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User Reviews for: Serpico

Warden1
CONTAINS SPOILERS7/10  2 months ago
A pretty good film. It has a good central character and a semi-interesting story about uncovering police corruption, but everything else leaves a little to be desired. Al Pacino's performance elevates the film a lot though, and it's no wonder he became a legendary actor.

A film ahead of its time in regard to the showing the flaws of police tactics at the time, and how Serpico was ahead of his time in police tactics, at least in the beginning. It also shows a bit ahead of its time in regards to masculinity, and not trying to be so manly or chauvinist, especially for police officers. It isn't explicitly political, but the film shows he's a kind of liberal in a country where most police departments are conservative. He's even called a hippy at one point.

We see the personal toll that seeing corruption and trying to stop it but seeing the bosses are corrupt, is hard to deal with.

It's rare i comment on a soundtrack that isn't good, but this one i feel is probably one of the worst miscast soundtrack i've ever seen. Sometimes it's decent with a kind of romantic tone, casting Serpico as a bit of a hero against the grimy backdrop of the constant corruption going on, but the soundtrack overall just isn't that good.

It tore him and his relationship up, but he couldn't get out because he feels so much to want to clean up the whole thing and actually do some good.

This is like Prince of the City, the film by the same director also about police corruption, but in this film the main character is more observing and trying to expose the corruption from the outside for the most part, while in Prince it was all about exposing it from the inside with the help of police higher ups.

He waited so long for help exposing the corruption, but he should have got out a long time ago.

Serpico is a smart guy though, and when the investigation finally starts, he doesn't throw himself fully into it or rather he doesn't fully expose himself to danger too much.

Once again, like Prince of the City, it shows how doing the good thing may not be the RIGHT thing. Serpico lost a great woman, friends, a career, and almost his life, in order to try and clean up some corruption. And the latter is an important point to highlight; that's it's only part of the corruption, in one city. He could have just ignored it and stayed clean, but he tried to expose it and lost almost everything. He'd never be able to live a good life on the force, always being bullied for being a snitch, and he'd always have to watch his back. That's no life to live, especially if you have a family.

He's a hero. A foolish hero.

Luckily he retired soon after. He realized in that hospital bed "what was it all for?" and i think he realized that it all wasn't worth it. Not with what he went through and what he lost.

The foolish hero realized he was a fool, and resolved to change.
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John Chard
/10  6 years ago
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
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