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Brian
De Palma's blood-and-sun-drenched saga of a Cuban deportees rise
to the top of Miami's cocaine business has become something of a popular
classic since its release; it's been referenced in rap songs and subsequent
gangster movies and quoted the world over. Despite this lovefest with
the dialogue, the films brutal violence and lack of positive characters
still make it controversial and disliked by certain critics.
Al Pacino stars as Tony Montana, whose intelligence, guts, and ambition
help him skyrocket from dishwasher to the top of a criminal empire but
whose eventual paranoia and incestuous desire for his kid sister (Mary
Elizabeth Mastrantonio) prove his undoing. Michelle Pfeiffer plays Tonys
neglected coke-addicted trophy wife, and Steven Bauer is his concerned
friend. F. Murray Abraham, Robert Loggia, and Paul Shenar are some of
Tonys sleazy business partners and potential killers.
Oliver Stone
wrote the expletive-packed screenplay, based on Howard Hawkss 1932
version--which was ostensibly about Al Capone and starred Paul Muni and
George Raft. The synth-heavy Giorgio Moroder score expertly evokes the
drug-fueled decadence of 1980s Miami, and De Palma provides several of
his elaborate set pieces, including a horrific showstopper in a motel
room with a chain saw.

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