He is rather certain that it is, at least.
Al Pacino, one of the greatest movie stars of all time, is seated in a hotel suite in Beverly Hills, appearing shocked that he has been passed over for this honor.
He reflects, “I don’t hang with people who’d ask me that, but I’m not convinced.”
“I don’t remember anybody asking me that.”
As his character Michael Corleone famously stated in The Godfather, “it’s not personal” if you are Al Pacino’s godchild and he has forgotten.
Pacino has been reflecting on his life a lot lately because, at eighty-four, the actor of movies like Dog.
Sonny Boy, the name his mother gave him, is the title of the memoirs that Heat and the Irishman wrote this afternoon.
He says that becoming a father for the fourth time last year at the age of 83 to a 16-month-old boy named Roman was “part of the reason” he wanted to write down his life.
The unmarried Pacino is co-parenting with Roman’s mother, the film producer Noor Alfallah, although they are no longer together. But based on his statements, the majority of his daily activities are restricted to online communication.
Pacino adds of Roman, “He does text me from time to time.”
“Every action he takes is genuine. I find everything he does fascinating. Thus, we converse. I use a harmonica to play.