Al Pacino packs a punch
It’s the Al Pacino syndrome. The other day I had a bad day at work and wanted to run around screaming expletives, with a gun for good measure. Just like Tony Montana in Scarface (1983). Being interrogated in a meeting, I long for the cockiness of Montana “the political prisoner from Cuba” demanding his “human right, now” in the opening scene of Scarface. Yes, I admit that I have watched Scarface far too many times for my own good. I’m a child of the early 80’s and Pacino was a star long before I arrived on the scene. I can’t claim to have watched all his films or know everything there is to know about the man, but whatever I have seen has me star-struck. For want of space, let me restrict my thoughts to just two of his films that influenced me -- Scarface and Scent of a Woman (1992) -- although his portrayal of the brooding Michael Corleone in Godfather (1972), his third film, was the one that got him noticed. It also earned him his first Academy Award nomination for Best Supporti...