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Mister Scarface

Original title: I padroni della città
  • 1976
  • R
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Mister Scarface (1976)
Dark ComedyComedyCrimeThriller

Two small-time hoodlums plot to get even with a treacherous boss who is intent on monopolizing all criminal activity within Rome.Two small-time hoodlums plot to get even with a treacherous boss who is intent on monopolizing all criminal activity within Rome.Two small-time hoodlums plot to get even with a treacherous boss who is intent on monopolizing all criminal activity within Rome.

  • Director
    • Fernando Di Leo
  • Writers
    • Fernando Di Leo
    • Peter Berling
  • Stars
    • Jack Palance
    • Al Cliver
    • Harry Baer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Peter Berling
    • Stars
      • Jack Palance
      • Al Cliver
      • Harry Baer
    • 19User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos42

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    Top cast45

    Edit
    Jack Palance
    Jack Palance
    • Manzari
    Al Cliver
    Al Cliver
    • Rick
    Harry Baer
    Harry Baer
    • Tony
    Gisela Hahn
    Gisela Hahn
    • Clara
    Enzo Pulcrano
    • Peppe
    Carmelo Reale
    • Luca
    • (as Roberto Reale)
    Edmund Purdom
    Edmund Purdom
    • Luigi Cerchio
    Vittorio Caprioli
    Vittorio Caprioli
    • Vincenzo Napoli
    Rosario Borelli
    • Actor
    Pietro Ceccarelli
    • Horseman
    Salvatore Billa
    Salvatore Billa
    • Mugger
    Peter Berling
    Peter Berling
    • Enrichetto
    Raul Lovecchio
    • Manzari Goon
    • (as Raul Lo Vecchio)
    Giulio Baraghini
    • Manzari Goon
    Erigo Palombini
    • Manzari Goon
    • (as Enrico Palombini)
    Spartaco Battisti
    • Gambler
    Fernando Cerulli
    Fernando Cerulli
    • Debtor
    Luciano Bottin
    • Young Rick
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Peter Berling
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.11.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10ZeddaZogenau

    "Supertypen" like Harry BAER and Al CLIVER

    Italian gangster film from cult director Fernando Di Leo

    This film, which is well worth seeing and is also known as "I padroni della citta" or "Mister Scarface", was released in Italian cinemas on December 3rd, 1976 and in West German cinemas on December 9th, 1977. "ZWEI SUPERTYPEN RÄUMEN AUF / Two Super Guys Clean Up" is the last film from the very innovative production company Daunia 80, which, with director Fernando Di Leo, produced such classics of the Italian gangster film (poliziotteschi) as "Milano Caliber 9" (1972), "La mala ordina / The Mafia Boss - They Kill Like Jackals " (1972) - by the way, both with a magnificent and uninhibited EUROPEAN FILM AWARD nominee Mario Adorf - and of course "Il Boss / Der Teufel führt Regie" (1973) brought to the cinema.

    This film is about Tony (Harry Baer), a young mafia money collector who, although he can casually cruise around Rome in his buggy, is not satisfied with his position in the mafia hierarchy. The likeable and actually rather slight rascal is such a sophisticated pugilist that he can beat any opponent to the ground, which can also be seen in detail. One day the opportunity arises to get one over on one of the big names in the underworld (delightfully nasty: the future Oscar winner Jack Palance as Manzari or Mister Scarface). Tony promptly gets caught up in the conflict between various gangs, which he tries to outsmart together with the experienced underworld agent Vincenzo Napoli (Vittorio Caprioli). They get support from another cool kid named Ric (Al Cliver), who isn't particularly into beatings, but can shoot remarkably well and still has a mysterious score to settle from the past. The beautiful Clara plays a smaller role (played by the enchanting Gisela Hahn, who also gets to sing a song herself here - probably T'amo lo stesso), who is good friends with both guys. What's worth noting is that Tony and Ric could also pass as a couple. Slight homoerotic undertones can definitely be heard. Edmund Purdom and Peter Berling, who also co-wrote the script, can also be seen in other roles.

    This film is really fun! Great atmosphere, lots of action, hearty fights and a sophisticated villain! Not quite as strong as Di Leo's three masterpieces mentioned above, but definitely worth seeing!

    An astonishing discovery is the German actor Harry Baer in one of the main roles, who fights his way through the underworld in a cool and charming way that you can't help but be amazed by. Born in 1947, Baer worked a lot at the beginning of his career with successful director Rainer Werner Fassbinder (e.g. "Götter der Pest" (1970) and many others), but is still present and has also appeared in "Feuchtgebiete" (2012 ) played along.

    The beautiful Gisela Hahn (born 1943) is known for her appearances alongside Brad Harris (KOMMISSAR X / SIE NANNTEN IHN ZAMBO).

    Peter Berling (1934-2017) could also be seen alongside the powerful Giancarlo Prete in the beating suit "Alle für einen - Prügel für alle" (1973), for which he also wrote the screenplay, and in the classics "The Marriage of Maria Braun" (1979), "The Name of the Rose" (1986) and "Homo Faber" (1991).
    Peter-174

    See the Italian DVD

    Charming movie. Fun and entertaining poliziottesco that doesn't take itself too serious. The Italian DVD is wide screen and includes the superior Italian dub (with English subtitles); don't see the American crappy DVD's that are out there. It also has nice extra's and even those are subtitled. Hail to Raro Video. The soundtrack is strange and original. And it works quite well. I wonder if it is out there on CD. The big name is of course Jack Palance, but my favorite character in the movie is Napoli, played by Vittorio Caprioli. Perhaps not one of Fernando Di Leo's best, but very entertaining indeed. Underrated by the IMDb-users, probably because of the horrible American DVD's.
    7Hey_Sweden

    Fun stuff.

    "Rulers of the City" is enjoyable for fans of the Italian crime flick, with a fast moving story and a sense of humour to let you know that it's never taking itself too seriously. The actors are all good and the film is effectively violent without ever getting very bloody. True enough that it may not be all that believable, but it *is* entertaining, if not memorable in the end. Director Fernando Di Leo was prolific in this genre and the viewer may want to check out his other works; they're available in DVD and Blu-ray box sets from Raro Video.

    The amiable Harry Baer stars as Tony, a young debt collector who's tired of his go-nowhere job. So he hatches a scheme with aging mobster Napoli (Vittorio Caprioli) and his new friend Rick (Al Cliver of "Zombi 2") to con big time hood Manzari (Jack Palance) out of several million. Naturally, things don't work out the way that they want and they end up having to make a stand against Manzari and his goons.

    It's enjoyable to see this international, familiar cast at work. Palance is convincing as the bad guy, the engaging Caprioli supplies a good deal of the comedy relief, Edmund Purdom (the dean in "Pieces") has a welcome presence as mafioso Luigi Cherico, the lovely Gisela Hahn provides the eye candy (and also sings some tunes), and Enzo Pulcrano is amusing as volatile jerk Peppi, who's out to get Tony. Co-scriptwriter Peter Berling also plays the role of Valentino in the film.

    All in all, this is pleasant to watch, with a reasonably rousing action climax and an eclectic score by Luis Bacalov.

    Seven out of 10.
    6Coventry

    Macho fistfights, explosive vendettas and …. Homo-eroticism?!?

    Writer/director Fernando Di Leo chronologically made three of the most stupendously amazing "Poliziottesco" (hardcore Italian cop/gangster thrillers) milestones with "Milano Caliber .9", "La Mala Ordina" and "Il Boss". I respectively granted those films with rating 10/10, 9/10 and 9/10 … just to indicate how powerful and overwhelming they are. Di Leo honestly was a brilliant but sadly underrated director who really knew how to make hardcore-to-the bone action movies. There are no good or loyal characters in Fernando Di Leo's depiction of the Italian mafia… There are only vicious and emotionless gangsters that would butcher their own parents in order to climb one small step up the ladder of power & influence. Although nearly not as brilliant as the aforementioned trio, Di Leo's later films keep featuring the same story elements. "Rulers of the City" – the literally translated title which I vastly prefer over "Mister Scarface" – is another mafia flick full of ultra-sadistic characters, nasty double-crossings, merciless executions, brutal bare-knuckle fistfights and explosive vendettas.

    Tony is a smooth and handsome but insignificant guy who works as a debt collector for Luigi Cherico; the number #2 gangster boss of Naples. He wants to make an impression on his boss and ingeniously plunders 10 million Lire from the absolute biggest crime lord in town, the feared and relentless Scarface. Tony unwillingly evokes a mafia war in Naples and finds himself in between the two camps. Luckily he receives help from an elderly Mafiosi and a mysterious blond shooting expert with an old personal vengeance to settle. "Rulers of the City" has a well- written and fast-paced script, and all the fistfight battles and shootout sequences are exhilarating and brute. The film also benefices from neat camera-work and a terrific score provided by Di Leo's regular composer Luis Bacalov. Still, "Rulers of the City" suffers from two serious defaults that simply cannot be neglected. First of all, everything is done to make it seems like the entire film orbits around Jack Palance and his character Mr. Scarface, but his role honestly isn't that extended or fundamental. The DVD-cover image that I own illustrates Jack Palance looking bewildered and firing off a machine gun, but never at one point during this movie he takes the effort of even picking up a weapon. Secondly, what's with the homo-erotic undertones in this film? It isn't too abnormal that there generally aren't many female lead roles in Italian gangster movies, but this one exaggerates! The only women in this film are secretaries, prostitutes and walking eye-candy on the sidewalk. Furthermore the hints at homosexuality are downright bizarre and misplaced. The older Mafiosi Vincenzo Napoli is obviously gay, with his pink scarves and feminine gestures the entire time, but even the two lead actors could easily pass for a cute couple. Whenever they're driving around the city in Tony's flamboyant buggy, they look like an advertisement campaign for coming out of the closet and the only thing missing is a slogan on the bottom of the screen saying "it's okay to be gay".
    8jakob13

    A gem of a film

    Fernando Di Leo's 1974 'Rulers of the City' is a delightful find among the gems of Italian cinema. The film is fast paced. It is, in hindsight, a gentle send up of the gangster genre. Remember took his treatment of spaghetti westerns to the urban turf, and, under all the grime and grit, he brings a comic turn. The cast is international: Harry Baer (Tony)is German; Jack Palance (Mr. Scarface)American; Al Cliver a Cairo-born Italian; and Vittorio Caprioli (Napoli) Italian. All things considered, it should come as no surprise that a German should appear in an Italian film. Remember, Visconti's casting of Alain Delon and his lover Helmut Schmidt. Italy was a haven for Americans: Italian directors brought out the hidden talent of some actors rarely seen in America. Richard Basehart in Fellini's 'la Strada'or Clint Eastwood who found an exit from a dead-end career in the US in Leone's spaghetti westerns as did Lee Van Clef. De Leo used well the image of Palance's face which incarnates the evil of loan sharks, and within he got an actor who could speak Italian. Baer brings the youthful elan of wanting to make it big and quick as a 'tax collector' though his fists and his intelligence. Cliver with a face of a fallen angel seeks revenge with a natural quickness and understanding of a finely tuned intelligence. And of course in Caprioli, he well used a finely turned the finely tuned sense of comedy and the wiliness of an old fox. The film opens up with a dreamlike sequence that as the quickly paced story is the key to its denouement. There is only one thing for you to do: rush out, find a copy of 'Rulers of the City', sit back and enjoy it!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Introductory line to the title character's introductory scene, upon Scarface's entry into the club: That's "The" Scarface. He's bad news, I can tell you. Just looking at him and my asshole twitches.
    • Goofs
      In the final chase scene, the passenger fires a gun through the windshield, at the motorcycle they are chasing. The window is not shattered after many shots fired through it.
    • Quotes

      Vincenzo Napoli: [upon Scarface's entry into the club] That's "The" Scarface. He's bad news, I can tell you. Just looking at him and my asshole twitches.

    • Alternate versions
      German VHS version was cut by ca. 8 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Italian Gangsters (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      T'amo lo Stesso
      Composed by Silvano Spadaccino

      Sung by Gisela Hahn

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 3, 1976 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Rulers of the City
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Cineproduzioni Daunia 70
      • Seven Star Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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