Rainbow
with Egg
Underneath and an Elephant
  
Serpico
Serpico
U.S.A. 1973
Director: Sidney Lumet
Monthly Film Bulletin - 1974
Richard Combs
Cert-X. dist-ClC. p.c--Artists Entertainment Complex. For
Produzioni De Laurentiis. p-Martin Bregman assoc, p--Roger M. Rothstein.
p. manager-Martin Danzig. ass. d-Burtt Harris, Alan Hopkins. sc-Waldo
Salt, Norman Wexler. Based on the novel by Peter Maas. ph-Arthur J. Ornik.
col-Technicolor. ed-Dede Allen, Richard Marks. p. designer-Charles Bailey.
a.d-Douglas Higgins. set dec-Thomas H. Wright. scenic artist-Jack Hughes.
m--Mikis Theodorakis. m.d--Bob James. sd. ed-John J. Fitzstephens, Edward
Beyer, Robert Reitano, Richard P. Cirincione. sd. rec-James J. Sabat. sd.
re-rec-Richard J. Vorisek.
I.p--Al Pacino (Frank Serpico); John Randolph (Sidney
Green); Jack Kehoe (Tom Keough); Biff McGuire (Inspector McClain); Barbara
Eda-Young (Laurie); Cornelia Sharpe (Leslie Lane); Tony Roberts (Bob
Blair); John Medici (Pasquale); Allan Rich (District Attorney Tauber);
Norman Ornellas (Rubello); Ed Grover (Lombardo), Al Henderson (Peluce);
Hank Garrett (Malone); Damien Leake (Joey); Joe Bova (Potts); Gene Gross
(Captain Tolkin); John Stewart (Waterman), Woodie King (Larry); James
Tolkin (Steiger), Ed Crowley (Barto), Bernard Barrow (Palmer); Sal Carollo
(Mr. Serpico); Mildred Clinton (Mrs. Serpico), Nathan George (Smith), Gus
Fleming (Dr. Metz); Richard Foronjy (Coraso); Alan North (Brown); Lewis J.
Stadlen (Berman); Ted Beniades (Sarno); John Lehne (Gilbert); M. Emmet
Walsh (Gallagher); George Ede (Daley); Charles White (Commissioner
Delaney).
11,725 ft. 130 minutes.
Frank Serpico joins New York's 82nd Precinct as a rookie
cop and is soon being introduced to the petty corruption of his colleagues
and reprimanded for taking the initiative in capturing two would-be
rapists. Hoping to become a detective, Serpico transfers to the Bureau of
Criminal Intelligence, while also studying at New York University where he
meets dancer Leslie Lane. Bored by clerical work and unpopular with his
superior because of his unconventional dress and interests, Serpico
persuades the sympathetic- seeming Inspector McClain to transfer him to
the 21st Precinct; on his first day there, he is offered a pay-off which
he reports to a friend on the Mayor's special investigating committee, Bob
Blair, but the two are dissuaded from taking the matter further. In the
meantime, Leslie leaves and Serpico meets and sets up home with a nurse,
Laurie. Transferred by McClain to a reputedly 'clean' division, Serpico
finds himself under as much pressure as before to accept bribes, and as
much disliked for his hippy dress, but when he reports to McClain, he is
asked to stay on and investigate the corruption for Commissioner Delaney.
No official action is taken however, and Serpico and Blair's attempts to
initiate an enquiry through the Mayor's office are blocked. Delaney is
eventually pressured into permitting an investigation, but the grand jury
hearings fail to probe far enough to satisfy Serpico. Ostracised and
actively threatened by fellow officers, and parted from Laurie after some
stormy scenes, Serpico finds an ally, Inspector Lombardo, in Manhattan's
8th Precinct and, together with Blair, they break their story to the New
York Times. A special commission appointed by the Mayor, and the vigorous
efforts of investigator Sidney Green re-open the enquiry, while Serpico is
transferred to Brooklyn's tough Narcotics Division. There he is seriously
wounded when other officers abandon him during a raid, recovering in
hospital, he rejects the detective's badge he is now offered, gives his
testimony before the Commission, and then resigns from the force.
Comment: A more full-bodied treatment of the themes of his
previous crime saga, The Anderson Tapes, and a healthy step away from the
theatrical adaptations that have been congesting his career, Serpico looks
like the epic that Sidney Lumet has been fitfully promising for years. Its
strongest qualities seem to cast back to his earliest films, to the kind
of dynamic, self-contained drama which, while worrying over a social
conscience in Twelve Angry Men, hadn't yet cast up the social parables
that appeared in The Pawnbroker and The Group, or the theatrical devising
of the later films. The career of Frank Serpico, the cop who became a
renegade to his colleagues because of his refusal to work their system of
full-time graft, connived at on all levels of the force, allows Lumet the
scope for a broad yet detailed attack on city-wide corruption and the
bureaucracy's frustrating mechanisms for self-protection, while the
emotional energies of his film remain, for once, firmly geared to the
hero's own. The peculiar mixture of idealism and obsession in Serpico's
notion of integrity leads him to become a pariah in his work, an
impossible companion at home, and a prima donna - as he is accused by the
investigating counsel finally assigned to open an enquiry - in applying
his own sense of justice. The film has the highly-charged style which
seems to be both peculiarly Lumet's own and almost the family technique of
all ex-TV directors. Harsh, hectic images flesh out a disconnected
narrative, and the drama is played, gracelessly but in a way that allows
for a fierce switchback of emotion, in an alternation of close-up
confrontation with the kind of static tableau where one worried police
officer considers aligning himself with Serpico's cause, while the man's
home and family are also held in the shot with a sense of precarious
harmony. Where confrere John Frankenheimer has gradually worn the style
down to academic monotony (in an effort to emulate Wyler, Stevens, et al),
Lumet in the past has bent it to the needs of very theatrical symbolism
and allegory (the confrontation in The Offence of another troubled copper
with the three-fold personification of a victim/judge). Allegory is
perhaps stirring beneath the surface of Serpico - in the Christ-like dress
and appearance of the maverick cop, in the stigmata wound he finally
suffers and his ritual disrobing in hospital - but it is surprisingly
discreet and never threatens the convulsions which have overturned so many
earlier films. And the fragmentation and episodic narrative are here
cogently justified: in following Serpico's course through successively
corrupt precincts, his ostracism increasingly marked by the unconventional
dress which, in his own eyes, fits him more usefully to his job; in
establishing the mood of frustration as one exit after another is blocked
off in this Byzantine labyrinth; and in lending an uneasy edge to the
occasional turnabout - the sympathetic officer who arranges transfers and
proffers information on Catholic retreats, but whose good will abruptly
reaches its own time-serving limits, and the eventual discovery of an ally
in the most unexpected quarter. Frank Serpico turns out to be a less
fantastical version of the loner-hero from the other side of the law in
The Anderson Tapes dreaming of the 'hit' that will net him an entire East
Side apartment house, and compromised, exploited and finally destroyed in
its execution. Characteristically, and more solidly than usual, Lumet
plots the ironies of Serpico's single-minded integrity: gradually divorced
from the environment of his past (the ethnic background rather eerily
pointed up by Theodorakis' score, but less morosely celebrated than in
Bye, Bye Braverman), from the people amongst whom he insists he wants to
work, Serpico's self-formulated honesty and obsessive campaign lead
directly to the final title, which tells of his resignation from the force
and his self-exile to Switzerland.
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