logo
The inside story of Apocalypse Now: ‘Martin Sheen refused to work with corpses'

The inside story of Apocalypse Now: ‘Martin Sheen refused to work with corpses'

Times29-06-2025
In May 1979 Francis Ford Coppola took Apocalypse Now to the Cannes Film Festival. It wasn't finished, despite two years of postproduction, as the director of The Godfather struggled to carve a film from his chaotic 238-day shoot and more than a million feet of footage. His hope was that the 139-minute work-in-progress print would at least extinguish reports that his transposition of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness from the 19th-century Congo to the Vietnam War was an overblown mess.
In fact it won the Palme d'Or. At the press conference, Coppola told the world's media, 'My film is not about Vietnam. It is Vietnam,' speaking both to the film's scale and his ego. 'We had access to too much money, too much equipment and, little by little, we went insane.'
Twelve years later Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse, a documentary directed by Fax Bahr and George Hickenlooper, premiered at Cannes to rave reviews. Assembled from 16mm footage shot by Coppola's wife, Eleanor, their astonishing chronicle captured all the behind-the-scenes drama as Captain Willard (Martin Sheen) journeyed upriver to assassinate the rogue Special Forces officer Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando).
There were the set-destroying typhoons; the leading man Harvey Keitel being let go a week into filming; his replacement, Martin Sheen, suffering a near-fatal heart attack; the Filipino army recalling its loaned helicopters to fight a communist insurgency; and the horror (the horror!) of Brando, who was pocketing $1 million a week, arriving overweight and underprepared for the film's final scenes.
'It was extraordinary,' Bahr says of that initial Cannes reception. Sitting in his Los Angeles home, the man who went on to create the US comedy series MadTV (based on the satirical magazine Mad) exudes the benevolent air of someone who still can't quite believe that he managed to corral the chaos of Apocalypse Now — or, indeed, was allowed to. Next month a restored print of his documentary will get a cinema release, before coming to Blu-ray.
Bahr had never made a film when he contacted the Coppolas in 1989, on hearing of Eleanor's unseen reels. 'They said, 'Sure, the [80 hours of] footage is just sitting in a vault.' We looked at it and thought, 'This is gold.' So we put together an eight-minute reel, and sold it based on that. They shipped all the footage down. It was just a bunch of boxes. Chaotic. And there was this shoebox of audio tapes with dates on them — Ellie taping Francis at night, in utter despair. How he was failing, how terrible the film was. Right then I knew what the heart of the movie was.'
Bahr's breakthrough was to introduce a metatextual narrative articulating Coppola's Kurtz-like journey into darkness. ('My greatest fear is making a really shitty, pompous film on an important subject!' he can be heard raving. 'I will get an F. I'm thinking of shooting myself.') To Coppola's credit, he rarely interfered, allowing for a warts-and-all portrait of his obsessive behaviour. With one exception.
Bahr smiles ruefully. 'I did an interview with Martin Sheen and he talked about when he first came to the Kurtz compound, and there were all the dead bodies strewn around, and he said, 'This looks very realistic.' And the art director said, 'Yeah, we got them from the medical school.' And [Sheen] flipped out and said, 'No! I will not do this!'' The corpses were removed, replaced by made-up extras. 'Francis had put the crew in a state of mind where everything could go. That was his aesthetic — everyone was supposed to go to this extreme place that Kurtz goes.' Even so, the Coppolas vetoed this part of Sheen's interview from Hearts of Darkness.
On set for stretches of the shoot were Francis and Eleanor's three children, Gian-Carlo (who died in a boating accident in 1986, aged 22), Roman and Sofia. Roman was ten when filming began, and recalls it primarily as an adventure. The costume department made him a Patrol Boat, River (PBR) uniform, and the make-up team covered him in fake scars and wounds. Most thrilling of all was witnessing the famous airstrike, as helicopters blasting Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries gratuitously firebomb a Vietnamese village. 'I remember the explosions, the helicopters flying through the air,' Roman tells me. 'It was a very sensual, exciting time for a kid to be in that setting.'
As for his father putting up his personal assets as collateral when the film's budget spiralled from $12 million to $25 million, Roman seems every bit as unfazed as his mother is in Hearts of Darkness. 'She was a very thoughtful and in-tune person,' he says. 'She was clearly supportive of my dad and recognised that he was an artist making some striking, original work — work that needed to go through these steps of uncertainty and difficulty to get to the other side. You know, my dad has always been a dynamic person, taking on adventures — as recently, with Megalopolis, [which demonstrated] a similar instinct to just follow his passions. Our family always supports that. I think that's the beauty of a life in art: you're an explorer, an adventurer.' Megalopolis was dedicated to Eleanor, who died, aged 87, in April last year.
There are clear parallels between Apocalypse Now and Megalopolis. Premiering at last year's Cannes Film Festival, Coppola's first movie for 13 years was self-funded to the tune of $120 million; he had sold off a portion of his wine-making business to finance an idea he had been wrestling with since the early 1980s. Just as Apocalypse Now riffed on Conrad (with elements of The Odyssey, The Divine Comedy and the poetry of TS Eliot thrown in), so Megalopolis drew on Roman history with side helpings of Shakespeare and Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead. Apocalypse Now reflected on American interventionism; Megalopolis drew comparisons between contemporary US politics and the collapse of the Roman republic.
'Yeah, I do see the parallels,' says Bahr, who found much to admire in Coppola's more recent epic. 'I felt it was what Francis always saw himself as — which was a master creator, not just a film-maker, but touching on architecture and societal issues. I think he was playing with what was always his dream for Zoetrope [the San Francisco-based studio Coppola co-founded in 1969, which aimed to democratise film-making]. He always bucked the Hollywood system because it was so restrictive.'
If Megalopolis and Apocalypse Now were huge gambles, Bahr had to take some of his own to bring Hearts of Darkness to the screen. In 1990 he wangled his way on to the set of the Mob comedy The Freshman, with the sole purpose of asking Brando to grant him an interview.
'They'd finished shooting for the day and Brando was on his way to his trailer,' he says with a grin. 'I chased him down. He looked at me like, 'Who's this asshole?' I gave him my whole spiel and said, 'I would love to interview you.' He said, 'Kid, I do my shit and I go home.' Then he walked into his trailer and shut the door.'Hearts of Darkness is in cinemas from Jul 4; the collector's edition Blu-ray is released on Jul 28 Do you have a favourite moment from Apocalypse Now? Let us know in the comments below.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Shrouds review — a sex scene so pompous it made me howl
The Shrouds review — a sex scene so pompous it made me howl

Times

time5 days ago

  • Times

The Shrouds review — a sex scene so pompous it made me howl

David Cronenberg certainly can't be accused of playing it safe in his ninth decade. The new film from the 82-year-old Canadian body-horror maestro (The Fly, Crash) stars Vincent Cassel as Karsh, the owner of GraveTech, a Toronto company that lets you watch your dead loved ones decay via in-coffin CCTV that sends images to a screen on the tombstone. • Read more film reviews, guides about what to watch and interviews Karsh is doing just that with his departed wife, Becca, portrayed in dream sequences by Diane Kruger, who also plays Becca's sister, Terry, and voices Karsh's flirtatious AI assistant. Guy Pearce looks faintly embarrassed as Terry's ex-husband, Maury, a sweaty conspiracy theorist. The idea of digitising grief is intriguing but Cronenberg drives it into what can only be termed a dead end. After the Noughties revival of Eastern Promises and A History of Violence, recent films such as Maps to the Stars have been more dubious, and this one, which premiered last year at the Cannes Film Festival, also leaves a strange taste in the mouth. It's full of gorgeous rich people, handsome interiors, narrative red herrings and half-hearted paranoia about artificial intelligence, biotech unscrupulousness and Chinese corporate espionage. Yet you worry that its main purpose is to put Cassel's hilariously self-satisfied Karsh into bed with as many naked women as possible and get poor Kruger to say things like, 'You'd better f*** me, quick.' One of their sex scenes together, with him commentating pompously throughout, is a mini-masterpiece of unintentional hilarity.★★☆☆☆15, 120minIn cinemas Times+ members can enjoy two-for-one cinema tickets at Everyman each Wednesday. Visit to find out more. Which films have you enjoyed at the cinema recently? Let us know in the comments and follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews

Crypto Fight Night brings blockchain to the boxing ring
Crypto Fight Night brings blockchain to the boxing ring

Coin Geek

time5 days ago

  • Coin Geek

Crypto Fight Night brings blockchain to the boxing ring

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... Blockchain and combat sports aren't an obvious pairing — but at Crypto Fight Night ONCHAIN® , they proved to be a knockout combination. title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen=""> The high-energy event, held as part of Philippine Blockchain Week 2025, pulled in not just fight fans, but an audience of Web3 developers, founders, venture capitalists (VCs), and enthusiasts eager to experience a different kind of industry gathering. Far from the typical drinks-and-deals networking scene, Crypto Fight Night fused the raw intensity of amateur boxing with the fast-paced energy of the blockchain community. The result? An unconventional but effective environment for building connections—and curiosity. 'I'm surprised because this is the first time that a crypto company held a boxing event,' said three-time world champion boxer John Riel Casimero, who was ringside to show support. 'As a three-time world champion, I just want to show my support to the blockchain community and to all the athletes fighting here tonight.' Claire Celdran exclusive interview with Crypto Fight Night's special guests: former three-division world champion John Riel Casimero and the first Filipina MMA world champion Denice Zamboanga. Hear their thoughts about the event coming soon on Casimero wasn't the only sports figure intrigued by the event's potential. MMA fighter Denice Zamboanga sees the crossover as an opportunity to raise awareness for both industries. 'A lot of people don't know much about combat sports, so this technology, this event, will help us to know more about the combat sports,' she said. 'Also, from the side of the technology, we can also know more about the blockchain and technologies.' For organizers, that intersection—between adrenaline-fueled spectacle and real-world conversations—was intentional. 'We want to create an event that is exciting for people to go to,' explained Jason Dominique, CEO of ONCHAIN®, the Web3 infrastructure company behind the event. 'And then on the side of that, in between the fights, it's an opportunity for people to connect, share experiences, and possibly do deals with people they didn't think they could meet.' According to Dominique, the goal is to evolve beyond the repetitive, transactional nature of typical blockchain conferences. 'Doing the fight night falls back into providing more than just networking opportunities,' he added. 'It's really trying to create entertainment and bring people together—more than just, you know, come for the drinks and the food, which I think can become quite redundant.' While the punches may have been the headline act, the bigger story lies in how events like these reshape Web3 community building, turn casual spectators into curious stakeholders, and spark conversations that extend well beyond the ring. If Crypto Fight Night ONCHAIN® is any indication, the future of Web3 gatherings may look less like boardrooms and more like boxing rings. Watch | Philippine Blockchain Week 2025: Web3 innovation goes from hype to use case

Hearts of Darkness: A Film-Maker's Apocalypse review – Francis Ford Coppola and the mother of all meltdowns
Hearts of Darkness: A Film-Maker's Apocalypse review – Francis Ford Coppola and the mother of all meltdowns

The Guardian

time5 days ago

  • The Guardian

Hearts of Darkness: A Film-Maker's Apocalypse review – Francis Ford Coppola and the mother of all meltdowns

The greatest ever making-of documentary is now on re-release: the terrifying story of how Francis Ford Coppola's Vietnam war masterpiece Apocalypse Now got made – even scarier than Les Blank's Burden of Dreams, about the making of Werner Herzog's Fitzcarraldo. The time has come to acknowledge Eleanor Coppola's magnificent achievement here as first among equals of the credited directors in shooting the original location footage (later interspersed with interviews by Fax Bahr and George Hickenlooper), getting the stunningly intimate audio tapes of her husband Francis's meltdown moments and, of course, in unassumingly keeping the family together while it was all going on. With his personal and financial capital very high after The Conversation and the Godfather films, Coppola put up his own money and mortgaged property to make this stunningly audacious and toweringly mad version of Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness from a script by John Milius; it is transplanted from 19th-century Belgian Congo where a rogue ivory trader has gone native in the dark interior, to south-east Asia during the Vietnam war where a brilliant US army officer is now reportedly being worshipped as a god among the Indigenous peoples and must have his command terminated 'with extreme prejudice'. Marlon Brando had a whispery voiced cameo as the reclusive demi-deity, Martin Sheen was the troubled Captain Willard tasked with taking Kurtz down and Robert Duvall is the psychotically gung-ho Lt Col Kilgore, who leads a helicopter assault. Haemorrhaging money and going insanely over-schedule, Coppola shot his film in the Philippines during burning heat, humidity and monsoons and borrowed army helicopters and pilots from President Ferdinand Marcos, only to find that on many occasions – especially during the legendary Ride of the Valkyries attack scene – filming had to halt as the Filipino military would ask for their helicopters back so they could suppress a communist insurgency. In fact, Coppola found himself reproducing reality on a 1:1 scale. As he said in his Cannes press conference, which opens the documentary: 'The film is not about Vietnam; it is Vietnam, it's what it was really like.' Well, bravura auteur rhetoric is an accepted Cannes press conference tradition. The film was arguably just what Vietnam was like for the Americans – though nobody actually died and perhaps it is time to re-state something about Vietnam that gets lost for later generations: a considerable proportion of US soldiers were drafted. The agony was there from the beginning. Coppola originally cast Harvey Keitel as Willard but didn't like what he was doing and fired him on pretty much the first day – a traumatic and legally fraught event that can't be talked about too clearly in the documentary. Sheen, the replacement, was a heavy drinker and smoker whose 'breakdown' scene in his seedy Saigon hotel room was a dangerous, booze-fuelled improvisation. It was a personal primal scream, which contributed so much to his stress that he had a near-fatal heart attack, almost scuppering the entire production. The documentary's most gripping moment is Coppola yelling at someone on the phone not to talk about Sheen's heart attack in case the resulting gossip causes his financial backers to lose their nerve. Sam Bottoms, playing one of Willard's crew, talks cheerfully about doing speed and LSD during filming; he can't have been the only one. And all the time Coppola was suppressing intense anxiety that he was making a mediocre, pretentious movie. Like Conrad, he wanted to satirise the hubris and grotesque vanity of the west's imperial ambitions – and there is something else as well. Willard comes to understand that in killing Kurtz, he is not interrupting or thwarting his occult ritual; he is in fact participating in it, and completing it. Perhaps Coppola came to believe something similar, that he was having his own epiphany-slash-nervous-breakdown in the jungle. It wasn't quite an apocalypse for him, although he arguably never made anything as good again. As it is, it might have been good to have had Coppola and Milius discuss that title: it sounds like a demand, coming from someone who won't wait for apocalypse a moment longer. It might be prescriptive and absurd, but as with the film itself, you wind up believing in it. Hearts of Darkness: A Film-Maker's Apocalypse is in UK and Irish cinemas from 4 July, and on UHD and Blu-ray from 28 July.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store