<b>Celebrating the 40th anniversary of <i>Scarface </i>starring Al Pacino — Brian DePalma’s 1983 gangster film that shook the world, shocked the critics, and shot bullet holes through the American Dream—this explosive Hollywood tell-all charts not only the phenomenon of this controversial classic but also the equally controversial legacy of the original 1932 <i>Scarface </i>that inspired it…<br><br>WITH A FOREWORD FROM STEVEN BAUER</b><br><br><i>How many movies in the history of film have truly shaken society? Scarface did it twice. </i><br><br>When Brian DePalma’s operatically violent and profane <i>Scarface</i> debuted in 1983, the film drew almost as much fire as the relentless gunfire in the film itself. Starring Al Pacino as Cuban refugee-turned-crime-boss Tony Montana, Steven Bauer as his best friend Manny, and rising star Michelle Pfeiffer as an Eighties gangster’s moll, the movie was a remake of 1932’s <i>Scarface</i>—revamped fo