Blu-ray: "Scarface" - Say Goodnight to the Bad Guy
Nothing exceeds like Brian De Palma's study in excess
"Scarface: Limited Edition" (Universal)
Brian De Palma's "Scarface," ostensibly a remake of the Howard Hawks gangster classic, moves the iconic rise and fall crime opera from the tommy-gun gangster wars of the prohibition era to the cocaine wars of Florida in the eighties. In the process, De Palma, screenwriter Oliver Stone and star Al Pacino carved out a film that redefined a generation of gangster cinema.
See below for details on the insanely deluxe edition ($1000 retail) and footage from the August 23 cast reunion.
Pacino's Tony Montana, a Cuban criminal fresh from Castro's prisons looking for his piece of the pie in Miami, is a predator from the moment he hits the shore and Pacino is pure drive for success: get the money, get the power, and then you get the girl, is his mantra, and he pulls along his loyal immigrant comrade Manny (Steven Bauer) for the ride to the top.
Oliver Stone's screenplay keeps the general shape of the original story -- Tony's friendship with Manny, his fierce over protectiveness of his kid sister (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) who isn't a virginal as he imagines and his obsession with the boss's ice-queen mistress (Michelle Pfeiffer), the trophy for the winner -- while rethinking it in terms of the Miami cocaine boom of the early eighties. It's a whole new spin on the immigrant story and the American Dream as an underworld nightmare and a fitting bookend to the two "Godfather" films. The façade of family loyalty, underworld authority and the mob code is trampled in the feral battle to get to the top of the cocaine mountain as Tony robs and murders his way to riches and power, and then numbs himself into a fantasy of invulnerability with his own product.
Meanwhile, De Palma directs it as a blood-drenched thug opera, a mix of the graceful and the garish with Pacino's guttural thug-in-a-suit spitting out dialogue like broken glass in a harsh Cuban accent. He gets to the point, whether he's talking or shooting, and has neither the time not the inclination for niceties.
"Scarface" has been a staple in the Universal catalogue since the days of VHS, constantly rereleased in new editions and promotions. New to the Blu-ray debut is the 38-minute retrospective "The Scarface Phenomenon," a decent featurette that surveys the film's cultural resonance and influence without offering any new insights, and the 11-minute "The World of Tony Montana," plus an optional picture-in-picture track that repurposes interview clips from the featurettes and drops them in at appropriate times, as well as clips from the original 1931 film to contrast the way key scenes are played, then and now. Also features the supplements from earlier editions, including a three-part documentary with De Palma, Stone, Pacino and others, and comparisons between the theatrical and TV cuts of the film.

Die-hard fans can even get a super deluxe edition with an exclusive, handcrafted, genuine humidor with the promise "The World is Yours" painted into the finish, at the not quite so reasonable price of $1000 retail. Cigars optional, cocaine not recommended. Rule number two: Don't get high off your own supply.
Internet bonus: on the evening of August 23, Al Pacino joined co-star Steven Bauer, Robert Loggia, F. Murray Abraham and producer Martin Bregman for a special Q&A in Los Angeles. You can watch a recording of the event streamed live via Livestream below.
about the blogger

Sean Axmaker is MSN's DVD columnist and the editor of Parallax View. He writes for Turner Classic Movies Online and his work has appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Seattle Weekly, The Stranger, Senses of Cinema, Asian Cult Cinema, Psychotronic Video and "The Scarecrow Video Guide."
movie news
- 'The Hangover III' vs. 'Fast & Furious 6' and four more summer box-office smackdowns
- Chilean miner happy to be played by Banderas in film
- Seth MacFarlane won't host Oscars, recommends Joaquin Phoenix for 2014
- Annotated 'Harry Potter' 1st edition on auction
- Steven Soderbergh on quitting movies
- VH1 sets theatrical release for Napster doc 'Downloaded'
- Martin Scorsese to present Mel Brooks with AFI Award
- 'Anchorman 2' trailer compares Ron Burgundy to Jesus, Jay-Z
- Man falls from NYC theater window onto marquee
- Amalric plays a Frenchman in America in 'Jimmy P'


