Film Review
Arguably the greatest gangster movie of all time,
Scarface was so shocking to
American sensibilities of the 1930s that it outraged public opinion and
was quickly taken out of circulation by its producer, Howard
Hughes. The film was forgotten for fifty years, only to be
resurrected after Hughes's death in the early 1980s. It is now
regarded as one of the most important examples of the gangster genre,
and a pretty amazing example of 1930s American cinema.
The film is loosely based on a novel by Armitage Trail, a thinly veiled
account of the murderous exploits of Al Capone, the most notorious
gangster in history (who was famously imprisoned for tax invasion, the
only part of his catalogue of crime that could be proven). It was
the third gangster film of significance, following Mervyn LeRoy's
Little Caesar (1930) and
Public Enemy (1931).
In the film Tony Camonte (Capone in all but name) is portrayed as a
psychopathic latter-day Cesare Borgia, an ape-like juvenile who
glorifies in mayhem whilst harbouring incestuous proclivities for his
younger sister. The film is as much an intimate character study
of someone who has no moral compass as it is a vivid portrayal of
rampant gangster criminality in America during prohibition.
With Hughes's generous financial support, director Howard Hawks set out
to deliver an authentic recreation of gangland Chicago in the late
1920s. To that end, he staged some of the most ambitious action
sequences of any film at the time, including fast-moving car chases and
shockingly brutal street battles between rival gangs. The
authentic set design and Lee Garmes's stylishly expressionist
cinematography create a chilling realism which makes the seemingly
relentless round of killing genuinely horrific. The sound of
machine guns blazing mercilessly away in confined spaces continues to
ring in your ears hours after the closing credits have rolled.
The great tragedy of this film is that it pretty well blighted the
career of Howard Hawks, unquestionably one of America's finest
filmmakers. In technique and artistic vision, Hawks was years
ahead of his time, but rarely did he receive the recognition he
deserved.
Scarface was
just one of his great achievements, a film that is peppered with
moments of cinematic brilliance: the St Valentine's Day Massacre, cleverly
shot as a shadow play; the stunning car chase in which Camonte's narrowly
escapes death; and the harrowingly suspenseful climax. Hawks was
one of the first directors to employ a visual motif - the symbol X
representing death throughout the film (in real life, this symbol was
used to illustrate where the body of a murder victim was found).
Far from glorifying crime,
Scarface
is a potent warning of what can happen if a country allows crime to get
out of control. It's worth remembering that the main cause for
the gangster activity in 1920s and 1930s America was alcohol
prohibition. Murder and widespread fear were
the inevitable by-products of legislation that wasn't effectively backed up by
policing. The moral: don't ever introduce laws that can't be
enforced.
Even before it was released, the film ran into difficulties for its
graphic portrayal of violence. There was an ongoing battle
between Hughes and the censors, which resulted in several cuts being
made and some new material being added to bolster the film's moral
subtext. The latter includes some introductory captions
denouncing the government's inability to control gangster crime, and
some new scenes which condemn the newspapers for sensationalising
violent crime. The original ending was also replaced with a
specially shot sequence which emphasised Camonte's cowardice and
satisfied the requirement for a just retribution.
As if that wasn't enough, the film was re-titled:
Scarface, the Shame of the Nation
This tinkering
delayed the film's release for two years and spectacularly failed to
abate the storm of protest which erupted when the film finally hit the
cinema screens in 1932.
Scarface may have been a
commercial failure that did little for the fortunes of its director and
producer, but for some of its cast members it marked the beginning of a
successful career in the movies. Paul Muni, who is brilliant in
this film as the charismatically psychotic Tony Camonte, had a very
successful career, taking the lead in such classics as
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang
(1932), and winning the Best Actor Academy Award for his part in
The Story of Louis Pasteur (1935)
(one of five nominations for the coveted Oscar). Whilst
Muni managed to escape typecasting, the same wasn't true of George
Raft, who continued playing tough criminals in several popular gangster
films throughout the 1930s and '40s. Boris Karloff went off into
a totally different sphere, becoming a stalwart of the horror genre,
most famous for his iconic portrayal of Frankenstein's monster.
Since
Scarface's ill-fated
first airing, the gangster film has rapidly gained public acceptance
and has proven to be one of the most enduring and successful genres in
cinema, and not only in America. Howard Hawks's original film has
even inspired an updated remake:
Scarface
(1983), directed by Brian De Palma and starring Al Pacino. No
history of cinema would be complete without a substantial chapter
devoted to the murky, cordite-fragranced underworld of the
gangster. It's a place that very few of us would ever want to
visit in real life, but it's nonetheless a place which holds a dark
fascination for many, many film enthusiasts.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Howard Hawks film:
Barbary Coast (1935)