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Serpico (1973)

7.5 | Dec 18, 1973 (US) | Crime, Drama | 02:10
Budget: 3 000 000 | Revenue: 29 800 000

Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man alive - An honest cop.

New York cop Frank Serpico blows the whistle on the rampant corruption in the force only to have his comrades turn against him.

Featured Crew

Director
Assistant Director
Executive Producer, Producer
Screenplay
Costume Design
Screenplay
Editor
Producer
Stunts
Co-Editor

Cast

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Al Pacino
Officer Frank Serpico
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John Randolph
Sidney Green
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Jack Kehoe
Tom Keough
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Biff McGuire
Captain McClain
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Cornelia Sharpe
Leslie Lane
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Tony Roberts
Bob Blair
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John Medici
Pasquale
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Allan Rich
D. A. Tauber

Reviews

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John Chard
9 | Jan 27, 2014
An honest cop. Who would believe that? Serpico is directed by Sidney Lumet and adapted to screenplay by Waldo Salt and Norman Wexler from Peter Maas’ biography of NYPD officer Frank Serpico who stood up to expose rife corruption in the force. It stars Al Pacino, John Randolph, Jack Kehoe, Biff McGuire, Bernard Barrow, Nathan George and Tony Roberts. Music is by Mikis Theodorakis and Giacomo Puccini and cinematography by Arthur J. Ornitz.. Great story telling meets a first class acting performance in Lumet’s searing movie. Frank Serpico (Pacino), a legend to us mere mortals out on the street, but the most hated man on the NYPD, so much so he almost paid for his sense of what’s right and wrong with his life. Picture follows Frank through his integration on the force and onto the build up of corruption he comes across. All the time we are also getting an insight into the man himself, his life and loves outside of work, with Lumet and Pacino making sure Frank is not painted as a saintly perfectionist, there is no halo above his head, he has flaws like everybody else. New York is expertly painted as a raw and grubby place, the hustle and bustle a nuisance, and the seamy underside where crims and dirty coppers dwell makes you feel like taking a shower. It proves to be a riveting character study and a thought provoking expose at the same time, while ultimately it proves to be a touching experience come the culmination of the drama. Excellent. 9/10