At the end of Godfather II which was sometime in December of '74, we were having a post-mortem meeting at Zoetrope, which was, 'Well, that was interesting. That worked, how could we have made this better', and just an evaluation of all of the work that had gone on over the last six months. And at one point Francis [Ford Coppola] said, 'You know, I'm tired. On every film I make it's as if I have to reach down into my guts, my personal life, pull out my guts, hack away at them in full view of the audience, then stitch them together and stuff them back inside.' 'And for just once', he said, 'I'd like to make a simple film, maybe an action film. Has lots of action in it, and to have three bankable and compliant stars that would do what I want. And I can sit in the director's chair like ordinary directors do and say: bring on the helicopters, action, and cut, and go home at night and not worry about the film.' Then he said, 'I think I'll make Apocalypse Now.' And that was the start in early 1975 of his decision to make Apocalypse Now, which ironically given the history of the film was originally conceived as a simple film, an action film set somewhere in the world in a jungle environment yet to be determined with three bankable stars. The film eventually came out in 1979, four plus years later. And a tremendous amount of angst and trouble, probably more than any other film that Francis made. So it's 'watch out for what you wish for', I guess.