Francis Ford Coppola on Thursday premiered his self-financed opus âMegalopolisâ at the Cannes Film Festival, unveiling a wildly ambitious passion project the 85-year-old director has been pondering for decades.
Reviews ranged from âa folly of gargantuan proportions” to âthe craziest thing I’ve ever seen.â But most assuredly, once again, Coppola had everyone in Cannes talking.
No debut this year was awaited with more curiosity in Cannes than âMegalopolis,â which Coppola poured $120 million of his own money into after selling off a portion of his wine estate. Not unlike Coppolaâs âApocalypse Nowâ some 45 years ago, âMegalopolisâ arrived trailed by rumors of production turmoil and doubt over its potential appeal.
What Coppola unveiled defies easy categorization. Itâs a fable set in a futuristic New York about an architect (Adam Driver) who has a grand vision of a more harmonious metropolis, and whose considerable talents include the ability to start and stop time. Though âMegalopolisâ is set in a near-future, itâs fashioned as a Roman epic. Driverâs character is named Cesar and the filmâs New York includes a modern Coliseum.
The cast includes Aubrey Plaza as an ambitious TV journalist named Wow Platinum, Giancarlo Esposito as the mayor, Laurence Fishburne as Cesarâs driver (and the filmâs narrator) and Shia LaBeouf as an unpleasant cousin named Claudio.
Coppola, wearing a straw hat and holding a cane, walked the Cannes carpet Thursday, often clinging to the arm of his granddaughter, Romy Coppola Mars, while the soundtrack to âThe Godfatherâ played over festival loudspeakers.
After the screening, the Cannes audience stood in a lengthy ovation for Coppola and the film. The director eventually took the microphone to emphasize his movie’s ultimate meaning.
âWe are one human family and that’s who we should pledge our allegiance to,â Coppola told the crowd. He added that Esperanza is âthe most beautiful word in the English languageâ because it means hope.
Many reviews were blisteringly bad. Peter Bradshaw for The Guardian called it âmegabloated and megaboring.â Tim Grierson for Screen Daily called it a âdisasterâ âstymied by arbitrary plotting and numbing excess.â Kevin Maher for the Times of London wrote that it’s a âhead-wrecking abomination.â Critic Jessica Kiang said âMegalopolisâ âis a folly of such gargantuan proportions itâs like observing the actual fall of Rome.â
But some critics responded with admiration for the film’s ambition. With fondness, New York Magazine’s Bilge Ebiri said the film âmight be the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.â David Ehrlich for IndieWire praised a âcreatively unbound approachâ that âmay not have resulted in a surplus of dramatically coherent scenes, but it undergirds the entire movie with a looseness that makes it almost impossible to look away.â
âIs it a distancing work of hubris, a gigantic folly, or a bold experiment, an imaginative bid to capture our chaotic contemporary reality, both political and social, via the kind of large-canvas, high-concept storytelling thatâs seldom attempted anymore?â wrote David Rooney for The Hollywood Reporter. “The truth is itâs all those things.”
âMegalopolisâ is dedicated to Eleanor Coppola, the directorâs wife who died last month.
Coppola is seeking a distributor for âMegalopolis.â Ahead of its premiere, the film was acquired for some European territories. Richard Gelfond, IMAXâs chief executive, said âMegalopolisâ â which Coppola believes is best viewed on IMAX â will play globally on the companyâs large-format screens.
In numerous places in âMegalopolis,â Coppola, who once penned the book âLive Cinema and its Techniques,â experimentally pushes against filmmaking convention. At a screening Thursday, Jason Schwartzman emerged mid-film, walked across the stage to a microphone and posed a question to Driverâs character on the screen above.
Several weeks ahead of Cannes, Coppola privately screened âMegalopolisâ in Los Angeles. Word quickly filtered out that many were befuddled by the experimental film they had just watched. “There are zero commercial prospects and good for him,â one attendee told Puck.