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Carlito's Way
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Directed by Brian De Palma.
Carlito's Way is a tale of a former hood trying to escape his former life. Al Pacino is Carlito Brigante, a high-level Puerto Rican drug dealer sprung from a three-decade jail sentence after only five years, thanks to a technicality and his sleazy, cocaine-addled lawyer, Dave Kleinfeld (Sean Penn). Carlito renounces his previous ways and takes a job as the manager of a club that Kleinfeld has invested in, planning to save enough money so that he can eventually move to the Caribbean. But no sooner is Carlito back on the streets of New York than his old life claws at him in the form of both old partners (Luis Guzman) and vicious up-and-comers (John Leguizamo). Nevertheless, Carlito stays clean and even restarts his relationship with a dancer named Gail (Penelope Ann Miller), until he is finally led astray by Kleinfeld, who manipulates Carlito into participating in the murder of a Mafia don from whom Kleinfeld has stolen a million dollars. At that point, the race is on to see whether Carlito and Gail can escape his world for good. The film is based on two novels about Carlito written by New York State judge Edwin Torres. ~ Don Kaye, All Movie Guide
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superfastreadersuperfastreader Re:A new pack of RESERVOIR DOGS ...
by superfastreader in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"Here it is--the all Al Pacino version of Reservoir Dogs. This is my first time contributing--love hearing the winners on Filmspotting! Carlito Brigante (Carlito's Way) ... Mr. WhiteBobby (Panic in Needle Park) ... Mr. OrangeTony Montana (Scarface) ... Mr. BlondeMichael Corleone (The Godfather) ... Nice Guy EddieRicky Roma (Glengarry Glen Ross) ... Mr. PinkJohn Milton (Devil's Advocate) ... Joe CabotLt. Col. Frank Slade (Scent of a Woman) ... Mr. BrownLowell Bergman (The Insider) ... Mr. BlueOfficer Frank Serpico (Serpico) ... Young Cop (gets ear cut off)Al Pacino (Looking for Richard) ... K-Billy DJ The song: http://www.weshow.com/us/p/147 19/basenji_dog_sings " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash Al Pacino's Greatest Rants
by lopezdash in The Movie Blog
is not interested.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"The high-quality magazine FHM has come out with a list of 10 of Al Pacino's Greatest Rants... And here it is:10. HeatMichael Mann’s classic crime drama casts Al Pacino as a Los Angeles detective trying to prevent a bank heist. He attempts to gain leverage over the wife of one of the robbers by going after a salesman with whom she’s been having an affair. When the chump asks himself why he was dumb enough to get mixed up with her, Pacino makes it clear—she’s got a great ass! Ferocious, isn’t he?http://www.youtube.com/watc h?v=mlXpX3o3W2Q9. Carlito's WayAl Pacino’s first collaboration with director Brian De Palma since Scarface wastes no time giving fans what they want—a rant. As convicted drug dealer Carlito Brigante, Pacino is released from prison on a technicality but wishes to assure the court and the district attorney (James Rebhorn) that his dealing days are done. This rant stands out as one of the very few times where Pacino ca ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
By the early '90s, the initial controversy surrounding Brian De Palma' violent remake of Scarface had evaporated and the film had become something of a high-profile cult classic. A re-teaming of the film's director and star Al Pacino, Carlito's Way was marketed as its followup -- and it is, though not necessarily in the way most would expect. While Scarface starred Pacino as a character whose all-encompassing appetite leads him to climb higher and higher in the underworld, in Carlito's Way he plays a world-weary character seeking only to get out. In place of the drug-fueled mania of Tony Montana, Pacino uses silence and knowing looks to convey a miles-deep sadness. It's a masterful performance in a film that has much to recommend it, in particular a handful of deftly-executed set pieces, a tremendous feel for its disco-era setting, and a terrific supporting cast (Luis Guzman, John Leguizamo, and especially Sean Penn). But ultimately it's the elegiac mood of the film that stays longest in the memory, as De Palma and company escalate B-movie material into a meditation on aging and fate. Severely underrated at the time, this is a film that just looks better as the years go by. (In fact, Cahiers Du Cinema would later pronounce it the best of the decade.) ~ Keith Phipps, All Movie Guide
 



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