Francis Ford Coppola Auctions Luxury Watches After Self-Financed Film Flop
Legendary director sells seven rare timepieces to offset losses from his epic sci-fi film “Megalopolis”
At age eighty-six, acclaimed filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola is taking the extraordinary step of auctioning parts of his personal watch collection in response to the financial shortfall from his self-funded project Megalopolis.
The film, on which he reportedly invested over one hundred million dollars of his own funds, has so far taken in approximately fourteen million dollars globally.
In an upcoming December auction hosted by Phillips, Coppola will offer seven high-end timepieces, including a custom-designed one-of-a-kind watch created in collaboration with Swiss horologist F.P. Journe, expected to fetch around one million dollars.
Other pieces in the lot comprise rare models from brands such as Patek Philippe, Blancpain, IWC and Breguet, with estimated values ranging from three thousand to two hundred forty thousand dollars.
Coppola previously sold two of his vineyards in order to raise funds for Megalopolis, and has now described the current sale of watches as necessary “to keep the ship afloat.” He remains adamant, however, that Megalopolis must be shown on the big screen and has resisted streaming rights as a short-term fix.
He looks back on his earlier gamble with Apocalypse Now—self-financed and ultimately profitable—with the hope that his latest epic may also recoup value over time.
Industry watchers note that this public liquidation underscores the risks that even celebrated auteurs face when using personal capital in a shifting film-finance landscape.
Coppola’s creative ambition remains undimmed as he pursues a new adaptation of The Glimpses of the Moon, yet the immediate financial realities have driven him back to tangible assets.
The December auction represents not only a high-profile sale of collectible watches, but a poignant chapter in the career of one of cinema’s most enduring figures.
Though the sale is primarily a financial measure, it also reflects Coppola’s unorthodox approach to filmmaking—one defined by autonomy, invention and a willingness to wager everything on the art.
Whether Megalopolis ultimately achieves long-term cultural or commercial redemption remains uncertain, but Coppola’s decision to transform his horological collection into liquidity speaks clearly to both his resilience and the high stakes of independent film-making in the twenty-first century.