Francis Ford Coppola is finding the razzle dazzle in his multiple 2025 Razzie Award nominations.
The director penned a blistering statement decrying the industry's focus on box office and playing it safe: "I chose to NOT follow the gutless rules laid down by an industry terrified of risk..."
The director is sticking to his guns even though the movie was nominated for Worst Picture and Worst Director.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
The Razzies dubbed the film “WTF: The Movie” and called it “an incoherent $120 million mess from the fabled director of ‘The Godfather.’” Jon Voight won for his supporting role in the movie as Hamilton Crassus III — a tie with his performances in three other films.
The court ruled against the outlet, which argued that the director's lawsuit should be dismissed because it's intended to chill free speech.
Francis Ford Coppola spoke out on Instagram after he won the award for worst director at the 2024 Razzie Awards for his film, Megalopolis.
The legendary Detroit-born filmmaker will present a screening of his 2024 film 'Megalopolis' at the Dearborn museum.
When you do find an architect on screen, the job is typically ancillary to the plot (in Death Wish, for example, Charles Bronson is an architect, not that it matters) or there to signal a character’s bourgeois desirability, the architect being artistically inclined and a respected professional (as played by Wesley Snipes in Jungle Feve r).
Francis Ford Coppola is taking his 2025 Worst Director Razzies win in stride. The Oscar winner, 85, was given the title at the notorious award show for his 2024 sci-fi drama “Megalopolis,” which starred Adam Driver, Aubrey Plaza, Jon Voight, and Shia LaBeouf.
The five-time Oscar recipient Francis Ford Coppola calls out Hollywood over its corporatization after winning Razzie.
Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis will not be receiving any awards at the Oscars this weekend, but Coppola is taking his bows anyway, in an Instagram post graciously accepting the movie’s nominations and awards from the 2025 Razzie Awards.
In a statement, Coppola said he was "thrilled" over the "distinctive honor" bestowed upon his film, which flopped at the box office and was largely panned by critics. (EW's Maureen Lee Lenker called the feature "bloated" and "unforgivably dull.")