Scarface Frank Lopez

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CREDIT: ITV/REX Shutterstock, a durable and versatile tough guy actor in movies and TV shows including Brian De Palma’s 1983 drama “” and “Big,” died Friday at his home in Los Angeles, his widow Audrey confirmed to Variety. Loggia had been battling Alzheimer’s Disease for the past five years, according to his widow. They had been married for 33 years. He was nominated for a supporting actor Academy Award for “Jagged Edge” in 1986 for his portrayal of blunt private detective Sam Ransom.

  1. Scarface Frank Lopez House
Scarface Frank Lopez

Loggia’s most notable film credits included “An Officer and a Gentleman,” “Prizzi’s Honor,” “Independence Day,” David Lynch’s “Lost Highway” and “Big,” in which he played a toy company owner and performed a memorable duet on a giant foot-operated piano with Tom Hanks. He played Miami drug lord Frank Lopez in “.”. Loggia was nominated for an Emmy in 1989 for his portrayal of FBI agent Nick Mancuso in the series “Mancuso FBI” — which has a spin-off of the character he created in the “Favorite Son” miniseries starring Harry Hamlin — and again in 2000 for his guest star role in “Malcolm in the Middle.” Related Loggia was a versatile supporting actor, assembling credits on three different episodes of “The Rockford Files” as three different characters.

He also appeared in three different “Pink Panther” movies with three different character names. Loggia played Anwar Sadat in the 1982 TV movie “A Woman Called Golda” opposite Ingrid Bergman. He also portrayed fearsome mobster-bakery owner Feech La Manna on several episodes of “The Sopranos.” Loggia was a native of Staten Island, born to Italian immigrants. He received a football scholarship to Wagner College and transferred to the University of Missouri. After serving two years in the U.S. Army, he began classes with Stella Adler and at the Actors Studio. “He loved being an actor,” his widow told Variety.

Scarface

“He used to say that he never had to work. He never had to wait tables.” “I loved Bob like a father,” Lionsgate Vice Chairman Michael Burns told Variety.

“I will miss him tremendously.” He broke into the entertainment business performing in stage plays in New York. His first film credit came in 1957 in the noirish “The Garment Jungle.” His first TV credits came in 1958 in “The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca” in a series of Walt Disney TV shows. He starred in the 1966-67 series “T.H.E. Cat” as a former circus aerialist and cat burglar turned professional bodyguard who would introduce himself as “T. Hewitt Edward Cat.” Loggia’s TV credits included “The Untouchables,” “Columbo,” “Gunsmoke,” “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea,” “The Big Valley,” “Rawhide,” “Little House on the Prairie,” “Starsky and Hutch,” “Charlie’s Angels,” “Magnum, P.I.,” “Kojak,” “Hawaii Five-0,” “The Bionic Woman,” “Frasier” and “Monk.” His other film roles include “Revenge of the Pink Panther,” “Trail of the Pink Panther,” “Curse of the Pink Panther,” “Over The Top,” “Necessary Roughness,” “Return to Me” and “Armed and Dangerous.”.

'You need people like me. You need people like me so you can point your fuckin' fingers and say, 'That's the bad guy'.' .: His philosophy separates him from Paul Muni's Tony Camonte who is otherwise free of any noble virtues.: At first he generally has a chill and mostly friendly demeanor and almost comes off as likeable, despite being a murderous henchman. He loses most of this in the 2nd half of the film once he gets addicted to his own drugs and goes mad with power.: At the end of the film, where he has gone completely off the deep end and lost everything partly due to his own mistakes. You still can't help but feel a little bit of pity for him.: A, since the real villain is Sosa, who is much worse than he is.

In the videogame, he's an. While he is a murderous drug kingpin, And had several moments.: His entire 'say goodnight to the bad guy' speech boils down to Tony telling everyone giving him funny looks at the restaurant that at least he acknowledges his own faults and slip-ups instead of pinning blames.: More and more so after he's.: One of the better examples of this trope as most of the time, he is a reasonable one. However, his gets in the way.: After Frank's murder, he's the biggest villain of his own story until Sosa comes along.: Many shootouts and fights Tony gets into he enjoys every minute of it. Special mention goes to Freedomtown. Tony: I kill a communist for fun, but for a green card, I gonna carve him up real nice.: 'So say goodnight to the bad guy!' .: Cares for his mother very much, even if she despises his trade.: Tony won't kill children.

He also has a hands-off policy on women.: Has shades of this. Tony is fairly pleasant to two kids he talks to while Manny tries to pick up a chick at the pool. He says that he'd really like to have kids with Elvira (which never happens, which is partly what starts the very public fight that finally drives Elvira away), and of course he will not kill children.: Is almost always on the brink of a cocaine-fueled rage.

Nearly everything sets him off, especially people who go near his sister.: His bravery and loyalty is what makes him a vital asset to his boss or his partner at the moment. Though his cocaine addiction has made him more of a liability.: Tony's violent protectiveness regarding his sister has more than a few shades of this, which is a callback to the original film this is a remake of.: Starts to have this attitude after he finished with his criminal empire.: More so than his original counterpart. Towards everyone except his family, but still.: He won't kill kids and the first thing he does when he makes it out on top is buy Gina her own beauty parlor for her to work in, in hopes that she doesn't end up like him.: Admittedly, most of his victims were bad people, like Hector, Bernstein, and Alberto. Touch his sister and you die.

Scarface Frank Lopez House

Isn't that right, Manny?.: Every line that comes out of his mouth is hammy.: It takes a whole army and a shotgun blast to the back to kill him. This is literal in the game where he is invincible when he is angry enough.: After killing Manny, he feels nothing but sorrow and regret about it.: Hoo boy, he does not like anyone getting around his sister. Not even his best friend is safe.: While this is shown to be true in the movie, it's made especially clear in the video game, where you simply can't shoot civillians, because that's not in-character for Tony.: Has standards compared to most of the other villains of the film. The noble aspects of him start to diminish over the course of the story, as he becomes a drug addict and his worsens though he still keeps his attitude.: Tony uses an assault rifle and grenade launcher to kill about a few dozen or so henchmen in the climax.

Frank

Roland jupiter 80 vst. However, he didn't avoid getting fatally shot in the back. However, this is played completely straight in the videogame.: He doesn't like working alongside Colombians. What's hilariously hypocritical is Montana, portrayed by Sicilian-born Al Pacino (most famous for portraying Corleone crime family head Michael in ), rejecting a suggestion by Manny to work with, on the entirely racist basis that he doesn't trust Italians.: Much of Tony's aggressive accusations are passed off as Paranoid, but there have been times where he's on the right. For example when Mel shakes him down for protection money, using his killing of Rebenga as leverage. Tony immediately figures that Frank Lopez is setting him up as he is the only one outside of Freedomtown to know about that hit.: Red to Manny and Sosa's Blue. Manny is generally more level-headed and easy going than the Tony, who's always looking for a fight. And Sosa is coldly pragmatic and ruthless.

Tony: There were fucking children in the car! Sosa: When you move 400 kilos a month, it is imperative that you do kill children.: In the game, he survives the climactic shootout in the film with plenty of bitter lessons learned, and he uses them as his motivation to take down Sosa once and for all.: At the film's climax, after Gina's death, leading to the film's most iconic moment. In the game where he survives said shootout, he's on one for the rest of the story against Sosa.: He gets more crazier and unhinged after his coke addiction settles in.: by Elvira. Elvira: 'Can't you stop saying fuck all the time?!' .: Tony has atrocious body posture whenever he's sitting in his office chair.: By the second half of the film, he does nothing but brag about how he's while he's really losing control of both himself and his empire due to his Cocaine addiction and anger issues.: To Frank, and later on, Sosa.: Tony can't have his sister and consequently doesn't want anyone else to have her. This is lampshaded by her right before she's gunned down.: May be a but is still of Miami and eventually becomes more violent and dangerous.: Very often due to his, but the most prominent one would have to be in the finale.: Typically uses a Beretta 81 handgun as his main weapon.: He would only go after men who challenge him.: The reason why Sosa puts a hit on him.: Acts as one towards his sister.

'Don't fucking go crazy on me, okay? Just remember, this time last year we were in a fucking cage.' .: In the same way that Tony starts out as. He gets bonus points for not, unlike Tony.

/: Though not as abhorrent or obnoxious as most examples.: In his interactions with Tony.: To Tony's.: Acts as this for Tony.: Was in prison with Tony.: Shoots Lopez.: Ends up falling in love with Tony's sister, Gina.: He becomes this in the second half of the film. Even given Tony's erratic behavior, the events of his downfall are mostly due to Manny's fuck ups. First he puts Tony in contact with a money launderer who turns out to be an undercover cop. Then while Tony is busy dealing with Sosa's business he puts Manny in charge of the operation, but instead of doing that Manny runs off to elope with Gina.