After ‘Megalopolis’ flops, Francis Ford Coppola puts his pricey watch collection up for auction
Francis Ford Coppola wants an offer he canβt refuse β on his timepieces.
The Academy Award-winning director is selling seven watches from his personal collection, including his custom F.P. Journe FFC Prototype, estimated to sell for more than $1 million, according to a statement from Phillips, the New York City-based auction house. Phillips will hold the auction on Dec. 6 and 7.
The sale could help stanch losses from last yearβs box-office flop βMegalopolis,β which cost over $120 million to make and was largely financed by the 86-year-old director. The movie grossed only $14.3 million worldwide.
The film, Coppolaβs first since his 2011 horror movie βTwixt,β premiered at Cannes last year to largely negative reviews. The Timesβ Joshua Rothkopf called it a βwildly ambitious, overstuffed city epic.β
At a news conference at Cannes, Coppola discussed the tremendous amount of his own money that he had sunk into the film, saying that he βnever cared about moneyβ and that his children βdonβt need a fortune.β
Among the Coppola timepieces also going under the hammer are examples from Patek Philippe, Blancpain and IWC.
But the headlining piece is the F.P. Journe FFC Prototype that features a black titanium, human-like hand that resembles a steampunk gauntlet that articulates the hours when the fingers extend or retract.
Francis Ford Coppolaβs custom F.P. Journe FFC timepiece uses a single hand to indicate all 12 hours.
(Phillips)
The watch was a collaboration between Coppola and master watchmaker FranΓ§ois-Paul Journe that began following a conversation the pair had during a visit he made to the filmmakerβs Inglenook winery in Napa Valley in 2012.
Coppola asked Journe if a human hand had ever been used to mark time. That question sparked a years-long conversation during which the watchmaker grappled with how to indicate the 12 hours of the dial using just five fingers.
Journe found his inspiration in Ambroise ParΓ©, a 16th century French barber surgeon and an innovator of prosthetic limbs in particular, including Le Petit Lorrain, a prosthetic hand made of iron and leather that featured hidden gears and springs enabling the fingers to move, not dissimilar to a watch mechanism.
βSpeaking with Francis in 2012 and hearing his idea on the use of a human hand to indicate time inspired me to create a watch I never could have imagined myself. The challenge was formidable β exactly the type of watchmaking project I adore,β said Journe in a statement.
Journe eventually created six prototypes and delivered Coppolaβs watch to him in 2021.
βIβm proud to fully support the sale of this watch through Phillips to fund the creation of his artistic masterpieces in filmmaking,β he said.
Coppola first became interested in the watchmaker when he gifted his wife Eleanor an F.P. Journe Chronomètre à Résonance in platinum with a white gold dial for Christmas in 2009, prompting the director to extend an invitation to Journe to visit him at his Napa winery.
Eleanor Coppola, a documentary filmmaker and writer, died in 2024 after 61 years of marriage. Her F.P. Journe timepiece is also part of the auction and is estimated to fetch between $120,000 to $240,000.