Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 1000000
Revenue
$ 2500000
Al Capone
Maureen Flannery
Schaefler (narrator)
Mac Keeley, reporter
Johnny Torrio
George 'Bugs' Moran
Dion O'Banion
Earl Weiss
Big Jim Colosimo
Bones Corelli
Lawyer Brancato
Tony Genaro
Joe Lorenzo
John Scalisi
Albert Anselmi
Ben Hoffman
Funeral Spectator
Nurse
Reporter
Benefit Guest
Convict in Yard at Alcatraz
Bodyguard
Lefty
Police Inspector (uncredited)
Vincent (uncredited)
Moran Associate (uncredited)
Tailor (uncredited)
Funeral Spectator (uncredited)
Hood (uncredited)
Capone Hood at Polling Place (uncredited)
Hood (uncredited)
Pallbearer at Colosimo's Funeral (uncredited)
Voice of Radio Announcer (uncredited)
Reporter (uncredited)
Storekeeper (uncredited)
Written by John Chard on 2015-09-20
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