March 2010 April 2010 May 2010 June 2010 July 2010
August 2010
September 2010 October 2010
November 2010
December 2010 January 2011 February 2011 March 2011 April 2011 May 2011 June 2011 July 2011 August 2011 September 2011 October 2011 November 2011 December 2011 January 2012 February 2012 March 2012 April 2012 May 2012 June 2012 July 2012 August 2012 September 2012 October 2012 November 2012 December 2012 January 2013 February 2013 March 2013 April 2013 May 2013 June 2013 July 2013 August 2013 September 2013 October 2013 November 2013 December 2013 January 2014 February 2014 March 2014 April 2014 May 2014 June 2014 July 2014 August 2014 September 2014 October 2014 November 2014 December 2014 January 2015 February 2015 March 2015 April 2015 May 2015 June 2015 July 2015 August 2015 September 2015 October 2015 November 2015 December 2015 January 2016 February 2016 March 2016 April 2016 May 2016 June 2016 July 2016 August 2016 September 2016 October 2016 November 2016 December 2016 January 2017 February 2017 March 2017 April 2017 May 2017 June 2017 July 2017 August 2017 September 2017 October 2017 November 2017 December 2017 January 2018 February 2018 March 2018 April 2018 May 2018 June 2018 July 2018 August 2018 September 2018 October 2018 November 2018 December 2018 January 2019 February 2019 March 2019 April 2019 May 2019 June 2019 July 2019 August 2019 September 2019 October 2019 November 2019 December 2019 January 2020 February 2020 March 2020 April 2020 May 2020 June 2020 July 2020 August 2020 September 2020 October 2020 November 2020 December 2020 January 2021 February 2021 March 2021 April 2021 May 2021 June 2021 July 2021 August 2021 September 2021 October 2021 November 2021 December 2021 January 2022 February 2022 March 2022 April 2022 May 2022 June 2022 July 2022 August 2022 September 2022 October 2022 November 2022 December 2022 January 2023 February 2023 March 2023 April 2023 May 2023 June 2023 July 2023 August 2023 September 2023 October 2023 November 2023 December 2023 January 2024 February 2024 March 2024 April 2024 May 2024 June 2024 July 2024 August 2024 September 2024 October 2024
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
News Every Day |

Scent of a Man

The huge solemnity of his eyes, grave and sober as a child’s but with a spark of ancient, euphoric irony back in there somewhere. The gangster-ish heaviness of his hands, dynastic hands, Godfather hands. The too-big head. The carved, impassive face that suddenly droops, drags, goes baggy with the weight of being alive. The voice, New York nasal as a young man, roaring and combusted as he ages, the lungs working like bellows, the larynx shooting flames. The timing—the beat, the lag, the throb of the void—between stimulus and reaction. And the energy, Jesus, that barely-inside-the-body Dog Day Afternoon energy, as if 30 seconds ago he disintegrated utterly into tics and ravings, splinters of self, and then 10 seconds ago—via some act of Looney Tunes reversal—he was whooshingly put back together.

It’s 1973. Al Pacino and Frank Serpico are sitting on the deck of a rented seaside house in Montauk, two men staring at the ocean. Serpico is the whistleblower cop, refuser of bribes and kickbacks, whose testimony before the Knapp Commission helped expose systemic graft in the NYPD. He has paid a high price for his rectitude: Isolated and vilified by his fellow officers, he’d been shot in the face during a suspiciously botched arrest in 1971. Now Pacino is preparing to play him in Sidney Lumet’s grimy, funky biopic Serpico, and the actor has a question. “Frank,” he says, “why didn’t you take those payoffs? Just take that money and give your share away if you didn’t want to keep it?” “Al, if I did that,” Serpico answers, “who would I be when I listen to Beethoven?”

That’s a story from Sonny Boy, Pacino’s new memoir. It’s more than a story, actually. It’s a teaching. Who you are when you listen to Beethoven (or Miles Davis, or AC/DC)—isn’t that what every actor, every artist, is trying to get at? It’s the essence. It’s your exposed and purely emotive being, and with it your availability to the divine. Compromise that, and you’re screwed. So Pacino plays Serpico as a man of sudden moods and movements, abrupt jokes, changes of key, switching through ever more improbable costumes—shaggy hippie, meat-packer, ultra-Orthodox Jew—as he goes undercover, a trickster whose wild whimsicality connects somehow to what is vivid and incorruptible in his nature, even as the department, the city, the whole world congeals in venality around him.

Can I say that I’ve long loved Al Pacino? But until Sonny Boy, I knew almost nothing about Pacino himself—or rather, I was content to know him glancingly and prismatically, via the apparitions of Michael Corleone and Ricky Roma and Tony Montana and Carlito Brigante. Is he ever not Al Pacino, in any of his roles?

[Read: The many eras of Al Pacino’s stardom]

Reading Sonny Boy, you get the feel of something restless and almost nameless—until it coheres, white-hot, at the moment of dramatic expression. The moment of ignition. “What actors call their instrument,” Pacino writes, “is their entire being: your whole person, your body, your soul. It’s what you play on, it absorbs things and lets them out.” He is paraphrasing his Method teacher, Lee Strasberg. “The actor’s instrument,” Strasberg wrote in A Dream of Passion, “is himself; he works with the same emotional areas which he actually uses in real life.”

The real life, then. Let’s have it. From Sonny Boy we learn that Pacino’s material, his toolbox, his emotional inheritance was his childhood in the tenements of the South Bronx: an absent father and a delicate, troubled mother, a wild life on the streets. His teens were delinquent. His 20s were a blur of drinking, acting, and bohemian precarity. “If the hour was late and you heard the sound of someone in your alleyway with a bombastic voice shouting iambic pentameter into the night, that was probably me.” Bum-hood, or at least a distressed Beatnik-hood, is always reaching for him, a world of 15-cent beers in dive bars and sitting for hours over a single cup of coffee in the Automat. Of boozing alone, reading tiny editions of Flaubert and Baudelaire on the subway.

The whiff of the street clung to him as he made his way, but so did an electric sense of destiny. The first wave of Method-associated stars—Brando, Dean, Clift—had already mumbled and stormed and shrugged and grimaced across the screens of America. By the time Pacino arrived, bristling with raw naturalism and second-generation Method-ness, he could wind people up just by entering a room. “I had that anarchic look,” Pacino writes. “No matter where I went, people looked at me as if to say, ‘Where does this guy come from? Who does he think he is?’ ” One inflamed theater director would periodically yell “Method actor!” at him. “It was a taunt, a put-down.” The momentum, though, is unstoppable. And it’s not just Pacino: Everyone’s pushing it. In 1967, he sees Dustin Hoffman in The Graduate : “I said, this is it, man—it’s over. He’s broken the sound barrier.”

Pacino’s own breakout role—Michael Corleone in 1972’s The Godfather and then, two years later, The Godfather Part II—was a huge challenge. A nonperson, almost. Formless at first, and then extremely dangerous. “Before filming started, I would take long walks up and down Manhattan, from Ninety-First Street to the Village and back, just thinking about how I was going to play him … He’s there and not there at the same time.” So Pacino made him at once blank and coiled. Cadaverous with power and repression. Given to lethal understatement, and with a strange, perfumed economy of gesture.

[From the June 1972 issue: David Denby’s review of The Godfather]

Playing Sonny Wortzik, the flailing, wired bank robber/accidental hostage-taker of Dog Day Afternoon (1975), was paradoxically more straightforward. Here Lumet set him in his element: overheated Brooklyn on the verge of Babylonian breakdown, a whole society doing the Method, as it were, triggering and retriggering itself. The mob is aroused and labile; the lumpy cops have no control, over the situation or over themselves. Trapped and pop-eyed, strutting around wildly under the terrible fluorescent tubes of the bank interior, Sonny channels it all, sweating through his off-white shirt, flapping his soiled handkerchief. He goes into the street screaming “Attica! Atti-ca!”—an improvisation—and the crowd of extras, to quote Sonny Boy, goes “fucking crazy.”

Does he harden into caricature in his later roles? In some of those films (Sea of Love, Carlito’s Way), I see him operating on a kind of scorching autopilot. Then there’s Scent of a Woman. I could watch this movie all day, and sometimes do. In it, the late-Pacino manner, the bark and the bluster, transcends itself, because here he’s playing a man who is all manner, all bark and bluster, a husk of a man, a hollowly booming, mirthlessly laughing man: Lieutenant Colonel Frank Slade, blind man, in despair—“I’m in the DARK HERE!”—whose communication style is basically cranked-up Al Pacino.

“The profession of acting,” Strasberg said, “the basic art of acting, is a monstrous thing because it is done with the same flesh-and-blood muscles with which you perform ordinary deeds, real deeds.” Sonny Boy gives us the Pacino of ordinary deeds, bumbling around and having his experiences, and we see that he is in service—in thrall—to Pacino the actor. And if a certain fuzziness or impressionism attends his memories, well, we get it: He doesn’t want to violate, with too much insight, the precious mystery at the core of his craft. Doesn’t want to compromise who he is when he’s listening to Beethoven.


This article appears in the November 2024 print edition with the headline “Scent of a Man.”

Минск

Лукашенко: Минск согласовал с ГК «Роснефть» изучение недр Гомельской области с

Comer slams Raskin over his election certification comments: 'Ultimate hypocrite'

James Toney Names The Only Fighter That Would Beat Both Artur Beterbiev And Dmitry Bivol

Cyprus Business Now: high rents, financial support to wine industry, PwC’s Academy Business Professionals Certificate

NIN-SIM linkage of all phone numbers completed, says NCC

Ria.city






Read also

From the lab to the legislature: STEM professionals run for political office

My Year Under Fire as a Peace Activist in Gaza

Cowboys' Dak Prescott rips media coverage of Texas mansion demolition: 'I think it’s crazy'

News, articles, comments, with a minute-by-minute update, now on Today24.pro

News Every Day

James Toney Names The Only Fighter That Would Beat Both Artur Beterbiev And Dmitry Bivol

Today24.pro — latest news 24/7. You can add your news instantly now — here


News Every Day

America’s Greatest Tradition



Sports today


Новости тенниса
WTA

Рахимова победила Учижиму и вышла во второй круг турнира WTA в Ухане



Спорт в России и мире
Москва

Турнир по дзюдо памяти Михаила Шабалина прошел в Подольске



All sports news today





Sports in Russia today

Москва

Результаты первого дня Московского марафона. Победителями на дистанции 10 км стали Ринас Ахмадеев и Светлана Аплачкина


Новости России

Game News

To mark the launch of Metaphor: ReFantazio, Sega is going to make someone a real-life noble, but there's a catch—you'll be joining the nobility of an illegitimate nation in the North Sea with only one resident


Russian.city


Москва

EVITA BEAUTY STORE - интернет-магазин косметики премиум-класса!


Губернаторы России
Россия

Названы города России с самыми бюджетными отелями для поездок в осенние каникулы


Блогера Михаила Литвина доставили в участок после нападения на болельщика

Поймайте его, если сможете: 17 октября в прокат выходит картина Дмитрия Клепацкого «Схватка»

Поймайте его, если сможете: 17 октября в прокат выходит картина Дмитрия Клепацкого «Схватка»

Средняя стоимость строительства дома в России достигла 5,8 млн рублей


Ротенберг высказался о хейтерах фразой саксофониста Игоря Бутмана

Группа «Сезон дождей» приняла участие в проекте «Сила родной земли. Песни о вечном»

Суд по делу о разводе Шнурова и Абрамовой состоится 21 октября

В Московской консерватории пройдет гала-концерт конкурса-фестиваля «Мелодия детства»


Анастасия Пивоварова стала ведущим экспертом эксклюзивного шоу про теннис на Betboom, в коллаборации с АТР

Соболенко вышла в ⅛ финала турнира WTA-1000 в Ухане

Шанхай (ATP). 1/2 финала. Синнер поборется с Махачем, Джокович – с Фрицем

Технологическая революция в теннисе: Уимблдон заменит линейных судей на искусственный интеллект с 2025 года



Константин Клименко: «Русский язык будут широко изучать в Буркина-Фасо»

Поймайте его, если сможете: 17 октября в прокат выходит картина Дмитрия Клепацкого «Схватка»

Гастроэнтеролог Садыков назвал 3 основные причины непреодолимой тяги к сладкому

Поймайте его, если сможете: 17 октября в прокат выходит картина Дмитрия Клепацкого «Схватка»


В субботу в Пулково задерживаются семь рейсов

EVITA BEAUTY STORE - интернет-магазин косметики премиум-класса!

EVITA BEAUTY STORE - интернет-магазин косметики премиум-класса!

Названы города России с самыми бюджетными отелями для поездок в осенние каникулы


В Москве задержали мигранта, который истязал пасынка, сделал ему обрезание и заставлял называться "узбеком"

Рабочий погиб при сносе здания в Москве

Известного шеф-повара Ивлева не пустили на матч КХЛ между «Динамо» и «Салаватом Юлаевым»

13 млрд рублей будет вложено в развитие птицеводства в Нижегородской области



Путин в России и мире






Персональные новости Russian.city
Сергей Брановицкий

Продажа песен. Песни на продажу. Продажа текстов песен. Продажа песен правообладателями. Продать текст песни. Продать слова песни. Хочу продать песню.



News Every Day

Cyprus Business Now: high rents, financial support to wine industry, PwC’s Academy Business Professionals Certificate




Friends of Today24

Музыкальные новости

Персональные новости