Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Scarface (For A While) Killed The Latino Actor


Today marks the 25th anniversary of the release of Scarface. I saw Scarface when I was 10 and all I thought was, “Coño, Cubans are some cutthroat mofos.” It wasn’t until my college years when I realized the impact it had on my generation. Rappers, in particular, used Tony Montana’s story as inspiration and sprinkled references in their rhymes. Once I found out Tony was really an Italian-American actor from New York, it made think differently of the film. Is this how America perceives Latinos? Immigrants who take the easy way out and push dope to get the American Dream. First you get the money, then you get the power and then, apparently, you upgrade from a Latina to Michelle Pfeiffer.

Five years ago I attended a party for the 20th anniversary of Scarface. It was for work and it was in Puerto Rico. And yes, the trip was dope. The scene was grand with cigar rollers, models and rappers all around. Jay-Z flew in by way of helicopter to perform a few tracks. Hey, I told you it was grand. I saw Pharrell for the first time looking like an ant could out-bench-press him. The point I’m trying to make is that for all its influence all these cats didn’t realize the harm it did to Latinos. After Scarface, a Latino was regulated to playing the greasy drug dealer (Miami Vice, Traffic, Empire), who in the end always lost. And in the end we lost as well.

Uno,

Jesus