Is this the best scene from the movie Scarface (HD)?
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- Опубликовано: 31 окт 2018
- Frank Lopez sends Tony Montana and Omar Suarez to make a drug deal with Sosa in Bolivia who asks them to guarantee the buying of a certain amount of cocaine every month.
After some issues, Montana promises Sosa to talk with Lopez about sharing the risk. When Sosa gets realization that Suarez was previously a police informant, Suarez is killed by Sosa's henchmen and his corpse is hung from a helicopter, which Tony witnesses.
If not the best , one of the best scenes of the movie.
Al Pacino rules!
#Scarface #Bestmoviescenes #Tonymontana
Which is your favourite scene from the movie?
Spartan Productions the classic of course. SAY HELLO TO MY LITTLE FRIEND. Yeah I’m a year late whatever.
@@braincube013 odd tv machine - needs
Ironically, the argument that Tony had with Omar, saved his life. Sosa realized that they hated each other. That's why he stopped Tony from getting on the chopper 😂
@@alleyblueeyes9557 Odd Good.
I kill a communist for fun of course!
Amazing how this was poorly received by critics when it released, and is now one of the most iconic films in history.
I remember December 31st 1983 my parents went out for a new year's eve party and 8 year old me and my 14 year old brother watched this for the first time at 11pm on Pay TV and were blown away.
We had more sense than those dumb "critics" at that age to know we were watching a masterpiece
Enough time has gone by. It’s considered a bad movie, once again
@@Stacey_-bf2mb 🤣wtf did you hear that from? You tweaking bro
@@breylivec it’s an awful movie. It ruined Pacino’s acting skills. The soundtrack is horrid, and there’s already talks of just remaking it altogether. Plus, it’s the most cringe-inducing, dude-bro, sigma grindset piece of work in history. Next to fight club
@@Stacey_-bf2mb al pacino made over 200 million dollars off of scarface.😂 the soundtrack is literally the most iconic soundtrack for any 80s movie i ever seen. And scarface is literally a remake of 1932's scarface. Is this the hill you wanna die on? Were making remakes of remakes now? Like shut up you have no evidence that support your claims
Why is it that I never noticed until now, that the guy who killed Tony was standing behind him the entire time during this scene!
And he is A terminator
@@alinsingh1625 he sho is!!
He a enforcer
Goofy
He was Sosa’s best hitman
Hector Salamanca came a long way since holding phones for other people.
There’s nothing to say Alberto wasn’t also a Salamanca.
LOL! He pops up everywhere. Probably survived the wheelchair bomb, now living in Argentina.
Breaking bad used many Scarface cast, because the story is inspired somewhat by that movie.
Ace Ventura
Landlord 😂
Be nice
The eating of the lemon is so significant to Tony’s character. It shows that no matter how much money you have, you can’t buy class.
That’s how Sosa knew he wasn’t a fed
Why is that??
@@Jimmy-gk1de Look up "finger bowl" and you'll understand.
@@Jimmy-gk1de the lemon in the water is for cleaning your finger tips and used in proper dining etiquette. You are not supposed to touch or eat the lemon at all. Now Sosa took note of Tony eating that and at that moment likely assumed he is not an undercover informant and indeed an uneducated Cuban immigrant.
@@Jimmy-gk1dewell because the bowl and lemon was meant for him to clean his hands off but Tony didn’t know that so he just ate the lemon and this also is what gave away that he’s not an informant
“Leave your friend here, maybe he can tell me how to run my business “ what a great line
You would think Tony would be the one getting whacked for the way he spoke to Sosa
@@rayromano6249 na bro.....one day Michael Jordan showed up and his teammates listened.
@@rayromano6249 That's what Omar thought was going to happen.
sosa's class is quite potent in this scene.
he knows Tony and Omar don't get along, and also that tony is very low class (because he mistakenly eats the lemon and Omar shows him up by immediately cleaning his hands with it). This saves tony's life.
also his "back in time for lunchhh." so much elegance.
That shit cracked me up
I love how Tony ate the lemon from the water which was for them to wash their hands in. No f**ks given
This movie is 37 years old and i never noticed that. Thanks!
Thanks for the small details
So that's why he called him a monkey.. 🤔🤔😂
Lol never noticed that
lol I never noticed
How AL Pacino didn't win the Oscar for this role I will never understand.
Oscars ain't chit. They give those statues out now to the most gayest actor now.....sick.
100 % agreed. This is a Masterpiece of a Movie.
That movie was competing with Ghandi, An Officer & A Gentleman, Sophie’s Choice, Missing, Terms of Endearment. Great movies by their own right.
@@TheTurk56523 And where are those movies now compared to Scarface?
@@audriusbaranauskas6227 -- at the time Scarface was not "cool" because of the violence and drugs portrayed in the movie ... I love the movie, though it is a bit brutal. Maybe Ghandi was better? Maybe not! Who cares about The Oscars anyway!
Tony Montana never did!
I love Tony Montanna's swag. I love how he stood up to anyone who tried to put him down. Confidence unscathed.
He a strong black man
@@somethinglikeanonymous1773 LOL
I think you are confuse @@klaatu368
Yeah, he says I stay here any keep him on ice
Its only a movie script. It aint real.
If godfather and Scarface taught us anything it’s to never show internal discord infront of outsiders
discord
The fuck is a internal discord
Kinda reminds me of Trump
@@rent6114 u ever watched how montana acted towards manny and his wife after the wedding? that is exactly what it is
The guy was a freaking snitch!
This scene was very significant! The reason Tony was able to stay alive because Sosa realized that Tony and Omar are not on the same page and Tony was talking freely on what he thinks needs to happen! If he saw them in sync, Sosa would have killed both of them but he knew he was going to kill Omar!
true, and tony knew sosa liked him when he wanted him to stay, he wasn't paranoid at all, he knew omar was done!
Plus Omar was a police informant
Yup
Yep
@@longview1987which brings me to my favorite line ,which is not in this clip .
When Omar is hanging from helicopter Tony say “ I never lik em anyway “
Right after this scene, saw this in the Marlboro movie theater on baypkwy Bklyn
Every scene is potentially the best scene in Scarface.
Bingo!!!
Fast forward ....rewind....stop anywhere ya want. They allll potential best scenes😂
Ya know this scene is low key hilarious. I mean, they're straight up having an argument in front of the plug 😂
🤣🤣🤣
that's some funny ass shyttt they don't give a flying fuck 😂😂😄😄😄
Arguments like these at the plugs mansion is what get you whacked 🔥😈😎💯
Best part in this whole scene is when Omar tells Tony “I started you in this fuckin’ business…So shut the fuck up!!” The gesture of his hand and the look of disdain on his face towards Tony as he’s saying it is a priceless moment in this movie.😂
I used to work for a family business where they used this tactic to screw me over... father and son arguing openly over me, (one on my side, the other not). In retrospect I now see they were both on the same page... very clever, I learned a lot from them and eventually set up on my own and screwed them both over.
Tony’s poor antics coming from Cuba eating the lemon he’s supposed to be washing his hands with and still having the confidence of a boss just shows how fast and motivated his ascend was along with his fall. 5stars
When Sosa came back to the table, he was angry and wanted to make quick work of both of them, so he had to set it up, and he just happened to say "So where were we?" and the way it unfolded was brilliant.
Exactly
In America, we put lemon in the water to drink
@@iwishiwasthomasshelby
It's called a finger bowl. High society types use it to disinfect their fingers. After eating or whatever.
I thought I was the only one who noticed that he eat that lemon, like fuck you, why waste this lemon. Tony was like that's why the napkin there. Look how Sosa just looking, Tony on some expand shit, Omar on some scared shit.
F Murray is great in the non-verbal pieces too. The way he clatters his cutlery when Tony asks Sosa "Are you nuts?" is a little gem.
CLINK CLANK👈🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Love how Sosa was feeling em out by tossing out a number that anyone who was really lookin to do business would scoff at. Among other things, the offense Tony took to that number let Sosa know he was solid.
"Watch my back!" "It's better than your front, let me tell you..." Best line in the movie!
Tony was watching Omar's backside.
@@alanmorris7669 dumb. he meant Omar's face is ugly.
@@alanmorris7669 That foreshadowing with the assassin standing right behind those two is brilliant.
@@alanmorris7669 HES A FAG
That’s easy to watch 😂😂
I like how Tony knows precisely how active the military and police are. He's got everything in his sights, leaves nothing to chance.
he was in the cuban army or something like that
@@ignaciogodoy7095he also didn’t get that scar from licking pussy!
@@ignaciogodoy7095 He was in the Cuban Army.
@@flipkiller8521he had a bad history being in the army right
oh he takes a big chance not doing that hit for Sosa
That little sound effect at 1:10 is one of my all time favorites. So ominous and scary even.
It is eerie... I thing think that sound is played when the hit squad invades Tony's mansion
Tony's street smarts meant he could talk straight and NEVER be intimated! ...
I love the dynamic between Omar & Tony 😂 it’s painfully obvious that they hate each other’s guts and are struggling to work together
For real Omar was getting pissed when he let his silverware go lol. "Fuck he's talking again."
Hilarious
@@noble20xx56 😂😂😂😄😂😂
Well he did set him up, got his friend angel killed because of it
It was a bad decision by Frank to send them together on this trip to negotiate a business deal.
The way Pacino says " Frank is going to love it, don't worry about it " is classic
Hahahaha
He tells Omar "Shut da fuk up will u" lmao
or "tell Frank I'll keep this guy on ice for him"
I remember when Howard Stern said 20+ years ago that this was the greatest film ever made and it's definitely at the top.
Tony Montana and Antonio ("Amadeus") SALIERI ; and Doctor ("Le Grand Bleu") Lawrence ... Great trio nostalgia.
They don’t make movies like this anymore
Unfortunately not ☹️
What is another movie other than Carlito’s way that is like this? That I would love ? Because this is my favorite movie in the world- I would appreciate it 👌👌🙏🙏
Legend by tom hardy is almost on this level
This movie was made with 1million dollars. Movies now will have 20-100+m budgets and won't focus in the most important thing the story
Right cause all the great actors & actresses are now old or dead! Smh
so this is where salamanca got his start in the drug business!
Meanwhile Gus Fring was torturing a coati.
Do it a big line of coke
Underrated comment - funny as hell and clever too 👍
when i saw him in breaking bad i knew his face rang a bell
He is also Ace Ventura's landlord!
its crazy that the guy who ends up killing Tony is right there behind them with the shades Sosa took no losses in this movie, it would be crazy to see a movie from the perspective of his empire
I think that’s Geno Silva. Still around. The old drug dealer kingpin in the movie with Vin Diesel, “A Man Apart”
The best part of this scene is when Omar is telling him to shut up and learn something while Tony eats the lemon in the water he was supposed to wash his fingers in, proving that Omar was correct that Tony was out of his element to begin with and was just flying by the seat of his pants. It was a very subtle moment in the scene, but it said so much
almost correct, yes Tony doesn't know table manners but at the same time he schools Omar on doing deals.
I'm sorry but Pacino's cuban accent is so bad it really hurts the movie for me. I've been to some of the places in the movie there's many good parts for me. But the accent maybe the worst in movie history or close to it.
I loved this scene in the movie because it was the turning point for everything that proceeded. Tony's defiance and disrespect to Omar is what keeps him alive in Sosa's eyes. But his knowledge also puts him in good graces with Sosa and bad graces with Frank eventually.....this was the takeoff point
I agree 100% definitely the turning point 👍
Viva Sosa on the Columbia River slanging the kilos of cocaine leafs
Greed
Greed was Tony's motivator for this moment.
Sosa respected that he wasn’t a yes man. As powerful as Sosa is, he’s impressed that tony is not intimidated like Omar is. Sometimes the yes man is really the one that can’t be trusted. Sosa sees how tony supplants Omar from a charismatic standpoint. He relates more to tony due to there determination.
This scene resonates with so many people because at one time or another we've all been in a situation where we could have stepped up and taken a chance. Some of us did...and others didn't. But we all recognise that this is the moment Tony went from an errand boy to a Boss...
Or more realistically, you have an asshole co-worker who needed to be put in their place.
You mean an errand boy to a corpse floating in a pool.
@@doomdude69 if that's all you can see then no more to be said. We'll ignore the dishwasher refugee who rose to the top of his profession. Yes he ( Tony ) was flawed and had vulnerabilities which I'm sure you don't have.. but that he got to the top of his profession is the achievement- and that he died as he lived is the lesson.
He was talking with sosa
And that's the point at which he changed from worker to a boss..... he took the initiative. Seized this chance
When you include the rest of this scene I agree it is one of the best.
Small little detail.. Instead of washing his hands with the lemon water, he eats it. This shows us that he grew up with little money.
Imagine how great Tony would've been had he listened to ONE thing Frank told him and it is this..."Don't get high on your own supply"
He also broke Frank’s first rule. He underestimated the other guy’s greed. He underestimated just how far Sosa would go to keep his empire, which included killing women and children. If Tony hadn’t done that, he still would have been around.
He should have told Tony not to take his suit either.
Naw it was “ Don’t you fuck me Tony” that he didn’t listen to
Frank actually liked him, but he let a woman control him.
@@SparkthatOldEl YES ... that's what Tony didn't pay attention and eventually cost him . He underestimated everything about Sosa really
Al Pacino’s character clearly dominates this scene…..simply amazing
Def one of my favourite scenes, that byplay between F. Murray and Pacino is awesome, lol
"Better than your front, lemme tell you, thats easy to watch" LMAO, savage Tony!
Yes, Childishly, Stupidly funny, juxtapositioned with their serious, high-dollar Professional Criminal drug business negotiations. Shows how Crude, low-class Petty and Stupid many of the people in these criminal enterprises are.
@@aminalsiskrazy3350 Yeah yeah, you're an intellectual. Nobody cares.
@@aminalsiskrazy3350 Ain’t that serious… Just a funny line from a movie
1:09 Love how that music always starts when something either violent or consequential is about to pop off. It also plays when Sosa tells Tony not to ever cross him, and foreshadows Tony's downfall.
Sosa’s theme and later remixed for Surrounding the mansion. I love the horn style used, such a great theme!
I agree
Damn thats a good catch
what is that music?
@@K2NGG Janet Jackson - Lonely
Everyone talks about how great this scene is with perfect dialogue- body language - thoughts etc
But you also have to take notice on Tony’s wardrobe - how Tony is dressed like a boss and the colors makes him look like a boss- his gangster lean etc…. This movie was thought out from every angle --
I always thought the incredible panning camera from the room where the drug deal is going wrong down to the guys in the car, back up to the room, but slow, real slow, was the best shot or scene in the movie. But this scene was incredibly well written and incredibly well acted as well. This scene is a masterclass in filmmaking.
That line was soooooo aristocratic...
“My associates here can escort you to my chopper. The chopper will take you to Santa Cruz. I have a jet there can have you in Miami in...5 hours. You’ll be *back here tomorrow* in time for lunch.”
I agree 100%
I love how calm Sosa was when he came back. Annoyed, but he was Mr. Frosty.
Growing up I always wanted to be SOSA
kids wanted to be Tony Montana but I wanted to be ALEJANDRO SOSA
Edit:
I ALWAYS LOVED THAT LINE
@@reedthompson6455 we might have to watch out for you. Maybe have the fbi monitor your every moves if this are the people you want to be
@@aje7183 lol
It was a childhood fantasy type thing but in reality I still wanna be like SOSA, I wanna be the guy who calls the shots, the guy whose 2 steps ahead of everyone else but no I’m not a criminal
When a low level kingpin assistant tells the most powerful kingpin that he must adjust his pricing you know the dude is going to be among the best
ikr😄😂😂😂😂
Yes and no. You also create enemies this way and piss people off, which will eventually get you killed and that’s exactly what happened to Tony.
This isn’t high school, confidence is a good thing but when it’s overdone you can make a lot of enemies, especially in this lifestyle.
Plot armor…
I’m The Modern Day Sosa At The End Of The Day I Always Get The Last Laugh!!
Tony eating the lemon with pure confidence not knowing it’s to clean his hands with gets me everytme
It's not confidence. It's to show he doesn't know what it's for. It shows he is over confident. He's in over his head
Tony never misses a chance to say and do more 🤣
As soon as I get back to Miami, I'll talk to Frank personally 👍
👍
Good my associates can escort you to my chopper
@@Takaichi666- and have you hanging from it in the process
👍
👍
Tony eating the lemon always kills me.
U gotta watch how when he sees Omar clean his hands with the 🍋 he's like "oh shit I wasn't supposed to eat these?" great acting
Bro I’ve seen this movie like 27 times and never noticed that one little detail. I always thought tony was eating a cookie or something. Now reading the comments.. I’m even more confused lol.
Do rich people really have a small plate of lemon water to wash their hands with???… bro I legit would have been tony in this situation. Saw the plate and took a couple bites of the lemon lol.
That cracks me up. I took a hot woman to a very high end restaurant when we were in grad school. After the salad they brought us a tiny scoop of sherbet to “cleanse our palate” before the next course. My date exclaimed “Desert!? We haven’t even had our entree yet!” I had never experienced that myself before either but fortunately I played it cool.
Brian De Palma's scenes are better than most other director's entire movies. This is a master class on blocking, camera placement and shooting dialogue.
Everyone knows Omar's fate in this scene but imagine watching this scene for the first time. The intensity was off the charts. You know Alberto and Sosa are discussing something about Omar or Tony, you just don't who they're talking about. And you just KNOW they are going to kill or harm one or both of them you just don't know for sure. The way Alberto motions at them with the telephone at 1:27 and then motions with his head at the Skull to "go ahead and do your thing" at 2:05 is textbook dramatic tension: no dialogue, just action, pure and simple, and totally fat-free filmmaking. We know something bad is going to happen to Omar or Tony. We just don't know when or why until we see Omar drop out of the helicopter and tension is relieved only by the shock of the moment. This movie is probably the greatest ever made if you are into filmcraft and filmmaking!
Dude, we knew it wasn't Tony, he's the star.
RIP Mark Margolis - fantastic actor!
Right! Thanks, I was just about to look at the cast list to find out why he looked so familiar.
And RIP Paul Shenar (Sosa) as well.
Liked him as Hector Salamanca
RIP John Allonzo Scarface/Chinatown D.P.
He will never die. Hollywood tried. I know he survived the wheelchair explosion so...
“Okay, fuck you.. how’s that” 💀
Love that 😂
I just rewatched this movie, such a classic, never gets old
Eating the lemon from the finger bowl, not knowing what it's truly for, shows the life of poverty and ignorance Tony endured growing up.
I love how Omar walks away from this scene thinking that Montana will get killed for being too overenthusiastic without realizing that he's the one who's about to be tortured and killed!
Actually, if you look at the expressión on his face as he is being led away, Omar realizes he is in trouble. Watch it again.
i guess,the original plan included both of em, but Tony spoke himself out of it without even knowing :D
Spoiler - dude - spoiler :(
@lowiqsavage you are deep in the comments lol
Interesting theory: what if Omar was never an informant and that Sosa wanted to manipulate the Lopez organization by giving Tony more authority?
Now that is an interesting change. If Omar was never an informative, things would have gotten heated between Tony and Frank.
Always thought that 💪🙏🤔💜
He was an informant. Frank was working with the police too. Playing both sides.
Negative. Notice the way Sosa looks at his man (Shadow) who hands him the phone. Shadow is telling Sosa that Omar is an informant. It is Sosa's look of surprise and anger, which tells us that Sosa was being straight with Tony, and Omar was indeed an informant.
Later in the movie. Sosa sends ( Shadow) with Tony to New York to plant the bomb under the car.
Sosa and Tony dialogue introduces him as Sosa' s brother, an expert in bombs but cant speak English and needs Tony to show him around.
So Tony seals his fate by killing Sosa's brother because he didnt want to kill any children.
Tony wanted children but Alvera couldn't conceive.
The writers wanted to show that Tony under all the layers of bad had a basic moral protector instinct of innocent children.
In fact it cost him his life. Because if he was all evil he wouldn't have cares about the kids in the car. As he said He's not going to Hell for that!"
I cant understand after when he talked to Sosa he said its no big deal we'll try again next month.
He knew that was Sosa' s brother.
I swear ive seen this movie 30-40 times, however this was from the eyes of a teenager.
Oh my, watching this scene over again, 30-35 years later, through my much older eyes and through the commenters perspectives, there are so many intricate details and nuances I never noticed.
Thanks guys, Im rewatching this as soon as the kids go to bed 😂
In my opinion Al Pacino is the GOAT of actor!
Historic scene. You have F. Murray Abraham who played a prolific Mobster later in life (Al Capone) and then you have Mark Margolis who plays Tio Hector Salamanca, one of the most feared Mob bosses on TV (Breaking Bad)
Two Academy Award winners in Abraham and Pacino.
Khonshu🌕
Wow, the dingdingding guy. Awesome now that you mention it. Thank you.
This scene also builds the characters of the assassins. Omar is shuttled into the hands of the killers and they did a great job showcasing the subtle presence of the characters.
a lot of people
theorize he want a snitch
but they wanted him out the way
"That's what the movies always get wrong. There's no big shootouts, or bright lights. Your murderers come with smiles, they come as your friends, the people who have known you and cared about you your entire life.
--Henry Hill"
--Michael Scott
It's ironic that for all of Tony's ruthless ways, his morality in the end was his undoing - not assisting in that assassination was what angered Sosa to commit fatal revenge but then again wasn't Tony just a rich disposable pawn to him in the end?
I could watch this movie a million times and still find something new, crazy!!!
Tony is somehow seems getting very comfortable with himself through out the scene.
Dude just got the confident.
He showing his ambition
This scene is a very powerful scene. The moment when tony ate the lemon in the water that was actually meant to was hands with. That was the moment Mr sosa realized that tony wasn’t exposed to rich life and that he was a humble man.
tony is humble? i could not get it.
@@CursedChic0 Compared to the man next to him, that's the point. It's context.
Even if you were starving youd know better than to eat a lemon bc it's too acidic, itll make you vomit. I get the point but it's not realistic.
@@notkerrystolcenberg Italians love lemon flavored shit plus if your being polite you eat nasty stuff and say ty do you have some more
@@philswensen5863 wtf Tony Montana wasn't Italian 😂
This whole movie is a masterpiece
The writing and acting is excellent. Its actually one of the best scenes in movie history.
"The prince of darkness is a gentleman"
-William Shakespeare.
That's Sosa to a T. A gentleman devil. A sophisticated demon. A villain with class. Great casting.
The best scene from Scarface.... Every scene!
The best scene in Scarface is the part between the beginning and the end.
This scene and also my favourite execution of Frank Lopez & Mel Bernstein.
Agreed.. Also, to me, showcases just how talented F. Murray Abraham is as an actor who steals the scene here. His expressions and voice inflection betray his annoyance with Tony because he sees he's actually being pushed aside and his authority stepped over and KNOWS he doesn't have the balls Montana does to back it up. You can clearly see what's about to happen in all 3 of their faces. Tony isn't going to take a NO from Omar. Souza closely watching their body language and clearly sees a future business partner in Tony and Omar realizing if he doesn't assert his authority here he's eventually replaced when he gets back to Miami. Brilliant writing, directing and casting..
Agreed, I just watched Amadeus and forgot he was in Scarface. Brilliant actor.
Agree 100% F. Murray Abraham is a talent!
Sosa (sorry). Written by Oliver Stone.
Great movie but if the plot was realistic, Omar (who seemed pretty high up in frank’s organisation) would have got rid of Tony waaay before they went to meet Sosa.
He sensed the danger of Tony from the beginning when he survived the Colombian set up. Ge would have made more of an effort to get rid of Tony than he did in the film
@@pbosustow
He filmed both movies at the same time. He jumped back and forth between both.
Best part is Tony Montana casually eating the orange in the finger bowl, only for Omar to use it to wash his hands.
It's a lemon 🍋
Issa lemon 🍋
🍋
lol oranges are sweet that would have been gross
It IS a Lemon slice. Meant to Wash one's hands. Remove the grease after one was eating food with their hands. This is brilliant because it shows the audience how low-class and uncultured Tony Is.
the part that gets me is when Tony eats the lemon in the hand bowl like it’s an appetizer
Yes, it was one of the very best scenes. Especially how it begins with that Cochabamba music looking over the Bolivian mountains.
They’re actually arguing in front of the boss lmao 😂
He’s not their boss, he’s one of their suppliers.
@@blackcapone187 which kinda means he's their boss
@@danielhuang2488 no he is not. THEY ARE ASSOCIATES
@@josephpalacio2343 NO HE IS NOT HIS BOSS, IN ANY ORGANISATION LEGAL OR OTHERWISE, YUR BOSS IS ANYONE WHO GIVES YOU ORDERS ,REPORT TO DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OR A ERSON WHO PAYS YOU. FRANK IS TONY'S BOSS, SOSA IS A BUSINESS PARTNER , ASSOCIATE OR IN THIS CASE A CONNECT. HE PRODUCES THE DRUGS, THEY MARKET IT. THE RISKD ARE SHARED 50/50. THERE IS NO BOSS /WORKER RELATIONSHIP HERE, THATS WHY THEY CAN ARGUE IN FRONT OF HIM LIKE THAT. ALSO CLEARLY YOU CAN HEAR OMAR SAY ITS UP TO FRANK, IF SOSA WAS THE BOSS WHAT WILL BE THE SENSE IN CLEARNG FROM A 3RD PARTY
@@josephpalacio2343 you are probably a real life drug dealer, thats why you know all about this and just because you deal drugs dont mean we all take it. fuc outta here
This is hands down the best scene of the movie. The negotiations, the brunch, and the absolute brilliance of both Tony and Sosa sticking to their words until the very end. Classic.
My favorite is when the shoot Frank and the ask about what to do with Tony.
“You wanna job?” The look on that guys face before he swigs the Jack Daniel’s. Great acting.
Whoa. Big call. I can't pick one best scene when there's a veritable buffet of best scenes!
Or when Marta pulls out a big one from under the pillow.
There are TOO many good scenes in this movie. You can't say which one is the best. They are all top quality stuff.
Hey the guy holding the phone is Hector Salamanca!
Definitely on of my favorite scenes. But I also like a little later when Mr. Montana flip tosses the binoculars back to Mr. Sosa and tells him to make a move lol.
al pacino at his best...masterpiece.
I bet no one noticed that the guy who finally killed him is standing right behind him lol
Wow that's crazy 😮
that was really sad, until now I realized that too.
Notice how he’s standing behind him the whole time and he killed him from behind the producers put that in on purpose to foreshadow Tony’s death
What chu kiddin me every true montana fan knew that
@@lrodriguez9315 Montana fan? Tony Montana was a small time criminal who became a big time criminal that brought about his own demise by getting strung out on his own product and crossing an even bigger criminal. He wasn't exactly someone deserving of any kind of fanbase.
Pacino is so amazing in this movie!
one of the reasons Tony was so brutal in negotiations, is cause Tony ALWAYS, knew the facts. Always!
The scene is classic. Tony's ascend into the being the ' shotcaller'.
I loved his tough character uncompromising, sincere and honest!
I never noticed before that after Sosa got off the phone, Alberto motioned the guy with the shades over, he knew it was that time to dangle Omar from the helicopter lol
Any scene Al Pacino is in is the greatest
One does not simply watch a single scene from Scarface👌
Just one of many great scenes.
I love this movie, I’ve seen it probably 12-15 times and I still enjoy it. Almost a 40 year old movie and it holds its value so well
Last count I had watched it 40 + times. 1st VHS movie I ever bought. Cost me 50 bucks in 1988. Now that copy is long gone and I have a blu ray as well as the 'black box' edition that came with lobby cards as well as a dvd copy of the original Scarface with Paul Muni.
Rookie numbers
I'm 🇨🇺 Cuban . I love this movie.
@@jayr3381 THANK YOU. Was just about to say this 😂. I’ve watched this movie over 500 times. I am not joking
im just now realizing hector salamanca is sosa's guy holding the phone
If Tony Montana didn't act the way he did in this scene, he very well could have ended in that helicopter ride with Omar Suarez.
You can loose your life by the people you associate you self with becareful. 🔥
This scene is amazing! Tony's personality and intelligence come through, he's not just a lackey. He very effectively displayed his worth and Sosa, being very shrewd, recognized it. Tony detailed the practical logistical challenges of getting the yayo from Panama to Miami, and how accepting that burden should impact Sosa's price... they would be splitting the costs, and risks, of getting the product to market 50/50. All the other drug dealers Sosa dealt with were not nearly as business savvy as Tony. If Tony could not back up his logic, Sosa would have been insulted and may have killed him along with Omar.
Why does he care? As long as he gets the money, who cares if they "all" get caught? You think it's a situation where they get paid after they sell it in america?
@@secondrule Sosa owns the means of production, but Tony is the link to the customer base in America/Miami. Without customers, Sosa is sitting on a mountain of unsellable coke... or he'll have to sell it dirt cheap locally in Columbia to get rid of it.
Americans loved their coke in the 80s and would pay top dollar. And once it's in Miami, it's much easier to distribute the coke to New York, Chicago, wherever the hot spots are.
If Tony gets caught and goes to prison, then Sosa loses his link to the customers in America.
Yes, Sosa can try get other partners, but what's the likelihood they are going to be as smart, connected, and loyal as Tony?
Tony incurs costs having to evade seizure of the drugs and arrest, so he wants Sosa to factor that into his price to make it worth Tony's while to run the coke back and forth from Columbia to Miami.
@@bobafeet1234 Sosa has many "Tonys". This Tony is just one of many dealers. Sosa saw him as a usefull idiot that can be talked into making a million dollar deal (Omar was against it).
@@CoolGobyFish I don't know if I agree that Sosa saw Tony as just another useful idiot.
To me, Omar and Frank were old school and not forward thinking... Tony was.
All of the technical hurdles Tony was aware of (Navy frogmen, EC2s, Bell 209 choppers)... your average low-level street dealer would not know any of that stuff. Plus Tony was at the epicenter of the hottest American coke market in the 80s (Miami). If Sosa could get any old dealer to courier his coke safely and with the connections to distribute it, he would have. I think Tony was closer to Sosa's level of intelligence and drive. Sosa and Tony were making a fortune, until Tony's reluctance to kill the two kids ended their relationship... and Tony's life.
@@bobafeet1234 Forward thinking? The guy got nailed for basic money laundering))) Everyone gave him advice (even the banker). He didn't listen. Yes, he is an idiot and to Sosa he was an expendable island monkey (as we saw later). Frank and Omar wanted to buy little bit of coke, but Sosa talked Tony into a million dollar worth of product once Omar was out of the picture. Think about that))) Sosa had lots of Tonys, the guy worked with CIA for crying out loud.
Nobody ever talks about how funny Tony was in this movie
I can’t think of anyone else that could’ve played Sosa so good ..it’s like it was made for him
by the way, have you watched the brazilian movies Elite Squad 1, 2? Its an amazing movie. I thought the same about the Captain Fabio, the actor looks exactly like Rio de janeiro corrupted policeman, the slangs, the character it's perfect.
A movie that aged so well in time,the first time i saw it i think that it was too long,the next time i saw it i understand better all the parts and it s brilliant in every second every word every camera angle all the actors the script the director all is absolute perfection.
Many good points about the lemon and Tony coming across as sincere etc. But I think an underappreciated factor is Tony's straight up non-nonsense approach to the business side. Explaining the problems and risks with transportation, losing 1/9 loads, negotiating a price and straight up declining Sosa's initial price suggestion (which may as well have been a test). Asking Sosa if he's nuts regarding the price.
Despite the other stuff people have mentioned. I think Sosa seeing Tony's serious attitude to the business side was a deciding and important factor.
TBH... the best scene from Scarface is literally all scenes in the movie.. it's that perfect.
I actually love Tony's first interaction with Omar and the whole dishwasher thing.
This is actually the turning point in the movie !! Tony kept it real as he is. 💯
The look on Sosa's face when Montana says, "What, are you nuts?" haha
I loved Sosa's expression after Tony says "Thirteen five? What are you nuts?"
I don't know if this is the best scene in the movie but when I think of the movie this scene often comes to mind first. I guess the helicopter scene that follows is a little too graphic for YT but that scene is very important because it shows Tony that Sosa isn't just another Frank. Tony has met his match and Sosa is much worse than Tony because Sosa has no problem sacrificing women and children to keep his empire. Tony draws the line at women and children.
Yeah first time I watched this film on VHS rental that chopper scene was nuts. Can't fuck with Sosa.
@@raygamble2105 he was a evil gangster....tony was a bad gangster
Tony got high on his own supply. He had the potential to be the greatest of them all until he made drugs rule his own
@@thecomeup5337 Yeah personally I see Tony Montana as being Scorpion and Sosa as being Noob Saibot
Man's gotta have code.
Sosa didn't
Ridiculously-superior filmmaking in every way. The acting, editing, camerawork, EVERYTHING. This is what can happen when you have a passionate crew working towards a masterpiece that pushes the envelope. This is one of those rare films that was more of an "event" than just a movie.
agreed watched twice on release
back when movies were movied not propaganda
that's the trade off. good point.
I love how Tony uses "duck walk" instead of the expression "cake walk". Thats a Ricky Ricardo move right there.
Every scene in Scarface is my favorite.
Incredible acting - all of three of them. Conveying the right emotions and sentiments