The Last Don (miniseries)

Last updated

The Last Don
The Last Don 1997.jpg
Genre Crime drama
Based on The Last Don
by Mario Puzo
Teleplay by Joyce Eliason
Directed by Graeme Clifford
Starring
Narrated byDanny Aiello
Theme music composer Angelo Badalamenti
Composer Roger Bellon
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes3
Production
Executive producers
ProducerJames T. Davis
CinematographyGordon C. Lonsdale
Editors
  • Tod Feuerman
  • Kimberly Ray
Running time90 minutes
Production companyKonigsberg/Sanitsky Company
Original release
Network CBS
ReleaseMay 11 (1997-05-11) 
May 14, 1997 (1997-05-14)
Related
The Last Don II

The Last Don, also known as Mario Puzo's The Last Don, is a 1997 American crime drama television miniseries directed by Graeme Clifford and written by Joyce Eliason, based on the 1996 novel The Last Don by Mario Puzo. It aired on CBS in three parts, on May 11, 13 and 14, 1997. [1] [2] [3] [4] It was followed by a sequel the next year, The Last Don II . [5] It follows a fictional Mafia crime family, the Clericuzios, and their multigenerational struggle to hold onto power.

Contents

Cast and characters

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
1Part I Graeme Clifford Joyce Eliason May 11, 1997 (1997-05-11)
In 1964, the only daughter of Mafia Don Domenico Clericuzio, Rose Marie, wishes to marry Jimmy Santadio, the son of the Don Domenico's rival Don Santadio. Rose Marie's brother Silvio agrees to speak to their father on their behalf, but he is ambushed and killed by Jimmy's brothers. At Silvio's funeral, Jimmy swears that he and Don Santadio had no foreknowledge of the attack. After finding out that Rose Marie is pregnant, Don Domenico consents to their marriage on the condition that the only family member that will be present for Rose Marie will be his nephew and top enforcer, Joseph "Pippi" De Lena. The wedding is held at the Santadio mansion, but that night, Pippi and Rose Marie's brothers massacre the Santadios, including Jimmy. Rose Marie is spared but her mental health is destroyed. She is sent to Sicily, but is brought back in time to give birth to her son, Dante, in America. Pippi is sent to Las Vegas to take over the Santadio's shares in a casino, the Xanadu, where he meets the owner, Alfred Gronevelt. While there, he also marries Nalene Jessup, a showgirl. They have a son, Croccifixio, called Cross. Cross and Dante are baptized together in a ceremony at the Clericuzio compound in Quogue, New York. Don Domenico, displeased with Pippi's choice in wife, tells him he will stay in Las Vegas to manage the family's affairs there permanently. Don Domenico also announces to the gathered Dons his family's retirement from all criminal enterprises except for gambling. Ten years later, after Pippi is implicated in a murder, he and Nalene divorce, with her taking their daughter Claudia and Pippi taking Cross. Meanwhile, Dante begins developing violent tendencies at a young age after Rose Marie tells him the truth about his father's death.
2Part IIGraeme CliffordJoyce EliasonMay 13, 1997 (1997-05-13)
Now an adult in the 1990s, Cross is mentored by his father to eventually take his father's place in the family. Cross makes his bones by killing a man who murdered the daughter of Clericuzio ally Senator Walter Wavven. He is set to participate in the murder of Virginio Ballazzo, a former ally turned government informant, but he refuses due to past friendship with the Ballazzo family. Dante is chosen for the job in his place. During the murder, Pippi becomes concerned that Dante behaves recklessly and enjoys killing. After, Pippi is sent to Sicily until the investigation dies down and Cross takes over his duties. While Pippi is gone, Cross is mentored by Gronevelt, who bequeaths Cross his controlling share in the Xanadu before he dies. Nalene dies of cancer with her children by her side. When Cross goes to Sicily to bring back his father, he speaks on behalf of hunted Sicilian mafioso Lia Vazzi, who Pippi agrees to bring back to America under the Clericuzio's protection. Claudia goes to her brother for help after her client, actress Athena Aquitane is intimidated by her estranged husband Boz Skannet into backing out of a lead role in a film, Messalina. Cross and Vazzi kill Skannet, and Cross begins a relationship with Athena, meeting her daughter, Bethany, who is institutionalized due to her autism. Meanwhile, Dante behavior becomes more erratic, and the Clericuzios cover up a murder he commits. An unknown assailant kills Pippi while he is on his way to meet his fiancée.
3Part IIIGraeme CliffordJoyce EliasonMay 14, 1997 (1997-05-14)
After Pippi's funeral, Don Domenico and his sons tell Cross the truth about the events of the Santadio war. Cross distrusts the Clericuzios and investigates the truth about his father's death. After finding out that Dante killed his father, Cross goes to Lia Vazzi for help planning his revenge. Using the production wrap-up party for Messalina as cover, Cross lures Dante to Las Vegas. After murdering Dante and his police accomplice, Jim Losey, they are called to the Clericuzio compound. Cross bargains with the Clericuzios, having to give up his shares in the Xanadu in return for only being exiled as punishment for Dante's murder. Cross then decides to live with Athena and her daughter in Paris.

Reception

The series received mixed to negative reviews from critics. As another adaptation of a mafia novel by Mario Puzo, The Last Don received unfavorable comparisons to The Godfather film series. [9] [10] John J. O'Conner of the New York Times stated that the series was too willing to reuse aspects from The Godfather, calling it "too familiar." [11] Ray Richmond of Variety had mixed feelings on the series, describing it as "a pretty decent trash wallow, if an overlong and often preposterous one," though he praised the performances of Joe Mantegna as mafia hitman Pippi De Lena. [2] Scott D. Pierce of the Deseret News was more favorable, stating that "the story is intriguing, the cast is good (for the most part) and - if you have a strong stomach for violence and blood - it's relatively involving entertainment." [9] Hal Boedeker of the Orlando Sentinel was very unfavorable, saying that the series "drags on for six numbing hours, dwells on unappealing mob figures and contains ludicrous performances." [12] Jeffrey Goldberg of Slate called the series "derivative," stating that the writer and director "have taken every element of fantasy in Puzo’s fable and made it literal, and they manage, quite successfully, to telegraph each Puzo twist about two hours before it is set to occur." [13]

Awards and nominations

The series received three nominations at the 49th Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Miniseries, [14] Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Special for Joe Mantegna as Pippi De Lena [15] and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special Kirstie Alley as Rose Marie. [16] The series also received a nomination at for Best Performance in a TV Movie / Pilot / Mini-Series: Supporting Young Actor at the 19th Youth in Film Awards for Tim Redwine as young Cross. [17]

The Last Don was also nominated for a TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries and Specials. [18]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mario Puzo</span> American author, screenwriter, and journalist (1920–1999)

Mario Francis Puzo was an American author and screenwriter. He wrote crime novels about the Italian-American Mafia and Sicilian Mafia, most notably The Godfather (1969), which he later co-adapted into a film trilogy directed by Francis Ford Coppola. He received the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for the first film in 1972 and for Part II in 1974. Puzo also wrote the original screenplay for the 1978 Superman film and its 1980 sequel. His final novel, The Family, was released posthumously in 2001.

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References

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  3. Fallow, Michael (February 25, 1998). "Last Don first off". The Southland Times . p. 27.
  4. Goldberg, Jeffrey (July 29, 1996). "Puzo Knows: into human nature, his life of crime and his huge new mafia novel". New York Magazine . Archived from the original on January 3, 2024. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
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  8. "The Advocate". Here. May 13, 1997.
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  15. "Nominees / Winners 1997". Television Academy. Archived from the original on January 3, 2024. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
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  18. "The Last Don Awards". TVGEEK. Retrieved January 7, 2024.