard also comprehends that by telling him the story, Kurtz was asking Willard to kill him to end the psychotic violence and take his pain away. | |||
{{About||a list of the rest of the cast members not included in the 153-minute version of the film that was released in theaters|Apocalypse Now Redux#Cast}} | |||
* ] as ], a highly decorated ] officer with the ] who goes rogue. He runs his own military unit based in Cambodia and is feared as much by the U.S. military as by the ], ] and ]. | |||
* ] as ] William "Bill" Kilgore, commander of 1st Squadron, ] and surfing fanatic. His character is a composite of several characters including Colonels ] and John Stockton, ] ], General ] and ], also a ] officer whom Robert Duvall knew.<ref>French, Karl (1998) ''Apocalypse Now'', Bloomsbury, London. {{ISBN|978-0-7475-3804-2}}</ref> Duvall reports that he was upset that a scene where Kilgore saves the life of a Vietnamese baby during the beach assault was cut by Coppola, as he felt that it added to the complexity of his character.<ref>{{cite web|date=February 23, 2010|title=Robert Duvall (Apocalypse Now), 1991|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWAkTFoKcpE |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/ZWAkTFoKcpE |archive-date=December 21, 2021 |url-status=live|access-date=April 8, 2021|website=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Duvall said that he found that the version of the character was too over-the-top, and asked Coppola permission to change the character.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://wtop.com/entertainment/2016/10/robert-duvall-dishes-on-career-at-washington-west-film-fest-in-va/ | title=Robert Duvall dishes on career at Washington West Film Fest in Va | date=October 18, 2016 | access-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231106100539/https://wtop.com/entertainment/2016/10/robert-duvall-dishes-on-career-at-washington-west-film-fest-in-va/ | url-status=live }}</ref> Duvall also asked people in the military on how to portray the character as a tough unflinching officer.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/interviews/a28704/robert-duvall-interview/ | title=Robert Duvall Does Not Flinch, Not Now, Not Ever | date=May 16, 2014 | access-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231106100537/https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/interviews/a28704/robert-duvall-interview/ | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* ] as U.S. Army Captain Benjamin L. Willard, a veteran ] who is serving his third tour in Vietnam. The soldier who escorts him at the start of the film recites that Willard is from the 505th Battalion, of the elite ], assigned to ]. The opening scene—which features Willard staggering around his hotel room, culminating in him punching a mirror—was filmed on Sheen's 36th birthday when he was heavily intoxicated. The mirror that he broke was not a prop and caused his hand to bleed profusely, but he insisted on continuing the scene, despite Coppola's concerns.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/telluride-francis-ford-coppola-spills-729281|title=Telluride: Francis Ford Coppola Spills 'Apocalypse Now' Secrets on 35th Anniversary|website=]|author=Appelo, Tim|date=August 30, 2014|access-date=August 25, 2018|archive-date=September 2, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140902041711/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/telluride-francis-ford-coppola-spills-729281|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine | url=https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/martin-sheen-heart-of-darkness-heart-of-gold-80879/ | title=Martin Sheen: Heart of Darkness Heart of Gold | magazine=] | date=November 1979 | access-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231106100741/https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-news/martin-sheen-heart-of-darkness-heart-of-gold-80879/ | url-status=live }}</ref> Sheen has said this performance where he writhes and smears himself in blood was spontaneous and was an exorcism of his longstanding alcoholism.<ref>{{cite web|date=February 23, 2010|title=Martin Sheen (Apocalypse Now)|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFiFQZeYeTU |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/AFiFQZeYeTU |archive-date=December 21, 2021 |url-status=live|access-date=April 9, 2021|website=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.moviefone.com/news/the-16-craziest-things-that-happened-during-the-filming-of-apocalypse-now/|title=The 16 Craziest Things That Happened During the Filming of 'Apocalypse Now'|first1=Sharon|last1=KnolleAugust 15|first2=2019-9 Min|last2=Read|website=Moviefone|access-date=September 10, 2023|archive-date=November 2, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231102081351/https://www.moviefone.com/news/the-16-craziest-things-that-happened-during-the-filming-of-apocalypse-now/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/martin-sheen-begged-coppola-film-his-bloodied-demons-apocalypse-now-breakdown-1305611/ | title=Martin Sheen Begged Coppola to Film His Bloodied 'Apocalypse Now' Breakdown | website=] | date=August 3, 2020 | access-date=October 26, 2023 | archive-date=October 26, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231026120233/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/martin-sheen-begged-coppola-film-his-bloodied-demons-apocalypse-now-breakdown-1305611/ | url-status=live }}</ref> Sheen's brother ] stood in for Willard in some scenes and performed the character's voiceover narrations while his son ] appears in the film as an extra. Both went uncredited.<ref>{{Citation |last=DeadBySense |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR80zXPE5i4 |title=Joe Estevez shares an incredible story. | date=June 2, 2008 |access-date=October 10, 2019 |archive-date=March 7, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307015553/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR80zXPE5i4 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* ] as ] 3rd Class Jay "Chef" Hicks, a tightly wound former chef from ] who is horrified by his surroundings. | |||
* ] as ] George Phillips. The Chief runs a tight ship and frequently clashes with Willard over authority. | |||
* ] as ] 3rd Class Lance B. Johnson, a former professional surfer from ]. In the bridge scene, he mentions having taken ]. As the film progresses Lance scene by scene becomes more and more strung out on drugs to the point that his grip on reality fades to almost nothing, and he becomes completely silent in the last act of the film. At the same time he becomes entranced by the Montagnard tribe and participates in the sacrifice ritual. | |||
* ] as Gunner's Mate 3rd Class Tyrone "Mr. Clean" Miller, the cocky seventeen-year-old ]-born crewmember. Fishburne was only 14 when shooting began in March 1976, as he had lied about his age to get the role.{{sfn|Cowie|2001|p=19}} The production took so long, he was 18 by the time of its release. | |||
* ] as an American ], a manic disciple of Kurtz who greets Willard. According to the DVD commentary of ''Redux'', the character is based on ], a famed news correspondent who disappeared in Cambodia in 1970. The character may also have been partially inspired by the British-Australian photojournalist ].<ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170209230454/https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2001/sep/23/features.magazine27 |date=February 9, 2017 }}, ''The Observer'', September 23, 2001.</ref> | |||
* ] as ] R. Corman, ] (]), an authoritarian officer who fears Kurtz and wants him removed. The character is named after filmmaker ], for whom Coppola had previously directed his early works. | |||
* ] as Colonel G. Lucas, aide to Corman and an Army intelligence specialist who gives Willard his orders. The character is named for ], who had directed Ford in '']'' and '']'', and with whom Coppola had founded ] in 1969. Lucas was also intended to direct ''Apocalypse Now'' before getting busy making ''Star Wars''.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://collider.com/what-if-george-lucas-directed-apocalypse-now/ |title=George Lucas Was Originally Supposed to Direct 'Apocalypse Now' - What Would That Have Looked Like? |first=Matthew |last=Mosley |work=Collider |date=August 10, 2022 |access-date=August 10, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://collider.com/harrison-ford-apocalypse-now-george-lucas/ |title=Harrison Ford's Appearance in 'Apocalypse Now' Is an Homage to George Lucas |first=Thomas |last=Butt |work=Collider |date=April 1, 2024 |access-date=April 1, 2024}}</ref> | |||
* ] as Jerry Moore, a C.I.A. officer in civilian clothing who sits in on Willard's initial briefing. His only line in the film is "]." Ziesmer was also the film's assistant director. | |||
* ] as Captain Richard M. Colby, previously assigned Willard's current mission before he defected to Kurtz's private army and sent a message to his wife, intercepted by the U.S. Army, telling her that he was never coming back and to sell everything they owned, including their children. | |||
* ] as Kilgore's Gunner, a man ready to battle to the tune of '']''.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Kantor |first=Jonathan H. |date=September 28, 2022 |title=The Only Actors Still Alive From The Cast Of Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.looper.com/1030381/the-only-actors-still-alive-from-the-cast-of-apocalypse-now/ |access-date=November 2, 2022 |website=] |language=en-US |archive-date=November 2, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221102000515/https://www.looper.com/1030381/the-only-actors-still-alive-from-the-cast-of-apocalypse-now/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* ] as Mike from ], a soldier who surfs against incoming attacks.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
* ], ] and ] as ]s. Wood was the ], and Beatty was the ]. | |||
* ] as Agent, the announcer in charge of the Playmates' show. | |||
* ] (''uncredited'') as a helicopter pilot. Ermey was himself a former ] ] and Vietnam War veteran, and later achieved fame for his role as ] Hartman in the 1987 film '']''. | |||
Co-writer, producer, and director ] makes an uncredited cameo playing a TV news director filming beach combat; he shouts "Don't look at the camera, go by like you're fighting!". Additionally, cinematographer ] plays the cameraman by Coppola's side. | |||
The finale involves juxtaposed scenes of a ceremonial slaughtering of a ], while Willard kills Kurtz with a machete. Dying on the ground, Kurtz whispers "The horror... the horror," (a quote taken directly from Conrad's novella). Willard walks through the now-silent crowd of natives, all of whom know he has killed their "God" and who begin to kneel before him as Kurtz's replacement. The temptation for Willard to stay and be an absolute ruler must have been immense. However, instead he finds Johnson, who has since joined the natives, and boards the PBR. As they float away Kurtz's final words "The Horror, the horror" echo and the screen fades to black. | |||
== Adaptation == | |||
===Alternative endings=== | |||
Although inspired by ]'s '']'', it is not a direct adaptation. The novella, based on Conrad's experience as a steamboat captain in Africa, is set in the ] during the 19th century.<ref>Murfin, Ross C (ed.) (1989): ''Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness. A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism''. Boston: St. Martin's Press, pp. 3–16.</ref> Kurtz and Marlow (whose corresponding character in the movie is Capt. Willard) work for a Belgian trading company that brutally exploits its native African workers. | |||
When Coppola originally organized the ending of the movie, he had two choices. One involved Willard leading Lance by the hand as everyone in Kurtz's base throws down their weapons, and ends with images of Willard's boat pulling away from Kurtz's compound superimposed over the face of a stone idol which then fades into black. Another option showed an air strike being called and the base being blown to bits in a spectacular display, consequently killing everyone left at the base. | |||
After arriving at Kurtz's outpost, Marlow concludes that Kurtz has gone insane and is lording over a small tribe as a god. The novella ends with Kurtz dying on the trip back and the narrator musing about the darkness of the human psyche: "the heart of an immense darkness." In the novella, Marlow is the pilot of a river boat sent to collect ivory from Kurtz's outpost, only gradually becoming infatuated with Kurtz. In fact, when he discovers Kurtz in terrible health, Marlow makes an effort to bring him home safely (which Willard also does in Milius's draft screenplay). In the film, Willard is an assassin dispatched to kill Kurtz. Nevertheless, the depiction of Kurtz as a god-like leader of a tribe of natives, Kurtz's written exclamation "Exterminate all the brutes!" (which appears in the film as "Drop the bomb. Exterminate them all!") and his last words "The horror! The horror!" are taken from Conrad's novella. | |||
The original 1979 70mm theatrical release ended with Willard's boat, the stone statue, then fade to black with no credits. Later, when it was no longer practical to have no credits, Coppola elected to show the credits superimposed over shots of Kurtz's base exploding (anamorphic 16mm rental prints circulated with this ending, and can be found in the hands of a few collectors). However, when Coppola heard that audiences interpreted this as an air strike called by Willard, Coppola pulled the film from its 35mm run, and put credits on a black screen. In the DVD commentary, Coppola explains that the images of explosions had not been intended to be part of the story; they were intended to be seen as completely separate from the film. He had added them to the credits because he had captured the footage during the demolition of the set in the Philippines, which was filmed with multiple cameras fitted with different film stocks and lenses to capture the explosions at different speeds. | |||
Coppola argues that many episodes in the film—the spear and arrow attack on the boat, for example—respect the spirit of the novella and in particular its critique of the concepts of civilization and progress. Other episodes adapted by Coppola—the Playboy Playmates' (Sirens) exit, the lost souls ("take me home") attempting to reach the boat, and Kurtz's tribe of (white-faced) natives parting the canoes (gates of Hell) for Willard (with Chef and Lance) to enter the camp—are likened to Virgil and "The Inferno" ('']'') by ]. While Coppola replaced European ] with American ], the message of Conrad's book is still clear.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cyberpat.com/essays/coppola.html |title=Heart of Darkness & Apocalypse Now: A comparative analysis of novella and film |publisher=Cyberpat.com |access-date=March 6, 2010 |archive-date=January 3, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100103190217/http://www.cyberpat.com/essays/coppola.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Because of the confusion over the misinterpreted ending, there are multiple slightly varying versions of the ending credits. Some TV screenings maintain the explosion footage at the end, others do not, and there are several other versions. | |||
It is often speculated that Coppola's interpretation of the ] character was modeled after ], a highly decorated Vietnam-era paramilitary officer from the CIA's ].<ref>Leary, William L. "Death of a Legend." Air America Archive. Retrieved June 10, 2007.</ref> Poe's actions in Vietnam and in the "Secret War" in neighboring Laos, in particular his highly unorthodox and often savage methods of waging war, show many similarities to those of the fictional Kurtz; for example, Poe was known to drop severed heads from helicopters into enemy-controlled villages as a form of ] and use human ears to record the number of enemies his indigenous troops had killed. He would send these ears back to his superiors as proof of the efficacy of his operations deep inside Laos.<ref>Warner, Roger. Shooting at the Moon.</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Ehrlich|first=Richard S.|date=July 8, 2003|title=CIA operative stood out in 'secret war' in Laos|url=http://geocities.com/asia_correspondent/laos0307ciaposhepnybp.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090806040904/http://geocities.com/asia_correspondent/laos0307ciaposhepnybp.html|archive-date=August 6, 2009|access-date=June 10, 2007|website=]}}</ref> Coppola denies that Poe was a primary influence and says the character was loosely based on Special Forces Colonel ], who was the actual head of 5th Special Forces Group (May to July 1969), and whose 1969 arrest over the murder of suspected double agent ] in ] generated substantial contemporary news coverage, in the ],<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.sfweekly.com/1999-11-17/news/agent-provocative/1 |title=Agent Provocative |work=] |access-date=May 2, 2009 |last=Isaacs |first=Matt |date=November 17, 1999 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090612061248/http://www.sfweekly.com/1999-11-17/news/agent-provocative/1 |archive-date=June 12, 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> including making public the phrase "],"<ref>{{cite news |title=Details of Green Beret Case Are Reported in Saigon |author-link=Terence Smith (journalist) |first=Terence |last=Smith |newspaper=The New York Times |date=August 14, 1969 |pages=1–2 |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1969/08/14/78391234.pdf|access-date=November 30, 2015 |url-access=subscription |quote=His status as a double agent was reportedly confirmed by the Central Intelligence Agency, which, according to the sources, suggested that he either be isolated or 'terminated with extreme prejudice.' This term is said to be an intelligence euphemism for execution.}}</ref> which was used prominently in the movie. | |||
The 70mm release ends with no credits, save for 'Copyright 1979 Omni Zoetrope' right after the film ends; This mirrors the lack of any opening titles, and supposedly stems from Coppola's original intention to "tour" the film as one would a play: the credits would have appeared on printed programs provided before the screening began. This was, in fact, done in certain cinemas and was repeated during the theatrical release of ''Apocalypse Now: Redux''.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} | |||
It is considered that the character of Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore is based on several characters, including John B. Stockton, commander of the ], ] in Vietnam, and infantry general ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/apocalypse-now-storyboards/ |title=Anatomy of a Scene: Apocalypse Now |date=May 20, 2011 |access-date=October 10, 2020 |archive-date=October 29, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171029072150/https://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/apocalypse-now-storyboards/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The first DVD of the theatrical version plays like the 70mm version, without beginning or ending credits, but has them on a separate part of the DVD. The credits to ''Apocalypse Now: Redux'' are different again: the credits play over a black background, but with ambient music and jungle sounds. | |||
=== Use of T. S. Eliot's poetry === | |||
===''Redux''=== | |||
In the film, shortly before Colonel Kurtz dies, he recites part of ]'s poem "]." The poem is preceded in printed editions by the epigraph "Mistah Kurtz – he dead," a quotation from Conrad's ''Heart of Darkness.''<ref>{{cite web |url=https://allpoetry.com/the-hollow-men |title=The Hollow Men by T S Eliot – Famous poems, famous poets. |publisher=All Poetry |date= |accessdate=July 17, 2022 |archive-date=July 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220716025119/https://allpoetry.com/the-hollow-men |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
In 2001, Coppola released ''Apocalypse Now: Redux'' (] for "brought back") in cinemas and subsequently on ]. This is an extended version that restores 49 minutes of scenes cut from the original film. Coppola has continued to circulate the original version as well: the two versions are packaged together in the ''Complete Dossier'' DVD, released on ], ]. | |||
Two books seen opened on Kurtz's desk in the film are '']'' by ] and '']'' by ], the two books that Eliot cited as the chief sources and inspiration for his poem "]." Eliot's original epigraph for "The Waste Land" was this passage from ''Heart of Darkness,'' which ends with Kurtz's final words:<ref>Davidson, Harriet. "Improper desire: reading ''The Waste Land''" in Anthony David Moody (ed.). ''The Cambridge companion to T. S. Eliot''. Cambridge University Press, 1995, p. 121.</ref> | |||
The most significant footage added in the ''Redux'' version is an ] chapter involving the de Marais family's rubber plantation, a holdover from the colonization of ]. These scenes were removed from the 1979 cut, which premiered at ] because its political critique of the French colonization of Vietnam was a taboo subject in France. In the scenes, the French family patriarchs argue about the positive side of colonialism in Indochina and denounce the ] of the military men in the ]. In the scenes, Hubert de Marais argues that French politicians sacrificed entire battalions at ], and tells Willard that the US had originally founded the ] (Vietcong) to get the French out of Vietnam. | |||
{{blockquote|text=Did he live his life again in every detail of desire, temptation, and surrender during that supreme moment of complete knowledge? He cried in a whisper at some image, at some vision, – he cried out twice, a cry that was no more than a breath – | |||
Other added material includes extra combat footage before Willard meets Kilgore, a humorous scene in which Willard's team steals Kilgore's surfboard, a follow-up scene to the dance of the ] playmates, in which Willard's team finds the playmates awaiting evacuation after their helicopter has run out of fuel, and a scene of Kurtz reading from a '']'' magazine article about the war, surrounded by Cambodian children. | |||
<div style="text-indent: 4em">"The horror! The horror!"</div> | |||
}} | |||
When Willard is first introduced to Dennis Hopper's character, the photojournalist describes his own worth in relation to that of Kurtz with: "I should have been a pair of ragged claws/Scuttling across the floors of silent seas," from "]."<ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/44212/the-love-song-of-j-alfred-prufrock|title = The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T. S. Eliot|date = August 24, 2021|access-date = May 3, 2021|archive-date = May 4, 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210504031849/https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/44212/the-love-song-of-j-alfred-prufrock|url-status = live}}</ref> Additionally, Dennis Hopper's character paraphrases the end of "The Hollow Men" to Martin Sheen's character: "This is the way the fucking world ends! Not with a bang, but with a whimper."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078788/characters/nm0000454 |title=Apocalypse Now – Dennis Hopper: Photojournalist |website=imdb.com |access-date=October 7, 2021 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210813080956/https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078788/characters/nm0000454 |archive-date=August 13, 2021 }}</ref> | |||
==Adaptation== | |||
Although inspired by Joseph Conrad's '']'', the film deviates extensively from its source material. The novel, based on Conrad's real experiences as a steam paddleboat captain in Africa, is set in the Belgian Congo during the 19th century. Kurtz and Marlow (who is named Willard in the movie) both work for a Belgian trading company that brutally exploits its native African workers. | |||
== Production == | |||
When Marlow arrives at Kurtz's outpost, he discovers that Kurtz has gone insane and is lording over a small tribe as a god. The novel ends with Kurtz dying on the trip back and the narrator musing about darkness of the human psyche: "the heart of an immense darkness". | |||
In the novel, Marlow is the pilot of a river boat sent to collect ivory from Kurtz's outpost, only gradually becoming infatuated with Kurtz. In fact, when he discovers Kurtz in terrible health, Marlow makes a concerted effort to bring him home safely. In the movie, Willard is an assassin dispatched to kill Kurtz. Nevertheless, the depiction of Kurtz as a god-like leader of a tribe of natives and his malarial fever, Kurtz's written exclamation "Exterminate the brutes!" and his final lines "The horror! The horror!" are taken from Conrad's novel. | |||
=== Development === | |||
Coppola argues that many episodes in the film—the spear and arrow attack on the boat, for example—respect the spirit of the novel and in particular its critique of the concepts of civilization and progress. While Coppola replaced ]an colonization with ] ] the message of Conrad's book is still clear. | |||
While working as an assistant for Francis Ford Coppola on '']'' in 1967, filmmaker John Milius was encouraged by his friends ] and ] to write a Vietnam War film.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=2}}<ref name=var/> Milius had wanted to volunteer for the war, and was disappointed when he was rejected for having asthma.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20130216063745/http://au.ign.com/articles/2003/05/07/an-interview-with-john-milius?page=3 |date=February 16, 2013 }}. Retrieved January 5, 2012</ref> He came up with the idea for adapting the plot of Joseph Conrad's ''Heart of Darkness'' to the Vietnam War setting. He had read the novel as a teenager and was reminded about it when his college screenwriting professor, Irwin Blacker of USC, mentioned the several unsuccessful attempts to adapt it into a movie. Blacker challenged his class by saying, "No screenwriter has ever perfected a film adaption of Joseph Conrad's ''Heart of Darkness''."<ref name="Cowie1">Cowie 1990, p. 120.</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=DeadBySense |title=Apocalypse Now – Interview with John Milius |date=April 5, 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4nY2J1gRzg |access-date=December 9, 2018 |archive-date=May 29, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190529185434/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4nY2J1gRzg&gl=US&hl=en |url-status=live }}</ref>{{efn|However, filmmaker ] claims that ''Apocalypse Now'' was his idea in 1967 before Milius had written his screenplay. Ballard had a deal with producer Joel Landon and they tried to get the rights to Conrad's book but were unsuccessful. Lucas acquired the rights but failed to tell Ballard and Landon.<ref name="Cowie1" />}} | |||
Coppola gave Milius $15,000 to write the screenplay with the promise of an additional $10,000 if it were ].<ref name="CowieNow3">Cowie 2001, p. 5.</ref><ref name="Medavoy">*Medavoy, Mike with Josh Young, ''You're Only as Good as Your Next One'', Astria, 2002 p 8</ref> Milius claims that he wrote the screenplay in 1969.<ref name="Cowie1" /> He wanted to use Conrad's novel as "a sort of allegory. It would have been too simple to have followed the book completely."<ref name="CowieNow3" /> Some sources state that Milius' original title was ''The Psychedelic Soldier,''{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=3}} but Milius disputed this in a 2010 interview, claiming ''Apocalypse Now'' was always the intended title.<ref>{{Citation |last=DeadBySense |title=Apocalypse Now – Interview with John Milius |date=April 5, 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4nY2J1gRzg |access-date=December 5, 2020|archive-date=May 29, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190529185434/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4nY2J1gRzg&gl=US&hl=en |url-status=live }}</ref> The title ''Apocalypse Now'' was inspired by a button badge popular with ] during the 1960s that said "Nirvana Now."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/68031/17-fascinating-facts-about-apocalypse-now |title=17 Facts About Apocalypse Now On Its 40th Anniversary |work=Mental Floss |date=August 15, 2019 |access-date=August 9, 2020 |archive-date=August 6, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200806141820/https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/68031/17-fascinating-facts-about-apocalypse-now |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==Background and production== | |||
{{unreferenced|secton|date=December 2006}} | |||
The film was originally written in the late 1960s by ], who would later direct films such as '']'' and ''].'' Milius claims to have been inspired by his film professor's claim that no one had successfully adapted the book ''Heart of Darkness,'' despite attempts by such legendary directors as ] and ]. Ironically, given that the finished film is seen as an anti-war movie, Milius, who is politically a rightist, originally conceived the title as a cynical answer to the leftist hippie slogan "Nirvana Now!" and his original screenplay includes several speeches by Kurtz extolling the virtues of combat and the warrior way of life. | |||
Milius based the character of Willard and some of Kurtz's on a friend of his, Fred Rexer. Rexer claimed to have experienced, first-hand, the scene relayed by Brando's character wherein the arms of villagers are hacked off by the Viet Cong; and that Kurtz was based on Robert B. Rheault, head of Special Forces in Vietnam.<ref>{{cite news|author=Charles Higham|title=Coppola's Vietnam Movie Is a Battle Royal: Francis Ford Coppola's Battle Royal|work=]|date=May 15, 1977|page=77}}</ref> Scholars have never found any evidence to corroborate Rexer's claim, nor any similar Viet Cong behavior, and consider it an urban legend.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://sites.google.com/a/uw.edu/vsg/discussion-networking/vsg-discussion-list-archives/vsg-discussion-2013/apocryphal-viet-cong-attrocity-story |title=Apocryphal Viet-Cong Attrocity Story – Vietnam Studies Group |website=sites.google.com |access-date=December 18, 2016 |archive-date=December 21, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221104200/https://sites.google.com/a/uw.edu/vsg/discussion-networking/vsg-discussion-list-archives/vsg-discussion-2013/apocryphal-viet-cong-attrocity-story |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~mfreeman/images/Vietnam+Guide+.pdf |title=Welcome to MarkFreemanFilms.com |website=www-rohan.sdsu.edu |access-date=October 4, 2017 |archive-date=November 14, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201114040631/https://mfreeman.sdsu.edu/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The script was originally to be directed by ], who was then Coppola's protege at ]. Coppola founded Zoetrope to create an alternative to the major Hollywood studios which would support the work of the rising generation of film-school graduates who would become known colloquially as "the movie brats." The war in Vietnam was still active at the time and the initial plan was to shoot ''Apocalypse Now'' guerilla-style in Vietnam itself. Warner Bros., which had a production deal with Zoetrope, refused to finance the project both for commercial reasons and the fear that the filmmakers would be killed trying to shoot it in a war zone. Lucas has claimed that the studio saw the project, as well as him and his colleagues, as "crazy." After Lucas found success with ''],'' Coppola chose to direct the film himself. This reportedly caused some friction between the two men. Coppola chose to finance the film entirely with his own assets, using money earned from the two ''Godfather'' films and a bank loan, in order to retain total creative control over the final product. | |||
At one point, Coppola told Milius, "Write every scene you ever wanted to go into that movie,"<ref name="Cowie1" /> and he wrote ten drafts, amounting to over a thousand pages.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=7}} He was influenced by an article by ], "The Battle for Khe Sanh," which referred to drugs, rock 'n' roll, and people calling ]s down on themselves.<ref name="Cowie1" /> He was also inspired by such films as '']''. | |||
Coppola also rewrote the script to accommodate his vision, removing much of Milius's macho dialogue and changing the film's ending. Milius's original ending showed Kurtz and Willard joining forces to fight an American air assault on Kurtz's compound. The compound is destroyed in a massive air strike and Kurtz dies of his wounds as Willard looks on. Coppola dismissed this ending as cartoonish. The ending would be rewritten multiple times over the course of production and most of Kurtz's role would eventually be improvised by Marlon Brando. The film's narration was written during the editing process by Michael Herr, who had written the book '']'' while a war correspondent in Vietnam. | |||
Milius says the classic line "Charlie don't surf" was inspired by a comment ] made during the ], when he went ] after capturing enemy territory and announced, "We're eating their fish." He says the line "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" just came to him.<ref name="can"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130205133713/http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Movies/03/09/john.milius.movies/index.html |date=February 5, 2013 }}, CNN, March 9, 2009. Retrieved 2012</ref> | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' was the first time Coppola worked with ] ], who had shot several films for ], including ''],'' one of Coppola's favorites. | |||
] acquired the screenplay in 1969 but put it into ].<ref name=AFI>{{AFI film|67464}}</ref><ref name=var/> Milius had no desire to direct the film himself and felt that Lucas was the right person for the job.<ref name="Cowie1" /> Lucas worked with Milius for four years developing the film, while working on other films, including his script for '']''.<ref name="thx">{{cite video |people=Lucas, George |year=2004 |title=A Legacy of Filmmakers: The Early Years of American Zoetrope |medium=DVD |publisher=]}}</ref> He approached ''Apocalypse Now'' as a ],<ref name=hearn>{{cite book |author=Marcus Hearn |title=The Cinema of George Lucas |publisher=] |year=2005 |pages=79–80 |isbn=0-8109-4968-7 |location=New York City}}</ref> and intended to shoot it after making '']'', with principal photography to start in 1971.<ref name="CowieNow3" /> Lucas's friend and producer ] traveled to the Philippines, scouting suitable locations. They intended to shoot the film both in the rice fields between ] and ], and on-location in ], on a $2 million budget, ] style, using ] cameras, and real soldiers, while the war was still going on.<ref name="Cowie1" /><ref name="thx" /><ref name="Cowie3" /> However, due to the studios' safety concerns and Lucas's involvement with '']'', and later ''Star Wars'', Lucas decided to put the project on hold.<ref name="CowieNow3" /><ref name="thx" /> | |||
The film was shot in the ] (most notably the ] and ]) and the shoot has become legendary for its length and difficulty; filming took so long, critics eventually began referring to it as "Apocalypse When?". The film went far over budget and over schedule for several reasons. A ] destroyed many of the sets, which had to be rebuilt at great expense. The Philippine Air Force helicopters used for shooting Col. Kilgore's attack on a Vietnamese village were constantly being called back by President ] to serve in actual combat against anti-government rebels. | |||
=== Pre-production === | |||
The lead role of the assassin was to be played by ] but it was recast two weeks after shooting began. Keitel's footage was re-shot with Martin Sheen, who suffered a near-fatal ] during production and was suffering from alcoholism during the shoot. In '']'', aired on the ]'s ] on the ] ], Sheen reveals that the opening scene was completely improvised, that he had been drinking all day before it was shot, and that he broke the mirror by accident. When he started bleeding, Coppola wanted to stop filming, but Sheen insisted that he continue. Watching the scene back, Sheen, said it was good to see where he'd come from knowing that he was never going to go back there again. It took Sheen weeks to recover and return to the set, during which time the film was in danger of being shut down. Being similar in appearance and voice, ], Sheen's brother, ] for Sheen in some of the long shots and would later record some of the film's narration. | |||
Coppola was drawn to Milius's script, which he described as "a comedy and a terrifying psychological horror story," and acquired the rights.<ref name="Cowie2">Cowie 1990, p. 121.</ref> In the spring of 1974, he discussed with friends and co-producers ] and ] the idea of producing the film.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=6}} He asked Lucas, then Milius, to direct it, but both were involved with other projects{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=6}} (Lucas in particular had gotten the go-ahead to make ''Star Wars'').<ref name="Cowie1" /> Coppola was determined to make the film and pressed ahead himself. He envisioned it as a definitive statement on the nature of modern war, the contrasts between good and evil, and the impact of American culture on the rest of the world. He said he wanted to take the audience "through an unprecedented experience of war and have them react as much as those who had gone through the war."<ref name="Cowie2" /> | |||
In 1975, Coppola hoped for cooperation from the ] and scouted military locations in Georgia and Florida,<ref name="var" /> but the Army was not interested. While promoting ''The Godfather Part II'' in Australia, Coppola and his producers scouted possible locations for ''Apocalypse Now'' in ] in northern ], as it had jungle resembling Vietnam's,{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=12}} and in Malaysia.<ref name=var/> He decided to make the film in the Philippines for its access to American military equipment and cheap labor. Roos, who also served as production coordinator, had already made two low-budget films there for ], and had friends and contacts there.<ref name="Cowie2" /> Frederickson went to the Philippines and had dinner with President ] to formalize support for the production and to allow them to use some of the country's military equipment.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=16}} Coppola spent the last few months of 1975 revising Milius's script and negotiating with ] to secure financing for the production. Milius claimed it would be the "most violent film ever made."<ref name=var/> According to Frederickson, the budget was estimated between $12 and 14 million.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=13}} Coppola's ] obtained $7.5 million from United Artists for domestic distribution rights and $8 million from international sales, on the assumption that the film would star Marlon Brando, ] and ].<ref name="Cowie2" /> | |||
]'' as Colonel Kurtz]] | |||
Marlon Brando appeared on set massively overweight, despite his character's description as sick and emaciated. He refused to learn his lines and had not read the book ''Heart of Darkness'' as Coppola requested. The majority of Brando's dialogue had to be improvised, despite the short time during which the actor was available. | |||
=== Casting === | |||
Coppola famously said of the shoot: "We had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little we went insane." The director faced bankruptcy and financial ruin if the film was not finished or shut down; his personal investment and the bizarre circumstances of the production created immense personal pressure. According to ]'s 1991 documentary, '']'' Coppola's marriage almost fell apart and the director suffered a nervous breakdown. | |||
Steve McQueen was Coppola's first choice to play Willard, but McQueen did not want to leave America for three weeks and Coppola was unwilling to pay his $3 million fee.<ref name=var/> When McQueen dropped out in February 1976, Coppola had to return $5 million of the $21 million he had raised.<ref name=var/> ] was also offered the role, but he too did not want to be away that long, and was afraid of falling ill in the jungle as he had done in the Dominican Republic during the shooting of '']''.<ref name="Cowie2" /> ], ] and ] were approached to play either Kurtz or Willard.<ref name="Cowie3">Cowie 1990, p. 122.</ref> ], ], ], and Frederic Forrest were also considered for Willard.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Tapp |first=Tom |title=Review: 'The Apocalypse Now Book' |date=May 25, 2001 |magazine=] |url=https://variety.com/2001/more/reviews/the-apocalypse-now-book-1200468131/ |access-date=June 27, 2017 |archive-date=August 13, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170813220029/http://variety.com/2001/more/reviews/the-apocalypse-now-book-1200468131/ |url-status=live }}</ref> In a 2015 '']'' interview, ] revealed that Coppola offered him the role of Willard, but much like McQueen and Pacino, he did not want to be away from America for a long time. He also revealed that McQueen tried to convince him to play Willard; McQueen wanted to play Kurtz because he would have to work for only two weeks.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/clint-eastwood-describes-his-death-781618 |title=Clint Eastwood Describes His Near-Death Experience, Says 'American Sniper' Is Anti-War (Exclusive) |website=] |date=March 16, 2015 |access-date=March 27, 2018 |archive-date=March 11, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180311200251/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/clint-eastwood-describes-his-death-781618 |url-status=live }}</ref> Coppola offered the lead role of Willard to ], but he declined due to other commitments.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.cigaraficionado.com/article/the-interview-robert-de-niro-18335 | title=The Interview: Robert de Niro | access-date=October 30, 2023 | archive-date=October 30, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231030173810/https://www.cigaraficionado.com/article/the-interview-robert-de-niro-18335 | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Coppola also offered the role of Colonel Kurtz to ] and ], both of whom turned it down.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article/188688/0/Apocalypse-Now.html |title=Apocalypse Now |website=Turner Classic Movies |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304040858/http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article/188688%7C0/Apocalypse-Now.html |archive-date=March 4, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://collider.com/what-if-lee-marvin-starred-in-a-brando-less-apocalypse-now/amp/ |title=What If Lee Marvin Starred in a Brando-less Apocalypse Now? |website=Collider |last=Bettinger |first=Brendan |date=April 28, 2010 |access-date=October 8, 2021 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210709183942/https://collider.com/what-if-lee-marvin-starred-in-a-brando-less-apocalypse-now/amp/ |archive-date=July 9, 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-jul-31-ca-28638-story.html?_amp=true |title='Apocalypse,' Now and Then |work=Los Angeles Times |last=Goldstein |first=Patrick |date=July 31, 2001 |access-date=October 8, 2021 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190927115445/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-jul-31-ca-28638-story.html?_amp=true |archive-date=September 27, 2019 }}</ref> | |||
The film took over a year to edit, mostly on state-of-the-art editing equipment purchased specifically for the production by Coppola. The initial rough cut was just over five hours long and had to be severely cut. A three-hour version was screened as a "work in progress" at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Palme D'Or for best film. It was at the Cannes press conference that Coppola made his famous comment that "My film is not about Vietnam, it ''is'' Vietnam." | |||
The director, according to archival materials in the recent "Complete Dossier" edition, also stated that his plan was to create a single theater, in the geographical center of the United States (likely ]) that would show ''Apocalypse Now'', and only ''Apocalypse Now''. It would be specially tailored to the film, with ] ] projectors, ], and the ] system, which would vibrate the seats at the appropriate intervals. In his eyes, it would be "an event", and he likened it to travelling to ]. It was, incidentally, exactly the same idea which motivated ]'s ]. Wagner's ] was initially only to be shown in Bayreuth and Bayreuth too was chosen as the festival location because it is more or less in the heart of Germany. Considering that Wagner's music features so prominently in ''Apocalypse Now'', Coppola may have been inspired by Wagner's example. | |||
Coppola and Roos had been impressed by ]'s screen test for Michael in '']'' and he became the second choice to play Willard, but he had already accepted another project. ] was cast in the role based on his work in ]'s '']''.{{Sfn|Cowie|2001|p=18}}<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2001/nov/02/artsfeatures.londonfilmfestival20011 | title=Typhoons, binges... Then a heart attack | newspaper=The Guardian | date=November 2, 2001 | access-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231106015141/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2001/nov/02/artsfeatures.londonfilmfestival20011 | url-status=live }}</ref> By early 1976, Coppola had persuaded Marlon Brando to play Kurtz, for a fee of $2 million for a month's work on location in September 1976. Brando also received 10% of the gross ] and 10% of the TV sale rights, earning him around $9 million.<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|date=November 21, 1979|page=37|title=New York Sound Track|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_variety_1979-11-21_297_3/page/37/mode/1up|access-date=December 16, 2023|via=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|url=https://ew.com/article/2004/07/02/millions-marlon-brando/|title=Millions for Marlon Brando|date=July 2, 2004|last=Ascher-Walsh|first=Rebecca|access-date=May 30, 2020|archive-date=August 3, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200803195337/https://ew.com/article/2004/07/02/millions-marlon-brando/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The original released version of the movie was just over two and a half hours long, and was a box-office success in the United States and overseas. It eventually made over 100 million dollars at the box office. | |||
Hackman was set to play Wyatt Khanage, who later became Kilgore, played by Robert Duvall.<ref name=var/> Dennis Hopper was cast as a war correspondent and observer of Kurtz; when Coppola heard Hopper talking nonstop on location, he remembered putting "the cameras and the Montagnard shirt on him, and the scene where he greets them on the boat."<ref name="Cowie3" /> James Caan was the first choice to play Colonel Lucas, but Caan wanted too much money for what was considered a minor part, and Harrison Ford was cast instead. | |||
Coppola re-released the film in 2001 under the title ''Apocalypse Now Redux''. The new print was supervised by Vittorio Storaro, who used a color process of his own invention to restore the film for release. He also cropped the frame from the conventional ] to 2.0:1 aspect ratio in order to improve detail by increasing vertical resolution.<ref>http://www.zoetrope.com/zoe_films.cgi?page=films&action=show_one&film_id=13</ref> Storaro has claimed that ''Apocalypse Now Redux'' looks better than the original release print of the film. | |||
Before departing for principal photography, Coppola took out an advertisement in the trade press declaring Keitel, Duvall and others as the "first choices" for the film.<ref name=var/> It also listed other actors who did not appear in the film, including ], ] and ].<ref name=var/> | |||
The catastrophic production of the film unfortunately made it symbolic of the dangers of excessive directorial control over major productions. The shooting was said to have taken a toll on all involved, especially Coppola, both mentally and emotionally. To many cinephiles, ''Apocalypse Now'' is the last great film by a legendary director whose subsequent work has failed to live up to his initial promise. | |||
], ] and ] all signed seven-year deals, with Coppola including acting training of their choice in their deal.<ref name=var/> Bottoms was infected with ] while filming in the Philippines, and the parasite "wrecked his liver."{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=132}} ] auditioned for the role of Lance Johnson.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |first= |date=January 21, 2020 |title=Interview: Robert Englund and his Star Wars connection |url=https://www.fanthatracks.com/interviews/interview-robert-englund-and-his-star-wars-connection/ |access-date=June 21, 2023 |website=Fantha Tracks |language=en-GB}}</ref> | |||
==Controversy== | |||
A water buffalo was partially decapitated and slaughtered with a machete for the climactic scene. It was in fact a real ritual performed by local natives, as Coppola felt that to film the ritual sacrifice would add depth and realism. Although this was an American production (ostensibly subject to American ] laws), scenes like this filmed in the Philippines were not policed or monitored. Still, after conducting an investigation, the American Humane Association gave the film an "unacceptable" rating. | |||
=== Principal photography === | |||
==Responses== | |||
On March 1, 1976, Coppola and his family flew to ] and rented a large house there for the planned four-month shoot.<ref name="Cowie3" /><ref name=var/> Sound and photographic equipment had been coming in from California since late 1975. ] assisted with production in the Philippines.<ref>{{cite magazine|first=Stephen|last=Vagg|url=https://diaboliquemagazine.com/the-nine-lives-of-john-ashley/|magazine=Diabolique Magazine|title=A Hell of a Life: The Nine Lives of John Ashley|date=December 2019|access-date=January 3, 2020|archive-date=December 30, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191230071102/https://diaboliquemagazine.com/the-nine-lives-of-john-ashley/|url-status=live}}</ref> The film was due to be released on Coppola's 38th birthday, April 7, 1977.<ref name=var/> | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' premiered in 1979 to mixed reviews and received polarized responses from audiences. It is said that it was as lauded as it was reviled. Many critics slammed the film, calling it overly pretentious, while others felt that it ended anticlimactically after a splendid first act.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} | |||
Shooting began on March 20, 1976.<ref name=AFI/> Within a few days, Coppola was unhappy with Harvey Keitel's take on Willard, saying that the actor "found it difficult to play him as a passive onlooker."<ref name="Cowie3" /> With Brando not due to film until three months later, as he did not want to work while his children were on school vacation, Keitel left the project in April and quit the seven-year deal he had signed as well.<ref name=var/>{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=348}} Coppola returned to Los Angeles and replaced Keitel with Martin Sheen, who arrived in the Philippines on April 24.{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=348}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://cinephiliabeyond.org/apocalypse-now/ | title=Once Upon a Time… in the Philippines: Francis Ford Coppola's 'Apocalypse Now' is a Three-Time Prime Cut of Film-Making Largesse • Cinephilia & Beyond | date=August 31, 2019 | access-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-date=November 6, 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231106035215/https://cinephiliabeyond.org/apocalypse-now/ | url-status=live }}</ref> Only four days of reshoots were reportedly required after the change.<ref name=var/> | |||
], who hailed it as the best film of 1979 and added it to his list of Great Movies, stated: | |||
{{cquote|Apocalypse Now is the best Vietnam film, one of the greatest of all films, because it pushes beyond the others, into the dark places of the soul. It is not about war so much as about how war reveals truths we would be happy never to discover.}} | |||
] wrecked 40–80% of the sets at ] and on May 26, 1976, production was closed down. Dean Tavoularis remembers that it "started raining harder and harder until finally it was literally ''white'' outside, and all the trees were bent at forty-five degrees." Some of the crew were stranded in a hotel and the others were in small houses that were immobilized by the storm. The Playboy Playmate set was destroyed, ruining a month's scheduled shooting. Most of the cast and crew returned to the United States for six to eight weeks. Tavoularis and his team stayed on to scout new locations and rebuild the Playmate set in a different place. Also, the production had bodyguards watching constantly at night and one day the entire payroll was stolen. According to Coppola's wife, ], the film was six weeks behind schedule and $2 million over budget;{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=123}} Coppola filed a $500,000 insurance claim for typhoon damage<ref name=var/> and took out a loan from United Artists on the condition that if the film did not generate ]s of over $40 million, he would be liable for the overruns.{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=352}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://variety.com/2019/vintage/features/apocalypse-now-production-1203309358/|title=Why Everything About 'Apocalypse Now's' Production Was Unorthodox|first=Tim|last=Gray|date=August 23, 2019|access-date=September 30, 2023|archive-date=September 6, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230906022130/https://variety.com/2019/vintage/features/apocalypse-now-production-1203309358/|url-status=live}}</ref> Despite the increasing costs, Coppola promised the ] Film Center 1% of the profits, up to $1 million, for a film study trust fund.<ref name=var/> | |||
Today, the film is regarded by many as a masterpiece of the ] era. It is on the ] list at number 28. Kilgore's quote "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" was number 12 on the ] list. In 2002, '']'' magazine polled several critics to name the best film of the last 25 years and ''Apocalypse Now'' was named number 1. The film is also ranked number 36 on ]'s Top 250 movies list, with an overall rating of 8.5 out of 10. | |||
Coppola flew back to the U.S. in June 1976. He read a book about ] to get a better handle on the character of Kurtz.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=123}} When filming commenced in July 1976,<ref name=AFI/> Marlon Brando arrived in Manila very overweight and began working with Coppola to rewrite the ending. The director downplayed Brando's weight by dressing him in black, photographing only his face, and having another, taller actor double for him to portray him as an almost mythical character.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=124}}<ref>{{Cite web |date=August 4, 2015 |title=Marlon Brando's 'Apocalypse Now' Clashes Haunt His Legacy In 'Listen To Me Marlon' |url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/marlon-brando-apocalypse-now_n_55bf66e1e4b06363d5a29e84 |access-date=June 21, 2023 |website=HuffPost |language=en |archive-date=August 13, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230813183347/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/marlon-brando-apocalypse-now_n_55bf66e1e4b06363d5a29e84 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==Home Video Release Aspect Ratio Issues== | |||
The first home video releases of ''Apocalypse Now'' were ] versions of the original 35mm Technovision ] 2.35:1 print, and the closing credits, white on black background, were presented in compressed 1.33:1 full-frame format to allow all credit information to be seen on standard televisions. The first ]ed appearance (on ] on 12-29-1991) cropped the film to the 70mm release 2:1 aspect ratio, featuring a small degree of pan-and-scan processing - notably in the opening shots in Willard's hotel room, featuring a composite montage - at the insistence of Coppola and cinematographer Vittorio Storaro (although the end credits (from a videotape source, not a film print) were still crushed for 1.33:1 and zoomed to fit the anamorphic video frame). All DVD releases have maintained this aspect ratio in anamorphic widescreen, but present the film without the end credits, which were treated as a separate feature. As a DVD extra, the footage of the explosion of the Kurtz compound was featured without text credits but included a commentary by director Coppola explaining the various endings based on how the film was screened. | |||
After Christmas 1976, Coppola viewed a rough assembly of the footage but still needed to improvise an ending. He returned to the Philippines in early 1977 and resumed filming.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=124}} | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
On March 5 of that year, Sheen, then only 36, had a near-fatal heart attack and struggled for a quarter of a mile to reach help. By then the film was so over-budget, Sheen worried that funding would be halted if word about his condition reached investors, and he claimed that he had suffered heat stroke instead. Until he returned to the set on April 19, his brother ] filled in for him, being shot from behind so close-ups of Sheen could be shot after he got better. Coppola later admitted that he could no longer tell which scenes were of Joe or Martin.<ref>{{Citation |last=DeadBySense |title=Apocalypse Now – Conversation Martin Sheen and Francis Ford Coppola Rus sub |date=April 5, 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BkChat11cE |access-date=December 9, 2018 |archive-date=December 6, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181206200858/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BkChat11cE |url-status=live }}</ref> A major sequence in a French plantation cost hundreds of thousands of dollars but was cut from the final film. Rumors began to circulate that ''Apocalypse Now'' had several endings, but ], who worked on the sound elements, said, "There were never ''five'' endings, but just the one, even if there were differently ''edited'' versions." These rumors came from Coppola departing frequently from the original screenplay. Coppola admitted that he had no ending because Brando was too fat to play the scenes as written in the original script.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/a-match-made-in-hell-marlon-brando-in-apocalypse-now/ |title=A Match Made In Hell: Marlon Brando in 'Apocalypse Now' |first=Tim |last=Coffman |work=Far Out Magazine |date=April 23, 2023}}</ref> With the help of Dennis Jakob, Coppola decided the ending could be "the classic myth of the murderer who gets up the river, kills the king, and then himself becomes the king – it's the ], from ''The Golden Bough''."{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=125}} Principal photography ended on May 21, 1977,{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=126}} after 238 days.<ref name=AFI/> | |||
{{Main|List of cultural references to Apocalypse Now}} | |||
=== Post-production and audio === | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' has been heavily referenced and spoofed in various forms of popular media. | |||
The budget had doubled to over $25 million, and Coppola's loan from United Artists to fund the overruns had been extended to over $10 million.<ref name=var/> UA took out a $15 million life insurance policy on Coppola.{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=361}} By June 1977, Coppola had offered his car, house, and ''The Godfather'' profits as security to finish the film.{{r|Harmetz}}<ref name=var/> When ''Star Wars'' became a major hit, Coppola sent a telegram to Lucas asking for money.{{Sfn|Biskind|1998|p=336-337, 343}} The release date was pushed back to spring 1978.<ref name=var/> | |||
Japanese composer ] was signed to provide an original score, with Coppola desiring the film's soundtrack to sound like Tomita's ] adaptation of '']'' by ]. Tomita went as far as to accompany the film crew in the Philippines, but label contracts ultimately prevented his involvement.<ref>{{cite web |title=Isao Tomita (2014 RBMA Tokyo Lecture) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj1igvo_WnQ&t=2840s |publisher=YouTube |date=November 13, 2014 |access-date=November 29, 2016 |archive-date=April 25, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160425171557/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj1igvo_WnQ&t=2840s |url-status=live }}</ref> In the summer of 1977, Coppola told ] that he had four months to assemble the sound. Murch realized that the script had originally been narrated but Coppola abandoned the idea during filming.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=126}} Murch thought that there was a way to assemble the film without narration but that it would take ten months, and decided to give it another try.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=126-7}} He put it back in, recording it all himself. By September, Coppola told his wife that he felt "there is only about a 20% chance can pull the film off."{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=127}} He convinced United Artists executives to delay the premiere from May to October 1978. In January 1978, Herr received a call from Zoetrope, asking him if he could write the film's narration based on his well-received book about Vietnam, '']''.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=127}} He said that the narration already written was "totally useless" and spent a year creating a new set of narration, with Coppola giving him very definite guidelines. Sheen was too busy to record the voice-over narration so Estevez, whose voice was almost identical to his brother's, was called back in to record the narration instead.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=127}} | |||
==Principal cast== | |||
*] - Col. Walter E. Kurtz | |||
*] - ] Benjamin L. Willard | |||
*] - "American ]" | |||
*] - Lt. Col. William Kilgore | |||
*] - Engineman 2nd Class Jay Hicks, AKA "Chef", sailor | |||
*] - Quartermaster Chief George Phillips, AKA "Chief", Navy boat commander | |||
*] - Gunner's Mate 3rd Class Lance B. Johnson, sailor and famous surfer | |||
*] - Gunner's Mate 3rd Class Tyrone Miller, AKA "Clean", sailor | |||
*] - Gen. Corman, ] | |||
*] - Col. Lucas, aide to Corman | |||
*] - Capt. Richard M. Colby, previously assigned Willard's current mission | |||
*] - Supply Sergeant | |||
*] - ], "Miss May" | |||
*] - Hubert de Marais (redux version) | |||
*] - Roxanne Sarraut-de Marais (redux version) | |||
Murch had problems trying to make a stereo soundtrack for ''Apocalypse Now'' because sound libraries had no stereo recordings of weapons. The sound material brought back from the Philippines was inadequate because the small location crew lacked the time and resources to record jungle sounds and ambient noises. Murch and his crew fabricated the mood of the jungle on the soundtrack. ''Apocalypse Now'' used novel sound techniques for a movie, as Murch insisted on recording the most up-to-date gunfire and employed the ] system for the 70 mm release, which used two channels of sound behind the audience as well as three channels from behind the movie screen.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=127}} The 35 mm release used the new ] optical stereo system, but due to limitations of the technology at the time, the 35 mm release that played in most theaters did not include surround sound.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Eric Dienstfrey |title=The Myth of the Speakers: A Critical Reexamination of Dolby History |journal=Film History |volume=28 |issue=1 |pages=167–193 |publisher=Film History: An International Journal |jstor=10.2979/filmhistory.28.1.06|year=2016 |doi=10.2979/filmhistory.28.1.06 |s2cid=192940527 }}</ref> In May 1978, Coppola postponed the opening until spring of 1979.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=128}} The cost overruns had reached $18 million, for which Coppola was personally liable, but he had retained rights to the picture in ].<ref name=varrev/> | |||
Several other actors who were, or later became, prominent stars have minor roles in the movie including ], ], ] and ]. Fishburne was only fourteen years old when shooting began in March 1976, and was credited as "Larry Fishburne." ''Apocalypse Now'' took so long to finish that Fishburne was seventeen (the same age as his character) by the time of its release. | |||
===Controversies=== | |||
The director had to finance the film with his own money, which he earned from the blockbuster '']'' films. Coppola's wife, ], chronicled the making of the film in the book ''Notes'' and in the documentary ''].'' The documentary uses footage she shot during principal photography. | |||
A ] was slaughtered with a machete for the climactic scene in a ritual performed by a local ] tribe, which Coppola had previously witnessed with his wife Eleanor (who filmed the ritual later shown in the documentary '']'') and film crew. Although it was an American production subject to American ] laws, such scenes filmed in the Philippines were not policed or monitored; the ] gave the film an "unacceptable" rating.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://humanehollywood.org/index.php/movie-archive/item/apocalypse-now |title=Apocalypse Now |last=AmericanHumane |website=humanehollywood.org |language=en-gb |access-date=February 22, 2017 |archive-date=February 23, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170223125510/http://humanehollywood.org/index.php/movie-archive/item/apocalypse-now |url-status=dead }}</ref> Coppola would later say that the animals were part of the production deal.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/movies/2019/08/13/apocalypse-now-turns-40-francis-ford-coppola-recuts-his-film-again/1992088001/|title=Coppola defends killing water buffalo in 'Apocalypse Now': 'That was the way they do it'|first=Andrea|last=Mandell|website=USA TODAY|access-date=September 30, 2023|archive-date=September 7, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230907142428/https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/movies/2019/08/13/apocalypse-now-turns-40-francis-ford-coppola-recuts-his-film-again/1992088001/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Real human corpses were bought from a man who turned out to be a grave-robber. The police questioned the film crew, holding their passports, and soldiers took the bodies away. Instead, extras were used to pose as corpses in the film.<ref>{{cite news|date=July 24, 2009|title=The strained making of 'Apocalypse Now'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-strained-making-of-apocalypse-now-1758689.html|access-date=August 9, 2020|website=The Independent|archive-date=August 17, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170817224203/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-strained-making-of-apocalypse-now-1758689.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
== Awards == | |||
===Wins=== | |||
*] : ] | |||
*] (]) | |||
*] (]) | |||
*] (] & ]) | |||
During filming, Dennis Hopper and Marlon Brando did not get along, leading Brando to refuse to be on the set at the same time as Hopper.<ref>{{cite web|title=Marlon Brando and Dennis Hopper Nearly Came to Blows on 'Apocalypse Now'|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/marlon-brando-dennis-hopper-came-blows-apocalypse-now-1288371|access-date=August 9, 2020|website=The Hollywood Reporter|date=April 3, 2020|archive-date=August 9, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200809190051/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/marlon-brando-dennis-hopper-came-blows-apocalypse-now-1288371|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In 2000 the United States ] deemed the film "]" and selected it for preservation in the ]. | |||
==Release== | |||
The movie poster art for ''Apocalypse Now'' is by ], who is considered an influential artist in the world of ]s. | |||
In April 1979, Coppola screened a "work in progress" for 900 people; it was not well received.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=128}} That year, he was invited to screen ''Apocalypse Now'' at the ].{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=129}} United Artists was not keen on showing an unfinished version to so many members of the press. However, since his 1974 film '']'' had won the ], Coppola agreed to screen ''Apocalypse Now'' with the festival only a month away. | |||
The week before Cannes, Coppola arranged three sneak previews of a 139-minute cut in ] on May 11<ref name=var/><ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|page=3|title=Just For Variety|last=Archerd|first=Army|author-link=Army Archerd|date=May 14, 1979}}</ref> attended by 2,000 paying customers, some of whom lined up for over 6 hours.<ref name=DVpre>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|page=3|title='Now' Hope: L.A. Preview, Cannes Prize|last=Pollock|first=Dale|date=May 16, 1979|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_variety_1979-05-16_295_2/page/3/mode/1up|access-date=December 16, 2023|via=]}}</ref> Other cuts shown in 1979 ran 150 and 165 minutes.<ref name=var/><ref name=AFI/> The film was also shown at the ] for ] on May 10.<ref name=DVpre/><ref name=AFI/> Coppola allowed critics to attend the L.A. screenings and believed they would honor an embargo not to review the work in progress.<ref name=AFI/> On May 14, ] previewed the film on television on '']'' and called it "a disappointing failure."{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=129}}<ref name=AFI/> This prompted '']'' to believe the embargo had been broken, and it published its review the following day, saying it was "worth the wait," calling it a "brilliant and bizarre film." They also noted that it was the first "70{{spaces}}mm presentation without credits,"<ref name=varrev>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|date=May 16, 1979|title=Film Reviews: Apocalyspe Now|last=Pollock|first=Dale|page=21|url=https://variety.com/1979/film/reviews/apocalypse-now-2-1200424565/|access-date=December 16, 2023|archive-date=December 16, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231216123800/https://variety.com/1979/film/reviews/apocalypse-now-2-1200424565/|url-status=live}}</ref> for which Coppola had obtained permission from the various guilds (], ], and ]) and instead provided a printed program with credits.<ref name=AFI/><ref name=DVpre/> The title appeared scrawled on a wall on a temple in the last third of the film.<ref name=DVpre/> '']'' reported that the first, 8:00{{spaces}}p.m. screening was received with "limited, if enthusiastic, applause."<ref name=DVpre/> | |||
===Nominations=== | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] - (]) | |||
*] (], ] and ]) | |||
*] (]) | |||
*] (], ], ] and ]) | |||
*] (] & ]) | |||
*] (] & ]) | |||
*] (] & ]) | |||
=== Cannes screening === | |||
==References== | |||
] Palme d'Or was awarded to ''Apocalypse Now''.]] | |||
<div class="references-small"><references/></div> | |||
At Cannes, Zoetrope technicians worked during the night before the screening to install additional speakers to achieve Murch's ] soundtrack.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=129}} A three-hour version of ''Apocalypse Now'' was screened as a work in progress at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival on Saturday, May 19, 1979<ref name=var>{{cite magazine|magazine=]|date=May 23, 1979|title=An Archival Detailing Of UA's 'Apocalypse Now' Since 1967 Start|last=Pollock|first=Dale|page=5|url=https://archive.org/details/sim_variety_1979-05-23_295_3/page/5/mode/1up|access-date=December 16, 2023|via=]}}</ref> and met with prolonged applause.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=130}} It was the first work in progress ever shown in competition at the festival.<ref name=DVpre/> At the subsequent press conference, Coppola criticized the media for releasing premature reviews<ref name=AFI/> and for attacking him and the production during their problems filming in the Philippines. He said, "We had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little we went insane," and "My film is not about Vietnam, it ''is'' Vietnam."{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=130}}<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/heartsofdarknessafilmmakersapocalypsenrbrown_a0addb.htm |title='Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse' |newspaper=The Washington Post |last=Brown |first=Joe |date=January 17, 1992 |access-date=January 22, 2024 |archive-date=August 28, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220828081509/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/heartsofdarknessafilmmakersapocalypsenrbrown_a0addb.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> His comments upset newspaper critic ], who reportedly stormed out of the conference. ''Apocalypse Now'' won the Palme d'Or for best film, along with ]'s '']'' – a decision reportedly greeted with "some boos and jeers from the audience."<ref name="TimeCannes">{{cite magazine |title=Sweeping Cannes |magazine=] |date=June 4, 1979 |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,946279,00.html |access-date=November 22, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216071516/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0%2C9171%2C946279%2C00.html |archive-date=December 16, 2008 |url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
== |
===Theatrical release=== | ||
On August 15, 1979, ''Apocalypse Now'' was released in North America in only three theaters equipped to play the Dolby Stereo 70 mm prints with stereo ]:<ref>Dienstfrey 2016, p. 171</ref> the ] in New York City, the ] in Los Angeles and the ] in Toronto.<ref name=AFI/> The film, without credits, ran 147{{spaces}}minutes and tickets were $5 (equivalent to a little over ${{Inflation|US|5|1979}} now{{when|date=May 2024}}),{{Inflation-fn|US}} a new high for L.A.<ref name=AFI/> | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
*{{imdb title|id=0078788|title=Apocalypse Now}} | |||
*{{filmsite|id=apoc|title=Apocalypse Now}} | |||
* critiqued by ] in The Guardian | |||
* | |||
* | |||
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* | |||
It ran exclusively in these three locations for four weeks before opening in an additional 12{{spaces}}theaters on October{{spaces}}3, 1979.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=131}} On October{{spaces}}10, 1979, the 35{{spaces}}mm version, with credits, was released in over 300{{spaces}}theaters.<ref name=AFI/> | |||
{{Francis Ford Coppola's films}} | |||
The film had a $9{{spaces}}million advertising campaign, bringing its total costs to $45{{spaces}}million.<ref name=AFI/> | |||
{{start box}} | |||
{{succession box | |||
| title=] | |||
| years=1979<br>'''tied with '']''''' | |||
| before='']'' | |||
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=== Alternative and varied endings === | |||
{{Link FA|ru}} | |||
At the time of the film's release, discussion and rumors circulated about its supposed various endings. Coppola said the original ending was written in haste, where Kurtz convinced Willard to join him and together they repelled the air strike on the compound. Coppola said he never fully agreed with Kurtz and Willard dying in fatalistic explosive intensity, preferring to end the film in a more positive way. | |||
When Coppola originally organized the ending, he considered two significant versions. One had Willard leading Lance by the hand as everyone in Kurtz's base threw down their weapons; Willard then piloted the PBR slowly away from Kurtz's compound, and this final shot was superimposed over the face of a stone idol, which then faded to black. The other version had the base spectacularly blown to bits in an air strike, killing everyone left within it. | |||
] | |||
The original 1979 70{{spaces}}mm exclusive theatrical release ended with Willard's boat, the stone statue, and the fade to black with no credits, save for '"Copyright 1979 Omni Zoetrope"' at its very end. This mirrored the lack of opening titles and supposedly stemmed from Coppola's original intention to "tour" the film as one would a play: The credits appeared on printed programs provided before the screening began.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=132}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
There have been, to date, many variations of the end credit sequence, beginning with the 35 mm general release, where Coppola elected to show the credits superimposed over shots of the jungle exploding into flames.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=132}}<ref name=AFI/> The explosions were from the detonations of the sets.<ref name=AFI/> Rental prints circulated with this ending, and can be found in the hands of a few collectors. Some versions had the subtitle "A United Artists release," while others had "An Omni Zoetrope release." The network television version of the credits ended with, "..{{nbsp}}from MGM/UA Entertainment Company" (as it made its network debut shortly after the merger of ] and UA). Another variation of the end credits can be seen on both YouTube and as a supplement on the current{{when|date=May 2024}} ] Blu-ray. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
When Coppola later heard that the audiences interpreted this as an air strike called by Willard, he pulled the film from its {{nowrap|35 mm}} run and added credits on a black screen.<ref name=AFI/> The "air strike" footage continued to circulate in repertory theaters well into the 1980s, and was included in the 1980s LaserDisc release. In the DVD commentary, Coppola explains that the images of explosions were not intended as part of the story, but were simply a graphic background he had added for the credits.<ref>{{cite AV media|title=Destruction of the Kurtz Compound w/ commentary by director ]|work=]|medium=DVD|trans-title=DVD Extras|date=November 20, 2001}}</ref> | |||
Coppola explained he had shot the explosion footage during demolition of the sets, whose destruction and removal were required by the Philippine government. He filmed the demolition with cameras fitted with different film stocks and lenses to capture the explosions at different speeds. He wanted to do something with the dramatic footage and decided to add them to the credits.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://homevideo.about.com/od/dvdreview1/a/apocalypsenowra.htm |title=DVD Review Apocalypse Now – Apocalypse Now DVD Review |publisher=Homevideo.about.com |date=March 5, 2014 |access-date=July 16, 2014 |archive-date=July 7, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707075145/http://homevideo.about.com/od/dvdreview1/a/apocalypsenowra.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
===Re-release=== | |||
The film was re-released on August 28, 1987, in six cities, to capitalize on the success of '']'', '']'', and other Vietnam War movies. New 70 mm prints were shown in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, St. Louis and Cincinnati—cities where the film had done well in 1979. It was given the same kind of release as the exclusive 1979 engagement, with no logo or credits, and audiences were given a printed program.<ref name="Harmetz">{{cite news |last=Harmetz |first=Aljean |title=''Apocalypse Now'' to Be Re-released |work=] |date=August 20, 1987 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1987/08/20/movies/apocalypse-now-to-be-re-released.html |access-date=November 24, 2008 |archive-date=December 16, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216122311/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE2D61F3BF933A1575BC0A961948260 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
=== Reception === | |||
==== Critical response ==== | |||
On ] ], ''Apocalypse Now'' holds an approval rating of 91% based on 148 reviews, with an average rating of 9.1/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "A voyage to hell where the journey is more satisfying than the destination, Francis Ford Coppola's haunting, hallucinatory Vietnam War epic is cinema at its most audacious and visionary."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/apocalypse_now |title=Apocalypse Now (1979) |website=] |publisher=] |access-date=September 23, 2024 |archive-date=June 28, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200628040132/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/apocalypse_now |url-status=live }}</ref> ], which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 94 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.metacritic.com/movie/apocalypse-now |title=Apocalypse Now (1979) |website=] |access-date=August 5, 2019 |archive-date=May 23, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200523122228/https://www.metacritic.com/movie/apocalypse-now |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Upon its release, ''Apocalypse Now'' received polarized reviews.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2010/oct/19/apocalypse-now-coppola-action |title=Apocalypse Now: the best action and war film of all time |last=Billson |first=Anne |newspaper=The Guardian |date=October 19, 2010 |access-date=June 5, 2017 |quote=Reviews were mixed, but within a year or so it had established itself as a modern classic {{nbsp}}... |archive-date=May 7, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170507043136/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2010/oct/19/apocalypse-now-coppola-action |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.theweek.co.uk/entertainment/5191/apocalypse-now-original-1979-reviews |title=Apocalypse Now: the original 1979 reviews |last=Rainey |first=Venetia |magazine=The Week |date=May 27, 2011 |access-date=June 5, 2017 |archive-date=August 18, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170818104413/http://www.theweek.co.uk/entertainment/5191/apocalypse-now-original-1979-reviews |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article/188688%7C0/Apocalypse-Now.html |title=Apocalypse Now |last=Fristoe |first=Roger |work=Turner Classic Movies, Inc. |access-date=June 5, 2017 |archive-date=October 14, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171014142326/http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article/188688%7C0/Apocalypse-Now.html |url-status=live }}</ref> In his original review, ] wrote: "''Apocalypse Now'' achieves greatness not by analyzing our 'experience in Vietnam', but by re-creating, in characters and images, something of that experience."<ref name="Ebert">{{cite news |last=Ebert |first=Roger |title=''Apocalypse Now'' |work=RogerEbert.com |date=June 1, 1979 |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/apocalypse-now-1979 |access-date=December 27, 2022 |archive-date=December 16, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216072520/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F19790601%2FREVIEWS%2F41214002%2F1023 |url-status=live }}</ref> and named it "The best film of 1979."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041215/COMMENTARY/41215001/1023 |work=Chicago Sun-Times |title=Ebert's 10 Best Lists: 1967–present |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060908200137/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20041215%2FCOMMENTARY%2F41215001%2F1023 |archive-date=September 8, 2006 }}</ref> Ebert concluded by writing: "What's great in the film, and what will make it live for many years and speak to many audiences, is what Coppola achieves on the levels Truffaut was discussing: the moments of agony and joy in making cinema. Some of those moments occur at the same time; remember again the helicopter assault and its unsettling juxtaposition of horror and exhilaration. Remember the weird beauty of the massed helicopters lifting above the trees in the long shot, and the insane power of Wagner's music, played loudly during the attack, and you feel what Coppola was getting at: Those moments as common in life as art, when the whole huge grand mystery of the world, so terrible, so beautiful, seems to hang in the balance." Ebert added Coppola's film to his list of ], stating: "''Apocalypse Now'' is the best Vietnam film, one of the greatest of all films, because it pushes beyond the others, into the dark places of the soul. It is not about war so much as about how war reveals truths we would be happy never to discover."<ref name="Ebert2">{{cite news |last=Ebert |first=Roger |title=Great Movies: ''Apocalypse Now'' |work=] |date=November 28, 1999 |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-apocalypse-now-1979 |access-date=November 24, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216072521/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F19991128%2FREVIEWS08%2F911280301%2F1023 |archive-date=December 16, 2008 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In his review for the '']'', ] wrote: 'as a noble use of the medium and as a tireless expression of national anguish, it towers over everything that has been attempted by an American filmmaker in a very long time.'{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=131}} Other reviews were less positive; ], writing for '']'', said: 'While much of the footage is breathtaking, ''Apocalypse Now'' is emotionally obtuse and intellectually empty.'<ref>{{cite magazine |first=Frank |last=Rich |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920572,00.html |title=Cinema: The Making of a Quagmire by Frank Rich |magazine=Time |date=August 27, 1979 |access-date=March 6, 2010 |archive-date=May 31, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100531194724/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920572,00.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> ] argued: 'Mr. Coppola himself describes it as 'operatic', but{{nbsp}}... ''Apocalypse Now'' is neither a tone poem nor an opera. It's an adventure yarn with delusions of grandeur, a movie that ends — in the all-too-familiar words of the poet Mr. Coppola drags in by the bootstraps — not with a bang, but a whimper.'<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=EE05E7DF173CE562BC4D52DFBE668382669EDE |title=APOCALYPSE NOW |last=Canby |first=Vincent |newspaper=New York Times |date=August 15, 1979 |access-date=June 5, 2017 |archive-date=September 10, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170910083903/http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=EE05E7DF173CE562BC4D52DFBE668382669EDE |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Commentators have debated whether ''Apocalypse Now'' is an anti-war or pro-war film. Some evidence of the film's anti-war message includes the purposeless brutality of the war, the absence of military leadership, and the imagery of machinery destroying nature.<ref name="Frank P. Tomasulo 1990">{{cite book |author=Frank P. Tomasulo |title=The Politics of Ambivalence: Apocalypse Now as Prowar and Antiwar Film |publisher=Rutgers |year=1990}}</ref> Advocates of a pro-war stance view these same elements as a glorification of war and the assertion of American supremacy. According to Frank Tomasulo, 'the US foisting its culture on Vietnam', including the destruction of a village so that soldiers could surf, affirms the film's pro-war message.<ref name="Frank P. Tomasulo 1990" /> ] recounted how his marine platoon watched ''Apocalypse Now'' before being sent to Iraq in 1990 to get excited for war.<ref>{{cite book |author=Marilyn B. Young |title=Now Playing:Vietnam |publisher=Organization of American Historians. OAH |date=October 2004}}</ref> Nidesh Lawtoo illustrates the ambiguity of the film by focusing on the contradictory responses the movie in general – and the "]" scene in particular – triggered in a university classroom.<ref>Nidesh Lawtoo, ''The Phantom of the Ego: Modernism and the Mimetic Unconscious'', East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 2013, pp. 85–90</ref> Writing for '']'', critic Robert Hatch felt the "moral indignation" behind ''Apocalypse Now'' was "lost in giantism," saying that the film presented the war as "one bloody huge circus" and that Coppola had "done no more than demonstrate the obvious — that in Vietnam we fought a bad war."<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Hatch |first1=Robert |title=Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/apocalypse-now-1/ |website=The Nation |date=December 19, 2008 |access-date=August 21, 2023 |archive-date=August 21, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230821102217/https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/apocalypse-now-1/ |url-status=live }}</ref> According to Coppola, the film may be considered anti-war, but is even more anti-lie: '...{{nbsp}}the fact that a culture can lie about what's really going on in warfare, that people are being brutalized, tortured, maimed, and killed, and somehow present this as moral is what horrifies me, and perpetuates the possibility of war'.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Mark J. Lacy |jstor=40645126 |title=War, Cinema, and Moral Anxiety |journal=Alternatives: Global, Local, Political |volume=28 |issue=5 |pages=611–636 |date=November–December 2003|doi=10.1177/030437540302800504 |s2cid=142538404 }}</ref> In 2019, however, Coppola told Kevin Perry of '']'' that he hesitated to call the film anti-war, stating .".. an anti-war film, I always thought, should be like ]'s 1956 post-second world war drama] '']'' – something filled with love and peace and tranquillity and happiness. It shouldn't have sequences of violence that inspire a lust for violence. ''Apocalypse Now'' has stirring scenes of helicopters attacking innocent people. That's not anti-war."<ref>{{Cite web |date=August 9, 2019 |title=Francis Ford Coppola: 'Apocalypse Now is not an anti-war film' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/aug/09/francis-ford-coppola-apocalypse-now-is-not-an-anti-war-film |access-date=October 1, 2022 |website=The Guardian |language=en |archive-date=October 3, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221003182700/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/aug/09/francis-ford-coppola-apocalypse-now-is-not-an-anti-war-film |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
In May 2011, a new restored digital print of ''Apocalypse Now'' was released in UK cinemas, distributed by ]. '']'' magazine gave the film a five-star review, stating: 'This is the original cut rather than the 2001 'Redux' (be gone, jarring French plantation interlude!), digitally restored to such heights you can, indeed, get a nose full of the napalm.'<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.totalfilm.com/reviews/cinema/apocalypse-now-1 |title=Apocalypse Now Review |work=] |access-date=June 8, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110519103028/http://www.totalfilm.com/reviews/cinema/apocalypse-now-1 |archive-date=May 19, 2011 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==== Box office ==== | |||
''Apocalypse Now'' performed well at the box office when it opened on August 15, 1979.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=130}} It initially opened in three theaters in New York City, Toronto, and Hollywood, grossing $322,489 in its first five days. It has grossed over $80 million in the United States and Canada<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Apocalypse-Now#tab=box-office|website=]|access-date=December 16, 2023|title=Apocalypse Now (1979)|archive-date=December 16, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231216134233/https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Apocalypse-Now#tab=box-office|url-status=live}}</ref> with a worldwide total of over $100 million.{{Sfn|Cowie|1990|p=132}}<ref name=HOD/> | |||
=== Versions === | |||
==== ''Apocalypse Now Redux'' ==== | |||
{{Main|Apocalypse Now Redux}} | |||
In 2001, Coppola released ''Apocalypse Now Redux'' in cinemas and subsequently on DVD. This is an extended version that restores 49 minutes of scenes cut from the original film. Coppola has continued to circulate the original version as well: the two versions are packaged together in the ''Complete Dossier'' DVD, released on August 15, 2006, and in the Blu-ray edition released on October 19, 2010. | |||
The longest section of added footage in the ''Redux'' version is the "French Plantation" sequence, a chapter involving the de Marais family's rubber plantation, a holdover from the colonization of ], featuring Coppola's two sons ] and ] as children of the family. Around the dinner table, a young French child recites a poem by ] entitled '']''. The French family patriarch is not satisfied with the child's recitation. The child is sent away. These scenes were removed from the 1979 cut, which premiered at ]. In behind-the-scenes footage in ''Hearts of Darkness'', Coppola expresses his anger, on the set, at the technical limitations of the scenes, the result of shortage of money. At the time of the ''Redux'' version, it was possible to digitally enhance the footage to accomplish Coppola's vision. In the scenes, the French family patriarchs argue about the positive side of colonialism in Indochina and denounce the betrayal of the military men in the ]. Hubert de Marais argues that French politicians sacrificed entire battalions at ], and tells Willard that the US created the Viet Cong (as the ]) to fend off Japanese invaders. | |||
Other added material includes extra combat footage before Willard meets Kilgore, a scene in which Willard's team steals Kilgore's surfboard (which sheds some light on the hunt for the mangoes), a follow-up scene to the dance of the ''Playboy'' Playmates, in which Willard's team finds the Playmates stranded after their helicopter has run out of fuel (trading two barrels of fuel for two hours with the Bunnies), and a scene of Kurtz reading from a '']'' magazine article about the war, surrounded by Cambodian children. | |||
A deleted scene titled "Monkey Sampan" shows Willard and the PBR crew suspiciously eyeing an approaching ] juxtaposed to Montagnard villagers joyfully singing "]" by ]. As the sampan gets closer, Willard realizes there are monkeys on it and no helmsman. Finally, just as the two boats pass, the wind turns the sail and exposes a naked dead ] (VC) nailed to the sail boom. His body is mutilated and looks as though the man had been ] and ]. The singing stops. As they pass on by, Chief notes out loud, "That's comin' from where we goin', Captain." The boat then slowly passes the giant tail of a shot down ] as the noise of engines high in the sky is heard. Coppola said that he made up for cutting this scene by having the PBR pass under an aircraft tail in the final cut. | |||
==== ''First Assembly'' ==== | |||
A 289-minute ''First Assembly'' circulates as a video bootleg, containing extra material not included in either the original theatrical release or the "redux" version.<ref name="Coates">{{cite news |last=Coates |first=Gordon |title=Coppola's slow boat on the Nung |work=] |date=October 17, 2008 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2008/oct/17/1 |access-date=October 17, 2008 |location=London|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081018214153/http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2008/oct/17/1|archive-date=October 18, 2008 |url-status=live}}</ref> This cut of the film does not feature Carmine Coppola's score, instead using several Doors tracks.<ref name="Cinephilia & Beyond 2015">{{cite web |title=The Holy Grail of Workprints: The Five-Hour Rough Version of 'Apocalypse Now' |website=Cinephilia & Beyond |date=October 12, 2015 |url=https://cinephiliabeyond.org/the-holy-grail-of-workprints-the-five-hour-rough-version-of-apocalypse-now/ |access-date=December 9, 2021 |archive-date=December 9, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211209230919/https://cinephiliabeyond.org/the-holy-grail-of-workprints-the-five-hour-rough-version-of-apocalypse-now/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
==== ''Apocalypse Now Final Cut'' ==== | |||
In April 2019, Coppola showed ''Apocalypse Now Final Cut'' for the 40th anniversary screening at the ].<ref>{{cite news |last=Lewis |first=Gordon |title=Tribeca: Danny Boyle's Beatles Movie 'Yesterday' Set as Closing Night Film |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/amp/news/beatles-movie-yesterday-say-anything-apocalypse-now-set-tribeca-2019-1194756 |access-date=April 24, 2019 |website=] |date=March 14, 2019 |archive-date=November 14, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201114040633/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/amp/news/beatles-movie-yesterday-say-anything-apocalypse-now-set-tribeca-2019-1194756 |url-status=live }}</ref> This new version is Coppola's preferred version of the film and has a runtime of three hours and three minutes, with Coppola having cut 20 minutes of the added material from ''Redux''; the scenes deleted include the second encounter with the Playmates, parts of the plantation sequence, and Kurtz's reading of ''Time'' magazine.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.movie-censorship.com/report.php?ID=442569 |title=Apocalypse Now Comparison: Final Cut – Redux Version |website=Movie Censorship |date=September 15, 2019 |access-date=January 9, 2020 |archive-date=April 12, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200412221437/https://www.movie-censorship.com/report.php?ID=442569 |url-status=live }}</ref> It is also the first time the film has been restored from the original camera negative at 4K; previous transfers were made from an ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=O'Falt |first1=Chris |title='Apocalypse Now': 5 Things You Need to Know About Coppola's New 'Final Cut' |url=https://www.indiewire.com/2019/04/apocalypse-now-final-cut-5-things-to-know-francis-for-coppola-new-version-1202129340/ |website=IndieWire |date=April 29, 2019 |access-date=April 30, 2019 |archive-date=April 30, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190430004130/https://www.indiewire.com/2019/04/apocalypse-now-final-cut-5-things-to-know-francis-for-coppola-new-version-1202129340/ |url-status=live }}</ref> It was released in autumn 2019, along with an extended cut of '']''.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Fleming |first1=Mike Jr. |title=Francis Ford Coppola: How Winning Cannes 40 Years Ago Saved 'Apocalypse Now,' Making 'Megalopolis,' Why Scorsese Almost Helmed 'Godfather Part II' & Re-Cutting Three Past Films |url=https://deadline.com/2019/05/francis-ford-coppola-apocalypse-now-cannes-40-anniversary-megalopolis-scorsese-godfather-part-ii-re-cutting-godfather-iii-cotton-club-interview-1202613659/ |date=May 13, 2019 |website=Deadline |access-date=May 18, 2019 |archive-date=May 16, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190516131543/https://deadline.com/2019/05/francis-ford-coppola-apocalypse-now-cannes-40-anniversary-megalopolis-scorsese-godfather-part-ii-re-cutting-godfather-iii-cotton-club-interview-1202613659/ |url-status=live }}</ref> It also had a release in select ] theaters on August 15 and 18, 2019, in a collaboration between IMAX and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://collider.com/apocalypse-now-final-cut-imax-theaters/ |title=Restored 'Apocalypse Now Final Cut' Coming to IMAX Theaters for the 40th Anniversary |website=] |date=July 25, 2019 |access-date=August 6, 2019 |archive-date=August 6, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190806155437/http://collider.com/apocalypse-now-final-cut-imax-theaters/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== Home media == | |||
The home media release history of ''Apocalypse Now'' is summarized in the following table. Although the dates are for the American publication of the home media editions, releases by publishers in other territories are identical in content and format. Despite filming ''Apocalypse Now'' in 2.35:1, the film's cinematographer Vittorio Storraro periodically approved home media releases in his preferred aspect ratio, the 2.00:1 ]. This aggressive crop of the original 2.35:1 film negative has been done away with in all releases since Coppola's ] reassigned home media rights to Lionsgate Home Entertainment in 2010.<ref>{{Citation |title=Lionsgate Announces Apocalypse Now Blu-ray |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=4914 |access-date=2024-01-09 |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109092317/https://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=4914 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|+ | |||
!Edition | |||
!US Release Date | |||
!Publisher | |||
!Aspect Ratio | |||
!Cut | |||
!Runtime | |||
!Commentaries | |||
!Resolution | |||
!Master | |||
!Medium | |||
|- | |||
|Final Cut SteelBook Edition | |||
|October 19, 2021<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,October%2019th,%202021,-Movie%20Release%20Year |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065734/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,October%2019th,%202021,-Movie%20Release%20Year |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Redux%C2%A0edit.-,Lionsgate,-gives%C2%A0Apocalypse |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065734/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Redux%C2%A0edit.-,Lionsgate,-gives%C2%A0Apocalypse |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.35:1,-Audio%20Formats: |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065734/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.35:1,-Audio%20Formats: |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Final Cut<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Now%C2%A0with-,The%20Final%20Cut,--%20a%20streamlined%20and |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=May 21, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220521024853/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Now%C2%A0with-,The%20Final%20Cut,--%20a%20streamlined%20and |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|3h 02m | |||
| rowspan="2" |none | |||
|]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,2160p,-HEVC/H.265 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065734/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,2160p,-HEVC/H.265 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=muddy%20at%20times,-,the%20new%204K%20scans,-are%20crisper%20and |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=May 21, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220521024853/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/98482/apocalypsenowthefinalcut4kultrahdbluraysteelbook.html#:~:text=muddy%20at%20times,-,the%20new%204K%20scans,-are%20crisper%20and |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="10" |] | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3" |40th Anniversary Edition | |||
| rowspan="3" |August 27, 2019<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=In%20Stock-,Release%20Date:%20August%2027th,%202019,-Movie%20Release%20Year |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=In%20Stock-,Release%20Date:%20August%2027th,%202019,-Movie%20Release%20Year |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="3" |Lionsgate<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Since-,Lionsgate,-is%20not%20part |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Since-,Lionsgate,-is%20not%20part |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="3" |2.35:1<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.39:1,-Audio%20Formats: |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.39:1,-Audio%20Formats: |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical<ref name="auto4">{{Citation |last=Talshir |first=Zipora |title=Texts, Text-Forms, Editions, New Compositions and the Final Products of Biblical Literature |date=2014-01-01 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004281226_004 |work=Congress Volume Munich 2013 |pages=40–66 |access-date=2024-01-09 |publisher=BRILL |doi=10.1163/9789004281226_004 |isbn=978-90-04-28122-6}}</ref> | |||
|2h 33m | |||
| rowspan="3" |2160p<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,2160p,-/HEVC%20H.265 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=October 3, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231003161414/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,2160p,-/HEVC%20H.265 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="3" |4K<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Sourced%20from%20a%204K%20scan%20of%20the%20original%20camera%20negatives, |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=October 3, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231003161414/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Sourced%20from%20a%204K%20scan%20of%20the%20original%20camera%20negatives, |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|]<ref name="auto4"/> | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|Francis Ford Coppola (2001)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (40th Anniversary Edition) - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Audio%20Commentary%20by%20Francis%20Ford%20Coppola%20(Redux) |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=ultrahd.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/72468/apocalypsenow40thanniversaryedition4kultrahdbluray.html#:~:text=Audio%20Commentary%20by%20Francis%20Ford%20Coppola%20(Redux) |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|Final Cut<ref name="auto4"/> | |||
|3h 02m | |||
| rowspan="6" |none | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |Triple Feature Edition (with '']'' as the third feature) | |||
| rowspan="2" |June 7, 2016<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: Triple Feature Blu-ray Disc Details {{!}} High-Def Digest |url=https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/32718/apocalypsenowtriplefeature.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,June%207th,%202016,-MPAA%20Rating:%20R |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=bluray.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065734/https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/32718/apocalypsenowtriplefeature.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,June%207th,%202016,-MPAA%20Rating:%20R |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="2" |Lionsgate<ref name="auto">{{Citation |title=Apocalypse Now: Triple Feature Blu-ray (Apocalypse Now / Apocalypse Now Redux / Hearts of Darkness) |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Apocalypse-Now-Triple-Feature-Blu-ray/153595/ |access-date=2024-01-09 |archive-date=September 1, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190901172935/https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Apocalypse-Now-Triple-Feature-Blu-ray/153595/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="2" |2.35:1 | |||
|Theatrical<ref name="auto"/> | |||
|2h 33m | |||
| rowspan="2" |]<ref name="auto"/> | |||
| rowspan="4" |4K | |||
|- | |||
|Redux<ref name="auto"/> | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |SteelBook Edition | |||
| rowspan="2" |November 24, 2013<ref name="auto1">{{Citation |title=Apocalypse Now Blu-ray (Best Buy Exclusive SteelBook) |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Apocalypse-Now-Blu-ray/90727/ |access-date=2024-01-09 |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Apocalypse-Now-Blu-ray/90727/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="2" |Lionsgate<ref name="auto1"/> | |||
| rowspan="2" |2.35:1 | |||
|Theatrical<ref name="auto1"/> | |||
|2h 33m | |||
| rowspan="2" |1080p<ref name="auto1"/> | |||
|- | |||
|Redux<ref name="auto1"/> | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |Full Disclosure Edition | |||
| rowspan="2" |October 19, 2010<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now (2-Film Set) Blu-ray Disc Details {{!}} High-Def Digest |url=https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3760/apocalypsenow_2_film.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,October%2019th,%202010,-MPAA%20Rating:%20Rated |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=bluray.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065737/https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3760/apocalypsenow_2_film.html#:~:text=Release%20Date:-,October%2019th,%202010,-MPAA%20Rating:%20Rated |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="2" |Lionsgate | |||
|2.35:1<ref name="auto2">{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: Full Disclosure Edition Blu-ray Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.35:1,-Audio%20Formats: |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=bluray.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=June 8, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230608043935/https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=Ratio(s):-,2.35:1,-Audio%20Formats: |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical | |||
|2h 33m | |||
| rowspan="2" |1080p<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: Full Disclosure Edition Blu-ray Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,1080p/AVC%20MPEG-4,-Length:202 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=bluray.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=June 8, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230608043935/https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=Resolution/Codec:-,1080p/AVC%20MPEG-4,-Length:202 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="8" |2K | |||
|- | |||
|2.35:1<ref name="auto2"/> | |||
|Redux | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | |||
|- | |||
|#031398123231<ref name="auto6">{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now DVD Release Date |url=https://www.dvdsreleasedates.com/movies/4651/Apocalypse-Now-(1979).html |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=DVDs Release Dates |language=en |archive-date=June 9, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230609012823/https://www.dvdsreleasedates.com/movies/4651/Apocalypse-Now-(1979).html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|May 18, 2010<ref name="auto6"/> | |||
| rowspan="15" |]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now: Full Disclosure Edition Blu-ray Review {{!}} High Def Digest |url=https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=In%20years%20past,%20'Apocalypse%20Now'%20was%20previously%20distributed%20on%20VHS,%20Laserdisc,%20and%20DVD%20by%20Paramount%20Home%20Entertainment. |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=bluray.highdefdigest.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://bluray.highdefdigest.com/3761/apocalypse_disclosure.html#:~:text=In%20years%20past,%20'Apocalypse%20Now'%20was%20previously%20distributed%20on%20VHS,%20Laserdisc,%20and%20DVD%20by%20Paramount%20Home%20Entertainment. |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="6" |] | |||
|Redux | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|Francis Ford Coppola (2001)<ref name="auto5">{{Cite web |title=DVD Talk |url=https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/22951/apocalypse-now-the-complete-dossier/#:~:text=The%20main%20attraction%20here%20is%20Francis%20Ford%20Coppola's%20involving,%20candid%20and%20revealing%20commentary%20track |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.dvdtalk.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/22951/apocalypse-now-the-complete-dossier/#:~:text=The%20main%20attraction%20here%20is%20Francis%20Ford%20Coppola's%20involving,%20candid%20and%20revealing%20commentary%20track |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="4" |] | |||
| rowspan="4" |] | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |The Complete Dossier | |||
| rowspan="2" |August 15, 2006 | |||
|Theatrical | |||
|2h 33m | |||
|edited from 2001 track | |||
|- | |||
|Redux | |||
|3h 22m | |||
|Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | |||
|- | |||
|Redux Special Edition | |||
| rowspan="2" |November 20, 2001 | |||
| rowspan="2" |Redux | |||
| rowspan="2" |3h 22m | |||
|Francis Ford Coppola<ref name="auto5"/> | |||
|- | |||
|#0097360962932 | |||
| rowspan="12" |none | |||
|240 lines | |||
|] | |||
|- | |||
|Theatrical Special Edition | |||
|1999<ref>{{Cite web |title=DVD Talk |url=https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/22951/apocalypse-now-the-complete-dossier/#:~:text=In%201999,%20Paramount%20issued%20the%201979%20theatrical%20version |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.dvdtalk.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065735/https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/22951/apocalypse-now-the-complete-dossier/#:~:text=In%201999,%20Paramount%20issued%20the%201979%20theatrical%20version |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical | |||
| rowspan="5" |2h 33m | |||
|480i | |||
|DVD | |||
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|#LV2306-3WS<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,LV2306-3WS%5D,-Country |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=May 16, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210516052219/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,LV2306-3WS%5D,-Country |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|April 1, 1997<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Released-,01/04/1997,-Publisher |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065737/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Released-,01/04/1997,-Publisher |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1.90:1<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.90:1 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065737/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.90:1 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0153%20min. |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065737/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20473/LV2306-3WS/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0153%20min. |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="4" |425 lines | |||
| rowspan="9" |] | |||
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|#LV 2306-2<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|December 20, 1991 | |||
|]<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.33:1 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.33:1 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0155%20min. |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=May 12, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210512175353/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20475/LV-2306-2/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0155%20min. |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
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|#RCA 00667<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now on CED Capacitance Electronic Disc |url=https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,RCA%2000667,-%5D |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,RCA%2000667,-%5D |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1982<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now on CED Capacitance Electronic Disc |url=https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Released-,1982,-Publisher |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=November 29, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231129184327/https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Released-,1982,-Publisher |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1.33:1<ref name="auto3">{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now on CED Capacitance Electronic Disc |url=https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio-,1.33:1,-Sides |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://www.lddb.com/ced/00098/RCA-00667/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio-,1.33:1,-Sides |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical<ref name="auto3"/> | |||
|- | |||
|#LV 2306<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,LV%202306,-%5D |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065738/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=(1979)%20%5B-,LV%202306,-%5D |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1981 | |||
|1.33:1<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.33:1 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065738/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Ratio%C2%A0,%C2%A01.33:1 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|Theatrical<ref>{{Cite web |title=LaserDisc Database - Apocalypse Now |url=https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0153%20min. |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.lddb.com |archive-date=January 21, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210121010612/https://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/20474/LV-2306/Apocalypse-Now#:~:text=Length%C2%A0,%C2%A0153%20min. |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
|#12999<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now {{!}} VHSCollector.com |url=https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-2#:~:text=Apocalypse%20Now-,12999,-- |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=vhscollector.com |archive-date=June 22, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230622003853/https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-2#:~:text=Apocalypse%20Now-,12999,-- |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1997<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now {{!}} VHSCollector.com |url=https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-2#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release-,1997,-Canada |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=vhscollector.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-2#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release-,1997,-Canada |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="3" |2.0:1 Univisium | |||
| rowspan="5" |Theatrical | |||
| rowspan="5" |2h 33m | |||
| rowspan="3" |240 lines<ref>{{Cite web |last=Shayotovich |first=Eli |date=2022-05-18 |title=The Real Reason Betamax Lost The Format Wars |url=https://www.slashgear.com/867718/the-real-reason-betamax-lost-the-format-wars/ |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=SlashGear |language=en-US |archive-date=July 23, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230723135833/https://www.slashgear.com/867718/the-real-reason-betamax-lost-the-format-wars/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| rowspan="3" |] | |||
|- | |||
|#2306 | |||
|1992<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now {{!}} VHSCollector.com |url=https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release,1992 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=vhscollector.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065737/https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release,1992 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
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|#2306 | |||
|1987<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now {{!}} VHSCollector.com |url=https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-1#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release-,1987,-United%20States |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=vhscollector.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065738/https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-1#:~:text=Year%20of%20Release-,1987,-United%20States |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
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|#BETA 2306A | |||
|1984<ref>{{Cite web |title=Betamax - Apocalypse Now - Paramount - USA |url=https://www.45worlds.com/dvd/disc/apocalypse-nowus#:~:text=Date:-,1984,-Region%20Code: |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=www.45worlds.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065736/https://www.45worlds.com/dvd/disc/apocalypse-nowus#:~:text=Date:-,1984,-Region%20Code: |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1.33:1 | |||
|250 lines | |||
|] | |||
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|#2306A | |||
|1981<ref>{{Cite web |title=Apocalypse Now {{!}} VHSCollector.com |url=https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-0#:~:text=Zoetrope%20Studios-,Year%20of%20Release,-1981 |access-date=2024-01-09 |website=vhscollector.com |archive-date=January 9, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109065739/https://vhscollector.com/movie/apocalypse-now-0#:~:text=Zoetrope%20Studios-,Year%20of%20Release,-1981 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|1.33:1 | |||
| rowspan="2" |240 lines | |||
| rowspan="2" |VHS | |||
|- | |||
|Assembly Cut | |||
|1979 | |||
|(bootleg) | |||
|2.39:1 | |||
|Assembly Cut | |||
|4h 39m | |||
|none | |||
|} | |||
== Legacy == | |||
]'' newspaper, illustrating the ] with imagery from the movie, attests to the film's pervasive cultural impact.]] | |||
In contrast to its mixed reviews upon release, today the movie is regarded by many as a masterpiece of the ] era. Roger Ebert considered it the finest film on the Vietnam War and included it on his list for the 2002 '']'' poll for the greatest movie of all time.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/topten/poll/voter.php?forename=Roger&surname=Ebert |title=How the directors and critics voted |access-date=October 18, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070310213807/http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/topten/poll/voter.php?forename=Roger&surname=Ebert |archive-date=March 10, 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-apocalypse-now-1979|title=Apocalypse Now (1979) by Roger Ebert|access-date=December 27, 2022|work=RogerEbert.com|archive-date=December 16, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216072521/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F19991128%2FREVIEWS08%2F911280301%2F1023|url-status=live}}</ref> In the 2002 ''Sight & Sound'' director's poll of the "greatest films of all time," it was ranked No. 19.<ref>{{cite web|title=Sight & Sound 2002 Directors' Greatest Films poll|url=https://www.listal.com/list/sight-sound-2002-directors|website=listal.com|access-date=July 27, 2021|archive-date=May 15, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190515094321/https://www.listal.com/list/sight-sound-2002-directors|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Sight & Sound Top Ten Poll 2002 The Rest of Director's List|url=http://old.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/polls/topten/poll/directors-long.html|website=old.bfi.org.uk|access-date=July 27, 2021|archive-date=February 1, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170201155933/http://old.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/polls/topten/poll/directors-long.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> It is on the ]'s '']'' list at number 28, but dropped to number 30 on their ]. Kilgore's quotation, "I love the smell of napalm in the morning," written by Milius, was number 12 on the AFI's '']'' list and was also voted the greatest movie speech of all time in a 2004 poll.<ref>{{cite news |title="Napalm" Speech Tops Movie Poll |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3362603.stm |work=BBC News |date=January 2, 2004 |access-date=September 19, 2007 |archive-date=July 8, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090708135503/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3362603.stm |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2006, ] ranked the screenplay, by John Milius and Francis Ford Coppola, the 55th greatest ever.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wga.org/writers-room/101-best-lists/101-greatest-screenplays/list|title=101 Greatest Screenplays|publisher=Writers Guild of America|access-date=March 8, 2017|archive-date=November 22, 2016|archive-url=https://archive.today/20161122211118/http://www.wga.org/writers-room/101-best-lists/101-greatest-screenplays/list|url-status=live}}</ref> It is number 7 on ''Empire''{{'}}s 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.<ref> '']'' via ]. Retrieved August 5, 2010.</ref> ''Empire'' re-ranked it at #20 in their 2014 list of ''The 301 Greatest Movies of All Time'',<ref> '']''. Retrieved September 22, 2020.</ref> and again at #22 on their 2018 list of ''The 100 Greatest Movies''.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200729092135/https://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/best-movies-2/ |date=July 29, 2020 }} '']''. Published March 20, 2018. Retrieved September 22, 2020.</ref> It was voted No. 66 on the list of "100 Greatest Films" by the prominent French magazine '']'' in 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.filmdetail.com/2008/11/23/cahiers-du-cinemas-100-greatest-films/|title=Cahiers du cinéma's 100 Greatest Films|date=November 23, 2008|access-date=May 12, 2021|archive-date=July 16, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180716224153/http://www.filmdetail.com/2008/11/23/cahiers-du-cinemas-100-greatest-films/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2010, '']'' named ''Apocalypse Now'' "the best action and war film of all time."<ref>{{cite news|author=Billson, Anne|date=October 19, 2010|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2010/oct/19/apocalypse-now-coppola-action|title=Apocalypse Now: the best action and war film of all time|newspaper=The Guardian|access-date=July 12, 2021|archive-date=May 7, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170507043136/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2010/oct/19/apocalypse-now-coppola-action|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2016, '']'' ranked it 11th among 69 winners of the '']''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/cannes-palme-dor-winners-ranked-891143/item/best-intentions-palme-dor-winners-891108 |title=Cannes: All the Palme d'Or Winners, Ranked |last=THR Staff |access-date=September 20, 2016 |work=] |date=May 10, 2016 |archive-date=August 17, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817231252/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/cannes-palme-dor-winners-ranked-891143/item/best-intentions-palme-dor-winners-891108 |url-status=live }}</ref> '']'' included it on its ''Best 1000 Movies Ever'' list.<ref> '']'' via ]. Published April 29, 2003. Retrieved June 12, 2008.</ref> ''Entertainment Weekly'' ranked it as having one of the "10 Best Surfing Scenes" in cinema.<ref name="EWsurfing">{{cite magazine |title=10 Best Surfing Scenes |magazine=] |date=August 8, 2002 |url=https://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,231017__334753_9,00.html |access-date=April 24, 2009 |archive-date=December 11, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211123533/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,231017__334753_9,00.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
On December 14, 1981, a day after martial law was enacted in the ]-controlled ], photographer ] photographed an ] ] with soldiers of the ] standing around it, in front of the {{ill|Moskwa Cinema|pl|Kino Moskwa w Warszawie}} with a banner containing the ] title of the movie, which was {{lang|pl|Czas apokalipsy}} (literally: ''Time of the Apocalypse''). The photo became one of the most recognizable symbols of the events during the ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.fotal.pl/artykul/Chris_Niedenthal__13/12_Polska_stanu_wojennego_doc13221.html|title=Chris Niedenthal - '13/12. Polska stanu wojennego'|date=November 21, 2006|language=pl|website=fotal.pl|author=Anna Cymer|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090516061633/http://www.fotal.pl/artykul/Chris_Niedenthal__13/12_Polska_stanu_wojennego_doc13221.html|archive-date=May 16, 2009|access-date=June 20, 2023|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.national-geographic.pl/artykul/to-najslynniejsze-zdjecie-z-czasow-stanu-wojennego-w-polsce-idealnie-oddaje-nastroj-w-kraju#chris-niedenthal|title=To najsłynniejsze zdjęcie z czasów stanu wojennego w Polsce. Idealnie oddaje nastrój w kraju|date=December 9, 2020|author=Julia Lachowicz|language=pl|website=national-geographic.pl|access-date=June 20, 2023|archive-date=June 20, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230620225706/https://www.national-geographic.pl/artykul/to-najslynniejsze-zdjecie-z-czasow-stanu-wojennego-w-polsce-idealnie-oddaje-nastroj-w-kraju#chris-niedenthal|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jak powstało zdjęcie "Czas Apokalipsy" - najpopularniejszy symbol stanu wojennego? |date=December 13, 2021 |url=https://fotoblogia.pl/czas-apokalipsy-czyli-jak-powstal-najwiekszy-symbol-stanu-wojennego-40-lat-temu,6794347405211265a |access-date=June 23, 2023 |archive-date=June 23, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230623221725/https://fotoblogia.pl/czas-apokalipsy-czyli-jak-powstal-najwiekszy-symbol-stanu-wojennego-40-lat-temu,6794347405211265a |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
In 2002, '']'' magazine invited several critics to name the best film of the last 25 years, and ''Apocalypse Now'' was named number one. It was also listed as the second-best war film by viewers on ]'s ''100 Greatest War Films'', and was the second-best war movie of all time based on the Movifone list (after '']'') and the IMDb War movie list (after '']''). It is ranked number 1 on Channel 4's '']''. In a 2004 poll of UK film fans, ] listed Kilgore's eulogy to napalm as the best movie speech.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071018145336/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/3362603.stm |date=October 18, 2007 }}, January 2, 2004, ]. Retrieved February 18, 2008.</ref> The helicopter attack scene with the ''Ride of the Valkyries'' soundtrack was chosen as the most memorable film scene ever by ''Empire'' magazine. (The scene is recalled in one of the last acts of the 2012 video game '']'', when the music is played while the character shoots from a helicopter.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2013/01/08/far-cry-3-review-part-two-through-the-looking-glass/ |title='Far Cry 3' Review – Part Two: Through The Looking Glass |work=] |date=August 8, 2013 |access-date=December 3, 2013 |archive-date=December 7, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131207114736/http://www.forbes.com/sites/erikkain/2013/01/08/far-cry-3-review-part-two-through-the-looking-glass/ |url-status=live }}</ref> It was likewise adapted for the '']'' anime episode "From Runan Island with Love" and the Battle of Italica scene in '']''.) | |||
In 2009, the ] voted ''Apocalypse Now'' the best film of the last 30 years.<ref name="BBCTop30">{{cite news |title=War epic Apocalypse Now tops UK film critics poll |publisher=BBC |date=December 1, 2009 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8388124.stm |access-date=December 2, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091204233105/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8388124.stm |archive-date=December 4, 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> It was also included in ]'s 2015 list of the 100 greatest American films.<ref>{{cite web|date=July 20, 2015|title=The 100 Greatest American Films|url=https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20150720-the-100-greatest-american-films|website=bbc|access-date=February 21, 2021|archive-date=January 14, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210114132906/https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20150720-the-100-greatest-american-films|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
In 2011, actor ], son of the film's leading actor Martin, started playing clips from the film on his live tour and played the film in its entirety during post-show parties. One of Sheen's films, the 1993 comedy '']'', includes a brief scene where Charlie is riding a boat up a river in Iraq while on a rescue mission and passes Martin, as Captain Willard, going the other way. As they pass, each man shouts to the other "I loved you in '']''!," referring to the 1987 film that featured both of them. Additionally, the promotional material for ''Hot Shots! Part Deux'' included a ] that aired on ] titled ''Hearts of Hot Shots! Part Deux—A Filmmaker's Apology'', a parody of the 1991 documentary ''Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse'' about the making of ''Apocalypse Now''.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://tv.yahoo.com/show/11575 |title=Hearts of Hot Shots! Part Deux – A Filmmaker's Apology Television show – Hearts of Hot Shots! Part Deux – A Filmmaker's Apology TV Show – Yahoo!! TV |publisher=Yahoo! |date=April 20, 2011 |access-date=July 16, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320030009/http://tv.yahoo.com/show/11575 |archive-date=March 20, 2012}}</ref> | |||
The film is credited with creating the Philippines surfing culture around the town of ], where the helicopter attack and surfing sequences were filmed.<ref>{{cite news|title=How Apocalypse Now inspired Filipino surfers|work=BBC News|author=Kate McGeown|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21941069|date=April 16, 2013|access-date=September 26, 2019|archive-date=October 2, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191002133606/https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21941069|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
On January 25, 2017, Coppola announced that he was seeking funding through ] for a horror role-playing video game based on ''Apocalypse Now''.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://variety.com/2017/digital/games/apocalypse-now-video-game-francis-ford-coppola-1201969542/ |title="Apocalypse Now" Video Game in Works From Francis Ford Coppola |work=] |last=Spangler |first=Todd |date=January 25, 2017 |access-date=January 25, 2017 |archive-date=January 26, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170126154143/http://variety.com/2017/digital/games/apocalypse-now-video-game-francis-ford-coppola-1201969542/ |url-status=live }}</ref> It was later canceled by Montgomery Markland, the game's director, as revealed on its official Tumblr page.<ref>{{cite web |title=Apocalypse Now |url=https://apocalypsenowgame.tumblr.com/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180225055451/https://apocalypsenowgame.tumblr.com/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 25, 2018 }}</ref> | |||
'']'', a ]-winning novel by ] author ], features a subplot that Nguyen describes as a critique of ''Apocalypse Now.'' He told '']'' that "''Apocalypse Now'' is an important work of art, but that doesn't mean I'm going to bow down before it. I'm going to fight with it because it fought with me." He said that the film centered on American perspectives of the war rather than Vietnamese experiences. He was especially critical of the scene where all the passengers of a boat were unjustly killed by the traveling party: "People just like me were being slaughtered. I felt violated."<ref>{{Cite news|url = https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/22/books/viet-thanh-nguyen-prizewinning-author-of-the-sympathizer-still-wrestles-with-apocalypse-now.html|title = For Viet Thanh Nguyen, Author of 'The Sympathizer,' a Pulitzer but No Peace|newspaper = The New York Times|date = June 21, 2016|last1 = Streitfeld|first1 = David|access-date = April 8, 2021|archive-date = March 6, 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210306085527/https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/22/books/viet-thanh-nguyen-prizewinning-author-of-the-sympathizer-still-wrestles-with-apocalypse-now.html|url-status = live}}</ref> | |||
The ] 6105 and its subsequent reissues have been nicknamed the "Captain Willard," in reference to its use by the eponymous character.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Pennington |first1=Cole |title=Introducing: The Seiko SPB151 and SPB153 'Captain Willard' Prospex Models |url=https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/seiko-spb151-and-spb153-captain-willard-prospex-introducing |website=HODINKEE |access-date=August 28, 2022 |language=en |archive-date=August 28, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220828104242/https://www.hodinkee.com/articles/seiko-spb151-and-spb153-captain-willard-prospex-introducing |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Yeung |first1=Jeff |title=Seiko Crafts Another More Affordable "Captain Willard" Alternative |url=https://hypebeast.com/2020/10/seiko-spb183-captain-willard-alternative-limited-edition |website=HYPEBEAST |access-date=August 28, 2022 |date=October 4, 2020 |archive-date=August 28, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220828104242/https://hypebeast.com/2020/10/seiko-spb183-captain-willard-alternative-limited-edition |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== Awards and honors == | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|+ Awards and Nominations received by Apocalypse Now | |||
! Award | |||
! Category | |||
! Nominee | |||
! Result | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=8|]<ref name="Oscars1980">{{cite web |url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1980 |title=The 52nd Academy Awards (1980) Nominees and Winners |access-date=October 7, 2011 |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |archive-date=April 2, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402002939/http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1980 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| ], ], ], and Tom Sternberg | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] and Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Art Direction: ] and ]; Set Decoration: ] | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ], Walter Murch, ] and ] | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ], ], ], and ] | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ]<ref name="festival-cannes.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/1897/year/1979.html |title=Festival de Cannes: Apocalypse Now |access-date=May 23, 2009 |publisher=festival-cannes.com |archive-date=March 9, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309031847/http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/1897/year/1979.html |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
|] | |||
| ''Apocalypse Now'' | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=9|]<ref name="BAFTA33">{{cite web|url=http://awards.bafta.org/award/1980/film|title=33rd BAFTA Awards – Film|access-date=March 31, 2013|work=BAFTA.org|archive-date=August 8, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140808051141/http://awards.bafta.org/award/1980/film|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| ''Apocalypse Now'' | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Robert Duvall | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] and Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Vittorio Storaro | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Richard Marks, Walter Murch, Gerald B. Greenberg, and Lisa Fruchtman | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Dean Tavoularis | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Nathan Boxer, Richard Cirincione, Walter Murch | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.allocine.fr/festivals/festival-128/edition-18353267/palmares/ |title=Prix et nominations : César 1980 |work=Allocine |access-date=August 5, 2020 |archive-date=August 9, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200809054825/http://www.allocine.fr/festivals/festival-128/edition-18353267/palmares/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] Awards<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.filmaffinity.com/us/awards.php?award_id=donatello&year=1980 |title=David di Donatello Awards 1980 |work=Film Affinity |access-date=August 5, 2020 |archive-date=June 30, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200630012649/https://www.filmaffinity.com/us/awards.php?award_id=donatello&year=1980 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.dga.org/Awards/History/1970s/1979.aspx?value=1979 |title=32nd Directors Guild of America Awards |work=Directors Guild of America Awards |access-date=August 5, 2020 |archive-date=August 4, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200804174123/https://www.dga.org/Awards/History/1970s/1979.aspx?value=1979 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=4|]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.filmaffinity.com/us/awards.php?award_id=goldenglobes&year=1980 |title=37th Golden Globes Awards (1980) – Movies from 1979 |work=Film Affinity |access-date=August 5, 2020 |archive-date=June 29, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200629191515/https://www.filmaffinity.com/us/awards.php?award_id=goldenglobes&year=1980 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Roos, Gray Frederickson, and Tom Sternberg | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Robert Duvall | |||
| {{won}}{{efn|Tied with ] for '']''.}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| Carmine Coppola and Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.grammy.com/nominees/search?artist=&title=&year=1979&genre=All|title=1979 Grammy Award Winners|publisher=Grammy.com|access-date=May 1, 2011|archive-date=September 23, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120923072905/http://www.grammy.com/nominees/search?artist=&title=&year=1979&genre=All|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| Carmine Coppola and Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| {{won}} | |||
|- | |||
| ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wga.org/awards/awardssub.aspx?id=1551|title=Awards Winners|work=wga.org|publisher=Writers Guild of America|archive-url=https://archive.today/20121205095022/http://www.wga.org/awards/awardssub.aspx?id=1551|archive-date=December 5, 2012|access-date=June 6, 2010}}</ref> | |||
| ] | |||
| John Milius and Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
|- | |||
| ] Awards | |||
| ] | |||
| Francis Ford Coppola | |||
| {{Won}} | |||
|} | |||
;] lists | |||
* ] – No. 28 | |||
* ]: | |||
** "I love the smell of napalm in the morning." – No. 12 | |||
** "The horror, the horror." – Nominated | |||
*]: | |||
** Colonel Walter E. Kurtz – Nominated Villain | |||
* ] – No. 30 | |||
== Documentaries == | |||
'']'' (1991) (American Zoetrope/Zaloom Mayfield Productions); Directed by ], ], and Fax Bahr | |||
''Apocalypse Now – The Complete Dossier'' DVD (]) (2006). Disc 2 extras include: | |||
* ''The Post Production of ''Apocalypse Now'': Documentary'' (four featurettes covering the editing, music, and sound of the film through Coppola and his team) | |||
** "A Million Feet of Film: The Editing of ''Apocalypse Now''" (18 minutes). Written and directed by Kim Aubry. | |||
** "The Music of ''Apocalypse Now''" (15 minutes) | |||
** "Heard Any Good Movies Lately? The Sound Design of ''Apocalypse Now''" (15 minutes) | |||
** "The Final Mix" (3 minutes) | |||
== Soundtrack == | |||
* "]" – performed by The Doors | |||
* "]" – performed by The Rolling Stones | |||
* "Love Me, And Let Me Love You" – performed by Robert Duvall | |||
* "]" – performed by The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra | |||
* "]" – performed by Shirley and Lee | |||
* "]" – performed by Flash Cadillac | |||
* Excerpts from ''Mnong Gar Music from Vietnam'' | |||
* Collection Musee de l'homme | |||
* "]" – performed by the Beach Boys | |||
== See also == | |||
* '']'', ]'s 1993 film adaptation of the Conrad novel. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* Adair, Gilbert (1981) ''Vietnam on Film: From The Green Berets to Apocalypse Now''. Proteus. {{ISBN|0-906071-86-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|author-link=Peter Biskind|first=Peter|last=Biskind|year=1998|title=]|publisher=Simon & Schuster|isbn=0-684-85708-1}} | |||
* ] (1979) ''Notes on the Making of Apocalypse Now''. Simon & Schuster. {{ISBN|0-87910-150-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Cowie |first=Peter | author-link = Peter Cowie |title=Coppola |publisher=Scribner |year=1990 |location=New York |isbn=0-684-19193-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/coppolacowi00cowi }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Cowie |first=Peter | author-link = Peter Cowie |year=2001|title=The Apocalypse Now Book|location=New York|publisher=Da Capo Press|isbn=978-0-306-81046-6}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Eagan |first=Daniel |chapter=Apocalypse Now |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/americasfilmlega0000eaga/page/756/mode/2up |chapter-url-access=registration |title=America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry |url=https://archive.org/details/americasfilmlega0000eaga |url-access=registration |publisher=Continuum |publication-place=New York |year=2010 |isbn=978-1-4411-1647-5 |oclc=676697377 |via=Internet Archive |ref=none}} | |||
* ] (1988) ''The Hollywood History of the World: from One Million Years B.C. to Apocalypse Now''. Kobal Collection /Beech Tree Books. {{ISBN|0-688-07520-7}} | |||
* French, Karl (1999) ''Karl French on Apocalypse Now: A Bloomsbury Movie Guide''. Bloomsbury Publishing {{ISBN|1-58234-014-5}} | |||
* ] & ] (2001) ''Apocalypse Now Redux: An Original Screenplay''. Talk Miramax Books/Hyperion {{ISBN|0-7868-8745-1}} | |||
* Tosi, Umberto & Glaser, Milton. (1979) ''Apocalypse Now'' – Program distributed in connection with the opening of the film. ] | |||
* Travers, Steven ''Coppola's Monster Film: The Making of Apocalypse Now'', McFarland 2016, {{ISBN|978-1-4766-6425-5}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
* {{AFI film|67464}} | |||
* {{mojo title|apocalypsenow}} | |||
* {{IMDb title|0078788}} | |||
* {{Metacritic film}} | |||
* {{Rotten Tomatoes|apocalypse_now}} | |||
* The strained making of ''Apocalypse Now'' at . | |||
{{Apocalypse Now}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:53, 21 December 2024
1979 epic war film directed by Francis Ford Coppola For other uses, see Apocalypse Now (disambiguation).
Apocalypse Now | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster by Bob Peak | |
Directed by | Francis Coppola |
Written by |
|
Narration by | Michael Herr |
Produced by | Francis Coppola |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Vittorio Storaro |
Edited by | |
Music by |
|
Production company | Omni Zoetrope |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release dates |
|
Running time |
|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $31.5 million |
Box office | $104.8–150 million |
Apocalypse Now is a 1979 American epic war film produced and directed by Francis Ford Coppola. The screenplay, co-written by Coppola, John Milius, and Michael Herr, is loosely inspired by the 1899 novella Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, with the setting changed from late 19th-century Congo to the Vietnam War. The film follows a river journey from South Vietnam into Cambodia undertaken by Captain Willard (Martin Sheen), who is on a secret mission to assassinate Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando), a renegade Special Forces officer who is accused of murder and presumed insane. The ensemble cast also features Robert Duvall, Frederic Forrest, Albert Hall, Sam Bottoms, Laurence Fishburne, Dennis Hopper, and Harrison Ford.
Milius became interested in adapting Heart of Darkness for a Vietnam War setting in the late 1960s, and initially began developing the film with Coppola as producer and George Lucas as director. After Lucas became unavailable, Coppola took over directorial control, and was influenced by Werner Herzog's Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) in his approach to the material. Initially set to be a five-month shoot in the Philippines starting in March 1976, a series of problems lengthened it to over a year. These problems included expensive sets being destroyed by severe weather, Brando showing up on set overweight and completely unprepared, and Sheen having a breakdown and suffering a near-fatal heart attack on location. After photography was finally finished in May 1977, the release was postponed several times while Coppola edited over a million feet of film. Many of these difficulties are chronicled in the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (1991).
Apocalypse Now was honored with the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, where it premiered unfinished. When it was finally released on August 15, 1979, by United Artists, it performed well at the box office, grossing over $80 million in the United States and Canada and over $100 million worldwide. Initial reviews were polarized; while Vittorio Storaro's cinematography was widely acclaimed, several critics found Coppola's handling of the story's major themes anticlimactic and intellectually disappointing. The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director (Coppola), and Best Supporting Actor (Duvall); it went on to win Best Cinematography and Best Sound.
Apocalypse Now is retrospectively considered one of the greatest films ever made; it has been assessed as Coppola's masterpiece and appeared on various best-of films in 20th-century and of all time lists. In 2000, the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the U.S. Library of Congress as "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant."
Plot
This summary excludes events only seen in the Redux or the Final Cut.In 1969, during the Vietnam War, jaded MACV-SOG operative Captain Benjamin L. Willard is summoned to I Field Force headquarters in Nha Trang. The officers there tell him that U.S. Army Special Forces Colonel Walter E. Kurtz is waging a brutal war against NVA, Viet Cong, and Khmer Rouge forces without permission from his commanders. He is based at a remote jungle outpost in eastern Cambodia, where he commands American, Montagnard, and local Khmer militia troops. These troops view him as a demigod. Willard is ordered to "terminate Kurtz's command... with extreme prejudice." He joins a U.S. Navy river patrol boat (PBR) commanded by Chief Petty Officer Phillips, with crewmen Lance, "Chef," and "Mr. Clean" to quietly navigate up the Nùng River to Kurtz's outpost.
Before reaching the coastal mouth of the Nùng, they rendezvous with the 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment—a helicopter-borne air assault unit of the elite 1st Cavalry Division, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore—to discuss safe entry into the river. Kilgore is initially inattentive, as he has not received word about their mission through normal channels. However, he becomes more engaged after discovering that Lance is a well-known surfer. Kilgore, an avid surfer himself, agrees to escort them through the Nùng's Viet Cong-held coastal mouth. The helicopter squadron, playing "Ride of the Valkyries" on loudspeakers, raids at dawn with a napalm strike.
Resisting Kilgore’s attempts to convince Lance to surf with him on the newly conquered beach, Willard gathers the sailors to board the PBR and continue on their mission. Tension arises as Willard insists on the priority of his mission over the Chief's usual patrol objectives.
Slowly making their way upriver, Willard partially reveals his orders to the Chief to convince him that the mission is important and should proceed despite the difficulties they’ve encountered. As Willard studies Kurtz's dossier, he is struck by the mid-career sacrifice Kurtz made by leaving a prestigious Pentagon assignment to join Special Forces, with no prospect of advancing beyond the rank of colonel.
At a remote U.S. Army outpost, Willard and Lance seek information on what is upriver and receive a dispatch bag containing official and personal mail. Unable to find any commanding officer, Willard orders the Chief to continue. Willard learns via the dispatch that another MACV-SOG operative, Special Forces Captain Richard Colby, was sent on an earlier mission identical to Willard's and has since joined Kurtz.
Lance activates a smoke grenade while under the influence of LSD, attracting enemy fire, causing Mr. Clean's death. Further upriver, the Chief is impaled by a spear thrown by Montagnards and attempts to kill Willard with the spear point protruding from his chest, but Willard overpowers him.
Willard reveals his mission to Chef, who is now in charge of the PBR. The PBR arrives at Kurtz's outpost, a Khmer temple teeming with Montagnards and strewn with remains of victims. Willard, Chef, and Lance are greeted by an American photojournalist, who praises Kurtz's genius. Willard encounters Colby and two other soldiers among the Montagnards. He sets out with Lance to find Kurtz, leaving Chef with orders to call in an airstrike on the outpost if the two do not return.
In the camp, Willard is bound and brought before Kurtz, after which he is locked in a bamboo cage. One night Kurtz appears and drops Chef's severed head into Willard's lap. Willard is released, and warned not to attempt escape from the camp or he will be shot. Kurtz lectures him on his theories of war, praising the ruthlessness of the Viet Cong, and asks him to tell his son the truth about his mutiny. Later, as the Montagnards ceremonially kill a water buffalo, Willard assassinates Kurtz with a machete. Everyone in the camp sees Willard departing, carrying a collection of Kurtz's writings, and bow down to him. Willard finds Lance, leads him back to the PBR, and they depart back down the river, away from Kurtz’s outpost.
Cast
For a list of the rest of the cast members not included in the 153-minute version of the film that was released in theaters, see Apocalypse Now Redux § Cast.- Marlon Brando as Colonel Walter Kurtz, a highly decorated United States Army Special Forces officer with the 5th Special Forces Group who goes rogue. He runs his own military unit based in Cambodia and is feared as much by the U.S. military as by the North Vietnamese, Viet Cong and Khmer Rouge.
- Robert Duvall as Lieutenant Colonel William "Bill" Kilgore, commander of 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment and surfing fanatic. His character is a composite of several characters including Colonels David Hackworth and John Stockton, Lieutenant General Hank "Gunfighter" Emerson, General James F. Hollingsworth and George Patton IV, also a West Point officer whom Robert Duvall knew. Duvall reports that he was upset that a scene where Kilgore saves the life of a Vietnamese baby during the beach assault was cut by Coppola, as he felt that it added to the complexity of his character. Duvall said that he found that the version of the character was too over-the-top, and asked Coppola permission to change the character. Duvall also asked people in the military on how to portray the character as a tough unflinching officer.
- Martin Sheen as U.S. Army Captain Benjamin L. Willard, a veteran assassin who is serving his third tour in Vietnam. The soldier who escorts him at the start of the film recites that Willard is from the 505th Battalion, of the elite 173rd Airborne Brigade, assigned to MACV-SOG. The opening scene—which features Willard staggering around his hotel room, culminating in him punching a mirror—was filmed on Sheen's 36th birthday when he was heavily intoxicated. The mirror that he broke was not a prop and caused his hand to bleed profusely, but he insisted on continuing the scene, despite Coppola's concerns. Sheen has said this performance where he writhes and smears himself in blood was spontaneous and was an exorcism of his longstanding alcoholism. Sheen's brother Joe Estevez stood in for Willard in some scenes and performed the character's voiceover narrations while his son Charlie appears in the film as an extra. Both went uncredited.
- Frederic Forrest as Engineman 3rd Class Jay "Chef" Hicks, a tightly wound former chef from New Orleans who is horrified by his surroundings.
- Albert Hall as Chief Petty Officer George Phillips. The Chief runs a tight ship and frequently clashes with Willard over authority.
- Sam Bottoms as Gunner's Mate 3rd Class Lance B. Johnson, a former professional surfer from Orange County, California. In the bridge scene, he mentions having taken LSD. As the film progresses Lance scene by scene becomes more and more strung out on drugs to the point that his grip on reality fades to almost nothing, and he becomes completely silent in the last act of the film. At the same time he becomes entranced by the Montagnard tribe and participates in the sacrifice ritual.
- Laurence Fishburne as Gunner's Mate 3rd Class Tyrone "Mr. Clean" Miller, the cocky seventeen-year-old South Bronx-born crewmember. Fishburne was only 14 when shooting began in March 1976, as he had lied about his age to get the role. The production took so long, he was 18 by the time of its release.
- Dennis Hopper as an American photojournalist, a manic disciple of Kurtz who greets Willard. According to the DVD commentary of Redux, the character is based on Sean Flynn, a famed news correspondent who disappeared in Cambodia in 1970. The character may also have been partially inspired by the British-Australian photojournalist Tim Page.
- G. D. Spradlin as Lieutenant General R. Corman, military intelligence (G-2), an authoritarian officer who fears Kurtz and wants him removed. The character is named after filmmaker Roger Corman, for whom Coppola had previously directed his early works.
- Harrison Ford as Colonel G. Lucas, aide to Corman and an Army intelligence specialist who gives Willard his orders. The character is named for George Lucas, who had directed Ford in American Graffiti and Star Wars, and with whom Coppola had founded American Zoetrope in 1969. Lucas was also intended to direct Apocalypse Now before getting busy making Star Wars.
- Jerry Ziesmer as Jerry Moore, a C.I.A. officer in civilian clothing who sits in on Willard's initial briefing. His only line in the film is "terminate with extreme prejudice." Ziesmer was also the film's assistant director.
- Scott Glenn as Captain Richard M. Colby, previously assigned Willard's current mission before he defected to Kurtz's private army and sent a message to his wife, intercepted by the U.S. Army, telling her that he was never coming back and to sell everything they owned, including their children.
- James Keane as Kilgore's Gunner, a man ready to battle to the tune of Ride of the Valkyries.
- Kerry Rossall as Mike from San Diego, a soldier who surfs against incoming attacks.
- Colleen Camp, Cynthia Wood and Linda Beatty as Playboy Playmates. Wood was the 1974 Playmate of the Year, and Beatty was the August 1976 Playmate of the Month.
- Bill Graham as Agent, the announcer in charge of the Playmates' show.
- R. Lee Ermey (uncredited) as a helicopter pilot. Ermey was himself a former USMC drill instructor and Vietnam War veteran, and later achieved fame for his role as Gunnery Sergeant Hartman in the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket.
Co-writer, producer, and director Francis Ford Coppola makes an uncredited cameo playing a TV news director filming beach combat; he shouts "Don't look at the camera, go by like you're fighting!". Additionally, cinematographer Vittorio Storaro plays the cameraman by Coppola's side.
Adaptation
Although inspired by Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, it is not a direct adaptation. The novella, based on Conrad's experience as a steamboat captain in Africa, is set in the Congo Free State during the 19th century. Kurtz and Marlow (whose corresponding character in the movie is Capt. Willard) work for a Belgian trading company that brutally exploits its native African workers.
After arriving at Kurtz's outpost, Marlow concludes that Kurtz has gone insane and is lording over a small tribe as a god. The novella ends with Kurtz dying on the trip back and the narrator musing about the darkness of the human psyche: "the heart of an immense darkness." In the novella, Marlow is the pilot of a river boat sent to collect ivory from Kurtz's outpost, only gradually becoming infatuated with Kurtz. In fact, when he discovers Kurtz in terrible health, Marlow makes an effort to bring him home safely (which Willard also does in Milius's draft screenplay). In the film, Willard is an assassin dispatched to kill Kurtz. Nevertheless, the depiction of Kurtz as a god-like leader of a tribe of natives, Kurtz's written exclamation "Exterminate all the brutes!" (which appears in the film as "Drop the bomb. Exterminate them all!") and his last words "The horror! The horror!" are taken from Conrad's novella.
Coppola argues that many episodes in the film—the spear and arrow attack on the boat, for example—respect the spirit of the novella and in particular its critique of the concepts of civilization and progress. Other episodes adapted by Coppola—the Playboy Playmates' (Sirens) exit, the lost souls ("take me home") attempting to reach the boat, and Kurtz's tribe of (white-faced) natives parting the canoes (gates of Hell) for Willard (with Chef and Lance) to enter the camp—are likened to Virgil and "The Inferno" (Divine Comedy) by Dante. While Coppola replaced European colonialism with American interventionism, the message of Conrad's book is still clear.
It is often speculated that Coppola's interpretation of the Kurtz character was modeled after Tony Poe, a highly decorated Vietnam-era paramilitary officer from the CIA's Special Activities Division. Poe's actions in Vietnam and in the "Secret War" in neighboring Laos, in particular his highly unorthodox and often savage methods of waging war, show many similarities to those of the fictional Kurtz; for example, Poe was known to drop severed heads from helicopters into enemy-controlled villages as a form of psychological warfare and use human ears to record the number of enemies his indigenous troops had killed. He would send these ears back to his superiors as proof of the efficacy of his operations deep inside Laos. Coppola denies that Poe was a primary influence and says the character was loosely based on Special Forces Colonel Robert B. Rheault, who was the actual head of 5th Special Forces Group (May to July 1969), and whose 1969 arrest over the murder of suspected double agent Thai Khac Chuyen in Nha Trang generated substantial contemporary news coverage, in the Green Beret Affair, including making public the phrase "terminate with extreme prejudice," which was used prominently in the movie.
It is considered that the character of Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore is based on several characters, including John B. Stockton, commander of the 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam, and infantry general James F. Hollingsworth.
Use of T. S. Eliot's poetry
In the film, shortly before Colonel Kurtz dies, he recites part of T. S. Eliot's poem "The Hollow Men." The poem is preceded in printed editions by the epigraph "Mistah Kurtz – he dead," a quotation from Conrad's Heart of Darkness.
Two books seen opened on Kurtz's desk in the film are From Ritual to Romance by Jessie Weston and The Golden Bough by Sir James Frazer, the two books that Eliot cited as the chief sources and inspiration for his poem "The Waste Land." Eliot's original epigraph for "The Waste Land" was this passage from Heart of Darkness, which ends with Kurtz's final words:
Did he live his life again in every detail of desire, temptation, and surrender during that supreme moment of complete knowledge? He cried in a whisper at some image, at some vision, – he cried out twice, a cry that was no more than a breath –
"The horror! The horror!"
When Willard is first introduced to Dennis Hopper's character, the photojournalist describes his own worth in relation to that of Kurtz with: "I should have been a pair of ragged claws/Scuttling across the floors of silent seas," from "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." Additionally, Dennis Hopper's character paraphrases the end of "The Hollow Men" to Martin Sheen's character: "This is the way the fucking world ends! Not with a bang, but with a whimper."
Production
Development
While working as an assistant for Francis Ford Coppola on The Rain People in 1967, filmmaker John Milius was encouraged by his friends George Lucas and Steven Spielberg to write a Vietnam War film. Milius had wanted to volunteer for the war, and was disappointed when he was rejected for having asthma. He came up with the idea for adapting the plot of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness to the Vietnam War setting. He had read the novel as a teenager and was reminded about it when his college screenwriting professor, Irwin Blacker of USC, mentioned the several unsuccessful attempts to adapt it into a movie. Blacker challenged his class by saying, "No screenwriter has ever perfected a film adaption of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness."
Coppola gave Milius $15,000 to write the screenplay with the promise of an additional $10,000 if it were green-lit. Milius claims that he wrote the screenplay in 1969. He wanted to use Conrad's novel as "a sort of allegory. It would have been too simple to have followed the book completely." Some sources state that Milius' original title was The Psychedelic Soldier, but Milius disputed this in a 2010 interview, claiming Apocalypse Now was always the intended title. The title Apocalypse Now was inspired by a button badge popular with hippies during the 1960s that said "Nirvana Now."
Milius based the character of Willard and some of Kurtz's on a friend of his, Fred Rexer. Rexer claimed to have experienced, first-hand, the scene relayed by Brando's character wherein the arms of villagers are hacked off by the Viet Cong; and that Kurtz was based on Robert B. Rheault, head of Special Forces in Vietnam. Scholars have never found any evidence to corroborate Rexer's claim, nor any similar Viet Cong behavior, and consider it an urban legend.
At one point, Coppola told Milius, "Write every scene you ever wanted to go into that movie," and he wrote ten drafts, amounting to over a thousand pages. He was influenced by an article by Michael Herr, "The Battle for Khe Sanh," which referred to drugs, rock 'n' roll, and people calling airstrikes down on themselves. He was also inspired by such films as Dr. Strangelove.
Milius says the classic line "Charlie don't surf" was inspired by a comment Ariel Sharon made during the Six-Day War, when he went skin diving after capturing enemy territory and announced, "We're eating their fish." He says the line "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" just came to him.
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts acquired the screenplay in 1969 but put it into turnaround. Milius had no desire to direct the film himself and felt that Lucas was the right person for the job. Lucas worked with Milius for four years developing the film, while working on other films, including his script for Star Wars. He approached Apocalypse Now as a black comedy, and intended to shoot it after making THX 1138, with principal photography to start in 1971. Lucas's friend and producer Gary Kurtz traveled to the Philippines, scouting suitable locations. They intended to shoot the film both in the rice fields between Stockton and Sacramento, California, and on-location in South Vietnam, on a $2 million budget, cinéma vérité style, using 16 mm cameras, and real soldiers, while the war was still going on. However, due to the studios' safety concerns and Lucas's involvement with American Graffiti, and later Star Wars, Lucas decided to put the project on hold.
Pre-production
Coppola was drawn to Milius's script, which he described as "a comedy and a terrifying psychological horror story," and acquired the rights. In the spring of 1974, he discussed with friends and co-producers Fred Roos and Gray Frederickson the idea of producing the film. He asked Lucas, then Milius, to direct it, but both were involved with other projects (Lucas in particular had gotten the go-ahead to make Star Wars). Coppola was determined to make the film and pressed ahead himself. He envisioned it as a definitive statement on the nature of modern war, the contrasts between good and evil, and the impact of American culture on the rest of the world. He said he wanted to take the audience "through an unprecedented experience of war and have them react as much as those who had gone through the war."
In 1975, Coppola hoped for cooperation from the United States Army and scouted military locations in Georgia and Florida, but the Army was not interested. While promoting The Godfather Part II in Australia, Coppola and his producers scouted possible locations for Apocalypse Now in Cairns in northern Queensland, as it had jungle resembling Vietnam's, and in Malaysia. He decided to make the film in the Philippines for its access to American military equipment and cheap labor. Roos, who also served as production coordinator, had already made two low-budget films there for Monte Hellman, and had friends and contacts there. Frederickson went to the Philippines and had dinner with President Ferdinand Marcos to formalize support for the production and to allow them to use some of the country's military equipment. Coppola spent the last few months of 1975 revising Milius's script and negotiating with United Artists to secure financing for the production. Milius claimed it would be the "most violent film ever made." According to Frederickson, the budget was estimated between $12 and 14 million. Coppola's American Zoetrope obtained $7.5 million from United Artists for domestic distribution rights and $8 million from international sales, on the assumption that the film would star Marlon Brando, Steve McQueen and Gene Hackman.
Casting
Steve McQueen was Coppola's first choice to play Willard, but McQueen did not want to leave America for three weeks and Coppola was unwilling to pay his $3 million fee. When McQueen dropped out in February 1976, Coppola had to return $5 million of the $21 million he had raised. Al Pacino was also offered the role, but he too did not want to be away that long, and was afraid of falling ill in the jungle as he had done in the Dominican Republic during the shooting of The Godfather Part II. Jack Nicholson, Robert Redford and James Caan were approached to play either Kurtz or Willard. Keith Carradine, Tommy Lee Jones, Nick Nolte, and Frederic Forrest were also considered for Willard. In a 2015 The Hollywood Reporter interview, Clint Eastwood revealed that Coppola offered him the role of Willard, but much like McQueen and Pacino, he did not want to be away from America for a long time. He also revealed that McQueen tried to convince him to play Willard; McQueen wanted to play Kurtz because he would have to work for only two weeks. Coppola offered the lead role of Willard to Robert De Niro, but he declined due to other commitments.
Coppola also offered the role of Colonel Kurtz to Orson Welles and Lee Marvin, both of whom turned it down.
Coppola and Roos had been impressed by Martin Sheen's screen test for Michael in The Godfather and he became the second choice to play Willard, but he had already accepted another project. Harvey Keitel was cast in the role based on his work in Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets. By early 1976, Coppola had persuaded Marlon Brando to play Kurtz, for a fee of $2 million for a month's work on location in September 1976. Brando also received 10% of the gross theatrical rental and 10% of the TV sale rights, earning him around $9 million.
Hackman was set to play Wyatt Khanage, who later became Kilgore, played by Robert Duvall. Dennis Hopper was cast as a war correspondent and observer of Kurtz; when Coppola heard Hopper talking nonstop on location, he remembered putting "the cameras and the Montagnard shirt on him, and the scene where he greets them on the boat." James Caan was the first choice to play Colonel Lucas, but Caan wanted too much money for what was considered a minor part, and Harrison Ford was cast instead.
Before departing for principal photography, Coppola took out an advertisement in the trade press declaring Keitel, Duvall and others as the "first choices" for the film. It also listed other actors who did not appear in the film, including Harry Dean Stanton, Robby Benson and Michael Learned.
Sam Bottoms, Larry Fishburne and Albert Hall all signed seven-year deals, with Coppola including acting training of their choice in their deal. Bottoms was infected with hookworm while filming in the Philippines, and the parasite "wrecked his liver." Robert Englund auditioned for the role of Lance Johnson.
Principal photography
On March 1, 1976, Coppola and his family flew to Manila and rented a large house there for the planned four-month shoot. Sound and photographic equipment had been coming in from California since late 1975. John Ashley assisted with production in the Philippines. The film was due to be released on Coppola's 38th birthday, April 7, 1977.
Shooting began on March 20, 1976. Within a few days, Coppola was unhappy with Harvey Keitel's take on Willard, saying that the actor "found it difficult to play him as a passive onlooker." With Brando not due to film until three months later, as he did not want to work while his children were on school vacation, Keitel left the project in April and quit the seven-year deal he had signed as well. Coppola returned to Los Angeles and replaced Keitel with Martin Sheen, who arrived in the Philippines on April 24. Only four days of reshoots were reportedly required after the change.
Typhoon Olga wrecked 40–80% of the sets at Iba and on May 26, 1976, production was closed down. Dean Tavoularis remembers that it "started raining harder and harder until finally it was literally white outside, and all the trees were bent at forty-five degrees." Some of the crew were stranded in a hotel and the others were in small houses that were immobilized by the storm. The Playboy Playmate set was destroyed, ruining a month's scheduled shooting. Most of the cast and crew returned to the United States for six to eight weeks. Tavoularis and his team stayed on to scout new locations and rebuild the Playmate set in a different place. Also, the production had bodyguards watching constantly at night and one day the entire payroll was stolen. According to Coppola's wife, Eleanor, the film was six weeks behind schedule and $2 million over budget; Coppola filed a $500,000 insurance claim for typhoon damage and took out a loan from United Artists on the condition that if the film did not generate theatrical rentals of over $40 million, he would be liable for the overruns. Despite the increasing costs, Coppola promised the University of the Philippines Film Center 1% of the profits, up to $1 million, for a film study trust fund.
Coppola flew back to the U.S. in June 1976. He read a book about Genghis Khan to get a better handle on the character of Kurtz. When filming commenced in July 1976, Marlon Brando arrived in Manila very overweight and began working with Coppola to rewrite the ending. The director downplayed Brando's weight by dressing him in black, photographing only his face, and having another, taller actor double for him to portray him as an almost mythical character.
After Christmas 1976, Coppola viewed a rough assembly of the footage but still needed to improvise an ending. He returned to the Philippines in early 1977 and resumed filming.
On March 5 of that year, Sheen, then only 36, had a near-fatal heart attack and struggled for a quarter of a mile to reach help. By then the film was so over-budget, Sheen worried that funding would be halted if word about his condition reached investors, and he claimed that he had suffered heat stroke instead. Until he returned to the set on April 19, his brother Joe Estevez filled in for him, being shot from behind so close-ups of Sheen could be shot after he got better. Coppola later admitted that he could no longer tell which scenes were of Joe or Martin. A major sequence in a French plantation cost hundreds of thousands of dollars but was cut from the final film. Rumors began to circulate that Apocalypse Now had several endings, but Richard Beggs, who worked on the sound elements, said, "There were never five endings, but just the one, even if there were differently edited versions." These rumors came from Coppola departing frequently from the original screenplay. Coppola admitted that he had no ending because Brando was too fat to play the scenes as written in the original script. With the help of Dennis Jakob, Coppola decided the ending could be "the classic myth of the murderer who gets up the river, kills the king, and then himself becomes the king – it's the Fisher King, from The Golden Bough." Principal photography ended on May 21, 1977, after 238 days.
Post-production and audio
The budget had doubled to over $25 million, and Coppola's loan from United Artists to fund the overruns had been extended to over $10 million. UA took out a $15 million life insurance policy on Coppola. By June 1977, Coppola had offered his car, house, and The Godfather profits as security to finish the film. When Star Wars became a major hit, Coppola sent a telegram to Lucas asking for money. The release date was pushed back to spring 1978.
Japanese composer Isao Tomita was signed to provide an original score, with Coppola desiring the film's soundtrack to sound like Tomita's electronic adaptation of The Planets by Gustav Holst. Tomita went as far as to accompany the film crew in the Philippines, but label contracts ultimately prevented his involvement. In the summer of 1977, Coppola told Walter Murch that he had four months to assemble the sound. Murch realized that the script had originally been narrated but Coppola abandoned the idea during filming. Murch thought that there was a way to assemble the film without narration but that it would take ten months, and decided to give it another try. He put it back in, recording it all himself. By September, Coppola told his wife that he felt "there is only about a 20% chance can pull the film off." He convinced United Artists executives to delay the premiere from May to October 1978. In January 1978, Herr received a call from Zoetrope, asking him if he could write the film's narration based on his well-received book about Vietnam, Dispatches. He said that the narration already written was "totally useless" and spent a year creating a new set of narration, with Coppola giving him very definite guidelines. Sheen was too busy to record the voice-over narration so Estevez, whose voice was almost identical to his brother's, was called back in to record the narration instead.
Murch had problems trying to make a stereo soundtrack for Apocalypse Now because sound libraries had no stereo recordings of weapons. The sound material brought back from the Philippines was inadequate because the small location crew lacked the time and resources to record jungle sounds and ambient noises. Murch and his crew fabricated the mood of the jungle on the soundtrack. Apocalypse Now used novel sound techniques for a movie, as Murch insisted on recording the most up-to-date gunfire and employed the Dolby Stereo 70 mm Six Track system for the 70 mm release, which used two channels of sound behind the audience as well as three channels from behind the movie screen. The 35 mm release used the new Dolby Stereo optical stereo system, but due to limitations of the technology at the time, the 35 mm release that played in most theaters did not include surround sound. In May 1978, Coppola postponed the opening until spring of 1979. The cost overruns had reached $18 million, for which Coppola was personally liable, but he had retained rights to the picture in perpetuity.
Controversies
A water buffalo was slaughtered with a machete for the climactic scene in a ritual performed by a local Ifugao tribe, which Coppola had previously witnessed with his wife Eleanor (who filmed the ritual later shown in the documentary Hearts of Darkness) and film crew. Although it was an American production subject to American animal cruelty laws, such scenes filmed in the Philippines were not policed or monitored; the American Humane Association gave the film an "unacceptable" rating. Coppola would later say that the animals were part of the production deal.
Real human corpses were bought from a man who turned out to be a grave-robber. The police questioned the film crew, holding their passports, and soldiers took the bodies away. Instead, extras were used to pose as corpses in the film.
During filming, Dennis Hopper and Marlon Brando did not get along, leading Brando to refuse to be on the set at the same time as Hopper.
Release
In April 1979, Coppola screened a "work in progress" for 900 people; it was not well received. That year, he was invited to screen Apocalypse Now at the Cannes Film Festival. United Artists was not keen on showing an unfinished version to so many members of the press. However, since his 1974 film The Conversation had won the Palme d'Or, Coppola agreed to screen Apocalypse Now with the festival only a month away.
The week before Cannes, Coppola arranged three sneak previews of a 139-minute cut in Westwood, Los Angeles on May 11 attended by 2,000 paying customers, some of whom lined up for over 6 hours. Other cuts shown in 1979 ran 150 and 165 minutes. The film was also shown at the White House for Jimmy Carter on May 10. Coppola allowed critics to attend the L.A. screenings and believed they would honor an embargo not to review the work in progress. On May 14, Rona Barrett previewed the film on television on Good Morning America and called it "a disappointing failure." This prompted Variety to believe the embargo had been broken, and it published its review the following day, saying it was "worth the wait," calling it a "brilliant and bizarre film." They also noted that it was the first "70 mm presentation without credits," for which Coppola had obtained permission from the various guilds (Screen Actors Guild, Directors Guild, and Writers Guild of America) and instead provided a printed program with credits. The title appeared scrawled on a wall on a temple in the last third of the film. Daily Variety reported that the first, 8:00 p.m. screening was received with "limited, if enthusiastic, applause."
Cannes screening
At Cannes, Zoetrope technicians worked during the night before the screening to install additional speakers to achieve Murch's 5.1 soundtrack. A three-hour version of Apocalypse Now was screened as a work in progress at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival on Saturday, May 19, 1979 and met with prolonged applause. It was the first work in progress ever shown in competition at the festival. At the subsequent press conference, Coppola criticized the media for releasing premature reviews and for attacking him and the production during their problems filming in the Philippines. He said, "We had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little we went insane," and "My film is not about Vietnam, it is Vietnam." His comments upset newspaper critic Rex Reed, who reportedly stormed out of the conference. Apocalypse Now won the Palme d'Or for best film, along with Volker Schlöndorff's The Tin Drum – a decision reportedly greeted with "some boos and jeers from the audience."
Theatrical release
On August 15, 1979, Apocalypse Now was released in North America in only three theaters equipped to play the Dolby Stereo 70 mm prints with stereo surround sound: the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York City, the Cinerama Dome in Los Angeles and the University Theatre in Toronto. The film, without credits, ran 147 minutes and tickets were $5 (equivalent to a little over $21 now), a new high for L.A.
It ran exclusively in these three locations for four weeks before opening in an additional 12 theaters on October 3, 1979. On October 10, 1979, the 35 mm version, with credits, was released in over 300 theaters.
The film had a $9 million advertising campaign, bringing its total costs to $45 million.
Alternative and varied endings
At the time of the film's release, discussion and rumors circulated about its supposed various endings. Coppola said the original ending was written in haste, where Kurtz convinced Willard to join him and together they repelled the air strike on the compound. Coppola said he never fully agreed with Kurtz and Willard dying in fatalistic explosive intensity, preferring to end the film in a more positive way.
When Coppola originally organized the ending, he considered two significant versions. One had Willard leading Lance by the hand as everyone in Kurtz's base threw down their weapons; Willard then piloted the PBR slowly away from Kurtz's compound, and this final shot was superimposed over the face of a stone idol, which then faded to black. The other version had the base spectacularly blown to bits in an air strike, killing everyone left within it.
The original 1979 70 mm exclusive theatrical release ended with Willard's boat, the stone statue, and the fade to black with no credits, save for '"Copyright 1979 Omni Zoetrope"' at its very end. This mirrored the lack of opening titles and supposedly stemmed from Coppola's original intention to "tour" the film as one would a play: The credits appeared on printed programs provided before the screening began.
There have been, to date, many variations of the end credit sequence, beginning with the 35 mm general release, where Coppola elected to show the credits superimposed over shots of the jungle exploding into flames. The explosions were from the detonations of the sets. Rental prints circulated with this ending, and can be found in the hands of a few collectors. Some versions had the subtitle "A United Artists release," while others had "An Omni Zoetrope release." The network television version of the credits ended with, ".. from MGM/UA Entertainment Company" (as it made its network debut shortly after the merger of MGM and UA). Another variation of the end credits can be seen on both YouTube and as a supplement on the current Lionsgate Blu-ray.
When Coppola later heard that the audiences interpreted this as an air strike called by Willard, he pulled the film from its 35 mm run and added credits on a black screen. The "air strike" footage continued to circulate in repertory theaters well into the 1980s, and was included in the 1980s LaserDisc release. In the DVD commentary, Coppola explains that the images of explosions were not intended as part of the story, but were simply a graphic background he had added for the credits.
Coppola explained he had shot the explosion footage during demolition of the sets, whose destruction and removal were required by the Philippine government. He filmed the demolition with cameras fitted with different film stocks and lenses to capture the explosions at different speeds. He wanted to do something with the dramatic footage and decided to add them to the credits.
Re-release
The film was re-released on August 28, 1987, in six cities, to capitalize on the success of Platoon, Full Metal Jacket, and other Vietnam War movies. New 70 mm prints were shown in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, St. Louis and Cincinnati—cities where the film had done well in 1979. It was given the same kind of release as the exclusive 1979 engagement, with no logo or credits, and audiences were given a printed program.
Reception
Critical response
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Apocalypse Now holds an approval rating of 91% based on 148 reviews, with an average rating of 9.1/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "A voyage to hell where the journey is more satisfying than the destination, Francis Ford Coppola's haunting, hallucinatory Vietnam War epic is cinema at its most audacious and visionary." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 94 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "universal acclaim."
Upon its release, Apocalypse Now received polarized reviews. In his original review, Roger Ebert wrote: "Apocalypse Now achieves greatness not by analyzing our 'experience in Vietnam', but by re-creating, in characters and images, something of that experience." and named it "The best film of 1979." Ebert concluded by writing: "What's great in the film, and what will make it live for many years and speak to many audiences, is what Coppola achieves on the levels Truffaut was discussing: the moments of agony and joy in making cinema. Some of those moments occur at the same time; remember again the helicopter assault and its unsettling juxtaposition of horror and exhilaration. Remember the weird beauty of the massed helicopters lifting above the trees in the long shot, and the insane power of Wagner's music, played loudly during the attack, and you feel what Coppola was getting at: Those moments as common in life as art, when the whole huge grand mystery of the world, so terrible, so beautiful, seems to hang in the balance." Ebert added Coppola's film to his list of The Great Movies, stating: "Apocalypse Now is the best Vietnam film, one of the greatest of all films, because it pushes beyond the others, into the dark places of the soul. It is not about war so much as about how war reveals truths we would be happy never to discover."
In his review for the Los Angeles Times, Charles Champlin wrote: 'as a noble use of the medium and as a tireless expression of national anguish, it towers over everything that has been attempted by an American filmmaker in a very long time.' Other reviews were less positive; Frank Rich, writing for Time, said: 'While much of the footage is breathtaking, Apocalypse Now is emotionally obtuse and intellectually empty.' Vincent Canby argued: 'Mr. Coppola himself describes it as 'operatic', but ... Apocalypse Now is neither a tone poem nor an opera. It's an adventure yarn with delusions of grandeur, a movie that ends — in the all-too-familiar words of the poet Mr. Coppola drags in by the bootstraps — not with a bang, but a whimper.'
Commentators have debated whether Apocalypse Now is an anti-war or pro-war film. Some evidence of the film's anti-war message includes the purposeless brutality of the war, the absence of military leadership, and the imagery of machinery destroying nature. Advocates of a pro-war stance view these same elements as a glorification of war and the assertion of American supremacy. According to Frank Tomasulo, 'the US foisting its culture on Vietnam', including the destruction of a village so that soldiers could surf, affirms the film's pro-war message. Anthony Swofford recounted how his marine platoon watched Apocalypse Now before being sent to Iraq in 1990 to get excited for war. Nidesh Lawtoo illustrates the ambiguity of the film by focusing on the contradictory responses the movie in general – and the "Ride of the Valkyries" scene in particular – triggered in a university classroom. Writing for The Nation, critic Robert Hatch felt the "moral indignation" behind Apocalypse Now was "lost in giantism," saying that the film presented the war as "one bloody huge circus" and that Coppola had "done no more than demonstrate the obvious — that in Vietnam we fought a bad war." According to Coppola, the film may be considered anti-war, but is even more anti-lie: '... the fact that a culture can lie about what's really going on in warfare, that people are being brutalized, tortured, maimed, and killed, and somehow present this as moral is what horrifies me, and perpetuates the possibility of war'. In 2019, however, Coppola told Kevin Perry of The Guardian that he hesitated to call the film anti-war, stating .".. an anti-war film, I always thought, should be like The Burmese Harp – something filled with love and peace and tranquillity and happiness. It shouldn't have sequences of violence that inspire a lust for violence. Apocalypse Now has stirring scenes of helicopters attacking innocent people. That's not anti-war."
In May 2011, a new restored digital print of Apocalypse Now was released in UK cinemas, distributed by Optimum Releasing. Total Film magazine gave the film a five-star review, stating: 'This is the original cut rather than the 2001 'Redux' (be gone, jarring French plantation interlude!), digitally restored to such heights you can, indeed, get a nose full of the napalm.'
Box office
Apocalypse Now performed well at the box office when it opened on August 15, 1979. It initially opened in three theaters in New York City, Toronto, and Hollywood, grossing $322,489 in its first five days. It has grossed over $80 million in the United States and Canada with a worldwide total of over $100 million.
Versions
Apocalypse Now Redux
Main article: Apocalypse Now ReduxIn 2001, Coppola released Apocalypse Now Redux in cinemas and subsequently on DVD. This is an extended version that restores 49 minutes of scenes cut from the original film. Coppola has continued to circulate the original version as well: the two versions are packaged together in the Complete Dossier DVD, released on August 15, 2006, and in the Blu-ray edition released on October 19, 2010.
The longest section of added footage in the Redux version is the "French Plantation" sequence, a chapter involving the de Marais family's rubber plantation, a holdover from the colonization of French Indochina, featuring Coppola's two sons Gian-Carlo and Roman as children of the family. Around the dinner table, a young French child recites a poem by Charles Baudelaire entitled L'albatros. The French family patriarch is not satisfied with the child's recitation. The child is sent away. These scenes were removed from the 1979 cut, which premiered at Cannes. In behind-the-scenes footage in Hearts of Darkness, Coppola expresses his anger, on the set, at the technical limitations of the scenes, the result of shortage of money. At the time of the Redux version, it was possible to digitally enhance the footage to accomplish Coppola's vision. In the scenes, the French family patriarchs argue about the positive side of colonialism in Indochina and denounce the betrayal of the military men in the First Indochina War. Hubert de Marais argues that French politicians sacrificed entire battalions at Điện Biên Phủ, and tells Willard that the US created the Viet Cong (as the Viet Minh) to fend off Japanese invaders.
Other added material includes extra combat footage before Willard meets Kilgore, a scene in which Willard's team steals Kilgore's surfboard (which sheds some light on the hunt for the mangoes), a follow-up scene to the dance of the Playboy Playmates, in which Willard's team finds the Playmates stranded after their helicopter has run out of fuel (trading two barrels of fuel for two hours with the Bunnies), and a scene of Kurtz reading from a Time magazine article about the war, surrounded by Cambodian children.
A deleted scene titled "Monkey Sampan" shows Willard and the PBR crew suspiciously eyeing an approaching sampan juxtaposed to Montagnard villagers joyfully singing "Light My Fire" by The Doors. As the sampan gets closer, Willard realizes there are monkeys on it and no helmsman. Finally, just as the two boats pass, the wind turns the sail and exposes a naked dead Viet Cong (VC) nailed to the sail boom. His body is mutilated and looks as though the man had been flogged and castrated. The singing stops. As they pass on by, Chief notes out loud, "That's comin' from where we goin', Captain." The boat then slowly passes the giant tail of a shot down B-52 bomber as the noise of engines high in the sky is heard. Coppola said that he made up for cutting this scene by having the PBR pass under an aircraft tail in the final cut.
First Assembly
A 289-minute First Assembly circulates as a video bootleg, containing extra material not included in either the original theatrical release or the "redux" version. This cut of the film does not feature Carmine Coppola's score, instead using several Doors tracks.
Apocalypse Now Final Cut
In April 2019, Coppola showed Apocalypse Now Final Cut for the 40th anniversary screening at the Tribeca Film Festival. This new version is Coppola's preferred version of the film and has a runtime of three hours and three minutes, with Coppola having cut 20 minutes of the added material from Redux; the scenes deleted include the second encounter with the Playmates, parts of the plantation sequence, and Kurtz's reading of Time magazine. It is also the first time the film has been restored from the original camera negative at 4K; previous transfers were made from an interpositive. It was released in autumn 2019, along with an extended cut of The Cotton Club. It also had a release in select IMAX theaters on August 15 and 18, 2019, in a collaboration between IMAX and Lionsgate.
Home media
The home media release history of Apocalypse Now is summarized in the following table. Although the dates are for the American publication of the home media editions, releases by publishers in other territories are identical in content and format. Despite filming Apocalypse Now in 2.35:1, the film's cinematographer Vittorio Storraro periodically approved home media releases in his preferred aspect ratio, the 2.00:1 Univisium. This aggressive crop of the original 2.35:1 film negative has been done away with in all releases since Coppola's American Zoetrope reassigned home media rights to Lionsgate Home Entertainment in 2010.
Edition | US Release Date | Publisher | Aspect Ratio | Cut | Runtime | Commentaries | Resolution | Master | Medium |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Final Cut SteelBook Edition | October 19, 2021 | Lionsgate | 2.35:1 | Final Cut | 3h 02m | none | 2160p | 4K | Blu-ray |
40th Anniversary Edition | August 27, 2019 | Lionsgate | 2.35:1 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 2160p | 4K | ||
Redux | 3h 22m | Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | |||||||
Final Cut | 3h 02m | none | |||||||
Triple Feature Edition (with Hearts of Darkness as the third feature) | June 7, 2016 | Lionsgate | 2.35:1 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 1080p | 4K | ||
Redux | 3h 22m | ||||||||
SteelBook Edition | November 24, 2013 | Lionsgate | 2.35:1 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 1080p | |||
Redux | 3h 22m | ||||||||
Full Disclosure Edition | October 19, 2010 | Lionsgate | 2.35:1 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 1080p | 2K | ||
2.35:1 | Redux | 3h 22m | Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | ||||||
#031398123231 | May 18, 2010 | Paramount | 2.0:1 Univisium | Redux | 3h 22m | Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | 480i | DVD | |
The Complete Dossier | August 15, 2006 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | edited from 2001 track | |||||
Redux | 3h 22m | Francis Ford Coppola (2001) | |||||||
Redux Special Edition | November 20, 2001 | Redux | 3h 22m | Francis Ford Coppola | |||||
#0097360962932 | none | 240 lines | VHS | ||||||
Theatrical Special Edition | 1999 | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 480i | DVD | ||||
#LV2306-3WS | April 1, 1997 | 1.90:1 | Theatrical | 425 lines | NTSC | LaserDisc | |||
#LV 2306-2 | December 20, 1991 | 1.33:1 | Theatrical | ||||||
#RCA 00667 | 1982 | 1.33:1 | Theatrical | ||||||
#LV 2306 | 1981 | 1.33:1 | Theatrical | ||||||
#12999 | 1997 | 2.0:1 Univisium | Theatrical | 2h 33m | 240 lines | VHS | |||
#2306 | 1992 | ||||||||
#2306 | 1987 | ||||||||
#BETA 2306A | 1984 | 1.33:1 | 250 lines | Betamax | |||||
#2306A | 1981 | 1.33:1 | 240 lines | VHS | |||||
Assembly Cut | 1979 | (bootleg) | 2.39:1 | Assembly Cut | 4h 39m | none |
Legacy
In contrast to its mixed reviews upon release, today the movie is regarded by many as a masterpiece of the New Hollywood era. Roger Ebert considered it the finest film on the Vietnam War and included it on his list for the 2002 Sight & Sound poll for the greatest movie of all time. In the 2002 Sight & Sound director's poll of the "greatest films of all time," it was ranked No. 19. It is on the American Film Institute's 100 Years...100 Movies list at number 28, but dropped to number 30 on their 10th anniversary list. Kilgore's quotation, "I love the smell of napalm in the morning," written by Milius, was number 12 on the AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Movie Quotes list and was also voted the greatest movie speech of all time in a 2004 poll. In 2006, Writers Guild of America ranked the screenplay, by John Milius and Francis Ford Coppola, the 55th greatest ever. It is number 7 on Empire's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time. Empire re-ranked it at #20 in their 2014 list of The 301 Greatest Movies of All Time, and again at #22 on their 2018 list of The 100 Greatest Movies. It was voted No. 66 on the list of "100 Greatest Films" by the prominent French magazine Cahiers du cinéma in 2008. In 2010, The Guardian named Apocalypse Now "the best action and war film of all time." In 2016, The Hollywood Reporter ranked it 11th among 69 winners of the Palme d'Or. The New York Times included it on its Best 1000 Movies Ever list. Entertainment Weekly ranked it as having one of the "10 Best Surfing Scenes" in cinema.
On December 14, 1981, a day after martial law was enacted in the Soviet-controlled Polish People's Republic, photographer Chris Niedenthal photographed an OT-64 SKOT armored personnel carrier with soldiers of the Polish People's Army standing around it, in front of the Moskwa Cinema [pl] with a banner containing the Polish-language title of the movie, which was Czas apokalipsy (literally: Time of the Apocalypse). The photo became one of the most recognizable symbols of the events during the martial law in Poland between 1981 and 1983.
In 2002, Sight and Sound magazine invited several critics to name the best film of the last 25 years, and Apocalypse Now was named number one. It was also listed as the second-best war film by viewers on Channel 4's 100 Greatest War Films, and was the second-best war movie of all time based on the Movifone list (after Schindler's List) and the IMDb War movie list (after The Longest Day). It is ranked number 1 on Channel 4's 50 Films to See Before You Die. In a 2004 poll of UK film fans, Blockbuster listed Kilgore's eulogy to napalm as the best movie speech. The helicopter attack scene with the Ride of the Valkyries soundtrack was chosen as the most memorable film scene ever by Empire magazine. (The scene is recalled in one of the last acts of the 2012 video game Far Cry 3, when the music is played while the character shoots from a helicopter. It was likewise adapted for the Cat's Eye anime episode "From Runan Island with Love" and the Battle of Italica scene in Gate: Jieitai Kano Chi nite, Kaku Tatakaeri.)
In 2009, the London Film Critics' Circle voted Apocalypse Now the best film of the last 30 years. It was also included in BBC's 2015 list of the 100 greatest American films.
In 2011, actor Charlie Sheen, son of the film's leading actor Martin, started playing clips from the film on his live tour and played the film in its entirety during post-show parties. One of Sheen's films, the 1993 comedy Hot Shots! Part Deux, includes a brief scene where Charlie is riding a boat up a river in Iraq while on a rescue mission and passes Martin, as Captain Willard, going the other way. As they pass, each man shouts to the other "I loved you in Wall Street!," referring to the 1987 film that featured both of them. Additionally, the promotional material for Hot Shots! Part Deux included a mockumentary that aired on HBO titled Hearts of Hot Shots! Part Deux—A Filmmaker's Apology, a parody of the 1991 documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse about the making of Apocalypse Now.
The film is credited with creating the Philippines surfing culture around the town of Baler, where the helicopter attack and surfing sequences were filmed.
On January 25, 2017, Coppola announced that he was seeking funding through Kickstarter for a horror role-playing video game based on Apocalypse Now. It was later canceled by Montgomery Markland, the game's director, as revealed on its official Tumblr page.
The Sympathizer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Vietnamese-American author Viet Thanh Nguyen, features a subplot that Nguyen describes as a critique of Apocalypse Now. He told the New York Times that "Apocalypse Now is an important work of art, but that doesn't mean I'm going to bow down before it. I'm going to fight with it because it fought with me." He said that the film centered on American perspectives of the war rather than Vietnamese experiences. He was especially critical of the scene where all the passengers of a boat were unjustly killed by the traveling party: "People just like me were being slaughtered. I felt violated."
The Seiko 6105 and its subsequent reissues have been nicknamed the "Captain Willard," in reference to its use by the eponymous character.
Awards and honors
- American Film Institute lists
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies – No. 28
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes:
- "I love the smell of napalm in the morning." – No. 12
- "The horror, the horror." – Nominated
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Heroes & Villains:
- Colonel Walter E. Kurtz – Nominated Villain
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) – No. 30
Documentaries
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse (1991) (American Zoetrope/Zaloom Mayfield Productions); Directed by Eleanor Coppola, George Hickenlooper, and Fax Bahr
Apocalypse Now – The Complete Dossier DVD (Paramount Home Entertainment) (2006). Disc 2 extras include:
- The Post Production of Apocalypse Now: Documentary (four featurettes covering the editing, music, and sound of the film through Coppola and his team)
- "A Million Feet of Film: The Editing of Apocalypse Now" (18 minutes). Written and directed by Kim Aubry.
- "The Music of Apocalypse Now" (15 minutes)
- "Heard Any Good Movies Lately? The Sound Design of Apocalypse Now" (15 minutes)
- "The Final Mix" (3 minutes)
Soundtrack
- "The End" – performed by The Doors
- "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" – performed by The Rolling Stones
- "Love Me, And Let Me Love You" – performed by Robert Duvall
- "The Ride of the Valkyries" – performed by The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
- "Let The Good Times Roll" – performed by Shirley and Lee
- "Suzie Q" – performed by Flash Cadillac
- Excerpts from Mnong Gar Music from Vietnam
- Collection Musee de l'homme
- "Surfin' Safari" – performed by the Beach Boys
See also
- Heart of Darkness, Nicolas Roeg's 1993 film adaptation of the Conrad novel.
- List of films considered the best
- List of films featuring hallucinogens
Notes
- However, filmmaker Carroll Ballard claims that Apocalypse Now was his idea in 1967 before Milius had written his screenplay. Ballard had a deal with producer Joel Landon and they tried to get the rights to Conrad's book but were unsuccessful. Lucas acquired the rights but failed to tell Ballard and Landon.
- Tied with Melvyn Douglas for Being There.
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Further reading
- Adair, Gilbert (1981) Vietnam on Film: From The Green Berets to Apocalypse Now. Proteus. ISBN 0-906071-86-0
- Biskind, Peter (1998). Easy Riders, Raging Bulls. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-85708-1.
- Coppola, Eleanor (1979) Notes on the Making of Apocalypse Now. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-87910-150-4
- Cowie, Peter (1990). Coppola. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0-684-19193-8.
- Cowie, Peter (2001). The Apocalypse Now Book. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81046-6.
- Eagan, Daniel (2010). "Apocalypse Now". America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry. New York: Continuum. ISBN 978-1-4411-1647-5. OCLC 676697377 – via Internet Archive.
- Fraser, George MacDonald (1988) The Hollywood History of the World: from One Million Years B.C. to Apocalypse Now. Kobal Collection /Beech Tree Books. ISBN 0-688-07520-7
- French, Karl (1999) Karl French on Apocalypse Now: A Bloomsbury Movie Guide. Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 1-58234-014-5
- Milius, John & Coppola, Francis Ford (2001) Apocalypse Now Redux: An Original Screenplay. Talk Miramax Books/Hyperion ISBN 0-7868-8745-1
- Tosi, Umberto & Glaser, Milton. (1979) Apocalypse Now – Program distributed in connection with the opening of the film. United Artists
- Travers, Steven Coppola's Monster Film: The Making of Apocalypse Now, McFarland 2016, ISBN 978-1-4766-6425-5
External links
- Apocalypse Now at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- Apocalypse Now at Box Office Mojo
- Apocalypse Now at IMDb
- Apocalypse Now at Metacritic
- Apocalypse Now at Rotten Tomatoes
- The strained making of Apocalypse Now at www.independent.co.uk.
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Related |
- 1979 films
- Apocalypse Now
- 1979 drama films
- 1970s English-language films
- 1970s adventure drama films
- 1970s war drama films
- 1970s American films
- American Zoetrope films
- American adventure drama films
- American war epic films
- American surfing films
- American war drama films
- Animal cruelty incidents in film
- Anti-war films about the Vietnam War
- English-language adventure drama films
- Existentialist films
- Films about United States Army Special Forces
- Films about assassinations
- Films about deserters
- Films about the United States Navy
- Films about tigers
- Films based on the Divine Comedy
- Films based on Inferno (Dante)
- Films directed by Francis Ford Coppola
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe winning performance
- Films produced by Francis Ford Coppola
- Films scored by Carmine Coppola
- Films scored by Patrick Gleeson
- Films set in 1969
- Films set in Cambodia
- Films set in Vietnam
- Films shot in the Philippines
- Films that won the Best Sound Mixing Academy Award
- Films whose cinematographer won the Best Cinematography Academy Award
- Films whose director won the Best Direction BAFTA Award
- Films whose director won the Best Director Golden Globe
- Films with screenplays by Francis Ford Coppola
- Films with screenplays by John Milius
- Palme d'Or winners
- United Artists films
- United States National Film Registry films
- Vietnam War films
- War adventure films
- Works based on the Divine Comedy
- Films based on British novels
- Films based on Heart of Darkness
- IMAX films
- English-language war drama films