Yup, Bob, Part III was, shall we say, not a cinematic gem. Having Coppola's untalented daughter playing a pivotal role certainly didn't help. When she got it while in crossfire and succumbed, I thought the audience was going to applaud.
I would find it interesting if Barnabas, when asked about watching the latest chill flicks hitting the theaters, would respond: "I don't like those kinds of movies. I'm into westerns myself."
Oh, your comment about Sofia Coppola is cruel, but quite true!
Actually, I got a bad case of “agita” when I saw that eternally-tanned and unfailingly vacuous pretty-boy, the
seemingly ageless George Hamilton, portraying the great Robert Duvall’s apparent/ersatz replacement as the Corleone family consigliere. Ugh!
There’s a scene in Godfather III, where you see Andy Garcia and Sofia Coppola in an old-fashioned bar on Mulberry Street; it’s not too far from the very good Grotta Azzura (Blue Gritto) Restaurant also on Mulberry
Street. I was in that bar once with my girlfriend, who was working in that part of lower Manhattan. In fact, I
believe that same bar was also used as gangster Johnny Sac’s NYC headquarters on “The Sopranos.” You’d
often see Johnny Sac and Tony Soprano negotiating over their crooked construction site schemes in that tavern.
I like your idea that Barnabas would express a liking for classic Western films. Barnabas would probably pop over to Collinwood, when he knew that TCM was airing “High Noon” or “Rio Bravo.” Although, I think Barnabas might pass on, one of my personal favorites, “Billy the Kid Versus Dracula,” which the great John Carradine (as the Transylvanian count) said that B-the-K vs D, was THE worst film of his long and distinguished acting career.
Bob