Popularity: 1 (history)
Director: | Josh Trank |
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Writer: | Josh Trank |
Staring: |
The 47-year old Al Capone, after 10 years in prison, starts suffering from dementia and comes to be haunted by his violent past. | |
Release Date: | Jun 26, 2020 |
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Director: | Josh Trank |
Writer: | Josh Trank |
Genres: | Drama, Crime |
Keywords | gangster, biography, based on true story |
Production Companies | A Band Apart, Lawrence Bender Productions, Bron Studios, Creative Wealth Media Finance, Endeavor Content, Addictive Pictures, AI Film Entertainment |
Box Office |
Revenue: $858,281
Budget: $20,600,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Tom Hardy | Al Capone |
Linda Cardellini | Mae Capone |
Matt Dillon | Johnny |
Kyle MacLachlan | Doctor Karlock |
Kathrine Narducci | Rosie |
Jack Lowden | Crawford |
Noel Fisher | Junior |
Tilda Del Toro | Mona Lisa |
Al Sapienza | Ralphie |
Mason Guccione | Tony |
Jhemma Ziegler | Betty |
Rose Bianco | Nanna |
Wayne Pére | Director Nordhoff |
Gino Cafarelli | Gino |
Manuel Fajardo | Zambini |
Christopher Bianculli | Young Tony |
Edgar Arreola | Rodrigo |
CG Lewis | Young Goon |
David Wachs | Dying Goon |
Josh Trank | Agent Harris |
Neal Brennan | Harold Mattingly |
Jason Edwards | Drunk Dancing Man |
Caiden Acurio | Vince |
Mason Rozas | Danny |
Emma Kathryn Coleman | Gabi |
Tara Foy | Roberta |
Reed Luckett Wiley | Mysterious Man #1 |
Troy Warren Anderson | Louis Armstrong |
Andreanna L. Jenson | Nurse Lianne |
Cameron Stout | FBI Agent (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
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Josh Trank | Director, Editor, Writer |
Stacy Kelly | Makeup Department Head |
Jonathan Parham | Sound Mixer |
P.K. Hooker | Sound Designer |
Bill Mellow | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Ryan Putz | Boom Operator |
Scott Bowers | Second Assistant Director |
Jessica Stumpf | Set Designer |
Jill Broadfoot | Assistant Set Decoration |
Courtney Lether | Makeup Artist |
Audrey Doyle | Makeup Designer, Prosthetic Designer |
Sandra Portman | Supervising Sound Editor |
Wicus Labuschagne | Visual Effects Producer |
Stephen Altman | Production Design |
Jeremy Woolsey | Art Direction |
Kelly Cole | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Kevin Morales | Sound Effects Editor |
Simon Hansen | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Ron McLeod | Unit Production Manager |
Wendy Yang | Assistant Costume Designer |
Alice Baker | Set Decoration |
Lana C. Mora | Makeup Artist |
Jay Wejebe | Prosthetic Makeup Artist |
Will Files | Sound Designer |
Tomas Deckaj | First Assistant Director |
Spencer Davison | Assistant Art Director |
Steffany Bernstein | Costume Supervisor |
Bailey Domke | Makeup Artist |
Diane H. Newman | Script Supervisor |
Mike Paprocki | Sound Effects Editor |
Ashley Keel | Costume Assistant |
Peter Deming | Director of Photography |
Amy Westcott | Costume Design |
El-P | Original Music Composer |
Tony Ward | Hair Department Head |
Andrea von Foerster | Music Supervisor |
Chelsea Bruland | Stunt Coordinator |
Rian Johnson | Thanks |
Tapio Liukkonen | Foley Artist |
Peter Epstein | Stunts |
Name | Title |
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Tomas Deckaj | Co-Producer |
Ron McLeod | Executive Producer |
Adhrucia Apana | Executive Producer |
David Gendron | Executive Producer |
Matthias Mellinghaus | Co-Producer |
John Schoenfelder | Producer |
Garrick Dion | Co-Executive Producer |
Chris Conover | Executive Producer |
Ali Jazayeri | Executive Producer |
Steven Thibault | Executive Producer |
Aviv Giladi | Executive Producer |
Brenda Gilbert | Co-Executive Producer |
Russell Ackerman | Producer |
Andria Spring | Co-Executive Producer |
Lawrence Bender | Producer |
Jason Cloth | Executive Producer |
Aaron L. Gilbert | Producer |
Anjay Nagpal | Executive Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
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2024 | 4 | 23 | 38 | 14 |
2024 | 5 | 28 | 68 | 17 |
2024 | 6 | 19 | 39 | 10 |
2024 | 7 | 17 | 33 | 11 |
2024 | 8 | 20 | 46 | 10 |
2024 | 9 | 11 | 15 | 7 |
2024 | 10 | 15 | 23 | 9 |
2024 | 11 | 14 | 25 | 9 |
2024 | 12 | 14 | 27 | 9 |
2025 | 1 | 16 | 31 | 10 |
2025 | 2 | 10 | 16 | 3 |
2025 | 3 | 5 | 16 | 1 |
2025 | 4 | 2 | 5 | 1 |
2025 | 5 | 2 | 6 | 1 |
2025 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
2025 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 4 | 895 | 907 |
<em>'Capone'</em> disappoints. It's not what I was expecting. I hadn't heard much about it admittedly, but I was anticipating a full blown film about Al Capone - especially with the casting of Tom Hardy. That's not a bad thing in isolation, at all, but coupled with iffy storytelling it ends up be ... ing a waste. Hardy (Al) is undoubtedly the best thing about this, yet I still think he had way more in him for this sort of role - if the filmmakers had allowed him to use it, of course. There aren't any standouts behind Hardy, though Linda Cardellini (Mae) and Kyle MacLachlan (Karlock) are OK. There's nothing I massively dislike about this, I just wanted so much more from it. It is, I will say, at least a film that makes you think - I just don't, personally, think it came out as perhaps intended.
Bobby De Niro's Al Capone in The Untouchables could make you figuratively crap your pants. Tom Hardy's Capone, on the other hand, is the only one soiling his pants – literally. In the Godfather, Don Vito Corleone leaves, through Luca Brassi, a horse's head on Jack Woltz's bed. In Capone, the only th ... ing the titular character leaves in a bed, which happens to be his own, is his dinner – after he has digested it. The events of Capone take place during Al Capone's final year on Earth, when the notorious criminal was “no longer considered a threat” to anyone or anything other than his underwear or his bed sheets. This film is arguably the second lowest point in the Al Capone mythos, following The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults. Not unlike Geraldo Rivera, Capone purports to give us access to the vault that was the mobster's psyche during his last days, and the result is equally disappointing. In theory no movie should be too bad that includes Hardy (or at least the Tom Hardy I remember from The Revenant), Kyle MacLachlan and Matt Dillon, but Capone gives them very little to do. MacLachlan looks as if he got lost on his way to the Twin Peaks set, Dillon wastes his considerable talent on some sort of Sixth Sense-esque routine, and Hardy spends the entire film wearing a prosthetic masks that covers the entire surface of his face and skull, making him look like Michael Myers in Halloween 3000: Massacre at the Old Folks Home. The worst part of the whole thing is that the majority of events in Capone take place only in the protagonist's feverish, senile mind, and while there's nothing wrong with a film that reflects the deteriorated mental state of a character – e.g., The Machinist –, my problem is that director/writer Josh Trank has no way of knowing what was going on in Al Capone's head during his last days of life; in other words, he's making this stuff up as he goes, and this gives the film a double layer of unreality. Put another way, we are dealing with not one, but two levels of fantasy; there's the character's ravings, and then there's the filmmaker's musings as to what the actual person's ravings might have been. We cannot expect to gain any new insights from this approach, and indeed the film fails to reveal anything important or relevant about its subject.