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| Living dangerously, Tony Camonte muscles in on his boss’s girlfriend. |
“Scarface” (1932) is one of the seminal American gangster films of the 1930s, along with “Little Caesar,” “The Roaring Twenties” and “The Public Enemy.” Each one tells the story of a gangster’s rise in the bootlegging business and his assent to the top of a powerful crime syndicate. After tasting success, each of the crime lords has a precipitous fall back to earth due to errors in judgment and his own hubris.
Howard Hawks directed the original and Ben Hecht wrote the break-neck paced script that is as witty as his screwball comedy, “His Girl Friday” — Hawks directed that one, too.
Paul Muni is terrific as the wisecracking Tony Camonte, a gangster who wants to control all of Chicago’s booze biz. He must step over or crush many other hoods to get the job done, and like many a successful gangster he’ll rub out even a longtime pal who stands in the way.
Tony flirts with his boss’s girlfriend and talks of taking over the North Side of Chicago’s bootlegging business that’s run by a powerful rival gang — both actions suggest a death wish at the core of his being. But pretty soon he makes good on his ambitions.
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| Tony (Paul Muni) likes the feel of a machine gun in ‘Scarface.’ |
Despite his penchant for deep-sixing his rivals, Tony has a goofy side that might have seemed out of place in such a dubious movie hero, but here it doesn’t.
When Tony gets his hands on a Thompson machine gun, the first one he’s ever seen, he’s delighted with the weapon’s raw destructive power. He takes adolescent delight in spraying the room with bullets, but it doesn’t take long before he starts training the weapon on human targets.
Tony is devoted to his mother — do all wiseguys have mother issues? He’s also a fierce overlord to his younger sister, demanding that she never go on dates with young men. His fixation with his attractive sibling is a bit creepy and ultimately becomes a key part of his undoing.
Tony’s fancy townhouse is equipped with steel shutters, making the joint a fortress to stave off bullets and bombs that rivals and the police might fire in his direction. But he can never completely shut out the threats that will ultimately rain down upon him.
Racked by paranoia, he ultimately finishes off his friends as well as other hoods looking to put out his lights. Alone, he’s no longer a force to be reckoned with and he pays the ultimate price for his misdeeds. A fitting end to a strange bad guy who we can’t help but like.

