Adapted by Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler from Peter Maas's book, Sidney Lumet's drama portrays the real-life struggle of an honest New York City cop against a corrupt system. Neophyte officer Frank Serpico (Al Pacino) is determined not to let his job get in the way of his individuality. Despite his colleagues' leery reactions, he keeps one foot firmly planted in the counterculture, sporting a beard and love beads and living in bohemian Greenwich Village, while he performs his police duties with dispatch. Serpico's peers genuinely ostracize him, however, when he refuses to take bribes like everybody else. Appalled by the extent of police corruption, Serpico goes to his superiors, but when he discovers that they have ignored his charges, he takes the potentially fatal step of breaking the blue wall of silence and going public with his exposé. Serpico's revelations trigger an independent investigation by the Knapp Commission, but they also make him a marked man, permanently changing his life. Shot on location with a gritty emphasis on documentary-style realism, Serpico presents a city in decay both literally and morally, as everybody is in on the take, and the cops and criminals are almost interchangeable. Released in late 1973, after months of revelations of Presidential malfeasance in the breaking Watergate scandal, Serpico's true story of bureaucratic depravity touched a cultural nerve, and the film became a hit with both critics and audiences, particularly for Pacino's complex performance as the honest, long-haired whistle-blower. One year after his star-making triumph in The Godfather, Pacino was nominated for an Oscar again, and lost again; Lumet and Pacino would reunite two years later for another true New York story, Dog Day Afternoon. — Lucia Bozzola
|
Al Pacino | Serpico |
|
John Randolph | Sidney Green |
|
Jack Kehoe | Tom Keough |
|
Biff McGuire | Captain McClain |
|
Barbara Eda-Young | Laurie |
|
Cornelia Sharpe | Leslie |
|
Tony Roberts | Bob Blair |
|
John Medici | Pasquale |
|
Allan Rich | D.A. Tauber |
|
Norman Ornellas | Rubello |
|
Edward Grover | Lombardo |
|
Albert Henderson | Peluce |
|
Hank Garrett | Malone |
|
Damien Leake | Joey |
|
Joseph Bova | Potts |
|
Gene Gross | Captain Tolkin |
|
John Stewart | Waterman |
|
Woodie King Jr. | Larry |
|
James Tolkan | Steiger |
|
Ed Crowley | Barto |
|
Bernard Barrow | Palmer |
|
Sal Carollo | Mr. Serpico |
|
Mildred Clinton | Mrs. Serpico |
|
Nathan George | Smith |
|
Gus Fleming | Dr. Metz |
| Director | Sidney Lumet |
|
| Writer | Peter Maas, Waldo Salt, Norman Wexler | |
| Producer | Martin Bregman, Dino De Laurentiis, Roger M. Rothstein | |
| Musician | Mikis Theodorakis | |
| Photography | Arthur J. Ornitz | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
|---|---|
| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (1.85:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Mono FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono |
| Subtitles | English | English (Closed Captioned) |
| Distributor | Paramount |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | Dec 03, 2002 |
| Regions | Region 1 |