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El Padrino, Parte 1 ends not with a victory but with a death. Michael Corleone has secured the family’s future, but he has lost his soul, his brother (Sonny), his wife (Apollonia), and his own humanity. The final image—the door closing in Kay’s face—is the door to the prison of power. Don Vito, for all his flaws, ruled with a sense of community and earned respect. Michael rules with fear and cold calculation.

The Baptism of Blood: Power, Patriarchy, and the Corrupted Soul in El Padrino, Parte 1

Don Vito Corleone (Marlon Brando) is neither a mere thug nor a romanticized hero. He is a feudal lord operating within a modern capitalist society. His power rests on three pillars: personal honor, strategic violence, and a network of personal obligations (the omertà ). When he refuses to participate in the narcotics trade, he does so on pragmatic and moral grounds (“It will make us careless”). This refusal triggers the war with Virgil Sollozzo and the Tattaglia family.

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