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Scarface

 
Movies:

Scarface

 
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Gangster Film, Crime Drama
  • Themes: Rise and Fall Stories, Drug Trade
  • Director: Brian De Palma
  • Main Cast: Al Pacino, Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Robert Loggia
  • Release Year: 1983
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 170 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Al Pacino stars as Tony Montana, an exiled Cuban criminal who goes to work for Miami drug lord Robert Loggia. Montana rises to the top of Florida's crime chain, appropriating Loggia's cokehead mistress (Michelle Pfeiffer) in the process. Howard Hawks' "X Marks the Spot" motif in depicting the story line's many murders is dispensed with in the 1983 Scarface; instead, we are inundated with blood by the bucketful, especially in the now-infamous buzz saw scene. One carry-over from the original Scarface is Tony Montana's incestuous yearnings for his sister Gina (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio). The screenplay for the 1983 Scarface was written by Oliver Stone. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Infinitely quotable and more than a little cartoonish, Brian De Palma's update of Howard Hawks' seminal gangster film revels in its freedom to be larger than life. A work as akin to pop art as any other form, it reworks the crime melodrama in bold, primary colors, mostly blood red. Attracting a great deal of attention for its violence at the time of its release, the controversy overshadowed the fact that everything in the film ran to extremes, including Pacino's performance, the director's visual style (which found him almost reverting to The Fury mode), the dialogue (from a script co-written by Oliver Stone), and most importantly the themes. Scarface focuses on words like "crime" and "America," then lets itself run wild with the associations. That a classically American rise-and-fall story forms the heart of the film is its simplest and best irony. The experience will probably be thrilling to some, particularly those already enthusiastic about De Palma's work, and extremely off-putting to others. Tony Montana may not be an appealing character with which to spend nearly three hours, but there's little chance of forgetting the experience. ~ Keith Phipps, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Scarface (1983 film)
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Scarface

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Brian De Palma
Produced by Martin Bregman
Written by Oliver Stone
Starring Al Pacino
Steven Bauer
Michelle Pfeiffer
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio
Robert Loggia
F. Murray Abraham
Harris Yulin
Music by Giorgio Moroder
Cinematography John A. Alonzo
Editing by Gerald B. Greenberg
David Ray
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) December 9, 1983
Running time 169min 49sec
Country United States
Language English
Spanish
Budget $25,000,000
Gross revenue $65,884,703
Followed by Scarface: The World Is Yours

Scarface is a 1983 epic crime drama film directed by Brian De Palma, written by Oliver Stone and starring Al Pacino as Tony Montana. A remake of Howard Hawks' original 1932 film of the same name, the film tells the story of a fictional Cuban refugee who comes to Florida in 1980 as a result of the Mariel Boatlift. Montana 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 tragic Greek fashion.

The film is dedicated to Howard Hawks and Ben Hecht, who were the writers of the original 1932 film.

The critical response to Scarface was mixed and the film received criticism for the violence and graphic language. Despite this, it did well at the box office and has since gathered a phenomenal cult following. The film has become an important cultural icon for many fans, inspiring posters, clothing, and many other references, especially in hip hop music. The film's grainy black and white poster is a very popular decoration and is still in production, and as a result of its popularity has been parodied many times.

Contents

Plot


The opening scenes show Cuban Tony Montana (Al Pacino), one of the 125,000 Cubans that immigrated to Miami, Florida via the Mariel Boatlift, and one of at least 25,000 who has a criminal record. He is being interrogated by three tough-talking immigration officers about his life in Cuba, and of his arrival in America. He and his best friend and former Cuban Army buddy Manolo "Manny" Ribera (Steven Bauer) are met with resistance, particularly because of their criminal records, and are placed in "Freedom town", a camp under the freeway where Cuban refugees without green cards are kept. A few months later, Manny makes Tony aware of a deal in which a wealthy man named Frank Lopez (Robert Loggia), can give them access to the cards needed in order to leave Freedomtown, in exchange for the murder of a former Cuban security agent named Emilio Rebenga, who tortured Frank's brother to death in Cuba. Tony does this without much thought, stabbing and killing Rebenga during a riot, and they receive their residency.

Over the next few weeks, Tony and Manny begin working in a small Cuban food stand to make money, but Tony soon grows restless. He wishes to leave behind his working lifestyle and have all the money he can possibly have. One evening they both meet with drug dealer Omar Suarez (F. Murray Abraham) (the same man who made the "Rebenga deal") for another job. Omar wants to unload a boat from Mexico containing 500 kilograms (1102.3113lbs.) of marijuana and offers to pay them $500 each. Tony balks and demands at least $1,000. After a short scuffle, Omar offers them $5,000 each for buying two kilograms of cocaine worth $25,000 a piece from Colombian dealer "Hector the Toad" who will be arriving in Miami in a few days. Omar will also give Tony the money for the deal as well as weapons just in case anything goes wrong.

A few days later, Tony and Manny, along with two other associates from Cuba who spent time in Freedomtown, Angel (Pepe Serna) and Chi Chi (Ángel Salazar), drive to the Sunray Motel in Miami Beach to meet with Hector for the drug deal. The transaction is revealed to be a rip-off when the Colombians pull guns and demand that Tony hand over the money. Tony refuses (using the now famous line "Why don't you try sticking your head up your ass... and see if it fits?"), prompting Hector to threaten him with a chainsaw and going as far as chopping Angel to pieces in front of Tony. After a gunfight, Tony, Manny, and Chi Chi escape with the cocaine and the money after killing Hector and his associates. Instead of allowing Omar to take the cocaine to his boss Frank Lopez, Tony takes it to Frank personally, already distrusting of Omar (whether Omar was in league with Hector to kill Tony, or whether it was just a coincidence that Omar set the drug deal up unaware that Hector planned to kill his buyers, is not revealed in the story). Frank, an affable, gregarious man, takes a shine to Tony immediately, impressed by his sense of humor and bold attitude. While Tony likes Frank, he later points out to Manny that he may be too "soft" to be a major player for too long. Tony and Manny end up getting a job under Frank in the drug dealing business. Meanwhile, Tony takes an interest in Frank's girlfriend, Elvira Hancock (Michelle Pfeiffer). Frank takes Tony, Manny and his associates out to the Babylon Nightclub which Frank frequently attends. While Tony flirts with Elvira, going so far as to purchase a Porsche 928 to appease her, she doesn't show any interest in him (or anyone else for that matter).

A few months later, Tony pays a visit to his estranged family's home. It is implied that Tony's father, a U.S. Navy sailor, walked out on the family years ago, but his mother Georgina Montana (Míriam Colón) and his younger sister Gina (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) are home. Gina is excited to see Tony (who hasn't seen the family in five years), while his mother isn't as thrilled, aware and ashamed of his criminal history. When he offers his mother $1,000 (claiming he's "made it"), his mother angrily rejects the gift. She believes he's still up to no good, and wants him to leave because she doesn't want him rubbing off on Gina. Tony leaves, but Gina runs after him. He slips her the $1,000 secretly, and tells her to spend it on whatever she wants and to give his mother a little from time to time. On returning to the car, he encounters Manny, who is awestruck with Gina's beauty. Tony angrily makes it abundantly clear that no one from their line of work is to go near Gina, especially Manny.

Some time later, while in Cochabamba, Bolivia, Tony and Omar begin discussing business plans with plantation owner and drug kingpin Alejandro Sosa (Paul Shenar) on the behalf of Frank, who couldn't make it down. Tony begins making major decisions about distribution of the drugs, angering Omar, who believes only Frank has authority to make such decisions. Omar and Tony begin arguing over the matter, while Sosa offers Omar a quick helicopter ride back home to talk over the transaction with Frank. However, Sosa then orders one of his men on the chopper to hang and kill Omar, explaining to Tony that he was allegedly a police informant some years back. However, Sosa believes that Tony is trustworthy and makes him one of his business partners, but warns Tony never to cross him. After returning to Florida, Tony comes under heat by Frank, who is angry at what happened to Omar, as well as Tony's new setup with Sosa. Frank warns Tony that Sosa is a backstabber and not to be trusted. Tony and Frank end their business relationship, while Tony begins making bolder passes at Elvira, one of them right in front of Frank.

At the Babylon nightclub, Tony is shaken down by a corrupt Miami narcotics detective, Mel Bernstein (Harris Yulin), who informs him he has evidence linking Tony to the murders of Rebenga and the Colombian drug dealers at the Sunray Motel. Forced to talk with Bernstein, the crooked cop proposes to "tax" Tony on his transactions in return for police protection and information. Bernstein negotiates a large bribe and two first-class airline tickets to London. Tony is convinced Frank sent Bernstein to shake him down because only Frank would know details about the murders. While talking to Bernstein, Tony is distracted by the sight of his sister Gina dancing with a low-level drug dealer. Tony sees him take her into the men's restroom to make out with her and snort cocaine. Tony throws the man out of the bathroom and berates Gina. Gina tells Tony she is old enough to do whatever she wants including going into the men's restroom with a man which prompts Tony to slap her. Manny proceeds to drive Gina home, telling her that she deserves better than to be with some two-bit thug in the unromantic environment of a men's room. When Gina compliments Manolo for being a gentleman to her and admitting an interest in him, he admits he could get in trouble with Tony.

While at the Babylon, Tony is nearly killed by two hitmen. Tony manages to escape, wounded but alive, and is convinced that Frank is responsible for the hit. Tony instructs one of his men, Nick the Pig, to call Frank at exactly 3 am at his office with the words, "We fucked up, he got away." Tony and Manny track Frank down to his car dealership, and find Frank in the middle of a meeting with Bernstein. Tony tricks Frank into confirming he was behind the attempted hit, by seeing Frank's reaction to the phone call he organized at 3am. Admitting what he did, Frank then begs for mercy at Tony's feet even offering Elvira to him. Manny kills Frank on Tony's orders to, "Shoot that piece of shit!", and Tony kills Bernstein saying, "So long Mel, have a good trip". Afterwards, Tony goes to Elvira's house, telling her that Frank is dead and that he wants to be with her. Stepping out onto Elvira's balcony, Tony looks into the sky and sees a blimp with the words "The World is Yours."

All seems to be going well for Tony. He makes $75 million off of the 2000 kilos of cocaine and his soon making $10–15 million a month in profits from his business arrangement with Sosa. He marries Elvira, takes over Frank's empire and becomes wealthy. He purchases a huge mansion, complete with luxury items, a tiger, as well as surveillance camera monitors. He makes Manny his second-in-command and in charge of security at his warehouses and mansion. However, cracks in Tony's "perfect life" begin to form as both he and Elvira become heavily addicted to cocaine. He becomes more paranoid and distrusting of those around him, and she becomes bored and distant. Tony becomes greedy and stingy with his wealth, while the bank that launders his illegally gotten cash wants higher fees to launder his money. Manny and Gina begin dating behind Tony's back, afraid of what his reaction would be if he found out.

Tony is arrested for money laundering (1.3 million dollars) and tax evasion by Mel Seidenbaum, a local money launderer who turns out to be an undercover cop. Tony posts bail and is out of jail while awaiting trial. Tony's lawyer tells him that although he can plea-bargain away most of the time Tony faces, he will still end up doing at least three years in prison for evading income taxes.

Alejandro Sosa, not wanting to lose his major distributor, calls Tony down to Bolivia and asks him for help assassinating a Bolivian anti-government activist who is exposing Sosa's dealings with Bolivian leaders on television. If Tony is successful, he will still have to pay back taxes, and a heavy fine, but there will be no prison. Tony is reluctant to kill a civilian, but seeing no other options, agrees to the deal. Manny tries to talk Tony out of going to New York, even though Tony doesn't tell him about the hit, because he has a bad feeling.

Soon, Elvira becomes tired of the dealer lifestyle, and leaves Tony after a fight at a restaurant. Afterwards, a drugged and drunken Tony starts yelling at the patrons for looking at him in disgust. He tells them they are just as bad as he is, they just hide it better. He feels society needs "bad guys" like him to point the finger at and tell themselves he is the bad guy while ignoring their own sins and deeds. After his tirade, Tony storms out of the restaurant with Manny in tow.

Tony and Alberto, Alejandro's best henchman, travel to New York City looking for the activist. Alberto plants a bomb under the activist's car, planning to detonate it before he drives to the United Nations building to give a speech about his activist work. Unfortunately, it is Tony's aversion to harming innocent people (especially women and children), that undoes him. On the day the assassination is to take place, Tony orders Alberto not to set off the bomb underneath the activist's car once he finds out his wife and children are in the car as well. When Alberto ignores him, Tony grows angry and shoots him in the head.

Tony returns to Florida to find his mother upset over Gina's new attitude (whom she believes Tony corrupted) and a furious Sosa phones Tony, threatening to kill him for not going through with the plan. Tony goes to find Gina at an unknown mansion in Coconut Grove, and sees her and Manny together in night robes. Realizing Manny has slept with his sister, he shoots and kills Manny in a fit of furious anger, which he later deeply regrets. Gina reveals that they just married the day before and were going to surprise Tony. Tony and his men take a distraught Gina back to his mansion. Meanwhile, a group of gun-toting assassins sent by Sosa are surrounding the place. While Tony later sits in his office snorting a huge pile of cocaine, the gunmen begin quietly killing Tony's guards outside.

Gina enters Tony's office wielding a gun, mocking the implicitly incestuous motivation for his jealousy of the men in her life before shooting and wounding Tony in the leg. One of the assassins enters the office through the window and kills Gina before being killed by Tony. Robbed of the element of surprise, Sosa's gunmen launch an all-out assault on Tony's mansion as he cradles Gina's body in his arms. In a cocaine-fueled rage, Tony bursts from his office with an M16 assault rifle with an M203 grenade launcher attachment and begins shooting wildly at the attacking henchmen, killing dozens of them despite being mortally wounded himself (In this scene, the famous "Say hello to my little Friend!" line is used). The carnage continues as Tony taunts the gunmen ("You think you kill me with bullets? I take your fuckin' bullets! Go ahead!") until Sosa's security chief shoots Tony in the back with a sawed-off shotgun. Tony falls from the balcony into a small pool in the lobby below, floating face-down in the water beneath a statue carrying the inscription "The World Is Yours" as the camera pans out over the devastation. The film ends with some of Sosa's surviving assassins tending their wounded comrades, while the others investigate Tony's lifeless body.

Cast

Production

Al Pacino as Tony Montana

Oliver Stone wrote the script in France while recovering from his own addiction to cocaine and also consulted with the Miami police and the Drug Enforcement Agency, incorporating many true crimes into the film, including using crime scene photos to inspire the infamous chainsaw scene.

According to Stone in the 20th Anniversary DVD Special Features, he spent time with drug dealers as a means of research and "things got pretty scary" when he mentioned the names of cops that the drug dealers knew whom Stone had performed research under.

Scarface was originally to be filmed in Florida but received criticism from the Cuban community who objected to various aspects of the film. Community representatives were opposed to the depiction of Cubans as drug dealers and demanded that the script be changed to incorporate anti-Fidel Castro rhetoric (most notably, changing Tony Montana into a spy working for Fidel Castro and the introduction of anti-Castro political organizations into the plot as foils for Montana) into the film. After protracted negotiations the producers ultimately refused to give in, saying the film was about cocaine and not the politics of Castro's Cuba. In order to ensure the safety of the crew and to avoid further problems, filming was moved to Los Angeles.

Ratings controversy

The film was given an "X" rating 3 times, with most of the violence having to be trimmed after each submission. After the film was rated "X" a third time, DePalma and producer Martin Bregman arranged a hearing with the MPAA. They brought in a panel of experts, including real narcotics officers, who stated that the film was an accurate portrayal of the real-life drug underworld and should be widely seen. This convinced the 20 members of the ratings board to give the third cut of the film an "R" rating by a vote of 18-2. DePalma surmised that if both the first and third cut of the film were judged an "X", and that the "R" rating was only secured on appeal, then there was very little difference between what were simply alternate cuts of the same film. DePalma then realized he should simply release the film in the version he initially intended with the "R" rating. He asked the studio if he could release the first cut but was told that he couldn't. However, since the studio executives really didn't know the differences between the different cuts that had been submitted, DePalma released the first cut of the film to theaters anyway. It was not until the film had been released on VHS months later that he confessed that he released his preferred version of the film, which is the only version we see today on all releases.

Reaction

Scarface held its premiere on December 1, 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, Cher, Lucille Ball and her family, and Eddie Murphy among others.[1] At the middle of the film, director 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".[2]

Box office

Scarface was released on December 9, 1983 in 996 theaters, grossing USD $4.6 million in its opening weekend despite drawing controversy regarding the violence and graphic language in the film and received many negative reviews from film critics. The film went on to make $45.4 million in North America and $20.5 million in the rest of the world for a worldwide total of $65.9 million. Today, if that gross were adjusted for inflation, it would probably be around $180 million.[3]

Reviews

Roger Ebert rated it four stars out of four in his 1983 review and wrote, "DePalma and his writer, Oliver Stone, have created a gallery of specific individuals, and one of the fascinations of the movie is that we aren't watching crime-movie clichés, we're watching people who are criminals".[4] He later added it to his "Great Movies" list.[5] Vincent Canby also praised the film in his review for the New York Times: "Yet the dominant mood of the film is anything but funny. It is bleak and futile: What goes up must always come down. When it comes down in Scarface, the crash is as terrifying as it is vivid and arresting".[6]

In his review for Newsweek, David Ansen wrote, "If Scarface makes you shudder, it's from what you think you see and from the accumulated tension of this feral landscape. It's a grand, shallow, decadent entertainment, which like all good Hollywood gangster movies delivers the punch and counterpunch of glamour and disgust".[7] Jay Scott, in his review for the Globe and Mail, writes, "For a while, Al Pacino is hypnotic as Montana. But the effort expended on the flawless Cuban accent and the attempts to flesh out a character cut from inch-thick cardboard are hopeless".[8] In his review for the Washington Post, Gary Arnold wrote, "A movie that appeared intent on revealing an alarmingly contemporary criminal subculture gradually reverts to underworld cliche, covering its derivative tracks with outrageous decor and an apocalyptic, production number finale, ingeniously choreographed to leave the antihero floating face down in a literal bloodbath".[9]

Legacy

In June 2008, the American Film Institute revealed its "Ten Top Ten"—the best ten films in ten "classic" American film genres—after polling over 1,500 people from the creative community. Scarface was acknowledged as the tenth best in the gangster film genre.[10] Also the "Say hello to my little friend" line took 61st place as the most famous quote on the list AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes. Entertainment Weekly ranked the film #8 on their list of "The Top 50 Cult Films".[11]

Releases

VHS

Scarface was initially released by MCA Home Video on VHS and Beta in the summer of 1984; a two-tape set in 1.33:1 Pan and scan ratio and quickly became a bestseller, preluding its cult status[12]. A 2.35:1 Widescreen VHS would follow years later in 1998 to coincide with the special edition DVD release. The last and most recent VHS release was in 2003 to counterpart the 20th anniversary edition DVD.

DVD

Scarface has been released on DVD four times in the United States as of 2007.

The first was released by Universal Studios Home Entertainment on the film's 15th anniversary in 1998 under the studio's "Collector's Edition" line. The DVD featured a non-anamorphic widescreen transfer, Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround, a "Making of" documentary, outtakes, production notes and cast & crew bios. This release was not successful, and many fans and reviewers complained about its unwatchable video transfer and muddled sound, describing it as "one of the worst big studio releases out there"[13].

This DVD quietly went out of print, subsequently fetching outrageous prices on secondhand sites, such as eBay. In 2003, Universal released a remastered two disc "Anniversary Edition" to coincide with the film's 20th anniversary re-release, featuring two documentaries; one re-edited from the last release to include new interviews with Steven Bauer (Manny Ray) and another produced by Def Jam Recordings featuring interviews with various rappers on the film's cult success in the hip-hop world and other extras ported over from the previous DVD. New to this edition was a 2.35:1 Anamorphic widescreen transfer and 5.1 surround sound in both Dolby Digital and DTS.

Curiously, the limited theatrical re-release also boasted a remastered soundtrack with enhanced sound effects and music, but the DVD's 5.1 tracks were mixed from the film's original audio, resulting in noticeably limited frequency and surround effects. A limited-edition box set was also produced featuring a gold money clip, production stills, lobby cards and a DVD of the original Scarface. In 2005, Universal released single disc movie-only version of the Anniversary Edition, with deleted scenes as the sole bonus feature.

In the fall of 2006, Universal released Scarface in a two-disc "Platinum Edition", featuring the remastered audio from the theatrical re-release in Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1 surround. Most of the extras (with the exception of the Def Jam documentary, production notes and cast & crew bios) from the Anniversary Edition were also included along with two new featurettes regarding the new video game and the criminal and cultural world of Miami in the 1980s. Also new to this edition was a "Scarface Scoreboard", which counted number of bullets fired and the notorious amount of uses of the word "fuck" throughout the film.

Spanish language title

When released in Spain, the film was titled El Precio del Poder (The Price of Power). [1] [2] The US and Latin American editions of the DVD feature a Spanish language track, but gives the title as Caracortada (Spanish for "Cutface", a literal translation of "Scarface" into Spanish is "Cara de cicatriz").

Pop culture

Music

The music in Scarface was produced by Academy Award winning Italian record producer Giorgio Moroder. Like Moroder's style, the soundtrack consists mostly of synthesized new wave, electronic music.

Video games

A licensed video game, Scarface: The World Is Yours, was released in September and October 2006 as well as an update in June 2007, developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Vivendi Universal Games. The game is a sequel, and goes on the premise that Tony actually survived the raid on his mansion at the end of the film. Wii, PS2, Xbox, and PC versions have been released.

Radical and Vivendi also released a second licensed video game, Scarface: Money, Power, Respect, in October 2006. The game is much like Scarface: The World is Yours, but one main difference is that the second game deals more with the controlling of drugs and managing of the Montana cocaine empire and turf, whereas The World is Yours is mostly focused on getting rid of gangs, gaining respect and overall reconstruction of the empire. To date, only a PSP version of this game has been released.

The hit game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City also has some homages to Scarface, like an area with the famous bloody bathroom in an empty apartment, along with a chainsaw that can be used as a weapon. Also the Malibu Club is very similar to the Babylon Club. In the beginning of the game, Tommy Vercetti's drug deal gets busted, much like the coke deal that Tony gets double crossed in. There is also a mission in the game where Tommy and his partner Lance Vance kill Tommy's cocaine-dealing boss Ricardo Diaz, much like when Tony and Manny kill Frank. Ricardo Diaz's office is virtually identical to Tony's office in the movie, including the black walls and the series of television screens, and the huge front hall of Diaz's mansion is also very similar to Tony's in the movie, including the deep red walls. Finally, the last mission of the game ("Keep Your Friends Close...") is a slight spin-off of the final scene in Scarface. In this mission, Tommy has to fend off a whole rival gang in his mansion with only a few weapons. The only difference, however, is that Tommy lives through the fight with Ken Rosenberg to start "a new business relationship."

Books and comics

Dark Horse Comics' imprint, DH Press, released a novel called Scarface: The Beginning by L. A. Banks.[14][15]

In 2007, IDW Publishing released a new series called Scarface: Scarred for Life, which picks up where the film ends; as in the video game, it depicts Tony Montana barely surviving the film's climactic shotgun blast and, with the aid of two corrupt DEA agents, recovering to rebuild his empire and seek revenge on Sosa. This series was written by John Layman, with art by Dave Crosland.[16] IDW followed it in July 2007 with a prequel comic mini-series called Devil in Disguise, by Joshua Jabcuga and Alberto Dose, which shows Antonio's pre-boatlift days as a boy learning his way around the Cuban criminal underworld.[17]

Television and film

In 2001, plans were set into motion for hip hop artist Cuban Link to write and star in a sequel to Scarface entitled Son of Tony.[18] The plans for a prospective sequel drew both praise as well as criticism, and after several years Cuban Link had expressed that he may no longer be involved with the project as the result of movie rights issues and creative control.[19]

USA Network announced in 2003 they would be producing a mini-series based on the movie; however, the series' current status is unknown.

References

  1. ^ "Wireimage Listings: Scarface Premiere: Dec 1, 1983". Wireimage. December 1, 1983. http://www.wireimage.com/GalleryListing.asp?nbc1=1&navtyp=CAL====122873&ym=198312. Retrieved on 2007-07-20. 
  2. ^ "Scarred for Life". The Palm Beach Post. October 11, 2003. http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/10/08/1065601905570.html. Retrieved on 2007-07-20. 
  3. ^ "Scarface". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=scarface.htm. Retrieved on 2007-01-02. 
  4. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 9, 1983). "Scarface". Chicago Sun-Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19831209/REVIEWS/312090301/1023. Retrieved on 2008-10-08. 
  5. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Great Movies". Chicago Sun-Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=greatmovies_fulllist. Retrieved on 2008-10-08. 
  6. ^ Canby, Vincent (December 9, 1983). "Al Pacino Stars in Scarface". New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=2&res=9B0DE3D71F39F93AA35751C1A965948260&scp=21&sq=%22Scarface%22&st=nyt&oref=slogin&oref=logint. Retrieved on 2008-10-08. 
  7. ^ Ansen, David (December 12, 1983). "Gunning Their Way to Glory". Newsweek. 
  8. ^ Scott, Jay (December 9, 1983). "A Castro cast-off cut from cardboard Scarface: the scuzziest of them all". Globe and Mail. 
  9. ^ Arnold, Gary (December 9, 1983). "Al Pacino, the New Gangster, Saddled With Old Cliches". Washington Post. 
  10. ^ "AFI's 10 Top 10". American Film Institute. 2008-06-17. http://www.afi.com/10top10/gangster.html. Retrieved on 2008-06-18. 
  11. ^ "The Top 50 Cult Films". Entertainment Weekly. May 23, 2003. 
  12. ^ "Fonda Still Working Out (best-selling VHS and Beta tapes of the week)". The Miami Herald. June 16, 1984. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=MH&s_site=miami&p_multi=MH&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB35FD5E3BD789B&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved on 2007-03-16. 
  13. ^ Todd Doogan (September 3, 1998). "DVD Review - Scarface: Collector's Edition". The Digital bits. http://www.thedigitalbits.com/reviews/scarface.html. Retrieved on 2007-03-16. 
  14. ^ Dark Horse Comics > Profile > Scarface Vol. 1: The Beginning
  15. ^ DH Press Books : Current Titles
  16. ^ IDW Publishing
  17. ^ IDW Publishing
  18. ^ "Son of Tony". Ozone Magazine. http://www.ozonemag.com/feb2002/cubanlink.html. Retrieved on 2007-01-02. 
  19. ^ "Cuban Link Starts His Chain Reaction". Latin Rapper. http://www.latinrapper.com/featurednews41.html. Retrieved on 2007-01-02. 

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