Sicily Part III:
An Offer We Couldn’t Refuse
The ride had also been
promoted as a tour. We anticipated a
guide, with expectations high for one who spoke English. Optimistically, we grabbed the
headphones. Once underway, it became
clear we were absent a guide, and the audio system was as dead as the wheezing transmission
portended. I wondered if the guide,
aware of the odds of survival, had called in sick! The reality of the situation meant we had no
soothing voice to muffle the bus’s death knells.
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Novelist Mario Puzo |
We were en route to mafia
country and to haunts made famous by the Corleone
family, most notably its patriarch, Don Vito Corleone, portrayed by Marlon
Brando, in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather trilogy, adopted from
Mario Puzo's 1969 novel by the same name.
Puzo, an Italian-American journalist and novelist, created a cultural
force that reshaped American cinema, redefined portrayals of Italian-Americans,
and tapped into universal themes of power, loyalty, and family. At its core lay a careful balance of
respect—and the even steeper consequences of disrespect.
Italians admire The Godfather for its cinematic
artistry, but many stop short of fully embracing it. To them, it reinforces mafia stereotypes and
falls far short of their broader national identity as Italians. Coppola,
aware of these sensitivities, always maintained that his film was never a portrayal of Italy, but depicted
Italian-American family life and immigrant struggle for identity.
And while clearly lacking the
lyrical heights of Shakespearian prose,
the Godfather Trilogy has gifted the world with indelible lines
that even Italy-based Italians recognize:
“Sleep with the fishes” (refers to a violent watery end that mirrors a
line in Homer’s Iliad “Lie there! Make
your bed with the fishes now.”)
“Leave the gun, take the cannoli” (a moment not written as a
joke but lands as dark comedy because of what it reveals about the characters,
the culture, and the priorities of the moment)
“I’m gonna make him an offer he can’t refuse” (mafia example of politeness
and brutality first proclaimed here as a threat)
“Keep your friends close, but your enemies
closer" (a line misattributed to Sun Tsu in The Art of War and
Machiavelli in The Prince)
Puzo
chose “Corleone” as Vito’s cognome (surname) after a real
Sicilian town known for
producing several infamous mafia figures. The fictional character Don Vito is a
composite of several real-life mob bosses, especially Frank Costello, with
elements of Joe Profaci and Carlo Gambino added to the mix..1 But the town, deemed too modern, fell short of
Coppola’s vision. Savoca, by contrast,
fit the bill—and remarkably still does.
It looks much the same today beginning with the iconic bend in the road
as Michael Corleone, the Don’s son, arrives to court Apollonia. This bend is where our lumbering bus thankfully
halted, and we hopped off.
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Movie's 1946Alfa Romeo Model 6C 500 |
Unlike Michael, we did not arrive in an Alfa—not Alpha the Greek letter, but an acronym for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili, and a distinctly Italian noun. It only adds to the movie’s cultural exploration. The deliberate choice of this vintage vehicle is likely symbolic: something significant in Sicilian culture, something local Sicilians would recognize as belonging to someone important, someone associated with status and worthy of respect. There is subtle meaning everywhere.
The
tragic car‑bomb scene which follows is also a
transformative moment. You don’t realize
it when you jump in surprise at Apollonia’s sudden and 
Alfa Romeo Car Double Explodes
violent death behind the wheel. Only later, thinking back on events, does it become
apparent that this was also the moment that destroyed Michael’s last chance to
maintain his own innocence. With
her death, his Sicilian exile ends, and remakes
him into the ruthless Don he becomes.
But the Alfa was not why we were in Savoca. That honor belonged to Bar Vitelli and beyond it, farther uphill, to the Chiesa di San Nicolò (Church of Saint Nicholas) also referred to as Santa Lucia where Michael and Apollonia marry. The church remains deeply woven into Savoca’s village life, its
fame inseparable from that cinematic union.It
was an arduous uphill climb past the bar and beyond toward the church. We padded along until our legs began to protest the assault. Even absent step-counting technology, it
didn’t take many strides for me to realize I needed to join a fitness rehabilitation
program. Confronted by the reality of
the moment, added to by the reveal of the fortress looking church still higher above the village in search of
closeness to God, if only by elevation alone, we surrendered to reality and hired
an ape (ah-pay). This three‑wheeled, Vespa‑born contrivance ferried
the four of us heavenward, weaving past a steady stream of tenacious Godfather
pilgrims tackling the ascent on foot.
There
was a small cover charge to enter the church. Quickly out of coins, I hesitated, but the serious-looking
attendant in white shirt 
Cameo Tribute to the Movie
and open black vest, evoking the film’s bodyguards but
mercifully absent a shotgun, waved us in anyway. I took it as an act of mercy befitting of the
setting, but in Sicily you never know, for especially here, customs and respect
run deep. Inside, the church felt almost monastic in
its simplicity, free of the gilded excess typical of Italian sanctuaries.
What remained was deeply rooted intimacy
in authentic harmony with centuries‑old Sicilian village life, precisely
what Coppola apparently sought and what
still lingers there today. In one corner, movie memorabilia quietly
claims a space: a looping video of Michael and Apollonia’s wedding, the couple
receiving blessings, their exit from the church. Nearby, the actual chairs they used, the
kneeling pillows, and the priest’s tattered garments were displayed with a kind
of humble pride. It was as though the
village was curating its own cameo in cinematic 
Blessing at the Church Door with Michael's
Shotgun-Toting Guards Beside Them
history. A thought, more a mischievous question
emerged: Had San Nicola, thanks to the
movie, become a fashionable venue for the modern criminal underworld? Did it have sufficient notoriety to command their
respect, perhaps even tempt them to host a daughter’s wedding there? It would certainly entail a climb, yet with
zero parking, it would mean a windfall for our ape driver.
When we emerged, our driver had returned, likely fresh from shuttling another batch of wide‑eyed arrivals. Unlike the film, where solemn vows
dissolve into a jubilant, communal celebration, we had no marching band escorting a festive procession from San Nicola through Savoca’s narrow streets. That celebratory scene, where cinema seamlessly blurs with real life, unfolds outside Bar Vitelli, our next destination, and conveniently close to our bus. This is where Michael and Apollonia dance, where villagers join in, where the movie breathes with the oneness of the people with their village.The front of the bar no longer spills openly into the street as it does on screen. Whatever boundary once separated the road from the doorway in the postwar 1940s portrayal has been replaced by a canopy roof with sidewalls accented with heavy vegetation, forming a modest courtyard. To the left of the bar’s entrance from the courtyard, an Itala Pilsen sign still hangs, though I doubt it’s the original, which already looked ancient in the film. You know you’ve arrived for in bold black strokes “Bar Vitelli” placards the stone arch entryway. A conversation with a sort of capo-like head waiter revealed
that Coppola himself supposedly scrawled it there. Today, this small act of graffiti, now treated as sacred text, looks far too precise to have been scribbled by hand. Its tidy air of precision dulled the mood of this cinematic sanctuary I’d imagined.It is here that Michael, flanked by two shotgun-toting bodyguards and seated at a table by the entrance, apologizes for his men’s earlier verbal slights and asks the bar’s owner, Fabrizio Vitelli, a question that changes everything: “Come si chiama tua figlia?” (What is the name of your daughter?). Learning her name, and apparently still in the throes of love-at-first-sight, he then asks Fabrizio for permission to court her.
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"Come si chiama tua Figlia?" |
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The Courtship Begins |
Those scenes
immortalized Bar Vitelli, and with the arrival of
every busload of Godfather film addicts, likely distinguishes it as the
highest-grossing business in town, far eclipsing the take at the church’s door. In keeping with the spirit of “When in Rome …,”
we did our part lingering over drinks in the busy courtyard until, too soon,
time to “hop-on” arrived.
Our waiting bus emitted a soft death-rattle wheeze, as if trying to gather the
strength for one more trip. Against
reason and absent any practical alternative, we entertained hope that with any
luck it might carry us back to Taormina, even at a sluggish, though safe
crawl. Privately, I prayed that our
recent pilgrimage and mountaintop intimacy with divinity might compensate for
any perceived disrespect caused by my empty pockets and see us safely back to
Taormina. Maybe I watch to many movies,
but with the mafia, it’s all about respect.
Fingers crossed, we boarded and buckled
in.
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A Typical Roadside Autogrill |
The following morning, we
departed Taormina with Antonio, once
again on his motorbike, kindly leading the way to the highway and our next
destination, Cefalù. We avoided Messina entirely,
turned inland instead and skirted Mount Etna along SS120. It was just after 1 p.m. when we arrived
after briefly hesitating at a rather large AutoGrill, what might be thought of
as a rest stop on steroids. Here, much like its American counterparts, in addition to the often urgent
need to synchronize bowels with rest stops and the ability to refuel your vehicle, you can also
refuel yourself on a hot meal free of the ubiquitous hamburger. After all, we are in Italy, where a daily dose
of pasta is mandatory. 
Far Better Than Fast Food, But
After All, This is Italy!
Some miles past the AutoGrill, nearing Cefalù, I thought to check for my wallet but couldn’t find it. It was one of those alarming adrenaline surge
moments that, after a stint of bobbing and bouncing about behind the wheel, sent
me swerving to the roadside, leaping out of the car, and patting my pockets. It was not as disquieting as thinking you’ve
lost a child in a mall, but on that order.
I could only imagine the consequences from the avalanche of problems its
loss would trigger, second
only to the nightmare of a lost passport that I
always fear when away. I must have
looked deranged to passing motorists as I twisted and turned while slapping my
pockets as though trying to extinguish flames.
When that failed, I emptied every pocket and was finally rewarded to
find my wallet pressed neatly against my phone’s screen. While it was there all the time, my prayer to
St Anthony (helper in recovering lost things) or possibly that visit to The
Godfather church had done the trick, or at the very least, prevented me from
being struck by a passing vehicle. Oh,
the pleasure of finding something feared lost!
Apparently, it was exactly where I’d placed it, though out of place, not
where it should have been, much like the physics of dropping something and not
understanding how what you dropped got all the way to where you found it. Crisis averted and lesson noted, the remainder
of the jaunt continued uneventful, now with my vigilance peaked.
Dominating La Rocca Rising Behind Cefalù
The
need for vigilance resurfaced almost
immediately. ZTL stands for Zona a
Traffico Limitato and should never be missed or ignored. If ever you see these three letters,
especially when illuminated like a neon sign and red (not green), pay close
attention. These zones restrict unauthorized
vehicles during certain hours. Unfortunately,
one glowing red marked the street in the city center, Via Giacomo Matteotti,
where our Cefalù AirB&B, Dolce Vita Appartamento, was located. Not being residents or hotel guests, we were
unauthorized. Unsanctioned entry is
automatically determined by unforgiving cameras with tickets to follow. On an earlier trip, we’d learned this lesson the
expensive way, well after memories had faded, when a fine arrived a year following
our return. Surprised, but not willing
to risk an outstanding traffic violation that might catch up with me on some
future return, I paid the 100€ plus fine without protest.
We were fortunate this time. The restricted area abutted a large intersection. That, and a police officer monitoring traffic gave us permission to enter just far enough to unload. We hadn’t rehearsed the maneuver, but instinct kicked in, and we unloaded our belongings quickly, like a crew at an Indy 500 pit-stop. While I drove off to find legal parking along the shore, my Indy team transferred our
worldly goods into the apartment that would be home for the next three days.And just like that, Cefalù revealed itself—another Sicilian paradise, poised to leave its fingerprints on our hearts. Looking back, we arrived in Savoca as tourists chasing glimpses of movie locations. But it delivered more than a double feature. It offered insight into respect and its consequences. The Godfather was never solely about the mafia; it was about how small decisions echo, how innocence erodes, and how power demands payment, sometimes immediately, sometimes violently, sometimes years later by mail. Our rattling bus, my empty pockets at the church door, the missing wallet, the glowing red ZTL sign―just a few consequences of travel―all were gentle reminders that in Sicily, nothing exists in isolation. Our travels had made us a little more aware, aware of our movements, what was expected, and how closely fiction and real-life sometime travel together on the same roads, at times uphill. We’d arrived in Cefalù, another instance of Sicilian lifestyle, changed, hopefully just enough to notice. To this point, we found that stops in Augusta, Ortigia, and Taormina made us “offers we couldn’t refuse.” Now Sicily simply watched to see whether we’d refuse the ones we’d make ourselves. With Sicily Part IV ahead, we’d likely find out.
From That Rogue Tourist,
Paolo
1.
Vito Corleone ,https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vito_Corleone











