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Al Capone

  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Al Capone (1959)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer2:29
1 Video
35 Photos
GangsterTrue CrimeBiographyCrimeDrama

A chronicle of the rise and fall of Chicago crime boss Al Capone during the Prohibition era.A chronicle of the rise and fall of Chicago crime boss Al Capone during the Prohibition era.A chronicle of the rise and fall of Chicago crime boss Al Capone during the Prohibition era.

  • Director
    • Richard Wilson
  • Writers
    • Malvin Wald
    • Henry F. Greenberg
  • Stars
    • Rod Steiger
    • Martin Balsam
    • Fay Spain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Wilson
    • Writers
      • Malvin Wald
      • Henry F. Greenberg
    • Stars
      • Rod Steiger
      • Martin Balsam
      • Fay Spain
    • 42User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Al Capone
    Trailer 2:29
    Al Capone

    Photos35

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    Top Cast99+

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    Rod Steiger
    Rod Steiger
    • Al Capone
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Mac Keely
    Fay Spain
    Fay Spain
    • Maureen Flannery
    James Gregory
    James Gregory
    • Sgt. Schaeffer
    Nehemiah Persoff
    Nehemiah Persoff
    • Johnny Torrio
    Murvyn Vye
    Murvyn Vye
    • George 'Bugs' Moran
    Robert Gist
    Robert Gist
    • Dion O'Banion
    Lewis Charles
    Lewis Charles
    • Earl Weiss
    Joe De Santis
    Joe De Santis
    • Big Jim Colosimo
    Sandy Kenyon
    Sandy Kenyon
    • Bones Corelli
    Raymond Bailey
    Raymond Bailey
    • Lawyer Brancato
    Al Ruscio
    Al Ruscio
    • Tony Genaro
    Louis Quinn
    Louis Quinn
    • Joe Lorenzo
    Ron Soble
    Ron Soble
    • John Scalisi
    Steve Gravers
    Steve Gravers
    • Albert Anselmi
    Raikin Ben-Ari
    • Ben Hoffman
    • (as Ben Ari)
    Fred Aldrich
    Fred Aldrich
    • Funeral Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Cindy Ames
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Wilson
    • Writers
      • Malvin Wald
      • Henry F. Greenberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.72.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7hitchcockthelegend

    Nobody who's smart goes hungry in Chicago.

    Al Capone is directed by Richard Wilson and written by Malvin Wald and Henry F. Greenberg. It stars Rod Steiger, Martin Balsam, Nehemiah Persoff, Fay Spain, Joe DeSantis and Murvyn Vye. Music is by David Raksin and cinematography by Lucien Ballard.

    Alphonse Gabriel Capone, it's a name synonymous with gangsters of 1920s America, and of course of cinematic films. Richard Wilson's film is one of the better gangster biopics out there, filmed in semi-doc style, it unfolds with great human drama without glorifying the subject matter. If anything it's refreshingly unsentimental in its approach.

    Steiger is Capone (never Caponee!) and he puts his method stomp all over the role, carrying the film squarely on his well cast shoulders. He has all the ticks and mannerisms of Capone to either chill the blood or charm the other characters in the play, it is very much a powerhouse performance.

    As a history lesson it's not wholly accurate, but much of it is rigid in the life and times of the famous criminal. The period detail is splendid, with the backdrops boosted no end by the gorgeous monochrome photography served up by Ballard. Enthralling, sometimes violent and always intriguing, this is well worth a look. 7/10
    7gitrich

    A gangster biography that is interesting more than entertaining.

    Al Capone does give us a clear picture of the rise and fall of the colorful gangster. He is played convincingly by Rod Steiger. The supporting cast does a fine job, especially Martin Balsam who plays a Capone associate. The film is, for the most part, realistic, but the violent scenes come close to being non-violent compared to today's standards. If you liked the old TV series The Untouchables, you will like Al Capone.
    5bkoganbing

    The Rise And Fall Of Scarface

    Although Rod Steiger gives an electrifying performance as Al Capone in the film of the same name, it could have been done a whole lot better.

    Influenced by the success of The Untouchables on television the classical gangster film underwent a short revival for about five years in the late Fifties and early Sixties. It was inevitable that a film about the most notorious gangster name of all would get a biographical film.

    The film concentrated on Capone's public life and the stories of gangland lore that have circulated about him. Very little is shown of his personal life, he had a wife and child and many a mistress not just the character Fay Spain portrays. Rod Steiger has been accused of overacting in his characterization, but in fairness I don't think the writers and director gave him much to work with.

    With one exception no characters had name changes. The one being Martin Balsam's character who was based on reporter Jake Lingle whose connections with the underworld got him many a good story, but also compromised his integrity. Capone is shown being responsible for Balsam's death, but in real life there are many theories about Lingle's demise.

    One character is grafted in from New York. There was no such a character as James Gregory's honest inspector, mainly because there were damn few honest cops in Chicago in the Twenties. His character is based on Lewis J. Valentine who did run a confidential squad in New York City and faced a lot of political pressure from Tammany Hall. Under Fiorello LaGuardia, Valentine became the city's police commissioner, probably the best one we ever had.

    Still if you were a big fan of The Untouchables, you should definitely like this Al Capone movie.
    8sddavis63

    The Rise And Fall Of History's Most Famous Gangster.

    Chicago in the 1920's: rife with political and police corruption and increasingly run by mobsters. The most famous of them undoubtedly was Al Capone. In this bio-pic, Capone is played very effectively by Rod Steiger. Steiger captured both the role and the man. Capone was a guy of humble origins, but was a bit of a contradiction: he had no education but a love for culture; he was a ruthless gangster but for the most part stayed legally "clean." Steiger captured both the ruthlessness and the culture with his portrayal. Based on actual photographs of Capone that I've seen, Steiger even looked the part. He was very impressive.

    The movie basically traces Capone's career in crime from the time he arrives in Chicago in 1919 as a bodyguard to a local crime figure and takes it up to his conviction for income tax evasion of all things (it was the only crime they could ever actually pin on him) in 1931, with a very brief look at Capone in Alcatraz, and a voice-over explaining his last years before his death in 1947. Watching his rise was always interesting. A lot of this is fictional. James Gregory's character (the honest Chicago cop who commits himself and his entire career to bringing Capone down, and from whose perspective the story is told) didn't exist, and there's no portrayal of Capone's actual marriage; instead the movie focuses on a relationship he supposedly develops with a woman (Fay Spain) whose husband he had killed in the early part of his criminal career. The character of the newspaperman Keely (Martin Balsam) was based on a real figure, although the name was changed.

    By the standards of the modern era of film-making, this is laughably clean. There are a lot of shootouts, but no blood ever appears on those who are shot and killed, and in general these gangsters are awfully polite! There's an extended look on the planning of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre (as Capone used his men to take out many of his rivals in Chicago while he stayed at his home in Florida) although the Massacre itself doesn't take very long and - again - isn't especially graphic.

    This represents an interesting and believable (if not quite historically accurate) look at not only Capone but at the state of Chicago in the era and of the role that Prohibition played in promoting the rise of organized crime, and Steiger's performance alone makes this worth watching. (8/10)
    bigpurplebear-1

    An eerily compelling Capone . . .

    Many actors have portrayed Capone over the years. It's virtually a "cottage industry," guaranteeing that yet another Capone flick will hit the screens before the collective audience has quite recovered from its yawn at the last one. And yet, for me, no one has ever come quite so close to nailing the role as Rod Steiger in this 1959 black-and-white low-budget effort.

    As a matter of fact, using the term "low-budget" does this film a disservice, calling to mind as it does the run-of-the-mill output of producer/distributor Allied Artists (usually on the scale of "Attack Of The 50-Foot Mummified Woman Meets Godzilla's Teenage Werewolf Son"). For this film, however, the studio assembled a strong acting ensemble which includes Martin Balsam, Nehemiah Persoff, Murvyn Vye, and James Gregory, all of whom deliver standout performances.

    Yet it's Steiger whose performance holds this film together. His Capone is a monster whose mood swings defy the term "mercurial," yet his psychopathy seems somehow strangely -- disturbingly -- human. You can sense the demons deep within him, and how they drive him, but you're never allowed to glimpse them, not even momentarily, lest you lose sight of the fact that this man truly is a monster. Eerily compelling, even hypnotic (particularly as he woos -- and wins! -- the widow of a cop he's previously murdered), Steiger invests his characterization with the bravura of the opera which the real-life Capone professed to admire. Alternately wheedling and bullying, bellicose and scheming, he assumes a larger-than-life mythos which resonates all the more uncomfortably due to a sense of plausibility, the feeling that such men do continue to exist among us.

    The storyline itself is more or less factual, save for Gregory's character (which isn't even really a composite of any particular real-life law enforcement personnel), as well as a decision to re-name Balsam's character rather than use the identity of the real-life Jake Lingle, upon whom the character is based. Certain incidents have been fictionalized as to the way they happened, but that's to be expected in the interest of dramatic effect.

    Overall, the film achieves an almost documentary effect. Steiger's performance makes it a very chilling documentary, indeed.

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Martin Balsam's character, Mac Keeley, was based on a real-life Chicago Tribune reporter named Jake Lingle. Lingle, a "legman" who ran down gang-related stories for the paper, had close ties to Al Capone and other gangsters as well as the notoriously corrupt Chicago Police Department, and he was well-paid by both mobsters and a police commissioner as a "go-between." Lingle was gunned down on June 9, 1930, much as depicted in the movie, after "getting too big for his hat", as Capone put it, and demanding too much for his services (though a Capone rival likely paid for the hit). Apparently legal concerns prevented the producers of this film from using Lingle's name. However, just a few months after this film was released, the TV series The Untouchables (1959) told Lingle's story in its third episode and used his actual name.
    • Goofs
      Al Capones had two scars on his left cheek according to actual (if rare - Capone disliked being photographed to show them as is correctly pointed out in the film) photos. The depiction in films like The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967) and Capone (1975) is closer to the truth.
    • Quotes

      Al Capone: Nobody leaves Al Capone, you understand that?

      Maureen Flannery: Well I do!

      Al Capone: Oh no, you don't!

      Maureen Flannery: Would you do me a favor please? Would you kill me?

    • Connections
      Edited into The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults (1986)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 25, 1959 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Al Capone Story
    • Filming locations
      • Monogram/Allied Artists Studios - 1725 Fleming Street, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Allied Artists Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $550,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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