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The following DVDs
starring actor Al Pacino are available through
Amazon.com. |
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Donnie Brasco
Amazon.com -
Based on a memoir by former undercover cop Joe Pistone (whose
daring and unprecedented infiltration of the New York Mob scene
earned him a place in the federal witness protection program),
Donnie Brasco is like a de-romanticized, de-mythologized
version of The Godfather. It offers an uncommonly
detailed, privileged glimpse inside the world of organized crime
from the perspective of the little guys at the bottom of Mafia
hierarchy rather than from the kingpins at the top. Donnie
Brasco is not only one of the great modern-day gangster
movies to put in the company of The Godfather films and
GoodFellas, but it is also one of the great undercover
police movies--arguably surpassing Serpico and Prince
of the City in richness of character, detail, and moral
complexity. Donnie (Johnny Depp, a splendid actor) is
practically adopted by Lefty Ruggiero (Al Pacino), a gregarious,
low-level "made" man who grows to love his young protégé like a
son. (Pacino really sinks into this guy's skin and polyester
slacks, and creates his freshest, most fully realized character
since his 1970s heyday.) As Donnie acclimates himself to Lefty's
world, he distances himself from his wife (a terrific Anne Heche)
and family for their own protection. Almost imperceptibly his
sense of identity slips away from him. Questioning his own
confused loyalties, unable to trust anybody else because he
himself is an imposter, Donnie loses his way in a murky and
treacherous no-man's land. The film is directed by Mike Newell,
who also headed up Four Weddings and a Funeral and the
gritty, true crime melodrama Dance with a Stranger.
--Jim Emerson |
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Heat
Amazon.com -
Having developed his skill as a master of contemporary crime
drama, writer-director Michael Mann displayed every aspect of
that mastery in this intelligent, character-driven thriller from
1995, which also marked the first onscreen pairing of Robert De Niro
and Al Pacino. The two great actors had played father and son in
the separate time periods of The Godfather, Part II, but
this was the first film in which the pair appeared together, and
although their only scene together is brief, it's the riveting
fulcrum of this high-tech cops-and-robbers scenario. De Niro
plays a master thief with highly skilled partners (Val Kilmer
and Tom Sizemore) whose latest heist draws the attention of
Pacino, playing a seasoned Los Angeles detective whose
investigation reveals that cop and criminal lead similar lives.
Both are so devoted to their professions that their personal
lives are a disaster. Pacino's with a wife (Diane Venora) who
cheats to avoid the reality of their desolate marriage; De Niro
pays the price for a life with no outside connections; and
Kilmer's wife (Ashley Judd) has all but given up hope that her
husband will quit his criminal career. These are men obsessed,
and as De Niro and Pacino know, they'll both do whatever's
necessary to bring the other down. Mann's brilliant screenplay
explores these personal obsessions and sacrifices with absorbing
insight, and the tension mounts with some of the most riveting
action sequences ever filmed--most notably a daylight siege that
turns downtown Los Angeles into a virtual war zone of automatic
gunfire. At nearly three hours, the film qualifies as a kind of
intimate epic, certain to leave some viewers impatiently waiting
for more action, but it's all part of Mann's compelling
strategy. Heat is a true rarity: a crime thriller with
equal measures of intense excitement and dramatic depth, giving
De Niro and Pacino a prime showcase for their finely matched
talents. --Jeff Shannon |
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Devil's Advocate
Amazon.com - Too old for
Hamlet and too young for Lear--what's an ambitious actor to do?
Play the Devil, of course. Jack Nicholson did it in The Witches
of Eastwick; Robert De Niro did it in Angel Heart (as Louis
Cyphre--get it?). In The Devil's Advocate Al Pacino takes his
turn as the great Satan, and clearly relishes his chance to
raise hell. He's a New York lawyer, of course, by the name of
John Milton, who recruits a hotshot young Florida attorney
(Keanu Reeves) to his firm and seduces him with tempting offers
of power, sex, and money. Think of the story as a twist on John
Grisham's The Firm, with the corporate evil made even more
explicit. Reeves is wooden, and therefore doesn't seem to have
much of a soul to lose, but he's really just our excuse to meet
the devil. Pacino's the main attraction, gleefully showing off
his--and the Antichrist's--chops at perpetrating menace and
mayhem. The film was directed by Taylor Hackford (Against All
Odds, Dolores Claiborne), who provides alternate-track
commentary for the movie itself, plus a dozen deleted scenes.
Also note: due to a settlement with artist Frederick Hart over
the movie's use of a sculpture resembling his Ex Nihilo in
Washington's National Cathedral, future releases of the film
will be altered. --Jim Emerson |
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Scarface
Amazon.com - This
sprawling epic of bloodshed and excess, Brian De Palma's update
of the classic 1932 crime drama by Howard Hawks, sparked
controversy over its outrageous violence when released in 1983.
Scarface is a wretched, fascinating car wreck of a movie,
starring Al Pacino as a Cuban refugee who rises to the top of
Miami's cocaine-driven underworld, only to fall hard into his
own deadly trap of addiction and inevitable assassination.
Scripted by Oliver Stone and running nearly three hours, it's
the kind of film that can simultaneously disgust and amaze you
(critic Pauline Kael wrote "this may be the only action picture
that turns into an allegory of impotence"), with vivid
supporting roles for Steven Bauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mary
Elizabeth Mastrantonio, and Robert Loggia. --Jeff Shannon
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Scent of a Woman
Amazon.com -
Hoo-hah! After seven
Oscar nominations for his outstanding work in films such as
The Godfather, Serpico, and
Dog Day Afternoon,
it's ironic that Al Pacino finally won the Oscar for his
grandstanding lead performance in this 1992 crowd pleaser. As
the blind, blunt, and ultimately benevolent retired Lieutenant
Colonel Frank Slade, Pacino is both hammy and compelling,
simultaneously subtle and grandly over-the-top when defending
his new assistant and prep school student Charlie (Chris
O'Donnell) at a disciplinary hearing. While the subplot
involving Charlie's prep-school crisis plays like a sequel to
Dead Poets Society, Pacino's adventurous escapades in New
York City provide comic relief, rich character development, and
a memorable supporting role for Gabrielle Anwar as the young
woman who accepts the colonel's invitation to dance the tango.
Scent of a Woman is a remake of the 1972 Italian film
Profumo di donna. In addition to Pacino's award, the picture
garnered Oscar nominations for director Martin Brest and for
screenwriter Bo Goldman. --Jeff Shannon |
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The Insider
THE INSIDER recounts the
chain of events that pitted an ordinary man against the tobacco
industry and dragged two people into the fight of their lives.
Academy Award(R)-winner Al Pacino (1990 Best Actor, SCENT OF A
WOMAN; THE RECRUIT) gives a powerful performance as veteran 60
MINUTES producer Lowell Bergman and Academy Award(R) Winner
Russell Crowe (2000 Best Actor, GLADIATOR; A BEAUTIFUL MIND)
co-stars as the ultimate insider, former tobacco executive Dr.
Jeffrey Wigand. When Wigand is fired by his employer -- one of
the largest tobacco companies in America -- he agrees to become
a paid consultant for a story Bergman is working on regarding
alleged unethical practices within the tobacco industry. But
what begins as a temporary alliance leads to a lengthy battle
for both men to save their reputations, and much, much more. As
they soon find out, Corporate America will use all legal means
at its disposal to save a billion-dollar-a-year habit. And as
the corporate giants soon find out, Bergman and Wigand are
honorable men, driven to smoke out the evidence. Also starring
Christopher Plummer (MALCOLM X) as anchor Mike Wallace and Gina
Gershon (FACE/OFF), THE INSIDER will chill you with its cold,
hard edge -- and thrill you with its unbelievable twists and
turns. |
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Any Given Sunday
Amazon.com -
Any Given Sunday, Oliver Stone's salute-cum-exposé of pro
football, belabors some pretty obvious points for nigh onto
three hours; but between the frenetic editing, the pounding
rap-music beats, and several flashy performances, it's certainly
never dull. Al Pacino, coach of the fictional Miami Sharks (the
NFL declined involvement in this production), struggles with the
most time-honored of sports movie dilemmas: what to do with the
old friend who's past his prime and the young hotshot who could
save the franchise but first has to learn what being a team
player is all about. Comedian Jamie Foxx does a marvelous
dramatic turn as the rookie quarterback whose ego and talent are
equally impressive, while Pacino seems more at ease in Oliver
Stone Land than any actor since regular James Woods (on hand as
well as a sleazy team doctor). Prowling the sidelines, shouting
spittle-flecked orders, seizing up in almost physical pain when
a play goes the wrong way, Pacino is as unashamedly--and
entertainingly--hyperbolic as Stone's whirling montages of
boiling storm clouds, bloodthirsty fans, and players smashed
into the mud. (Once again football, perhaps the most
sophisticated of team sports, is viewed cinematically as a bunch
of guys hitting each other in slow motion.) Unfortunately, all
the self-conscious mythologizing and pumped-up macho posturing
that Stone can muster doesn't conceal a clichéd,
slapped-together script, whose few good ideas (mostly about race
in America) jostle about with several hoary, terrible
ones--including a too-literal analogy of football players as
modern gladiators. (To drive the point home, Stone includes
Charlton Heston--the aging Ben-Hur--in one of many
star-powered cameos.) All in all, Any Given Sunday is
never dull, but never very enjoyable, either. --Bruce Reid |
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Carlito's Way
Amazon.com essential
video - Al Pacino cuts a noble figure in this very enjoyable drama by
director Brian De Palma (Scarface), based on a pair of
books by Edwin Torres. Pacino plays a Puerto Rican ex-con trying
hard to go straight, but his loyalty to his lowlife attorney (a
virtually unrecognizable Sean Penn) and enemies on the street
make that choice difficult. Penelope Ann Miller plays, somewhat
unlikely, a stripper who has a romance with Pacino's character.
The film finds De Palma tempering his more outlandish moves
(think of Body Double or Snake Eyes) just as he
did with the popular Untouchables and Mission:
Impossible. But while Carlito's Way was not
commercially successful and never rises to the level of
greatness, it is a genuinely compelling movie graced with a fine
performance by Pacino and a surprising one from Penn. --Tom
Keogh |
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Glengarry Glen Ross
Amazon.com essential
video - Like moths to a flame, great actors gravitate to the singular
genius of playwright-screenwriter David Mamet, who updated his
Pulitzer Prize-winning play for this all-star screen adaptation.
The material is not inherently cinematic, so the movie's
greatest asset is Mamet's peerless dialogue and the assembly of
a once-in-a-lifetime cast led by Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, and
Alec Baldwin (the last in a role Mamet created especially for
the film). Often regarded as a critique of the Reagan
administration's impact on the American economy, the play and
film focus on a competitive group of real estate salesmen who've
gone from feast to famine in a market gone cold. When an
executive "motivator" (Alec Baldwin) demands a sales contest
among the agents in the cramped office, the stakes are
critically high: any agent who fails to meet his quota of sales
"leads" (i.e., potential buyers) will lose his job. This intense
ultimatum is a boon for the office superstar (Pacino), but a
once-successful salesman (Lemmon) now finds himself clinging
nervously to faded glory. Political and personal rivalries erupt
under pressure when the other agents (Alan Arkin, Ed Harris)
suspect the office manager (Kevin Spacey) of foul play. This
cauldron of anxiety, tension, and sheer desperation provides
fertile soil for Mamet's scathingly rich dialogue, which is like
rocket fuel for some of the greatest actors of our time. Pacino
won an Oscar nomination for his volatile performance, but it's
Lemmon who's the standout, doing some of the best work of his
distinguished career. Director James Foley shapes Mamet's play
into a stylish, intensely focused film that will stand for
decades as a testament to its brilliant writer and cast.
--Jeff Shannon |
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