The world is yours. Political prisoners uphold this sentence. He doesn't believe in anyone, only in himself.
Montani is the real master of his life, always on the road, just to become the person he wants to be. In the restaurant, he was splashed with alcohol on his face by his wife, and through the alcohol he said the key line: "You need a bad guy like me." However, he knows that this kind of life is not a model, and his sister is the last hope in his heart— —Never go to the dance floor like him, mix with people who are inconsistent, and live a life like him. He put all his dreams of success and longing for life on his younger sister, which is another manifestation of his strong desire to control.
Scarface, as a "soil bun", tries hard to climb up, but never learns "completely". He talked to Aviana for the first time and asked her surname. She said: "Hancock." "Hancock? It's like a bird's name. Hancock~flying in the sky~" Mondani Persist in a certain innocence, like that scar, carved for a lifetime. This innocent persistence helped him at the critical moment, and of course it also made him inevitable a tragedy.
Montani’s success undoubtedly comes from his bravery. He dares to think and do, never hesitate to do things, he has the iron will and the confidence to level the world. At the end of the film, the not huge body received countless bullets, and it was still strong, which is undoubtedly a miracle. No one can really defeat him. However, when he personally ruined his sister Jin Na's happiness, he failed completely.
Killing Manny was a selfish act of him. Manny took away not only Jinna, but also something that Montani had always believed in and worked for. To impose his own belief on others and ruin the happiness of others without hesitation, who has no selfishness? Selfishness makes people inevitably stupid.
Watching "Scarface", it's not the plot, it's the bloody man Montani. Al Pacino's acting is superb, interpreting this tragic character in a breathtaking interpretation. The tragic death is due to the power of life.
View more about Scarface reviews