Scarface (1983)
"He loved the American Dream. With a vengeance".
Brian
DePalma's gut-busting remake of Howard Hawks' 1932 gangster
melodrama, Scarface sets out to disgust, sicken and horrify
the audience with a rampage of violence, bloodshed and carnage. It
accomplishes this beyond debate.
Chicago is now Miami, beer is now cocaine, and Tony Camonte,
the Italian hood, is now Tony Montana, a sleazebag Cuban refugee
who floats in with the other 125,000 "Marielitos" who
poured into Florida in May 1980 when Castro turned his slaves
free.
Although the film is careful to point out that not all Cubans
are pimps, killers, racketeers, and social leeches, it also points
out that 25,000 of the 1980 refugees had criminal records. This is
the story of one of them.
Like many freeloaders who arrived with him, demanding political
freedom and civil rights and giving nothing in return, Tony
Montana throws himself on the mercy of the immigration officials,
then carves up what's left of a troubled America with a
switchblade.
The violence in Scarface begins immediately, with a riot
in a detention centre where Tony knifes his first victim. It's the
beginning of a long and gruesome body count. The murder pays for
Tony's green card and before long, this greasy hustler is making
cocaine transactions while his best friend gets chained to a motel
shower rod and has his arms and legs buzzed off with a chainsaw
(while the blood splashes all over Pacino's face and the bathroom
wallpaper!).
The rest of Scarface, which runs to almost three hours,
features more of the same.
It doesn't take long for Tony to get a taste of the high life -
$500 suits, vintage champagne, silver Porsches, blondes, and a
Miami mansion that seems to have been interior decorated by Sabu
the Elephant Boy. Tony's goal is "to get what's coming to me
. . . The world, and everything in it", and he's learned
quickly the secret of the American dream - that money equals
power, and drugs make money.
Tony corrupts his kid sister (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) who
adores him; he negotiates major drug deals in Colombia; muscles in
on his own boss's connections (Robert Loggia is marvellous as the
coke Tsar who addicts half of Florida from his Mercedes-Benz
dealership); falls for the gang lord's sultry gun moll (Michelle
Pfeiffer, looking like a 1940s Lizabeth Scott); and ends up with a
tax-evasion charge he must get out of by massacring what looks
like most of the Gulf Coast.
Tony machine-guns everyone who gets in his way, and by the time
he finally comes to his own grisly and predictable end, he's
running a cocaine empire that takes in $100 billion a year (and
has still never heard of Brooks Brothers).
Scarface provides one of the most nihilistic portraits
of America ever seen on film. Not only are the Cuban gangsters
reprehensible, but they are surrounded by crime on every level of
social stratification: narcotics agents who protect drug imports
with everything from money to first-class airline tickets, bankers
who launder illegal money, cops who dig into the profits, lawyers
who fix drug busts through connections that lead all the way to
Washington . . .
One fascinating shot reveals Loggia (the drug king who Pacino
bumps off) framed by personally autographed photos of everyone
from Bobby Kennedy to Richard Nixon.
The
message here is that the whole world is corrupt, everybody has a
price, and a sane and honest citizen hasn't got a chance. It's
probably the worst public-relations black eye ever given to the
city of Miami.
Painted in garish, peeling pink, the city looks like a
cesspool, and so many hotel, discos and restaurants get riddled
with machine-gun fire that the safest thing to do in Miami is
probably to stay in your room and watch television!
To be fair, Scarface does not condone or glamorise
cocaine or crime. The people are so scummy that when Tony finally
gets ripped apart by a thousand bullets and plunges into his
swimming pool there is no feeling of sadness or sense of loss.
The paranoia, madness and wholesale massacre that dominate the
final half hour of the film are really almost laughable. The sight
of Pacino, eyes rolling around in a junkie haze, his head almost
obscured by a desk piled high with a mountain of cocaine, is
comical.
His head falls into a mound of the stuff and he comes up
looking like a clown, while the supporting cast from The
Godfather moves in with enough artillery to wipe Beirut off
the face of the globe.
It's a sad thing to admit, but these days we've become so
de-sensitised by movie violence, so anaesthetised by the sight of
bullet-ridden corpses, that Scarface doesn't seem any more
repellent than any other movie (and a great deal less nauseating
than any movie ever directed by Sam Peckinpah).
Yes, the violence is endless and the four-letter words take the
place of English. The decadence and perversion drown everything in
a viscous grunge, and when the movie is over, you feel mugged,
debased, and like you've eaten a bad clam. It's brilliant!
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