01x01 - A Seat at the Table

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Offer". Aired: April 28, 2022 - present.*
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Based on Al Ruddy's experience of making the 1972 film "The Godfather".
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01x01 - A Seat at the Table

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PERSON: [SINGING IN ITALIAN]

[SPIRITED MUSIC]



PERSON: Bellissimo!

Good to see you. Good to see you.

- Hey, Jim.
- Jim, good to see you.

Good to see you.

PERSON: Hey, Mr. Bonnano, Mr. Colombo!

[INDISTINCT CHATTER]

- What are you doing?
- What?

Leave the f*cking cannoli.

JOE: You're a capo
when you really need to be a boss.

We gotta get you
your own seat at the table.

It's the only way
we're gonna make change.

Lucchese, Gambino, those tired fucks,

one of them gotta go.

And you want me to take care of it?

When the time is right.

With you and me in power,
we can do things

the way they should be f*ckin' done.

- DOMINIC: Mr. Colombo.
- PERSON: Whoa.

- Come in, Dominic.
- Yeah.

- PERSON: Come on, let him in.
- Excuse me, excuse me.

DOMINIC: Sorry to interrupt.
I saw you walk by,

- and, uh, I brought these...
- You don't have to do this.

- Look at this. That's beautiful.
- For you and your friends.

DOMINIC: Francesca and I
are so grateful.

Good, good, good.

I'm in a meeting right now.

- Oh, I'm sorry.
- No, no, no.

- God bless you, sir.
- No, I'll see you in a bit.

- God bless you, Mr. Colombo.
- Yeah, yeah.

Excuse me. Excuse me.

- The f*ck is that?
- Oh, he owes.

He, uh... he owns the bakery
over on Grand.

His grandkid's sick,

so I suspended
the interest for six months.

[SPEAKING ITALIAN]

You wanna be a boss,
you better start acting like one.

You're going soft on me?

It sends a wrong message
showing mercy like that.

No, no, no, I told him if he
doesn't pay me in six months,

I'll k*ll his whole family.

I'll gut the kid first
and make the family watch.

That's what I'm talking about.

That's the change we need.

I still don't know
about the seat though.

There's gotta be another way.

Ain't exactly handing 'em out, Joey.

You want that seat?

You gotta take it.

[DRAMATIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC]



[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]



[UPBEAT DRAMATIC MUSIC]







[UPBEAT MUSIC]



- Top of the morning, Bobby.
- Good morning, Mr. Evans.

- Morning, Mr. Evans.
- Hey, babies.



Julie, baby, welcome back.



- Good morning, Mr. Evans.
- Good morning.

- Hey.
- Hey, Bob.

Those rushes looked great last night.

You're doing such a good job.
You keep it up.

- Watch that budget, though.
- Evans!

- Johnny Potatoes!
- Whoo!

- You're looking good, man.
- You like that, huh?

I just came down to tell you.

Hank can't f*cking direct
his way out of a paper bag.

- [CHUCKLES]
- But you, star,

you're knocking it out of the park.



Good morning, Bob.

Well, it should be,
and it would be, Peter,

if I didn't have to watch the rushes

for "Tarzan and the Jungle Boy"
last night.

My God, what a turd.

But the sun is shining.
It's still a good day.

What do we got? Hit me.

Bluhdorn is having trouble
wrapping his head

around Eastwood starring in a musical.

- He wants to talk.
- SHEILA: Neil Simon called.

He says it's gotta be Lemmon,

but Lemmon will only do it
if Matthau's in it,

and he wants , for the picture,

and Bluhdorn says quote,
"Under no circumstances

"are we paying anyone $ ,
to star in anything." Unquote.

He said a few other things.

Don't be scared. What did he say?

He said he's got a fire poker
with your name on it,

if you need a better illustration

of the studio's finances.

Huh.

All right, take a deep breath.
This is what you're gonna do.

Peter, you're gonna send
a copy of Clint's album

"Cowboy Favorites" to Bluhdorn.
That's gonna change his tune.

Now, Sheila, you can tell him...
You tell Charlie Bluhdorn

that he can save his poker
for opening night

because if that film
is anything like the play,

"The Odd Couple"
it's gonna save this studio,

and I'll bend over for him
if it doesn't.

Thank you, Sheila. Peter, you stay.

[SIGHS]

[SUAVE MUSIC]



[INDISTINCT CHATTER]

Hey, Ruddy, I'm not paying you to read.

Those contracts need to be on
my desk by the end of the day.

They were on your desk this morning.

Good.

Ruddy, you're making
the rest of us look bad.

Dave, you're doing a great job of that
all on your own, buddy.

[UPBEAT MUSIC]



Uh, nice car, sir.

You'd be surprised
what a paint job will do.

Or a blow torch.

MITCH: Hey, Ruddy!

Mitch, sorry I'm late, buddy.
Had a hard time finding the place.

After a year in L.A.,
who doesn't know where the Chateau is?

Just try not to impress too many girls
with that shirt tonight, Ruddy.

What? I came straight from work.

Still lost on me what you do.

It's contracts or something, right?

I've told you times.

You really think this
is gonna be the time it sticks?

That's a good point. Let's grab a drink.

♪ [THE KINKS' "ALL DAY
AND ALL OF THE NIGHT"] ♪



Wendy.

SINGER: ♪ I'm not content to ♪
♪ Be with you in the day time ♪



♪ Girl, I want to be with you ♪
♪ All of the time ♪



♪ The only time I feel ♪
♪ All right is by your side ♪

I was wondering where the
beautiful, cool cats had gone.

Here they all are. How's it going?

Darling.

- Yeah, Bob, nice to see you.
- Nice to see you.

Hey, who is that guy?

MITCH: Bob Evans, head of Paramount.

Guy's more connected than God,

and yeah, he's always that tan.

Nikita, you don't want
to miss this bus, baby.

Let's do it. Come on.



Everyone, this is my neighbor, Al Ruddy.

- How are you?
- Hey.

Any friend of Mitch's
is a friend of mine.

Okay.



You sure you're just a TV writer?

I'm in the wrong f*cking business.



MARIO: What am I doing wrong?
Nobody came.

Mario, this is the best thing
you've written.

Six years wasted.

"The Fortunate Pilgrim"
was my mother's story.

Uh, you know, I... [SIGHS]

I thought the world
would identify with it.

Three people came
and... and no one bought a book.

I don't even know what to write anymore.

People perked up listening to
the part about the mafia guy.

Oh, yeah, great.

That was, like, three paragraphs.

Well, did you ever think about writing

a mafia book with more than that?

I spent my childhood
hiding from those gangsters.

I... I... you know, Hell's Kitchen
was chock full of 'em.

So write what you know.

So they can put a b*llet in my head?

Just think about it.

Club, please.

Anthony.

Yeah.

You know, you owe our friend
a thousand dollars.

Yeah, uh, uh, you know,

I... I have, uh, .

Take that.

Oh.

How much do we owe?

You don't wanna know.

I thought this book was the one.

We'd be able to pay 'em back and...

- So what are gonna do, Mario?
- [SIGHS]

Candida wants me
to write about the mafia.

I married you because
you're an artist, not a hack.

Hacks sell books.

They can pay for the education
of their kids.

Hacks don't borrow money from guys
you shouldn't borrow money from.

How much do we owe?

- Five Gs to two bookies.
- [SIGHS]

A few grand to the bank,

not including what I owe my brother.

f*ck art, Mario. Start typing.

You want me to write about the mafia?

Yeah.

How do I tell that story
any differently?

Everybody knows they steal.

They control gambling,
they run whores, unions.

Okay, so maybe it's not
just a book about the mafia.

What do you mean?

Well, the guys you grew up with,

they didn't start out
so different from you.

Immigrants. They eat, they drink,

they love, they cry,

they worry about their kids' futures

just like us.

And they k*ll.

Okay, so maybe we don't k*ll.

But maybe this book

is about finding the reason we would.

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]



♪ [BRENDA DEVLIN'S "I LOVE YOU
MORE THAN ANYTHING"] ♪



Have a beautiful night.

- Hey.
- Hey.

- Hi.
- Hi, guys.

How are you? Nice. Enjoying?

I'm back. I'm back.
Whatever he said, he's lying.

[CHUCKLES]

- MITCH: How we doing?
- BERNIE: I'm good.

Okay, so now you look interesting.

- Are you interesting?
- Depends on the company.

BERNIE: Hmm, that's a good answer.

Who's your friend, Mitch?

Françoise Glazer,
this is my neighbor, Al Ruddy.

Mm. What do you do?

- Programming.
- FRANCOISE: Programming.

What network?

I program computers
for the Rand Corporation.

Still have no idea what that means.

The Rand Corporation?

I'm impressed.

That's defense work.

Secret. It's not top secret.

What about you, what do you do?

She owns the ground
you're sitting on, my friend.

The hotel?

FRANCOISE: You're surprised?

You think a woman can't run a business?

I was raised by a single mother.

She could've run anything.

You see? He doesn't hate his mother

like all you comedy writers.

Come on. Come on.

- Oh, you write comedy too?
- Uh, no.

- You watch "Sgt. Bilko"?
- Yeah, I love "Bilko."

I play Gomez.

You know, I thought you looked familiar.

I'm a hell of a comedy fan.

The way these shows tell their stories,

it's like a formula, and in a good way.

- A formula?
- Think about it.

"Bilko," "McHale's Navy,"
even "My Favorite Martian,"

right, they're
the same cast of characters

in similar situations

with just enough difference
to be interesting.

That's kind of true, Mitch.

If you really wanna upset
the apple cart,

put your cast of characters
where you least expect them

to be in a comedy,
somewhere that isn't safe.

That's how you make it stand out.

MITCH: If it were really that easy,

every Tom, d*ck, and Ruddy would do it.

I didn't mean any offense.

BERNIE: Hey, uh, you seem to have

a hell of an instinct
for all these shows.

I mean, you wanna talk shop sometime?

I could send you some scripts.

You could see how they all lay out.

AL: That'd be great.

But, hey, I'm just a guy
who programs computers.

All evidence to the contrary.

SINGER: ♪ I love you
more than anything ♪

♪ Oh, yeah, mm-hmm ♪

♪ As long as you treat me right ♪



[TYPEWRITER CLICKING]

You found it.

- Oh, boy.
- Mm-hmm.

[BOTH CHUCKLE]

It's not about a g*ng.

It's about a gangster's family.

- Oh.
- Hmm?

The oldest son is a hothead.

The middle son is sweet, but he's weak,

and the younger son is a w*r hero

who wants nothing to do
with the family business.

Okay.

But the Don wants this son,

call him Michael...

- Mm-hmm.
- Hmm?

Wants him to rise above
the family business

and become a... a senator,
you know, someone powerful,

but Michael's destiny
won't let him escape

the power of Don Vito Corleone.

Who's the Don?

He's what Sicilians call

the godfather of gangsters.

- Oh.
- Huh?

He's, uh, the head of the family.

Oh.

And my title.

"The Godfather"? Mm-hmm.

I like it.

- [LAUGHS]
- Okay.

All right, it's not written yet.

[CHUCKLES SOFTLY]

"The Godfather." Hmm.

[TYPEWRITER CLICKING]

So come on. What do you wanna pitch?

We could do rags to riches
or fish out of water.

I mean, Bernie, I don't
even know what a pitch is.

[CHUCKLES] Don't even know
what a pitch is.

Uh, we just go into the network,
tell 'em about our idea.

You know, what it's about,
the characters,

what stories we tell week to week.

That's it. That's the pitch.

Look, all these execs
want to see is that

they can put
a hundred episodes in the can.

Okay, so maybe we go with
what you've hit with, a m*llitary comedy.

Eh, there's already "McHale's Navy,"

"F Troop," "Gomer Pyle."

They're gonna wanna see something new.

"McHale" and "Gomer's"
are peacetime stories.

Nobody's set a m*llitary comedy
during wartime.

Let's do something
about what you know, hmm?

Workplace comedy set
at a defense contractor.

It's not inherently funny.
Trust me, I live it.

Not to you.

[BOTH CHUCKLE]

Hey, you ever seen "Stalag "

- with William Holden?
- Mm-hmm.

American POWs.
It's a Billy Wilder thing.

It's great characters, man.

I mean, it's set up for a comedy.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

No, w*r equals death.
Hey, let's do this.

Let's sell the Rand comedy,
and after that,

we can sell the army comedy, hmm?

[SIGHS]

Ruddy, just relax, okay?
You're making me nervous.

Yeah, well, we f*ck this up,
you go back to making TV.

I go back to Rand
where the soul goes to die.

Goodbye, Miss Taylor.

AL: Holy sh*t. That's Elizabeth Taylor.

[UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC]



Gentleman, Mr. Paley will see you now.



BERNIE: And so these two bachelors
at the Rand Corporation,

they're actually peaceniks.

They're using company computers
to program for peace

instead of w*r.

There's a lot of good stuff in here.

People are gonna love it.

We call it "Modern Warfare."

Mm, interesting idea.

You got anything else?

"Bilko," swastikas. Swastikas, "Bilko."

You think Nazis are funny?

Imagine Bilko as a pilot, right?

He's a colonel,
and he's fighting in the w*r.

[IMITATES MACHINE g*n FIRE]

He gets sh*t down over Germany
and taken prisoner.

Mr. Ruddy, I don't think this is...

Now, our colonel, he knows exactly
how to escape, but he never does.

None of the prisoners do
because he's leading

an allied group inside the camp
to help the resistance.

The camp commandant,
he is a guy named Klink.

Now, he's got a reputation
of being the toughest guy in the SS,

but actually he's a f*cking idiot.

[LAUGHTER]

Yeah, and there's this big fat sergeant,

uh, Sergeant Schultz.

AL: And he's always
walking in on their plans,

but he likes the guys,
they're nice to him,

so he turns a blind eye.

[IN GERMAN ACCENT] I see nothing.

I hear nothing. I know nothing.

There's a French prisoner.
Guy's a gourmet chef,

and he feeds the guard dogs
so that they love the prisoners.

[IN FRENCH ACCENT] Eh, this is for you,

- my little chienne.
- [BARKING]

AL: That's a good boy.
That's a good boy.

[LAUGHTER]

Are there any women in the show?

Oh, yeah, there's a woman,
and not just any woman.

Oh, boys, Helga,
she is an Amazon, right?

I mean, sexy German secretary.

"Oh, Guten Tag, mein little Liebchen!"

Hey, and she might even
have an eye for our colonel.

Yeah, so she's in on all their schemes.

What do you call this thing?

"Hogan's Heroes."

[MARTIAL DRUMBEAT]

Have you pitched this anywhere else?



Don't.

'Cause we're buying it.



CANDIDA: "I'll make him
an offer he can't refuse."

- Great line.
- Yeah.

- It's fun, isn't it?
- It's special, Mario.

The Frank Sinatra,
Johnny Fontane character?

Great.

Maybe Sinatra will play him
in the movie, hmm?

- Should we call Paramount?
- [CHUCKLES]

Mario, just because
they optioned it early,

it doesn't mean it's gonna get made.

Yeah.

CANDIDA: Let's make sure
it gets published first.

They say to me,
you can make "Love Story,"

which we agree,
greatest love story of all time.

But the girl has to live at the end.

Can you f*cking believe that?

Yeah, the death is what makes it work.

- Yes.
- Look at "Romeo and Juliet."

Not the same story if they'd lived.

God, no.

We feel the pain of the loss,
feel the grief.

We feel pity. We... we cry.

I'll make the movie, Bob,
but only if she dies.

You are preaching to the choir, babe.

Look, you make "Love Story,"

and I will give you
total creative control.

- And final cut.
- And a back end that's real.

We got a chance to make a huge hit here.

I only make two decisions, all right?

Hiring you, yes.

Secondly, casting Ali MacGraw.

[SIGHS]

Bob, I don't know if I'm comfortable

with hiring your girlfriend.

One of the best actresses of our time.

Trust me, my friend,
I've seen her up close.

And so should you,
that's all I'm saying.

Sheila, could you send in
our guest, please?

What is this?

BOB: Ali MacGraw, meet Arthur Hiller.

I'm so excited to be working with you.

Me too.

You two are gonna make magic together.

I'll let you get acquainted.

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

ALI: I saw your most recent film.

- I loved it.
- ARTHUR: Thank you so much.

Sheila,

I'm good.

♪ [THE FIVE SATINS'
"IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT"] ♪

PERSON: Lucchese and Gambino
got here about ten minutes ago.



Sinatra's crying to everyone
but the Pope

about this book
that's about to come out:

"The Godfather."

Giving me a f*cking headache.

'Cause there's a character in it

that's supposed to be a real fighetta,

and everyone thinks it's him.

How'd you know that?

I read it somewhere.

[DOOR OPENS]

I just have to use the bathroom.

What have we got here?

He said it was important
to the commission.

SINGER: ♪ I remember ♪

♪ That night in May ♪

♪ The stars were bright above ♪

♪ I'll hope ♪

♪ And I'll pray ♪

♪ To keep ♪

♪ Your precious love ♪

♪ Well, before the light ♪

- ♪ Hold me again ♪
- TOMMY: [SPEAKING ITALIAN]

SINGER: ♪ With all of your might ♪

Sit down, Joe. Have a drink.

You're making me nervous
standing like that.

Sit down, Joe.

I've been offered a seat
at the commission table.

My own family.

Well, nobody told me about that.

Well, it's supposed to be
the last thing you'll ever hear.

Bonanno.

He came to me a while back,

talking about making changes.

That's what he thinks
I'm doing here right now.

But I'm here to tell you
so you can deal with it

the way the commission chooses.

And then you take
Bonanno's seat at the table?

Well, that's not up to me.
That's up to you.

Hey, I'm an ambitious guy,

but not at the price of
my loyalty to what we do here,

to you and the rest of the commission.

I respect whatever you decide.

Good night, gentlemen.

Let's go.

Bonanno, he's gotta go.

GEORGE: You maniacs!

You blew it up!

God damn you!

[AUDIENCE GASPING, MUTTERING]

God damn you all to hell!

Uh, are we moving in?

This.

This is what it's all about.

What, monkeys?

No, the excitement, the thrill.

I mean, did you hear them at the end?

Yes, uh, that... that
was a great ending.

No, no, it's not just about the ending,

it's... it's about the experience of it.

You got people
all watching the same thing,

reacting in real time,
just feeding off each other.

You can't get that experience
in television.

You're just in your living room,
looking at a small f*cking box.

It's just a different game.

Five years of "Hogan's" and you can make
all the money you'd ever need.

Five years of "Hogan's,"
I'm gonna sh**t myself in the face.

- Hmm.
- Yeah.

They showed us the writer's room

- at CBS last week.
- Mm.

It was like an exact
f*cking replica of Rand.

[SOFT JAZZ MUSIC]

It can't just be about the money.

At first, I thought it was, this
whole Hollywood thing, but...

my mother,

she was a tough broad,

and she never showed emotion
ever about anything,

except at the movies.

That was the only time
I ever saw my mother cry.

I mean, you can't put a price
on that experience.

I mean, that's magic, baby.

I need to be in the movies.

So what do you know
about producing film?

What do I know about producing TV?

Good point.

Let's go.

You coming?



Sir.

[UPBEAT MUSIC]



BOB: I'm having a party Saturday night,

and if you're not there,

well, I'm just gonna send
everybody home,

even Jack and Warren.

PERSON: Huh?

Nicholson and Beatty.

Ooh, you're gonna love them.

And, uh, bathing suits are optional.

Barry, what are you doing here?

BARRY: I hate to interrupt
your little soiree,

- but we had a meeting.
- BOB: Oh, relax, Barry.

Have a drink before you have
a heart att*ck, right, girls?

It's : in the morning.

- Coffee, black.
- Give us a minute.

I'm sorry. Every party needs a pooper.

- How you doing, Barry?
- Bob.

Thank you.

I got off the phone with Charlie.
He's livid.

Paramount has fallen back
to eight out of nine.

Let me guess. He's up your ass
about "Paint Your Wagon" overages.

Lee Marvin and Clint Eastwood
should be sh**ting people, not singing!

That's entertainment.

And what's with the "Love Story"?

The girl dies at the end?
Who wants to see that?

It's his studio.

Look, I'm not gonna b*at
around the bush.

We need hits.

You can't live off of
"Rosemary's Baby" forever.

Barry, did you...
Did you read "Love Story"?

Yes.

Why?

Did it move you?

What does that have to do with anything?

The audience needs to be moved, Barry.

That's how you make hit pictures.

Times are changing,
and we need to keep up.

That's why I got the job
in the ivory tower

and you don't.

If you don't string together some hits,

that ivory tower of yours
is going to come crashing down.

Oh, ye of such little faith.

Bottoms up, Barry.

Bob Evans. I'm Al Ruddy.

I wanted to talk to you.
You got a minute?

I'm fairly certain
we don't have a meeting,

but you knew that already, didn't you?

How'd you get on the lot?

- Ain't exactly Fort Knox.
- Fair enough.

What can I do for you, Mr. Ruddy?

It's what I can do for you.

I wanna produce for Paramount.

You told a good story once.

Ballsy of you to walk away
from "Hogan's Heroes."

- So you do know who I am?
- I know who everyone is, kid.

Look, you know what
a producer does, Mr. Ruddy?

They do whatever it takes
to get their movie made.

Now, what makes you think
that you're qualified to do that, huh?

You know, I read
an article in "Variety,"

said that you started out
selling ladies' slacks

and doing bit parts in movies,
but you still figured it out.

Don't... don't... don't call them bit parts

when you're kissing someone's ass.

I work with Jimmy f*cking
Cagney, my friend,

toe-to-toe.

So unknown computer guy

creates CBS's hit comedy about Nazis.

Go figure.

All right. All right.

You do remind me of me,
and I'm a sentimental guy,

and you caught me on a good day.

Let's set a lunch, Mr. Ruddy.

Talk about your future.

AL: What producers have you worked for?

NANCY: You'll be my first.

I've worked in legal for three years

and then saw this job posted.

Well, then, I guess, uh,
we both have a lot to learn.

- [CHUCKLES]
- Thanks.

Thank you. We'll let you know.

I thought he just gave me the job.

Oh, no, sweetie.

That was just his Valium talking.

You are dodging a b*llet here.

You can thank me later. Exit's that way.

Thank you.

All right, bye.

You're Albert Ruddy.

Who are you?

Bettye McCartt.

Bernie Fein sent me.

Bernie.

It's nice to meet you, Bettye, but
I'm sorry. I just hired somebody.

- That little mouse?
- Yeah.

- BETTYE: No.
- Yeah.

No.

Let me take you on a tour.

Come on.

I don't bite.

That spot is hallowed f*cking ground.

You're not even paying attention to it.

Look.

The guard gate?

That is where Gloria Swanson

drove onto the lot
in "Sunset Boulevard."

Because she thought Cecil B. DeMille

wanted to make her version of "Salome."

When all he actually wanted

- was her f*cking car.
- f*cking car.

BETTYE: Oh, you see that door?

That is the secret entrance
where Adolph Zukor,

who's the founder of Paramount,

it's where he used to sneak
his little starlets

into his office.

- Oh.
- Ooh.

It's hallowed ground, man.
Hallowed ground.

Ladies, it's time. Come on, let's go.

BETTYE: Seriously, what's your story?

AL: It's not terribly interesting.

Worked for Rand Corporation
before "Hogan's."

Architect before that.

BETTYE: Those are both steady gigs.

Why'd you walk away?

Because I could, I guess.

So, Bettye, what's your story?

It's not terribly interesting.

I'm divorced, opinionated.

The latter most likely
the cause of the former.

DIRECTOR: Okay,
let's get ready for picture.

- Walk it up.
- I love the movies.

My mom used to take me every Saturday.

Even when she couldn't make the rent.

- Single mother?
- Mm-hmm.

Yeah, me too.

Still go every Saturday?

Yes, I do.

I wouldn't miss it for the world.

How long is your deal here for, Al?

- A year.
- What, really?

That is not long enough
to start from scratch.

We have to find a script
that's been overlooked.

DIRECTOR: Places, everybody!
I want to feel some energy!

Well, then we'd better get started.

Yeah?

Let's watch this take first.

PERSON: Quiet on set!

CANDIDA: "The New York Times'"
d*ck Schaap,

"What Philip Roth did for masturbation,

Puzo does for m*rder."

"The Post," "A searing portrayal

of the mafia underworld."

I'll lay odds that you're gonna
be signing more than books.

[UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC]



AL: Bob, I found something
you're gonna love.

Jesus, Ruddy! Knock.

It's all right, Sheila.

What was the best scene
in "The Great Escape"?

I don't have time for party games.

It's McQueen's motorcycle jump.

Yeah, true. So what?

I found a great script.
It's about motorcycle racers.

And chicks? Yeah, and chicks.

It's called
"Little Fauss and Big Halsy."

- It's perfect for McQueen.
- Oh, forget McQueen.

For Christ's sake, he's making
his own racing movie,

"Le Mans."

Who else you got in mind?

You need a star, kid.

Robert Redford.

Redford? Yeah, great idea.

You get me Redford,

you do it for a million five all-in,

you got yourself a go picture.

Thanks, Bob.

Sure, yeah, yeah.

Evans is messing with you, Al.

Redford will never do this
for a million five all-in.

- How do you know?
- How is it that you don't?

I don't know. I'm new at this.
Work with me here.

Well, if anyone knows
what Redford's up to,

- it'll be Stevie Phillips.
- Who's he?

She is his agent.

You gotta know these things, Al.

Stevie Phillips please.

This is Al Ruddy calling from Paramount

in regards to a project
for Robert Redford.

Yes.

Okay.

Yes, I'll tell him. Thank you.

Stevie says to call back
when you have more than

"Hogan's Heroes" under your belt.

Pass. So we go around her.

That's not how things are done, Al.

I don't give a f*ck how things are done.

Redford's not in town.

He's sh**ting "Butch Cassidy"
outside San Pedro, Mexico.

Find out the most expensive hotel there.

That'll be where Redford's staying.

And then book me a flight.

You are certifiable.

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]



Hey, buddy. I'm looking for Redford.

- And who are you?
- Producer of his next film.

He said he wanted to speak to me.

Okay, just... just wait right there.

DIRECTOR: Action!
Butch and Sundance, go!

[g*nshots]

And cavalry, go!

[g*nshots]

All right. Cut, cut, cut.

All right. Great, all right.

Let's get set up for the next sh*t.

Let's go, people! Let's go.

PERSON: We're burning daylight!

PERSON: So this is the guy?

- Producer of my next film, huh?
- AL: That's right.

- Who the hell are you?
- Al Ruddy with Paramount.

Huh, Paramount.

Okay, so?

So?

It's a great Charles Eastman script.

Motorcycles and chicks.
You're gonna love it.

Well, you didn't come all the
way down here to tell me that.

Yeah, Bob, I did.

Well, you could have called.
Paramount's suing me.

That's why I didn't do
"Rosemary's Baby."

Could've saved you the hassle.

What if I could get you
out of that lawsuit?

You have the authority to do that?

Yeah, I do...

If you do the movie.

Well, first things first,
how about you and I go get drunk later?

You tell me who you are
and why I should work with you.

Great. I'm buying.

No sh*t.

Yeah.

Ruddy.

"Little Faus and Big Hals."

AL: "Fauss and Halsy."

Ah.

Evans is in this for himself,
not for Gulf and Western.

I give you the reins,

and the problems,
they just magically disappear?

Ah, there's my favorite Austrian.

I missed this place. Nice touch, Evans.

- Ask and you shall receive.
- [CHUCKLES]

Been a while since you've
visited the studio, Barry.

BARRY: Well, that's because
I've been in New York

actually making money for the company.

- Can you say the same?
- Play nice, children.

Charlie, you know Ann-Margret, right?

Of course. One of the greats.

Good to see you, Charlie.

- A glass?
- From you? Sure.

BOB: Thank you, honey.

I would love to stay and chat,
but I'm wanted on set.

- I'll see you soon?
- You count on it.

PERSON: This way, Miss Margret.

CHARLIE: [SIGHS]

Evans, you are completely transparent.

Well put.

And I love it! [CHUCKLES]

Cheers. Help yourself, Barry.

Oh, and, uh, lighten up.

Come on, Cheese.

BARRY: Ann-Margret
and two flutes of champagne

is not gonna erase ninth place, Evans.

It's as if every new Paramount picture

comes with its own death rattle.

News flash,
you approved them too, Barry.

SECRETARY: Jack Warner
on line one for Mr. Bluhdorn.

Jesus. Uh...

Put him through.

[PHONE RINGS]Ah, ah, ah.

I don't pick up first.

Jack Warner doesn't wait on the line.

Neither do I.

You wait for Jack Warner.

Everybody does.
He invented this business.

Uh, Paramount, holding for Mr. Warner.

SECRETARY: Hold please.

JACK: Bluhdorn.

Are you there?

Bob Evans, Mr. Warner. How you doing?

I got Charlie here with me.

JACK: Charlie, you own "The Godfather."

You doing anything with it?


- No.
- Yes.

JACK: Well?

We haven't decided.

It's an uncut gem.

Could be a crown jewel.

JACK: I've been making gangster movies

since they were silent.

We know how to make this work, Charlie.

I'll buy it today for a million.

[QUIETLY] Take it.

We'll think about it.

JACK: You do that.

- I won't wait forever.
- [LINE DISCONNECTS]

What does he know that I don't?

He knows that there's
movie gold in that book,

which is why we took
a cheap, early option

on the first pages, $ , ,

and that book has been at
number one for the past year.

Barry, why didn't I know about this?

Yeah. Why, Barry?

Because our last gangster movie

was a sugarless turd.

Yeah, because Kirk Douglas

is a goyish Jew playing an Italian.

We're not gonna make that mistake again.

Charlie, gangster movies are dead.

All right? It's a new world.

"James Bond," "Funny Girl,"

that's what people want to see.

Jack Warner, he offers me
a million, we can get three.

Help cover some losses.

Unless I'm missing something.

Evans, what do you see in this book?

I'll tell you what I see.

I see... money.

This picture can make
Paramount number one, Charlie.

I feel it. I feel it.

My kishkehs are screaming.
That book's all anyone's talking about.

Now, you get the right hands
at the wheel

and this could become
a cultural phenomenon,

the likes we've never seen before,

like "Rosemary's Baby"

but bigger.

A million dollar return
on an investment of fifteen grand?

We're not gonna get a better offer.

[GRUNTS]

It's only a million.

- [CHUCKLES]
- Thank you, Charlie.

The bookstore in Little Italy,
"The Godfather."

weeks at number one.

'Cause of the tourists.

Well, it makes us look stupid.

Like... you know, like a joke.

And that's bad for business.

Sinatra isn't wrong about this one.

[CLINKING GLASS]

We're here tonight to acknowledge

Joseph Anthony Colombo,

capo to the Profaci Family.

In recognition for his loyalty
to the commission,

Joe, you have earned a seat
at the table amongst us.

To the Colombo Family.

May you live a long life
with prosperity.

Salute!

ALL: Salute!

[APPLAUSE]

[DRAMATIC ORCHESTRAL MUSIC]



AL: Some opening weekend.

FRANCOISE: It's the studio.

They didn't spend enough on advertising.
That's all.

It's the movie, not the marketing.

Trust me.

All right. What are you in the mood for?

I'll take you anywhere you want.

Nah, honey, I can't. I gotta get home.

Got a stack of scripts
I need to go through

if I'm gonna find my next project.

- Right now?
- Yeah.

I thought we were going to dinner.

You okay if we get something to go?

If you tell me what's really going on
in that head of yours.

I'm just scared to lose this, producing,

and I've never really felt that before.

Dan Tana's to-go?

[CHUCKLES] Sure.

[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]



His secretary say what Evans
wanted to see me about?

No. But he likes you, Al.

He's probably just checking in
to find out what's next.

My film tanked. What if he fires me?

Then I'm fired too. sh*t! Hey!

Do not get fired.

Yeah?

BOB: Where's the chocolate, man?

I mean, I don't see any chocolate.
It's a chocolate factory, right?

You see where I'm going with this.

Absolutely, it's devoid of chocolate.

Ruddy, pack your bags.
You're outta here.

f*ck.

New York. You got a meeting

with Charlie Bluhdorn
first thing in the morning.

What, you thought you were fired?
That's sweet.

You're not out
of the woods, but, you know.

Okay, yeah. What... whatever you need.

But, uh, why am I doing this?

You've read "The Godfather," right?

"The Godfather"? Sure, who hasn't?

I mean, you've read it.
It's... it's great. I love it.

BOB: Well, you are officially now

Paramount's low budget specialist.

We've been all over town.

No one wants to make this movie
for four million dollars,

so I need you to produce it.

Get going.

Nice.

BOB: And, Ruddy...

Don't f*ck it up.

AL: You get 'em?

I can't believe you told him
you read it.

What else was I gonna say?

You better read fast on the plane.

f*ck, that's big.

[UPBEAT MUSIC]



It's about an American family.

Bluhdorn is Austrian. Make it universal.

"The Godfather" is a Greek tragedy
about an Italian family.

You say the word "tragedy"
to Charlie, and he says,

"The only tragedy of my life
is that I bought Paramount."

Okay, it's a story about immigrants.

Everybody in America
comes from immigrants.

- It's a universal story.
- You're overthinking it.

Bluhdorn is famous for being direct.

He speaks like a telegram.

So just be a telegram.

Thanks.

[JAZZ MUSIC]



Al Ruddy for Charlie Bluhdorn.

This way.

Al Ruddy.



[MUTTERING] Americans.



Crime leads to m*rder under the...



CHARLIE: Holden, you're fired.
Look at the seventh one.

Location, what is that?

Shut up, I don't want
to know what you think!

So you're the genius that Evans wants

to produce the film
that we should not be making?

CHARLIE: You, stay.

Ah.

So tell me, Al Ruddy,

what are you gonna do
with this f*cking book?

What? Is he deaf?

I'm going to make
an ice-blue, terrifying film

about people you love.

That is brilliant!

You, come.

What just happened?

Congratulations.

You're the producer of "The Godfather."



Ice-blue, baby.

BOB: Well, hello to the ice-blue,

terrifying man of the hour.

[CHUCKLES]

Nobody understands what that means,

but he loved it. Well done.

Now, I wanna talk to you about writers.

William Goldman, great.
Waldo Salt, excellent.

Look, Bob, they're great writers,

but we need a fresh perspective.

We need someone
who understands Italians.

I wanna talk to Puzo.

Oh, sweet Jesus.

Puzo's never written a film.

It's an unwritten law in Hollywood
that you never hire the author.

They'll turn in a -page first draft

a year f*cking late.

Yeah, but he's the guy
with the original idea.

It's at least worth a meeting.

Look, I'm gonna talk to him
while I'm here in New York,

and if I think he's the guy,
will you back me?

f*ck no, but it's your call.

BOB: [SIGHS]

Everything all right?

When was the last time
you made love in a pool?

Al, I was born to write this screenplay.

Well, the studio doesn't believe

that an author can adapt his own novel.

Then why are you here?

Because I told him.

I said, "Who knows it better than you?"

Now, look, the movie's in here,
but you gotta carve it away.

Can you do that?

Thank you.

ERIKA: Mario, he asked you a question.

All right, look.

Fresh start.

But I have to be the one to write this.

This is my story.

The Corleones are my family.

Can you deliver a quick draft?

What's quick?

Three months.

[CHUCKLES]

You let me do this,

I'll do it in three days.

Who can argue with that?

Three days. I'm gonna hold you to that.

ERIKA: Hold on, hold on.

I will let you take my husband,

but you must promise me,
Mario has diabetes.

- Oh, Erika, please.
- ERIKA: No. No.

- MARIO: Stop, now, come on.
- ERIKA: Listen.

- You must watch his diet.
- MARIO: Stop, stop.

He eats crap.

He needs to lose weight.

Lock up the food. No pizza.

No ice cream. No ice cream.

No donuts.

You must swear a blood oath to this.

Hon, he's a Jew.

Ooh.

He can't swear a Catholic blood oath.

I volunteer to swear.

Thank you, see?

L'chaim.

[UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC]



So the studio got me
a whole house to write in?

No, I got you the house.
They're just paying for it.

Mr. Ruddy. Nice to see you again.

Good evening, sir.

Your table will be ready
in a few minutes.

Thanks, Marco.

Yeah, it's not a bad night.

What'd I miss? What'd I miss?

- I got a drink.
- MARIO: That's Frank Sinatra.

f*cking Frank Sinatra!

Amazing.
I'm in the same room with Sinatra.

Look, Puzo, Chasen's is not
a celebrity petting zoo, okay?

Now, stay here. I gotta pee.

[LAUGHTER]

MAITRE D': Please, sir, this way.

Sir... sir?

- MARIO: Mr. Sinatra?
- Yeah?

You have given me and... and my family

and my late sainted mother
so much pleasure.

That's very kind of you to say so.

It's fans like you that keep me going.

You know, from... from
one artist to another,

you teach the world about true emotion.

- You're Mario Puzo?
- You know me?

FRANK: Yeah, I know who you are.

You're the ratfink
who wrote that f*cking book

about the degenerate singer.

You know, I... I've been
an admirer of yours

since I was a kid.

Well, I can't choose my fans,

especially ones that make up
a story that insults Italians

and a singer, world-famous,
who's a disgusting pervert

and a faithless friend of criminals.

Johnny Fontane is a fictional character.

You find me one book review
in any language in the world

that does not refer
to the singer Johnny Fontaine

as having been based on Frank Sinatra.

Now, get the f*ck out of my sight

before I have Jilly here
smack some respect into you.

I will not be threatened
by anyone, okay?

Including you, Mr. Sinatra.

Oh, you wanna cross me,
you fat f*ck, huh?

- Hey, hey!
- Huh?

JILLY: Hey! No, no, no, no, no.

- No, not today.
- Hey, come on.

Get out of here, you fat f*ck.

Get the f*ck out of here
before I smack you myself.

Get him the f*ck out of here.

- Sorry, Frank.
- JILLY: Take it easy.

Choke on it.

Sorry about that.

Sorry, folks. Go back to eating.

Evans is f*cking pissed,

and he's got every right to be.

Sinatra and Puzo
are gonna hit the trades.

My greatest achievement
so far as a producer

is that Frank Sinatra is mad at me.

Well, that's more than
most people can say, no?

I f*cked it up, baby.

Mais non.

It was just starting to go well too.

You know what we're gonna do?

We're gonna find our own "Great Escape."

So we're gonna start with breakfast

at Les Deux Magots.

Then we're gonna do
steak frites at Brasserie Lipp.

You like steak frites.

And then we're gonna spend
the afternoon making love.

That's what were gonna do.

Paris, huh?

For one week.

Babe, all of your problems,
I can assure you,

they're still gonna be here
when you get back,

but your head will be clear.

I can't, baby. I gotta stay.

[SIGHS]

Okay.

[JAZZ MUSIC]



AL: f*ck.

Mario, what's going on, man?

I, uh...

I can't do this.

I'm a novelist.

It takes me six years to write.

What happened to Mr. Three Days?

Every time I sit down
to that typewriter,

there's a blank page laughing at me.

I don't know why I did this to myself.

[CHUCKLES] I mean, I'm a...

- I'm a... I'm a failure...
- No, you're not.

At something that
I already made a success.

I don't even know where to begin.

The book starts with a wedding.

The movie probably should too.

Trust yourself and write that scene.

Movie scenes are abbreviations.

They're snapshots.

While the wedding
is going on in the garden,

the bride's father is in
the office handing out favors.

You wanna write it?

AL: It's been weeks, and Puzo
hasn't written a single word.

Evans warned you
about hiring the novelist.

Peter, we couldn't find anybody else.

The agencies won't touch us.
Not for a writer, a director.

Ah, the town wants this project to die

to humiliate Evans for taking
a chance on the Rand guy

who sold his first pitch in the room.

- "Rand guy."
- It's not just you, Ruddy.

Talent is scared of doing
a gangster movie

after the last three bombed.

So how do we fix it?

Francis Ford Coppola. He's brilliant.

He wrote the script for "Patton"

and probably gonna be nominated
for an Oscar.

Now, he might do this,
but he'll want to direct.

Evans will need to be talked into it.

- It's worth taking a sh*t.
- It's a great idea.

Coppola owes Warners money,

and he has a very expensive
setup in San Francisco.

How do you know that?

A girl never reveals her secrets.

You should give him a call.

No. Send Coppola the book.

- Tell him I'm on the way.
- Done.

Did you tell him to come to me?

- It was a good idea.
- Yeah, I got a lot of those.

[UPBEAT MUSIC]

How embarrassing for you.

I... I left you a message not to come.

Uh, I'm passing on "The Godfather."

I got the message,

but I respect you
and what you stand for,

so I came to hear the reason why.

Ah, okay, uh, as an Italian,

I don't want to glorify mafia v*olence.

I agree with you. You're right.

I mean, how do you glorify men
who cut the head off a horse

and put it in a producer's bed?

FRANCIS: [CHUCKLES]
Yes, that producer...

AL: Deserved it.

Yes, he did. It was a hell of a scene.

And Sonny gunned down at a toll booth.

Or Michael seeing
his wife's car bombed in Sicily

after the wedding, I mean, priceless.

Francis, let me be candid.

You're in director jail.

And the only movie I produced,
like your last movie,

didn't exactly set the world on fire.

And in spite of that, here I am,

producer of the hottest novel
in the world,

and I'm begging you to take it on.

You're a true artist.

We need that.

You help Mario Puzo finish this script,

we'll get you back on the floor.

Are you telling me that Bob Evans

is gonna let me direct this film?

It's not up to Bob. It's up to you.

Francis Ford Coppola will
help Puzo finish the script.

Well, he's a great writer, man.
Smart move.

He didn't, um, hustle you
to let him direct?

No, I hustled him.

Look, we need an Italian to do this.

He's got a great vision,

but, uh, he could
tell you about it himself.

Francis.

Hello, Bob.

Hey, Francis. How you been?

He wanted to tell you a little bit about

what he's got in mind
for "The Godfather."

Oh, I'm listening. I'm all ears.

FRANCIS: Okay.

So why is it that "The Godfather"

is selling more copies than the Bible?

You think it's about the drug trade

in New York City? Not at all.

It's a metaphor for American capitalism.

The American dream.

The mythic battle for control, okay?

What is our opening line?

"I believe in America."

How perfect is that?

And what is America to this undertaker?

It's a land of opportunity,

and it's a justice system
that has failed him.

It's Shakespeare. It's Greek.

Biblical. Epic.

Evil versus evil.

Fun.

"The Godfather" is a story about men,

and they come together,
and they form a bond,

and they find justice through loyalty,

not the f*cking law.

But at its core,

this is a story about family.

That's the secret sauce.

That is what has captured the hearts

and minds of the whole world.

You read it and you say,
"That's my family."

That's your family.

For Paramount, it's the Corleone family.

I know how to make this film.

You need an Italian to tell this tale.

Four million all-in

not including prints and ads,
I can do that.

And, uh, he told me
to say that last part.

[CHUCKLES]

[CHUCKLES] So that's it.

That's my pitch.

That's great, Francis.

That is great stuff.

- Cheers.
- BOB: Cheers.

FRANCIS: I'm going to leave
you gentlemen to it.

I'm sure that we will be talking soon.

Thanks, buddy. Good stuff.

Nice f*cking ambush.

Jesus, taking a leaf out of my playbook.

You don't like the rules much,
do you, Ruddy?

I don't know the rules.

[CHUCKLES]

Well, I guess it looks like
you got yourself a director.

Nice work, kiddo.

Nice work.

Tell me, how are
Nate's figures wrong again?

That's two weeks in a row.
Send someone to see...

All right, listen up.

The f*cking book is still number one,

and now they're making a movie of it.

Well, I ain't gonna see it, boss.

The Jews got the JDL.

The Blacks got the NAACP.

But who defends us, the Italians?

- Nobody.
- Nobody.

Well, I'm starting.

Beginning now,

the Italian-American
Civil Rights League.

No gagootz is gonna
push us around anymore.

What the f*ck are those flowers?

It's from Sinatra.

It's says, "Hopefully, we can
make this thing go away."

It's a funeral wreath.

The florist f*cked up.

No, he didn't f*ck up.

Sinatra wants us
to shut the picture down.

Get me Mickey Cohen in Los Angeles.

It's time to send a message.

- It smells delicious, guys.
- Yeah.

It's a beautiful piece of meat, huh?

Mmm.

Where you going with that Kn*fe?

I'm going to cut the fat
so that I can brown it.

Brown it?

My mother never browned anything.

She fried it.

What's the difference?

We have to put this in the picture.

AL: What? A scene about
gangsters arguing over sauce?

No, a scene about family
arguing over sauce.

Huh? Huh?

[LAUGHTER]

Let's open another bottle of wine.

AL: I'll get it.

You boys just keep on talking.

SINGER: ♪ It's the beginning
of a love affair ♪



BETTYE: I had a really lovely time.

- Yeah, that was a lot of fun.
- Yeah.

- [CHUCKLES]
- My God.

They can eat a lot of food though.

[LAUGHS]

I think Puzo's been around
a kitchen once or twice.

Yeah. [LAUGHS]

I know, they're like
this old married couple.

An old married couple that
needs to start turning in pages.

[g*nsh*t]

SINGER: ♪ You said no strings ♪
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