Intro Across The Godfather Trilogy, Michael Corleone undergoes one of cinema’s most tragic and complex character arcs — from idealistic war hero to ruthless mafia don, and ultimately to a broken, haunted man. In The Godfather, Michael begins as an outsider to the Corleone family's criminal empire, a decorated Marine who insists he is "not like them." But after an assassination attempt on his father, Vito Corleone, and the murder of his brother Sonny, Michael steps into the violent world he once rejected. He kills Sollozzo (rival and a drug business owner) and McCluskey (corrupt police officer) to protect his father, flees to Sicily where he marries and loses Apollonia, and eventually returns to the U.S. to assume control of the family, ruthlessly eliminating all enemies in a baptism of blood, including his brother-in-law Carlo and rival heads of the Five Families, thus completing his transformation. In The Godfather Part II, Michael is now the Don, presiding over a vast criminal empire from Nevada. He becomes increasingly paranoid, isolated, and consumed by power, ordering hits on those closest to him, including his brother Fredo, who he discovers betrayed him. He also loses his wife Kay after she reveals she aborted their son to prevent another Corleone heir, solidifying his emotional and moral decay. By the end, Michael is victorious but alone, having destroyed his family. In The Godfather Part III, an aging Michael seeks redemption and legitimacy for his empire through business and charity, particularly by attempting to buy influence through the Vatican Bank. However, he is pulled back into a world of betrayal, assassination, and corruption. His efforts to atone are shattered when his daughter Mary is killed in an assassination attempt meant for him, pushing him into complete ruin. The trilogy ends with Michael dying alone in Sicily — old, frail, and forgotten — a man who once ruled everything, now reduced to nothing, paying the final price for a lifetime of sins.
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19/07/2025