Coppola doesn't have an ending, and it's brilliant.
A cinematic masterpiece and we're just giving it away!
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 27, 2001 -- Those who enjoyed "Apocalypse Now" will be glad to know that director Francis Ford Coppola plans to screen his landmark film this May at the Cannes Film Festival. The film promises to be bigger, better and more disturbing than ever. Coppola has added nearly an hour of footage to the new version of the 1979 war epic. In a statement Coppola said that the new version is three hours and seventeen minutes long, and does not re-use scenes left out of the 1979 release. Instead it was re-edited using original material. Coppola calls the new version of the film "a more disturbing, sometimes funnier and more romantic film, whose historical perspective has become more forceful." It's also 53 minutes longer than the original.Inspired by the Joseph Conrad's ``Heart of Darkness,'' the film stars Martin Sheen as a special agent sent into the Cambodian
The new director's cut of Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 war drama Apocalypse Now, renamed Apocalypse Now Redux, is attracting sell-out crowds at virtually all the 19 theaters in which it is being shown in the U.S. and Canada.
The clock is ticking down. There are only a few more weeks to catch up on Hollywood's end-of-the-world flicks before life as we know it goes to ... well, you know. Don't worry about whether you're prepared for armageddon, though. We've done the research and stocked the shelter with enough apocalyptic flicks to see anyone through a nuclear winter. So grab your sunscreen, head for the hills and remember the remote. It's time for the final countdown: 20. "The Omega Man" — Imagine your worst nightmare about the end of the world, and Charlton Heston probably suffers it in this adaptation of Richard Matheson's "I Am Legend." He's the last guy on Earth, and as luck would have it, there are zombies spawned from germ warfare trying to tear his guts out. 19. "The Seventh Sign" — Forget Ah-nuld in "End of Days." The true biblical blood curdler is this mid-'80s parabl