The Godfather trilogy: Power, Succession and the price of control
The Godfather Trilogy: Power, Succession, and the Price of Control Few cinematic works have penetrated the collective understanding of power as deeply as The Godfather trilogy. Francis Ford Coppola’s saga is not merely a crime epic; it is a meditation on authority, legacy, deception, and the quiet corrosion of the soul that accompanies the pursuit of absolute control. What elevates The Godfather beyond gangster mythology is its psychological realism: power is never simply seized—it is inherited, defended, negotiated, and ultimately paid for. At the center of this tragic architecture stands Michael Corleone, the reluctant prince who becomes a sovereign tyrant in all but name. Around him orbit allies, traitors, institutions, and—crucially—antagonists who mirror his ambitions but fail where he succeeds. Figures such as Don Emilio Barzini, Hyman Roth, and even institutional powers like the Vatican and Immobiliare serve as cautionary counterpoints. Their errors illuminate Mich...