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Disc #1 -- Capone
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Scenes
Bonus
Commentary by Director Steve Carver
Trailer 1
Trailer 2
TV Spot 1
TV Spot 2
The St. Valentine's Day Massacre Trailer
Chapters
Disc #1 -- Capone
1. New York Big Shots [9:00]
2. Chicago 1919 [7:09]
3. Dirty Work [4:12]
4. Bootlegging [3:27]
5. September 4th, 1923 [5:12]
6. War [6:09]
7. Raid [7:01]
8. Dame Named Crawford [5:46]
9. January 15th, 1925 [5:18]
10. Clyde Avenue [7:10]
11. Big Al [3:40]
12. April 27th, 1926 [3:28]
13. Flapper [6:23]
14. September 20th, 1926 [5:30]
15. February 7th, 1929 [6:55]
16. City Hall [2:38]
17. February 14th, 1926 [1:51]
18. Beginning of the End [2:30]
19. Alcatraz 1938 [1:56]
20. Palm Island 1946 [4:44]
21. End Credits [1:01]
Art Director - Ward Preston
Associate Producer - John C. Broderick
Cinematographer - Vilis Lapenieks
Composer (Music Score) - David Grisman
First Assistant Director - Eugene Mazzola
Makeup - Maurice Stein
Sound/Sound Designer - Bob Gravenor
Special Effects - Roger George
Special Effects - Gene Corso
Stunts Coordinator - Charlie Picerni
This entry into the 1970's cycle of gangster films is entertaining -- but often for the wrong reasons. Howard Browne's script piles on characters and incidents but this density of narrative fails to disguise how derivative and familiar its "rise and fall of a mobster" storyline is. It doesn't help that the script will offend many crime buffs because it mangles the chronology of the events it presents and also creates a number of events that never occurred. Director Steve Carver's work is competent but impersonal, lending little flair or inspiration to the material. Ben Gazzara puts on an impressive display of acting pyrotechnics in the lead role but goes so far over the top that his work descends into pure camp spectacle. That said, his theatrics often prop up the weak material here so it's a trade-off. The best performances come from the supporting players: Susan Blakely is alluring as Capone's uninhibited party-girl moll, Dick Miller is amusing as a crooked cop angling for some of Capone's money and a young Sylvester Stallone delivers a nice, understated turn as Capone's right-hand man Frank Nitti. In short, "Capone" is a humdrum quickie that offers more camp laughs than it does gangster thrills. It is best left to genre completists. ~ Donald Guarisco, Rovi