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Published: Tuesday, 07 January 2025 at 17:37 PM


In 1972, the composer Nino Rota received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score for his work on The Godfather. No surprise to anyone, surely, as Rota’s music for The Godfather score to that iconic film is one of the most recognizable and celebrated film scores in history.

The score plays a pivotal role in creating that haunting, nostalgic, and emotionally rich atmosphere that pervades The Godfather and makes it such an iconic landmark of world cinema. Rota’s compositions seamlessly blend themes of family, love, betrayal, and the brutal reality of organized crime.

Given all this, The Godfather was surely a shoo-in for the Best Original Score medal thay year. But it didn’t win. What went wrong?

Why was the Godfather score disqualified from the Oscars?

Nino Rota’s music for The Godfather was deemed ineligible for the award for Best Original Score because it was revealed that part of the film’s famous ‘love theme’ had already been used in Rota’s score for the 1958 Italian comedy film, Fortunella. For that reason, the score was not deemed ‘original’: it was previously existing material, despite being performed in a different style.

See what you think. Here’s the Fortunella theme, coming in at around 0:55: