'Scarface' is being remade yet again. The film, which began life on the screen in 1932 as a classic gangster story was remade by Brian De Palma in the 1983 film starring Al Pacino as a Cuban refugee who goes from street dealer to drug kingpin. Universal, which already has a script for the contemporary remake, has found a director: Pablo Larrain, a Chilean director, most recently known for his crit
It's hard to get upset about a remake of Brian De Palma's 1983 film 'Scarface,' if only because it was a remake of Howard Hawks's 1932 film of the same name. But a second remake is moving forward, and Universal proved it by hiring a new writer.
Police in Michigan pulled 87-year-old Leo Sharp over during a routine traffic stop. Sharp refused a search of his pickup truck and drug sniffing dogs found almost 228 pounds of cocaine in the back.
A reboot of the oft-quoted 1983 cult classic ‘Scarface’ is being developed by Universal.
There is no timeline for the release of the film, at this point, since potential script writers are being considered. Universal doesn’t intend the film be a sequel or a remake, but rather a re-imagination that draws from the themes prevalent in both Al Pacino’s notorious version of Scarface and the original 19
The classic line, “Say hello to my little friend,” which Al Pacino’s Tony Montana character belts out before his absurdly violent last stand in the cult classic ‘Scarface,’ has become deeply ingrained in pop culture since the film’s 1983 debut.
Movieline got its hands on some never-before-seen outtakes of that scene, which show that Pacino didn’t exactly nail the line on his first try.