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Frank Serpico (2017)

GENRESDocumentary,Biography
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Frank SerpicoStanislao PuglieseJanet PanettaJohn O'Connor
DIRECTOR
Antonino D'Ambrosio

SYNOPSICS

Frank Serpico (2017) is a English movie. Antonino D'Ambrosio has directed this movie. Frank Serpico,Stanislao Pugliese,Janet Panetta,John O'Connor are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2017. Frank Serpico (2017) is considered one of the best Documentary,Biography movie in India and around the world.

In play at John jay college of criminal justice re:Thomas Beckett serpico played a tempter to the soon to be fallen becket for his unwavering religious convictions may have propelled serpico to face certain danger and even death which Beckett did not escape

Frank Serpico (2017) Reviews

  • hero or rat?

    ferguson-62017-11-02

    Greetings again from the darkness. Deciding whether a whistleblower is a hero or a "rat" usually depends on which side of the issue you fall. The line is not quite so clear in the case of Frank Serpico, the New York cop who exposed massive corruption in that city's police department in the late 1960's and early 1970's. Of course the crooked cops vilify him as a rat, but even the good cops are divided … some believing a cop should never break ranks and go against another cop. After testifying in 1972, Frank Serpico left it all behind (spending time in Holland). It's now 45 years later, and director Antonino D'Ambrosio allows him to tell his own story directly to the camera. If you have seen the 1973 film SERPICO (directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Al Pacino), you will recognize some of the referenced stories and situations, and realize how closely the movie followed the Peter Maas book. Despite his theatrical nature – he seems to be a thespian at heart – Mr. Serpico is so committed to truth that we find it difficult to question much of what he says. This is a man that yelled "cut" during the filming of a scene in the movie … he claims the events depicted in the scene never happened, so they shouldn't be part of the movie. Yes, he was then banned from the set. Serpico's stories are irresistible and we are captivated by the charm and personality of the now 81 year old who seems both at peace with the past, and crystal clear on what it has meant to his life. There can be a fine line between hero and villain, and sometimes the legend holds up when the facts are known. Through the years, Serpico has remained true to his ideals … the same ideals that were present when he was a kid working at his immigrant father's shoe shine store. The film's presentation is terrific as Serpico takes us on a tour of that old family business (now a diner), his childhood home, and old Greenwich Village apartment. He then meets up with Arthur Cesare, one of his partners that fateful night of February 3, 1971. A drug bust resulted in Frank being shot in the face and leading to questions of a set-up and slow police response. These are straight talking New Yorkers who uncharacteristically dance around the topic, leading us to believe there is something to the rumor. It's a powerful segment. The clips and photographs take us back to that era, and there are interviews from neighbors, friends, partners, Ramsey Clark (his attorney), journalists, writers, and other cops. It seems clear that payoffs were "part of the scene", and that some cops were simply too afraid to not go along. We see the distinctive New York magazine cover showing Serpico's skull with the bullet visible in the x-ray. Actor John Turturro describes him as an inspiration, while others state Serpico suffers from PTSD (who could blame him?). "Never run when you're right." That's the fatherly advice Frank says he got from his father, and what we see on screen is a man who refused to accept the corruption of an institution he believed should be above it all. He accepts the hate from those who see him as anything but true blue, and also refuses to see himself as the hero who stood up when someone needed to. On what side of the line do you fall?

  • Never run when you're right

    wynne-12018-03-11

    The story of Frank Serpico is part heroic, part tragic and part odyssey. Serpico was a young policeman in New York in the sixties and early seventies. He saw widespread corruption in law enforcement (officers taking bribes, etc.) and his sense of honour and his moral code was offended. But his response did not stop there. He took action. He reported the moral decay he witnessed to his superiors and testified repeatedly to lawmakers to try to initiate change and reform. He stuck his neck out when many others who might be equally disturbed by the corruption around them would not have had the courage to do so. And it cost him. Big time. Serpico was ostracized, his life was imperiled and the toll it took on him mentally and physically, was and continues to this day to be, siginificant. This new documentary by Antonio D'Ambrosio attempts to show Frank Serpico, warts and all. Through extensive interviews with Serpico and former friends and colleagues (not to mention enemies) as well as clips from the Al Pacino Oscar-nominated film SERPICO, Serpico's epic journey from rookie to celebrity to chump to whistle blower to outcast and to celebrity is vividly conveyed, sometimes with alarming frankness. One hand-shaking, slap on the back reunion with a former colleague soon deteriorates into an uncomfortable trip down memory back lane when it becomes apparent that the former colleague of Serpico's was one of his detractors. And while it's all water under the bridge now, to this fellow's credit he doesn't back off from his criticisms of Serpico and his relentless drive to expose the New York Police Department as a den of corruption. One excellent choice by director/producer/writer D'Ambrosio is his use of clips from the Pacino film. Why use re-enactments when you've got the scenes you want already intact, directed by no less a director than the great Sidney Lumet? Anything less than Lumet's gritty, '70's-era approach would have paled by comparison. Where the film takes a tragic turn is when it becomes obvious that Frank Serpico's bull-headed integrity has taken a terrible toll on him. He truly suffers from PTSD and might even be seen to be a little crazy. D'Ambrosio wisely does not comment, but lets the viewer decide for himself if and how much Serpico is mentally disturbed by his experiences. Was what Serpico did necessary? To him, yes. Was his approach the best? For him, yes. Was the cost to his physical and mental well-being too great? You decide. When you live by the credo "Never run when you're right" it is bound to cost. Even when motivated by the unique type of stubborn moral integrity possessed by Frank Serpico, not everyone is going to admire what you do and how you do it. Very few of us could do what Frank Serpico did. Not everyone would want to. This outstanding film shows the rightness, the wrongness, and the everything in between-ness of the cost of personal integrity and morality.

  • Still very relevant

    tim-hanrahan-15-1259852018-09-22

    If it's true, the most important thing Serpico says in this documentary comes right at the end: I remember being invited to a program where cops were honoured from all over the country. I got invited to be a presenter. I said "congratulations! - you got the nation's ten-top cop award". When I went to shake their hands, each one of them gave me a big hug, and they each whispered something in my ear. And what they whispered was: "I gotta talk to ya."

  • Cops make themselves the law when they are to uphold the law

    justbusinessthebook2018-09-09

    I cannot believe that there are only 4 reviews here a year after this landmark film came to be. I watched it on DVD, ironically only after the love of my life suggested I should after she had. Watching it, I cannot believe that there are reviews here which still carry the debate whether Serpico was a 'rat' or actually a rare man who knew and knows what morality is. In time I hope to buy this DVD. That is because the message inside it, from Serpico's own mouth, applies across the board, not just to cops. Elected officials are to use our selection of them to lead, not rule. Lawyers are to use their position to uphold principled justice, not advance their positions over their own duty to the law, as a protectorate of rights and justice. The whole of this planet's citizenry should sit down and watch this documentary. They should then ask what is the disease in our society that allows Donald Trump to declare that his position makes him above all laws, international and otherwise. Near the end of this movie, Serpico insinuates what I loosely use in this title. However, he nails it on the head when he also suggests that the law is required to be applied in a manner where we are all equals, cop or not. Others want to debate whether this film settles the issue that Serpico acted properly when becoming a singularly brave man who dared to stand up against corruption? Let them. When they do, they miss the fact that it is men like this to whom statues should be built instead of this imposed stupidity that stature in society, that is the wealth achieved, is a measure of modern morality. Serpico's simple approach to life and the value of this film is that both confirm that, despite their faults, it takes men like Serpico to define what moral, not perfect, behaviour truly is

  • One of the good guys

    parkerrodney2018-07-26

    In this documentary we see an aging Frank Serpico, former NYPD police officer, relive his experiences as a Police Officer in New York City during a period when corruption was rampant in the department, and crime was high. In viewing this documentary one would get the most out of it by reading the book and watching the movie Serpico as well. If you are a history of public administration student, or are interested in politics, I recommend watching video of the Knapp Commission which was formed by Mayor John Lindsey to look into police corruption in the department. This documentary is slow and at times does not seem to follow a logical script, but it is valuable given the subject at hand. I think one of Serpico's greatest challenge is living up to Al Pacino's performance.

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