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Roger Avary
Roger Avary@AVARY·
We can thank MTV Cribs for the ultimate acceptance of Scarface. When touring a crib it became de rigueur to pull out one’s copy of Scarface and hold it up to the camera as proof. Every crib had one.
Gangster Cinema Central@GangsterCinema

Scarface is widely regarded as a classic today, but when it first came out, the reception was brutal. Steven Bauer, who played Manny, says it was so painful that for years he and Al Pacino barely even spoke about the film. He explains… “Scarface is great to be a part of now. For years, it was dismal - like everybody associated with Scarface was a leper - people got very wimpy about Scarface really quickly. As soon as the reviews were out… Our peers came to see the movie in the premiere, right? There were two premieres, one in New York, one in LA, and people came to see it and they were like, ‘Wow, what a movie…. The next day, the reviews are out, and all the papers — this is before the internet, okay? - so you get just the conventional news media outlets - and 90% of them gave Scarface a horrible review. Like horrible, really, really insulting, injurious stuff. Personal attacks on Pacino and Brian De Palma, the director, and on Oliver, the writer... It was really, really mean because the country was going through a politically correct sort of thing - they were like, "This is like a new wave of violence in the movies, oh!" It’s nice because when I see Al - we can finally talk about it, because...for years, we couldn’t even talk about it. We’d be like, “Oh yeah, Scarface, yeah, yeah...” It was so sad! Because the movie was so great! And then it was like this thud, and it lasted like 10 years… Anywhere I’d go, it was like, ‘You’re that guy who was really good in that really terrible movie.’ And I’d be like, ‘How could you say that?’ And they’d go, ‘Well, you were good.’ And I’m like, ‘Okay, but I don’t care. What about the movie?’ And they go, ‘Oh, come on, you gotta admit it. It was like way over the top. It was like so exaggerating,’ blah, blah, blah, blah.…and I’d be like, ‘You’re a pussy!”

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WelcometoKlutch
WelcometoKlutch@KlutchWelcometo·
@AVARY MTV Cribs? It was loved in the early 90s by Hip Hop Culture. Long before MTV Cribs. New Jack City had clips of it in the movie.
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Ben
Ben@benherebef33217·
@AVARY How do you still not get that scarface was pro immigrant propaganda?
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Martin
Martin@Martinsomebody·
@AVARY I never knew it was supposed to be bad. When it played at our theater I brought in a home cassette deck and mic to audio record the whole thing.
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Knocko Nolan
Knocko Nolan@KnockoNolan·
@AVARY When executing search warrants on drug hits during the VHS/DVD era, EVERY single pad had a copy of SCARFACE & sometimes the movie poster for good luck. On a weirder note, almost every tweaker pad had numerous dildos.
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Billy Exeter
Billy Exeter@SgtMccray·
@AVARY And every dude’s undergrad dorm in the early 2000’s
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Ben Carlisle
Ben Carlisle@WriteInMayorBen·
@AVARY Scarface is okay, but if you really want to pimp out your crib, Carlito's Way is superior in every way.
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Jessica Brainard
Jessica Brainard@JessicaBra82321·
@AVARY have you seen the video of brian de palma and quentin tarantino talking about scarface.
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Jessica Brainard
Jessica Brainard@JessicaBra82321·
@AVARY I wanted to like it and michelle pffiefer was great in it it just wasn't good and i didn't find Al Pacino convincing.
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X-Ray 🇺🇸
X-Ray 🇺🇸@X_Ray44·
@AVARY Did You Know... One of the extras from Scarface went missing and has never been seen since? Unsolved Mysteries even did a segment on her back in the late 80s. She also had a small role in the 1983 raunchy comedy, Spring Break. allthatsinteresting.com/tammy-lynn-lep…
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Aurelio Muraca
Aurelio Muraca@equality2112·
@AVARY Where’s your Scarface pinball machine?
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Greek Fire
Greek Fire@mastic_magpie·
@AVARY There was even a reference to it in Curb Your Enthusiasm, when Larry was given a tour of his rapper neighbour’s mansion.
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HollywoodPhish
HollywoodPhish@shafbag·
@AVARY The gore is what was talked about early on. And the final shootout. Nothing like it in American cinema at the time.
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michael_wharton
michael_wharton@michael_wharton·
@AVARY Facts. One sees a similar phenomenon, if you know where to look, regarding Robert Greene's The 48 Laws of Power. Regarding unlikely crossovers from back in the day, Ralph Lauren was the one that took me most by surprise when I first saw it in Manhattan...
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ComedyNerd
ComedyNerd@schmiesel1·
@AVARY Haha I’ll always love the wallpaper though. I kinda want it
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barbitas 🇺🇸🇪🇸
barbitas 🇺🇸🇪🇸@coldreadz·
@AVARY It's fascinating when a movie finds its audience years later and seeps into popular as if it was always there
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Anthony
Anthony@fcukheineken·
@AVARY Did you see Scarface opening night with the video archives crew? What were your first thoughts? Assuming everyone was anticipating the newest de Palma.
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bloodofmyenemies
bloodofmyenemies@bloodofmyenemi2·
@AVARY Didn't one rapper have Scarface on loop 24/7 in his house?
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