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Scarface (Universal Cinema Classics)
DVD
NR (Not Rated) :: United Artists ::
Released:
2007-05-22
$10.72USD
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Rank:
#174
Rating:
3.06/4
View Movie Trailer
4/4
You wanna play rough? Okay. Say hello to my little
One of the most definitive gangster films of the 80's, Scarface is very much a film of its time. The first thing you notice when you watch this film is that it is screaming at you, 'made in 1983'. The costumes, the music score and soundtra...
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3/4
Say Hello To My Little Friend!
After 24 years of life, I finally sat through Scarface from beginning to end. I was pleasantly surprised by it. Going into this movie I thought I was going to have to sit through and an hour an a half of boring rising to the top scenes an...
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4/4
Say Heloo to my Little Friend
"Scarface" starts off with an overly tanned Al Pacino getting interrogated by three Immigrations Officers. His character, Cuban Tony Montana, recently arrived in America, and is trying to hide his obvious history of crime from the cops. Th...
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3/4
Whas you talkin?
I don't care if people think this is over rated. It's not. I don't think anyone ever said it was a great movie, it's just that tons of people love it. Rags to riches at it's grimiest best. It appeals to people who don't have it all. It's m...
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1/4
Brian De Palma and Oliver Stone's disasterpiece
Probably the most over rated movie ever that is just plain bad. Engaging for about the first half hour and then over the top ridiculous for the last 2 and a half. Al Pacinos worst performance set to one of the worst scores in movie history...
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2.5/4
overrated
This movie is overrated :) While i did enjoy it to a point it didn't do anything extraordinary for me (not even Pacinos good acting) and i wouldn't even bother with the original since i never liked Howard Hawks. American cinema mostly just...
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3.5/4
Scarface Quick Review
It's a pretty good movie, except that the ending is kinda dull compared to the rest of the movie. But, all in all, not a bad flick.
0.5/4
Scarface Quick Review
de palma overrated director for me, i dont like his style. al pacino was so acting overblown. totally sucks
3.5/4
Scarface Quick Review
This movie is amazing. I almost counted the F words but I obviously could not keep up the pace.
3/4
Scarface Quick Review
A decent criminal caper, if not the masterpiece rappers will have you believe it is. Still, Al Pacino looks like he's having a great time, and it's pretty much worth it to watch that final shoot-out.
3/4
Scarface Quick Review
I was really excited to see this movie for the first time, but I was eventually let down. There were was not enough things going on at a quick enough pace for it to really be a great movie. I enjoy long movies if they are paced well and told well, this one is not. Plus, the really bad 80's music shows its age. Still, a good gangster to movie to watch and there are some really great scenes.
Rank:
#9834
Rating:
4.5/5 (36 Reviews)
5/5
Crime Doesn't Pay - forget the obvious lesson, enjoy the work of a master,
by Muzzlehatch (the walls of Gormenghast)
This is a film where you really have to talk about the beginning, at the beginning, as it sets the stage both formally and narratively in many ways. A street sign - a striking, brief pan past an obviously artificial, oddly angled and heavily Expressionistic street-alley, and then past a restaurant employee bringing in a sign for the night, into the restaurant and to rest on a group of men talking loudly, the remains of a party around them. The loudest man is Big Louie - he talks in a thick Italian accent about "having enough" and how satisfied he is...but his buddies tell him that, Johnny Lovo, apparently wants more; maybe he'll have to do something about that. We haven't been told that these men are mobsters, but we get the gist; they're fat and happy in the midst of the Depression, drinking the forbidden liquor that they doubtless control - but Johnny and more importantly his top lieutenant Tony Camonte want more, as Big Louie quickly finds out to his chagrin, gunned down as he tries to make a phone call, the sound of whistling as the camera pans from the silhouette of his assassin down to his dead body. One fantastic shot - I'd say one of the most impressive opening shots I've ever seen - lasting about 3 minutes and 20 seconds, giving us a prologue of much that's to come: the casual brutality of the whistling murderer, the lust for the good life, the impossibility of letting anybody else have a part of the pie.
Tony is played by Paul Muni in a ferocious yet rather pathetic way - he's tough, ambitious, street-smart, quick on his feet, yet so blinded by his emotions and passions that he dooms all of those around him and cannot stop, cannot ever have enough. Shortly after taking out Big Louie, he sets his sites on the north side gangsters, including Boris Karloff's wonderfully cynical Gaffney, and then it's only his own big boss himself, Johnny Lovo, standing in the way of him taking the town (Chicago, obviously, and in many ways Tony is Al Capone). We get the St. Valentine's day massacre, a half-dozen drive-by machine-gunnings...all the while Tony is becoming a big shot, scaring everybody, romancing Lovo's girl Poppy (Karen Morley), while trying to keep his younger and very anxious sister Cesca (Ann Dvorak) away from any man but...himself? The undercurrent of incest is powerful throughout the film; I suppose one could try to come up with a psychological reading as to why Tony's forbidden desires turn him mad and towards a life of crime - there's no father in the picture and his mother though stern is completely ineffective - but I'm not sure it's really there. In any case, his "protection" of his sister is so extreme as to eventually cost him his best friend, Guino (a very charming, low key George Raft), and it's emblematic of the madness that never allows him to stop, seeming to ignore any possibility that he can ever be overthrown.
The film seems to alternate visually between the dark expressionism that we're introduced to in that first shot: the crazy action scenes which really are something for a film from that period, machine guns blasting and cars crashing rapid-fire for several minutes at a time, most memorably in the rat-ta-tat that accompanies months of dates in a calendar flying - and a brighter, smoother camera-work for a couple of ballroom scenes. Even in opulent surroundings at last, Tony is never sated. Even if you've never seen the film or it's dubious "remake", it's not hard to guess the fate that's in store for him, and the genius of the film is that though we may not be able to feel much for Tony, who is never anything close to sympathetic, we can at least care a little for those who surround him like moths near the flame. His "secretary", the illiterate Angelo (Vince Barnett) who brings the film down a little with some ill-judged and draggy humor that sounds straight out of the Marx brothers, even manages a touching death - faithful to the last.
This struck me as in some ways atypical of director Howard Hawks - at least, it differs from his later work in that the male relationships are nearly all antagonistic rather than comradely; this is a film revolving really around one man who is always alone in his obsessive need to rule and dominate, a man who never has equals in his mind, and at the end has no one but the sister whose life he ruined, and then...the only fate a gangster could have in a film that tries to be both sensationalistic (succeeding well) and moralizing (not really). The DVD offers the alternate ending as well, so you can see Tony both shot to death and hanged. Did you learn your lesson? With the caveats of the obvious and unnecessary "message" being pushed on the audience (really only overt at the very beginning and ending) and those lame bits of vaudevillian humor, this is pretty damn impressive and probably my favorite of the early 30s gangster cycle.
5/5
Great gangster movie
by Marie Christman
It was fun watching this movie and seeing all the simalarities with the Al Pacino Scarface. I loved it.
4/5
Effective and not dated
by One-Line Film Reviews (Easton, MD)
The Bottom Line:
Partly due to the better script and partly due to Paul Muni's trademarked over-the-top acting, the original Scarface holds up today far better than its arguably more famous Warner Brothers contemporaries (The Public Enemy and Little Caesar); whether you've seen the remake and want to see the original or whether you're just looking for an engaging gangster flick, check out the 1932 classic.
3.5/4
5/5
Ahead Of Its Time
by Craig Connell (Lockport, NY USA)
Action-wise, this movie was 60 years ahead of its time, at least in terms of the amount of violence in it. I think it's safe to say most classic films, including the crime movies, are much slower in pace than today's fare. Sometimes that's better; sometimes it isn't.
This movie is action-packed with few lulls and it's fun because of it, in this case. Paul Muni, as "Tony Camonte," the head gangster, is compelling and fun to watch. He's tough-as-nails until the end. The main women in here - Ann Dvoark and Karen Morely - are interesting, too. Don't be fooled by the billing of George Raft and Boris Karloff. In this film, they have very small roles.
This is Muni's show, though, all the way and few actors could ham it up in his day like him. It's a wild ride for the full 93 minutes.
3/5
Famous film but obsolete now.
by Douglas M
While "Scarface" was a shattering and powerful film in 1932, time has not dealt with it kindly. Presented with a Forward that offers the film as a document to demonstrate the need for political action to curb mob violence, Paul Muni stars as a practically neanderthal gangster who shoots his way to the top of the mobs during prohibition. Muni was a prestige actor who always immersed himself in his roles almost to the point of inertia. He is at his best here, completely and totally in character, but as usual, he verges on the monotonous. His number one henchman is the novice George Raft who has little dialogue but lots of charisma. He mostly stands in the background flipping a coin. The film was the most violent of all the gangster films and there are endless shootouts including a brief recreation of the St Valentines Massacre. In fact, the Forward tells us that every incident depicted in the film is a recreation of an actual incident.
From a cinematic viewpoint, the least dated aspect of the film is the performance of the sensational Ann Dvorak who plays Muni's teenage sister with none too subtle hints of incest. The ethnic background is also well depicted with Muni's mother less than enchanted with her violent son.
The print of the the film is not very good. The soundtrack comes and goes as the actors move to and from the microphones. The visuals are dark and the contrast is poor so it is sometimes hard to see what is happening. The DVD includes an alternate ending which shows "Scarface" being hanged rather than simply gunned down in the street. The alternate ending allows a judge to deliver a speech about the need to eradicate the gangsters and makes a more logical book end piece to the Forward. It adds to the documentary aspect of the film but adds nothing in terms of cinematic impact.
The fine gangster films of the 70s, including the remake of this film by Brian de Palma, have made this film obsolete except, of course, as an important component of the 30s gangster cycle. The package would have been vastly improved with an erudite commentary.
Scarface (Universal Cinema Classics) Summary
Generally Regarded To Be The Best Of The Classic Gangster Films, Scarface Tells The Exciting Story Of Organized Crime's Brutal Control Over Chicago During The Prohibition Era. Oscar Winner Paul Muni Gives An Electrifying Performance As Tony Carmonte, An Ambitious Criminal With A Ruthless Drive To Be The City's Top Crime Boss. Produced And Directed By The Legendary Howard Hawks, Scarface Was A Groundbreaking Film Which Established Both Paul Muni And George Raft As Major Hollywood Stars, While Influencing All Gangland Films To Follow.
Howard Hawks's
Scarface
was one of the first "talkies" to reclaim the fluidity of the late-silent masterpieces, while also tapping into a feral new energy that came with talking smart and moving smarter on the motion picture screen. Outgunning such contemporaries as
Little Caesar
and
The Public Enemy
--in terms of both its ferocious death-dealing and dynamic style--the movie was interfered with by censors and kept out of circulation for decades thanks to its eccentric producer, Howard Hughes. It remains the gold standard among classic gangster pictures. Paul Muni's portrayal of Al Capone surrogate Tony Camonte etched a screen original: a merciless assassin who's not only reflexively criminal but pre-civilized, almost pre-evolutionary, a simian shadow ready to rub out the world if he can't have it for his own. This is still one of the greatest, darkest, most deeply exciting films American cinema has produced. Those demonically ubiquitous X's--starting with that titular scar gouged into Tony's cheek--rival "Rosebud" for resonance.
--Richard T. Jameson
Scarface DVD Techincal Details
Cast:
Paul Muni
,
Karen Morley
,
George Raft
Aspect Ratio:
1.33:1
Rated:
NR (Not Rated)
Running Time:
93 mins
UPC:
025195004473
Binding:
DVD
Studio:
United Artists
Release Date:
2007-05-22
Region Code:
1
Specs:
Black & White, DVD, Full Screen, Original recording remastered, Subtitled, NTSC
Language & Subtitles
English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), English (Published),
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