Francis Ford Coppola won his first Oscar in 1971 for writing "Patton," but he was not involved with the film's production and it came as a surprise when he first learned that it had been made. Coppola wrote the script for the movie in 1963, based on two books, Omar Bradley's "A Soldier's Story" and Ladislas Farago's "Patton: Ordeal and Triumph." The latter was a biography of U.S. World War II General George S. Patton which had been published that year. It was not until several years later, however, that the script would make it through development and become a movie starring George C. Scott.
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The post Francis Ford Coppola Found His Patton Script Was Used in the Most Unusual Way appeared first on /Film.
By that...
The post Francis Ford Coppola Found His Patton Script Was Used in the Most Unusual Way appeared first on /Film.
- 3/28/2022
- by Joshua Meyer
- Slash Film
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