Scarface (1983 film)
Scarface is a 1983 film directed by Brian De Palma, written by Oliver Stone and starring Al Pacino as Antonio "Tony" Montana. A loose remake of the 1932 Howard Hawks gangster film of the same title, it tells the story of a fictional Cuban refugee who comes to Florida in 1980 as a result of the Mariel Boatlift.
Tony becomes a gangster against the backdrop of the 1980s cocaine boom. The film chronicles his rise to the top of Miami's criminal underworld and subsequent downfall in Greek tragedy fashion.
The
film is dedicated to Howard Hawks and Ben Hecht, who were the writers of the original
Scarface.
Cast
Al Pacino as Antonio "Tony"
Montana "Scarface"
Steven Bauer as Manny Ribera
Michelle Pfeiffer
as Elvira Hancock
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as Gina Montana
Robert Loggia
as Frank Lopez
Miriam Colon as Georgina "Mama" Montana
F. Murray
Abraham as Omar Suarez
Paul Shenar as Alex Sosa
Harris Yulin as Chief
Det. Mel Bernstein
Ángel Salazar as Chi-Chi
Track
listing
"Scarface (Push It to the Limit)" by Paul Engemann
"Rush
Rush" by Deborah Harry
"Turn Out the Light" by Amy Holland
"Vamos a Bailar" by Maria Conchita Alonso (credited as Maria Conchita)
"Tony's Theme" by Giorgio Moroder
"She's on Fire"
by Amy Holland
"Shake It Up" by Elizabeth Daily
"Dance
Dance Dance" by Beth Anderson
"I'm Hot Tonight" by Elizabeth
Daily
"Gina's and Elvira's Theme" by Giorgio Moroder, performed
by Helen St. John
---- Spoiler ---
In July 1980, Cuban man Tony Montana (Al Pacino) claims asylum, in Florida in the US, and is in search of the 'American Dream' after departing Cuba in the Mariel boatlift of 1980. When questioned by INS officials, Montana is detained on suspicion of apolitical criminal activities, in a camp called 'Freedomtown' with other Cubans, while the government evaluates their visa petitions. To be released after six months of governmental dithering and camp rumors, and given green cards, Montana and his best friend Manny Ray (Steven Bauer) kill a former aide to Fidel Castro, Emilio Rebenga (Roberto Contreras). The murder of Rebenga was requested by Frank López, a wealthy, politically astute man who deals cars and trades in cocaine, as Rebenga had tortured López's brother to death while still in Cuba. Mr. López's political allies provide the work permits that effectively purchase Montana's service. After getting their cards, Tony Montana and Manny Ray are working as dishwashers in a corner sandwich shop when a López henchman, Omar Suárez (F. Murray Abraham), offers Tony and Manny a job unloading cocaine.
Tony insults Suárez by turning down the job, so Suárez sets him up to pick up a sample of coke from a Colombian dealer, Hector. Tony, Manny, and two other Marielitos in his crew, Angel Fernández (Pepe Serna), and Chi Chi (Ángel Salazar) then set out to meet "Hector the Toad" (Al Israel) at a seedy motel on the beach. The meeting does not go smoothly, as Tony grows irritated with Hector, who is slow to give him the cocaine in exchange for money. Suddenly, Montana and Angel are double-crossed in a rip off move by the Colombian. To convince Tony to give over the cash, Angel is dismembered in a shower stall with a chainsaw by Hector. After Angel is dead, Montana, about to suffer the same fate, is saved by Chi Chi and Manny who arrive in the nick of time to gun down Hector's henchmen in the hotel's room. Hector escapes but Tony vengefully confronts him in the street and shoots him dead in the middle of Ocean Drive, the now famous Miami South Beach boulevard. Tony and his crew then get away with both the coke and the money before the police arrive. Montana then impresses the money's owner, López (Robert Loggia), with not only the return of his cash but with a gift of the coke, a prize from the botched rip off. Frank immediately hires Tony's crew into his criminal hierarchy, representative of a Cuban mafia. But during this initial get together Tony also meets Lopez's lady, the blonde and beautiful Elvira Hancock (Michelle Pfeiffer), who will eventually become the source of tension between the two men. Thus, Montana begins his rise through the ranks of the Miami cocaine underworld.
While on business in Bolivia to help Omar set up a new distribution deal for Lopez, Montana, feeling that Frank is "soft," begins to show his defiance to López's authority when he negotiates a deal with Alejandro Sosa (Paul Shenar), the ruthless and powerful Bolivian drug lord. Sosa finds out that Omar is an informant during the trip and has him murdered to show Tony his intolerance for disloyalty. Upon his return to Florida Tony gets into trouble with Frank over the deal, who accuses him of "stealing" it. Montana then leaves López to strikes out on his own. This allows him to seek out Elvira to whom he makes an unexpected marriage proposal. Lopez is none too happy and decides to take out Tony.
But his move to assassinate Tony fails as two hitmen, hired by Lopez to kill Tony at the Babylon Club, cannot get it done. A vengeful Montana decides to take over Frank's business. That same night he and Manny kill both Frank and the cop on his payroll, Miami Chief of Narcotics Mel Bernstein, who had already shaken down Tony for a hefty monthly payment and airline tickets to London. His problems apparently solved, Tony begins a profitable relationship with Sosa, marries Elvira, buys a new mansion, and sets his sister Gina (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) up in business with her own beauty salon.
But as Montana's business grows, so does his cocaine addiction and paranoia. It is the beginning of the end. His wife, now hopelessly addicted herself, becomes distant. His banker informs him that he will be charging higher fees for washing the increasing flow of drug money. After Manny convinces him that he has a way to save money on the laundering of the coke cash, Montana is arrested in a sting operation by Manny's contact, an undercover cop. He is charged with tax evasion.
Sosa, not wanting to lose his main distributor, steps in to intervene by offering Tony a way out of going to prison. He introduces Montana to his cocaine "board of directors" a group that includes Bolivia's military chief and a mysterious American, known only as being "from Washington." We assume he is a CIA officer because Sosa guarantees that the IRS will not be able to send Tony to jail. In exchange, Montana must assist in the assassination of a journalist attempting to expose Sosa, his partners, and the ongoing corruption in the Bolivian government. Montana agrees but later has second thoughts when the journalist, now in New York to expose the cartel at the UN, unexpectedly picks up his wife and children. Tony, saying that the team was only supposed to kill the journalist, instead then shoots the assassin to prevent the journalist's family from being killed. Thus he seals his fate with Sosa.
Returning to Miami, Tony discovers that both his sister Gina and right-hand man Manny have disappeared. Tony has long harbored an apparent unnatural obsession for his sister and is overly protective of her for reasons that he may not understand himself. After getting Gina's address from his mother, who doesn't know who lives there, Tony goes to the house. Manny unexpectedly opens the door. Tony then sees Gina in a night gown at the top of the stairs. Enraged that another man has obviously slept with his sister, Tony kills Manny. Hysterically, Gina reveals that they had just been married. Tony has Gina taken back to his mansion where all hell is about to break loose.
In revenge for the missed opportunity to kill the journalist, who has now exposed him to the world as a drug lord, Sosa sends an assassination team to Montana's mansion to kill him. Sitting at his desk snorting from an enormous pile of cocaine, Tony realizes and regrets what he has done to his best friend. Suddenly Gina enters his office armed with a pistol to confront him with the truth about his feelings for her. She now realizes that Tony loves her in an unnatural way and demands, at gun point, that he make love to her. She begins to shoot at him while demanding he take her. A Sosa assassin hiding on the balcony, thinking Gina is shooting at him, leaps in and riddles her with bullets. Tony, enraged, throws the man off the balcony and kills him.
As his men are being killed Tony still dilerious from the cocaine leans over Gina's body begging for forgiveness, at the same time the hitmen break into the mansion, Chi Chi opens fire with an Uzi as he backs up banging on the door but Tony does not seem to hear him, Chi Chi is shot in the back and Tony sees it on the cameras.
As the hitmen take their position by the stairs preparing to storm his office Tony arms up with an M16 with an undermounted M203 blowing down the door and crying out "say hello to my little friend," and killing several of the hitmen he is hit at least three times until after killing about ten stands at the top of the stairs crying out stating that they will never kill him, he is then shot in the back by Sosa's righthand man the Skull and falls into the pool at the end of the stairs below the globe that says THE WORLD IS YOURS.
Scarface held its premiere on December
1st, 1983 in New York City where it was initially greeted with mixed reaction.
Among those in attendance were the film's two stars; Al Pacino and Steven Bauer
as well as Burt and Diane Lane, Melanie Griffith, Raquel Welch, Joan Collins,
her then-boyfriend Peter Holm and Eddie Murphy among others. According to AMC's
"DVD TV: Much More Movie" airing: Cher loved it; Lucille Ball, who came
with her family, hated it because of the graphic violence and language; Dustin
Hoffman was said to have fallen asleep; writers Kurt Vonnegut and John Irving
were among those who were said to have walked out in disgust after the notorious
"chainsaw" scene. At the middle of the film, Martin Scorsese turned
behind to Steven Bauer and told him "You guys are great - but be prepared,
because they're going to hate it in Hollywood. . . because it's about them".
Scarface, upon its first release, drew controversy regarding the violence and
graphic language in the film, and received many negative reviews from movie critics.
Despite this, the film grossed $65 million worldwide and has since gathered a
large following. On the 2 Disc Special Edition, director Brian De Palma said that
the film was well received by only one notable critic, Vincent Canby of The New
York Times. However, Roger Ebert rated it four stars out of four in his 1983 review
and he later added it to his "great movies" list.
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