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Le tueur de Chicago

Original title: The Scarface Mob
  • TV Movie
  • 1959
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
373
YOUR RATING
Le tueur de Chicago (1959)
CrimeDrama

Story of how a group of incorruptible federal lawmen helped put 1920s' Chicago gangster Al Capone in prison.Story of how a group of incorruptible federal lawmen helped put 1920s' Chicago gangster Al Capone in prison.Story of how a group of incorruptible federal lawmen helped put 1920s' Chicago gangster Al Capone in prison.

  • Director
    • Phil Karlson
  • Writers
    • Paul Monash
    • Eliot Ness
    • Oscar Fraley
  • Stars
    • Robert Stack
    • Keenan Wynn
    • Barbara Nichols
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    373
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Phil Karlson
    • Writers
      • Paul Monash
      • Eliot Ness
      • Oscar Fraley
    • Stars
      • Robert Stack
      • Keenan Wynn
      • Barbara Nichols
    • 11User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos84

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    Top cast45

    Edit
    Robert Stack
    Robert Stack
    • Eliot Ness
    • (archive footage)
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Joe Fuselli
    • (archive footage)
    Barbara Nichols
    Barbara Nichols
    • Brandy LaFrance
    • (archive footage)
    Pat Crowley
    Pat Crowley
    • Betty Anderson
    • (archive footage)
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • Martin Flaherty
    • (archive footage)
    Joe Mantell
    Joe Mantell
    • George Ritchie
    • (archive footage)
    Bruce Gordon
    Bruce Gordon
    • Frank Nitti
    • (archive footage)
    Neville Brand
    Neville Brand
    • Al Capone
    • (archive footage)
    Peter Leeds
    Peter Leeds
    • LaMarr Kane
    • (archive footage)
    Eddie Firestone
    Eddie Firestone
    • Eric Hansen
    • (archive footage)
    Robert Osterloh
    Robert Osterloh
    • Tom Kopka
    • (archive footage)
    Paul Dubov
    Paul Dubov
    • Jack Rossman
    • (archive footage)
    Abel Fernandez
    Abel Fernandez
    • William Youngfellow
    • (archive footage)
    Paul Picerni
    Paul Picerni
    • Tony Liguri
    • (archive footage)
    John Beradino
    John Beradino
    • Johnny Giannini
    • (archive footage)
    Wolfe Barzell
    Wolfe Barzell
    • Picco
    • (archive footage)
    Frank Wilcox
    Frank Wilcox
    • U.S. District Attorney Beecher Asbury
    • (archive footage)
    Peter Mamakos
    Peter Mamakos
    • Bomber Belcastro
    • (archive footage)
    • Director
      • Phil Karlson
    • Writers
      • Paul Monash
      • Eliot Ness
      • Oscar Fraley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    7.2373
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    Featured reviews

    5ccthemovieman-1

    This Didn't Match Up To The Weekly Show

    Could this one of those films (or TV shows or made-for-TV movies) that was intense and dramatic when you first watched it as a kid....but now looks tame and wasn't as good as you remembered? Or was this TV-movie simply not up to standards of the weekly show? Hopefully, the latter because I have fond memories of the show.

    Growing up, I never missed an episode of the "The Untouchable" on TV and thought it was the greatest. I am still anxiously awaiting someone to put the show on DVD.

    However, even though it was fun to see Robert Stack playing Elliot Ness once again; Neville Brand as the tough Al Capone and Barbara Nichols playing a dumb blonde, all of it was just didn't have the impact anymore....or at least in this movie.

    The problem was that the story moved too slowly. You can't do that today, especially in crime movies. The only "crime" is having a film that drags.
    9wynne-1

    Wonderful!

    Back in the good old days of television censorship, shows like THE UNTOUCHABLES were never allowed to be shown without first having passed the strict rules of censorship insisted upon by sponsors and ever-cautious studio executives. As history has shown us, eventually there was a backlash to such concerns. The end result? Well, such considerations are always subjective and many viewers today might wonder aloud how shows like THE SOPRANOS could ever have come to be in such an environment.

    For better or for worse, things have changed. But those who might label shows like THE UNTOUCHABLES "naïve" had best be reminded that it took an awful lot of creativity to work around the limits of early television censorship to present programming as violent, hard-hitting and memorable as THE UNTOUCHABLES or, as we have it here: THE SCARFACE MOB.

    THE SCARFACE MOB was the name of the two-part pilot for the Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse Anthology series on CBS. Desilu was the television production company created by Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball. Together they were committed to the artistic growth as well as financial success of the medium. The same way they pushed the envelope in comedy with I LOVE LUCY no doubt inspired their attempts to do the same with drama. We'll never known the full extent of the battles that went on behind closed doors to finally get the green light from rival network ABC (after CBS passed) to go ahead with the weekly series of THE UNTOUCHABLES. Two factors must have come to mind in favour of producing the show. The series was based on fact and not too distant recent (though almost forgotten) history; and more importantly, each episode of THE UNTOUCHABLES ultimately represented a morality play with good triumphing over evil. Thus, with the inherent morality intact, THE SCARFACE MOB, with a lot of editing apparently, gave birth to the long-running popular program THE UNTOUCHABLES that proved over its four-season life span there was an audience for such violent fare-so long as the good guys won in the end.

    Robert Stack (sounding like Gary Cooper's younger brother) stars as agent Eliot Ness, whose real-life exploits during Prohibition were largely forgotten by the time the series was made. Ness struggled financially and was almost penniless in his later years. He died in1957 of a heart attack at the mere age of 54 while working on his memoirs as a desperate means of generating some income. Stack was perfect for the part, though he was not first choice. That distinction went to Arnaz' friend, Van Johnson, whose agent made the fatal error of asking for too much money--$10,000 for each of the two-part episodes! Outraged, Arnaz withdrew the offer and called Stack, offering him the role. Stack accepted immediately and the rest is television history!

    The real standout performance is Neville Brand as Al Capone, broad Italian accent and all. Combined with terrific atmosphere, a constant stream of bullets, beautiful women in '20s-era dresses and strongly delineated characters who are either black or white, good or bad, THE SCARFACE MOB sizzles with the promise of danger at every turn. Ambiguity and subtlety have no place in the world of THE SCARFACE MOB.
    JohnnyCNote

    Brutal, Violent, Great Fun

    Unlike the DePalma picture of the late 80's, this original pilot film for the Untouchables TV show features great performances and really conveys the look and feel of Prohibition era Chicago. Well, it makes you feel as if you were there, whether or not it's all that accurate. Robert Stack once said he didn't so much act as react to the colorful gangsters of the show.

    My favorite is Neville Brand, who plays Scarface Al Capone. He's a riot to watch, particularly in the scene where he's berating his lieutenants one moment, then laughing lasciviously the next. Bruce Gordon is Frank Nitti, "The Enforcer". He's crude and brutal, all in all the perfect villain. Watch for the scene where he's working over one of his boys because he can't get Ness and his crew to play ball. Each blow is accented by a musical flourish, while the unlucky victim of his rage sobs and cries out "mama mia! mama mia!".

    The TV show dispensed with the Hollywood Italian accents. I can't say whether they'd be offensive to the average Italian-American viewer or not. I do know that the Chicago Outfit, or mob, didn't like it. They went to far as to put a contract on Desi Arnaz, whose studio, Desilu, produced the series. Needless to say, it was never filled.

    This will always be one of my favorite gangster films. It's not on the same level as The Godfather, Casino or Goodfellas, Key Largo or Scarface, but it's just as entertaining. It gets a solid Three Stars in my book...
    7Morrisonhig

    Great But...

    As the world's biggest Untouchables fan it would pain me to write anything negative about this franchise. But this Pilot, at least the first part, though it does get a bit better, is pedestrian compared to the best episodes of the subsequent series, which of course we remember, forgetting the worst. First episode The Empty Chair a case in point. Of which the first few minutes even, are a step up in tempo.

    Its funny that some of the original Untouchables such as Paul Dubov later sit on Frank Nitti's council and Peter Leeds is as a con in 3000 suspects!!. Eddie Firestone an Untouchable!!!! (sorry Eddie), and Paul Picerni does a complete about turn. The series has the benefit of the great music played during the episodes which this does not have. Which always adds great substance.

    To me its ironic that the whole revolves around the prohibition of alcohol while most of the characters smoke like chimneys!!!

    Bruce Gordon, Neville Brand, and Frank (F. Troop) de Kova are some of my all time favourites but for the first two in proper larger than life form watch the Big Train Parts 1 and 2 and Bruce and Frank in The Frank Nitti Story , Nick Acropolis etc.

    Again a good watch but not a patch on the best of Series 1-3. but still way ahead of disappointing Season 4
    4valstone52

    Good imagination.

    I used to love this series growing up. But as I got older I knew most of it was false. No way was Ness going around slapping gangsters, and talking down to them. Ness wanted to be important again, so he wrote this mostly fictional account. The IRS brought Capone down, not Ness. Read the true story. All in all this was light entertainment.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Abel Fernandez's character was based on William Jennings Gardner, a real-life Native American member of Elliot Ness' "Untouchables."
    • Quotes

      Betty Anderson: [Eliot Ness arrives after two Capone men pay his fiance a visit] Eliot what kind men are they?

      Eliot Ness: They are warped, sadistic, rotten little cowards!

    • Alternate versions
      This was originally a two part presentation on the Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse under the title of simply "The Untouchables," the title given to the subsequent television series.
    • Connections
      Edited from Les incorruptibles (1959)
    • Soundtracks
      Ain't Misbehavin
      Written by Fats Waller (as Thomas Walter), Harry Brooks and Andy Razaf

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 13, 1962 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Les incorruptibles défient Al Capone
    • Filming locations
      • Desilu Studios - 9336 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Desilu Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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