kid. >> mr. coppola: i hated it. >> anthony: of course. >> mr. coppola: but now i don't. >> anthony: so good. >> anthony: we're dining at palazzo margherita -- not the ancestral home of generations of coppola's -- but might well have been the one time manor house of those who lorded over them while they worked in the fields. >> mr. coppola: during the mussolini time, every town had a podestà, the official of the fascist party. and this family was the podestà. the ladies here were so, you know, snobby -- we are low-class italians. they were more high-class italians. >> anthony: it took years, and a lot of money, converting the once grand, but decaying mansion into a boutique hotel. >> anthony: you know, when you bought this place, was there a sense of vengeance? >> mr. coppola: i, you know, by then, "the godfather" had come out 40 years ago. >> anthony: no, no. i mean, look, it's not about the film. historical correction. >> mr. coppola: there's a saying, do you know what italian alzheimer's is? do you know what it is?