Capone
- R
- Year:
- 1975
- 101 min
- 839 Views
Come on. Hurry up.
Hello, operator? Get me the police.
- Bet these are worth 20 grand.
- Shut up.
Hold it.
Get up against the car.
Spread them out.
Come on. Move.
F***ing wops.
Get up. Okay, get up. Come on.
Okay, you guinea son of a b*tch,
who were they?
I don't know.
Easy, Mike, easy.
Give the lad a chance.
You got trouble.
Big trouble.
You know that, don't you?
- I didn't mean anything.
- Look...
...they're gonna put you away
for 10 years. Easy.
Unless you open up.
Captain, I swear.
I didn't know those two guys.
I figured it was a stickup going on,
I wanted to help.
You see two uniformed policemen
making a pinch...
...and you think it's a stickup?
It was dark in there. I couldn't see.
Mike!
All right, beat it.
- Just a goddamn minute, lieutenant...
- That'll be enough of that.
- Come on, get out of here.
- Sure thing, lieutenant.
It was only a mistake, that's all.
Right, officer?
Do you want your goddamn head
busted, you f***ing wop?
Goddamn fink.
Move!
I got a call from
Judge McQuade's bailiff.
Seems His Honor would
appreciate us letting this guy go.
Not only didn't His Honor know
why this guy was pulled in...
...he didn't even know
his goddamn name.
Now, how is that for a laugh, huh?
Hop in, kid.
- Yeah, says who?
- Says me.
Up yours.
Get in.
- You have a name?
- Alphonse Capone.
Everybody calls me Al.
Your father own a barbershop
on Navy Street?
- Yeah, that's right.
- I know him, Frank.
Gabriel Capone, nice man.
When you see him, you just tell him
that Johnny Torrio sends his respects.
I sure will, Mr. Torrio.
- Who tipped you off on the fur heist?
- Nobody.
Nobody tipped me off, Mr. Yale.
See, I got this girl.
...and I'm coming home. I see this squad
pull in the alley, grab these two fellas.
I put my nose in, that's all.
- You know our boys were in there?
- Well, I don't know your boys.
Least I don't think I know them.
Anyway, I tell you the truth...
...it was so dark
you couldn't see nobody's face.
You're gonna tell me that you jumped
two cops with nothing in it for you?
Now that I think of it, if I'd thought
about it, I wouldn't have done it.
I just don't like cops, that's all.
- Here.
- Oh, no.
Please, Mr. Yale. It was a pleasure
to do a man like you a favor.
An important man like you.
My pleasure, I swear.
Yeah. You go out there, see Solly.
Tell him to drive you over
to St. Vincent's. Fix up that face.
Sure thing, Mr. Yale.
- Thank you.
- Go ahead.
You too, Mr. Torrio.
Pleasure to meet you.
Hey, how'd you make out, kid?
- "J.M." Who's J.M.?
- Judge McQuade, 20th District.
Frank, 2000 a month?
whorehouses open.
Fifty thousand dollars a month, clear.
You do that good in Chicago?
A little bit here, a little bit there.
It adds up.
Remember when we were kids?
We had rags on our backs.
Had cockroaches in the oatmeal.
Crabs on our balls
from the stinky toilets.
But one thing we did have,
we had brains.
Even as kids we had brains.
These punks today have nothing.
No, no. Not all of them, Frank.
Young Capone.
You didn't believe that story he told,
did you? He called the cops.
Come on. Do you remember
we were kids?
- How we got the big shots to notice us?
- You bastard.
Twenty thousand clear from that fur
heist. I ought to have his neck broke.
If I were you,
I'd put him on the payroll.
I gotta get going.
Johnny.
Give regards to Big Jim.
- Yeah. He's still buying diamonds.
- Respect, huh?
Yeah.
I don't wanna argue
with you, Johnny.
Sure Prohibition comes in. So what?
There'll be a few wise guys bootlegging
the stuff, but not Big Jim Colosimo.
I don't wanna tangle with no feds.
Federal badges or not,
Name the right price and I guarantee
they'll be on the take like anybody else.
Look, I'm doing okay with my
whorehouses and my gambling spots.
What's the matter, Johnny?
Ten grand a month don't satisfy you?
Not when there's a chance
to rake in millions.
What the hell would I do with millions?
Buy more diamonds? Here. Diamonds.
Johnny, let me tell you something.
If Prohibition comes in,
it ain't gonna last six months.
You take beer and booze away from
people, they're gonna be sore as hell.
One thing the politicians can't afford
is to have the voters mad at them.
So forget about this bootlegging.
I want no part of it.
That's my last word.
Operator. Number, please?
Long distance, please.
- Operator.
- Brooklyn, New York, operator.
Yeah, Mr. Frankie Yale.
- Prospect-1107.
- Thank you.
My number is Wabash-6215.
Hello. Hello, Frank.
Johnny. Yeah, yeah. Fine, fine.
Well, how about you?
Yeah, well, listen, Frank.
The reason why I'm calling.
I'm in a situation out here. I gotta
have somebody to give me a hand.
No, no.
Somebody I can trust 100 percent.
Are you kidding? In this town?
I wouldn 't even trust
the pope if he came from Chicago.
I was thinking about, you know,
this Alphonse Capone.
He comes to my mind.
- Hey, Alphonse.
- Hey, Johnny.
What happened?
I was beginning to worry.
- I had to find a hotel.
- I should have arranged all of that.
But never mind.
We'll take care of that later.
Come on upstairs.
I want you to meet some friends.
- What do you think?
- It's a beauty.
It's all right. Come on.
So I said, "Mr. Mayor, you
expect me to feed you...
...and half of city hall for nothing?
Ain't it enough
that me and my friends...
...stuffed the ballot box
to get you elected at all?"
Jim, I want you to meet
a friend of mine, Alphonse Capone.
Just come in from the East Coast.
- Honor to meet you, sir.
- Alphonse is gonna be working for me.
This is my wife.
- How you doing?
- Mr. and Mrs. Jake Guzik.
- Pleasure to meet you.
- How do you do?
- Miss Crawford.
- Hello.
And her friend, Mr. Cooper.
Pleasure to meet you.
I'm sorry. I just washed my hands.
Don't mind Mr. Cooper.
He's widely known as a horse's ass.
You stupid...
Take him for a walk. Cool him off.
Big Jim Colosimo.
If he had listened to me a year ago...
One year.
We'd be cleaning up
in this beer racket now.
Maybe you could split up on him,
Mr. Torrio. Start your own business.
No, it takes time.
You don't understand.
I need strong connections
in the mayor's office...
...county building,
the police department.
Even into Springfield.
And time is something
that I don't have.
Alphonse...
...you have the brains. Ambition.
You're not afraid of anything.
These are qualities that could
make you a very important man.
But only if you put into my hands...
...your trust...
...your loyalty...
...and even your life.
All these are yours, padrone.
On the soul of my mother,
I swear it.
Big Jim, Big Jim.
He's a fine man.
He's been very good to me.
I love him like the brother
that I never had.
But he just won't listen.
He won't listen.
It must happen in such a way
that he has no warning.
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"Capone" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/capone_5030>.
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