Scarface Frank Lopez
Torrent Download Visio 2010 Professional. Scarface (1983) Scarface Blu-ray offers solid video and great audio in this excellent Blu-ray release In the spring of 1980, the port at Mariel Harbor was opened, and thousands set sail for the United States. They came in search of the American Dream. In this fictional account one of them found it on the sun-washed avenues of Miami. Wealth, power and passion beyond his wildest dreams. He was Tony Montana. The world will remember him by another name.
Scarface Script taken from a transcript of the screenplay and/or the Oliver Stone movie with Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer.
For more about Scarface and the Scarface Blu-ray release, see published by Kenneth Brown on August 25, 2011 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.0 out of 5. Director: Writer: Starring:,,,,, ». Scarface Blu-ray Review 'A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse.' Reviewed by, August 25, 2011 The scene that best captures everything that makes Scarface, well. When Tony offers Ernie a job. That's right, when Tony offers Ernie a job. No chainsaws, no Bolivian helicopters, no nightclub hits, no cock-ah-roaches or say-hellos, no M16-mounted grenade launchers, no lines of llello (pronounced yey-yo for the uninitiated), no showers of blood or barrage of bullets.
The film's choice scenes may stick to the roof of your brain, but they're merely pulpy pleasures. They're not the things that make the film sizzle.
They're not the things that make it tick. Scarface, penned with a razor blade by Oliver Stone and directed with a fierce vengeance by director Brian De Palma, is a film of startling fury, brutal savagery and operatic shock and awe; elements that have earned the critically divisive 1983 crime drama the fervent cult following it enjoys today. And yet it's Stone and De Palma's command of suspense, volatility and tension -- the quiet moments before and, in Ernie's case, after every Pacino storm -- that makes Scarface so much more than the unhinged, hyper-violent, overindulgent schlock so many have unjustly labeled it. In May 1980, Fidel Castro opened the harbor at Mariel, Cuba with the apparent intention of letting some of his people join their relatives in the United States. Within seventy-two hours, 3,000 U.S.
Boats were headed for Cuba. It soon became evident that Castro was forcing the boat owners to carry back with them not only their relatives, but the dregs of his jails.
Of the 125,000 refugees that landed in Florida, an estimated 25,000 had criminal records. Scarface tracks the ruthless rise (and spectacular fall) of Tony Montana (Al Pacino), a Cuban refugee who comes to Miami and soon sets his sights on more than the entry-level American Dream tends to offer. With lifelong best friend Manny Ribera (Steven Bauer) in tow, Tony locks and loads his way up the criminal ladder, killing anyone who crosses him, exacting vengeance on his enemies and honing his bloody business sense. He snags a pair of green cards by assassinating a former Cuban official, cuts his teeth running dope for a dealer named Frank Lopez (Robert Loggia), eventually makes inroads with a Bolivian distributor (Paul Shenar), steps up when Frank begins to slip, and soon becomes Miami's most powerful and most feared kingpin. But for as much as Tony comes to despise Lopez, he neglects to take two important lessons to heart: 'don't underestimate the other guy's greed' and 'don't get high on your own supply.'