Menu
The Untouchables Poster

The Untouchables

What are you prepared to do?
1987 | 119m | English

(347167 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

Elliot Ness, an ambitious prohibition agent, is determined to take down Al Capone. In order to achieve this goal, he forms a group given the nickname “The Untouchables”.
Release Date: Jun 03, 1987
Director: Brian De Palma
Writer: Eliot Ness, Oscar Fraley, David Mamet, Chip Miller
Genres: Crime, Thriller, History
Keywords chicago, illinois, prohibition era, gangster, baseball bat, white suit, tough cop, treasury agent, untouchable, tax evasion, jury tampering, 1930s
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Linson Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $76,270,454
Budget: $25,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 22, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Kevin Costner Eliot Ness
Sean Connery Jim Malone
Robert De Niro Al Capone
Charles Martin Smith Oscar Wallace
Andy García George Stone
Richard Bradford Mike
Jack Kehoe Payne
Brad Sullivan George
Billy Drago Nitti
Patricia Clarkson Ness' Wife
Vito D'Ambrosio Bowtie Driver
Steven Goldstein Scoop
Peter Aylward Lt. Anderson
Don Harvey Preseuski
Robert Swan Mountie Captain
John J. Walsh Bartender
Del Close Alderman
Colleen Bade Mrs. Blackmer
Greg Noonan Rangemaster
Sean Grennan Cop Cousin
Larry Viverito Sr. Italian Waiter
Kevin Michael Doyle Williamson
Mike Bacarella Overcoat Hood
Michael P. Byrne Ness' Clerk
Kaitlin Montgomery Ness' Daughter
Aditra Kohl Blackmer Girl
Charles Keller Watson Reporter
Larry Brandenburg Reporter
Chelcie Ross Reporter
Tim Gamble Reporter
Pat Billingsley Bailif
Sam Smiley Bailiff
John Bracci Fat Man
Jennifer Anglin Woman in Elevator
Eddie Minasian Butler
Anthony Mockus Sr. Judge
Will Zahrn Defense Attorney
Louie Lanciloti Barber
Vince Viverito Bodyguard
Valentino Cimo Bodyguard
Joe Greco Bodyguard
Clem Caserta Bodyguard
Bob Martana Bodyguard
Joseph Scianablo Bodyguard
George S. Spataro Bodyguard
Melody Rae Union Station Woman
Robert Miranda Gunned Head
James Guthrie Pagliacci
Basil Reale Hotel Clerk
John Barrowman Street Person (uncredited)
Jimmy Borto Court Reporter (uncredited)
Stephen Burrows Hoodlum (uncredited)
Ernest Capponi Gangster at Round Table (uncredited)
Justin De Rosa Capone's Hitman (uncredited)
Eddy Donno Capone's Hitman (uncredited)
Jack Fitzstephens Train Announcer (uncredited)
Collin Hymes Baby in Carriage (uncredited)
Clifton James District Attorney (uncredited)
Matt Johnston Union Station Bodyguard (uncredited)
Robert Minkoff Man (uncredited)
William Rossman Gangster (uncredited)
Name Job
Stephen H. Burum Director of Photography
Ennio Morricone Original Music Composer, Conductor
Mali Finn Casting
William A. Elliott Art Direction
Gerald B. Greenberg Editor
Hal Gausman Set Decoration
Allen Hall Special Effects Coordinator
Eric Schwab Location Manager
Kelly R. Borisy Grip
Michael Hancock Makeup Artist
Raymond Hartwick Unit Production Manager
Matt Johnston Stunts
Sioux Richards Script Supervisor
Emile Charlap Music Supervisor
Bette Iverson Hairstylist
George DiLeonardi Transportation Captain
Dick Vorisek Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ray Hubley Editorial Services, Associate Editor
Dick Hansen Set Dressing Artist
Robert W. Dutton Leadman
E.C. Chen Set Designer
Sam Moore Property Master
Gregory Lundsgaard Steadicam Operator
Glenn Williams Cableman
Winnie D. Brown Costume Supervisor
Clay Bartholomew Driver
Shari Leibowitz Production Coordinator
Douglas Ryan Camera Operator
Dale R. Janus Boom Operator
Matthew Benjamin Craft Service
Eve Cauley Research Assistant
John Moses Musician
James M. Tanenbaum Sound Mixer
Robert A. Hogan Transportation Co-Captain
Jack Fitzstephens Sound Editor
Bob Olari Sound Recordist
Anne Marie Stein Unit Publicist
Dan Sable Supervising Sound Editor
Joe Napolitano First Assistant Director
Thomas S. Drescher Music Editor
Alex Touyarot First Assistant Camera
Tim Phelps Rigging Gaffer
Michael DiCosimo Dolby Consultant
Hayden D. Anglin Transportation Coordinator
Richard Ritchie Color Timer
Zade Rosenthal Still Photographer
Tara Timpone First Assistant Editor
Elisha Birnbaum Foley Supervisor
Cyd Adams Production Assistant
Richard Clarkson Second Assistant Camera
Gregory A. Jackson Location Assistant
Richard Patrick Second Second Assistant Director
Marvin Gardner Special Effects Technician
Deborah Peretz Assistant Editor
John Sweeney Assistant Property Master
Sherwin Tarnoff Weapons Master
Faith Jones Apprentice Sound Editor
Michele Imperato Stabile Assistant Production Coordinator
Tim Griffith Chief Lighting Technician
Frank Keever First Company Grip
Maureen Cunningham Assistant Location Manager
Susan J. Bonno-Buckner Assistant Accountant
George R. Schrader Dolly Grip
Mort Hyatt Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Harriet Fidlow ADR Editor
Mel Zelniker ADR Recordist
Douglas Kraner Technical Advisor
James W. Skotchdopole Second Assistant Director
Eliot Ness Book
Oscar Fraley Book
Michael Berenbaum Assistant Sound Editor
Bill Pankow Editor
David Mamet Writer
Marilyn Vance Costume Design
Bob Muñoz Second Company Grip
Gary Epper Stunts
Tim A. Davison Stunts
Gilbert B. Combs Stunts
Chip Miller Writer
Brian De Palma Director
Glen Trotiner Assistant Director
Gary Hymes Stunt Coordinator
Danny Rogers Stunts
Name Title
Art Linson Producer
Raymond Hartwick Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actor Kevin Spacey Nominated
Academy Awards Best Actor Kevin Costner Nominated
Berlin International Film Festival Best Actor Kevin Costner Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 47 79 30
2024 5 57 135 34
2024 6 42 73 22
2024 7 46 73 33
2024 8 40 58 29
2024 9 31 38 26
2024 10 36 61 24
2024 11 35 85 24
2024 12 30 40 20
2025 1 36 48 25
2025 2 27 44 6
2025 3 12 40 3
2025 4 7 9 5
2025 5 6 7 5
2025 6 5 6 4
2025 7 5 6 4
2025 8 5 8 4
2025 9 7 9 6

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 452 619
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 508 575
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 827 827

Return to Top

Reviews

John Chard
10.0

Never stop fighting till the fight is done, here endeth the lesson. As good a gangster movie that has ever been made as DePalma does justice to Mamet's electric script. The acting on show is right out of the top draw, the inevitable ease that DeNiro puts menace into Capone is quite impressive, wh ... ilst the fresh faced pugnacious tenacity of Andy Garcia's George Stone is something of a delightful experience. Yet that is not enough because we still need the central actors to carry the film if it is going to triumph. Connery is a given performance wise (accent aside of course, but then again who cares when the character portrayal is as sharp as it is here?) but it is Costner as Eliot Ness that shines like the star he was soon to become, it's a magic performance that manages to fuse genuine tenderness of family love with little trips to the dark side in pursuit of making good triumph over evil. I love that the film is showing how violence and fear affects families, mother and child is a theme that is central to the film's heartbeat, notice how some of the more violent scenes are followed by tender scenes of Ness and his family. The set pieces here are attention grabbing entertainment, a roaring Canadian border rumpus and a smashing roof top pursuit and face off are top value, but it's DePalma gold watching a brilliant Battleship Potemkin homage at the Union train station that takes the cake as the film enters the last quarter. Surely historical facts does not matter when films are as sharp as this one is?. It's frightening, touching, and even witty. So for me at least, the film is 10/10 in every department (and yes, even with Sean's accent). Footnote: The academy saw fit to nominate Ennio Morricone for his wonderful score, yet strangely he used some of it for the main theme in John Carpenter's 1982 film "The Thing", they must have missed it that time I presume! Must be the genre angle one thinks...

May 16, 2024
msbreviews
8.0

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com Capone starring Tom Hardy is being released this week, so I decided to visit a classic from the late 80s that also features Al Capone (this time portrayed by Robert De Niro). One of my 2020's resolut ... ions is to review older films, classics that I never wrote about, and maybe go through a director's filmography before his/her next big movie. I'll also try to review previous films inside a franchise, for example, before the live-action Mulan is released, I'll definitely rewatch and review the 1998's original. You get my point. The Untouchables is one of those classics I've already seen a few times, but I can't quite recall the last time I watched it, so it almost felt like a whole new release since I didn't remember most plot points. I really enjoyed experiencing such a great period gangster movie again. The cast is incredible, and I'll get there, but I need to start with the impressive production level for a 1987's flick. From the set design to the well-crafted action sequences, everything looks and feels like Chicago during the Prohibition Era. I love how the dialogues are played out. Nowadays, it's not that common to have an entire film filled with long, uncut conversations between the characters. Most directors just employ the unimaginative "line-cut-line" type of dialogue. I'm not the biggest fan of Brian DePalma, even though he started one of my favorite action sagas of all-time (Mission: Impossible). However, his blocking/framing skills are outstanding in this movie. Every actor's movement is followed seamlessly by the camera (DP: Stephen H. Burum), making every single shot count. The screenplay is very well-structured. Every time the film starts lacking energy, something impactful occurs. A great action scene, a new story development that changes the course of the narrative, or a character's decision that makes the viewer worried about an inevitable outcome. Consequently, The Untouchables rarely loses its momentum, it's always entertaining in some shape or form. The four characters that constitute the title group are all emotionally compelling, and their actors offer extraordinary performances... except for the lead, Kevin Costner. I don't know if people might consider this a hot take or not, but I find Costner's display extremely one-dimensional. During the movie, he goes through life-threatening situations, people that he cares about die, and he eventually gets face-to-face with Al Capone. His facial expression looks awkwardly almost identical in all of these scenes, and many more. It's his first big film, the one that catapulted him into stardom, but I'm not the first to find his acting rangeless in this flick. Nevertheless, it doesn't become that big of a distraction that I can't connect with his character. Regarding the rest of the cast, Sean Connery steals the show with his portrayal of Jim Malone. He's charming and funny, but when he needs to take his character through a very dark and dramatic scene, he has no problems in delivering an exceptional performance. The young Andy Garcia (George Stone) proves that he had the chops to become a great actor (which he did), and Charles Martin Smith is surprisingly witty as Oscar Wallace. My main issue with the movie involves the lack of screentime given to Robert De Niro as Al Capone. Sure, it's a story about the people who got the famous gangster, and not a biography of the latter. However, not only it's a waste of a phenomenal actor, but also a waste of a potentially great character. Al Capone is supposedly a quite clever businessman and ruthless crime boss, possessing an unusually well-protected organization, but he only appears in a few scattered scenes, like he's just some random villain that the good guys need to defeat. Granted, they're really cool scenes, but he doesn't feel like the massive threat that the film assumes he is since the viewer barely gets to know Al Capone and how he holds so much power. All in all, The Untouchables still holds up incredibly well after more than thirty years. Production-wise, not only the sets and costumes seamlessly resemble the Prohibition Era, but Brian DePalma's technically impressive blocking and framing are a joy to watch. Long, captivating, uncut dialogues are elevated by a remarkable cast (Sean Connery is undoubtedly the standout), despite Kevin Costner lacking a bit of emotional range. Even the action sequences of this 1987's movie look better than a lot of blockbusters of today. David Mamet writes a well-structured screenplay that rarely loses interest and featuring exceptionally compelling characters. Addictive score from Ennio Morricone as well. However, both Robert De Niro and his character, Al Capone, are underused, especially the latter. For such an important character who constantly changes the path of the narrative, the lack of screentime doesn't allow the viewer to understand Al Capone's motivations or feel how much of a threat he truly is. Still, it's a classic worthy of a rewatch, and I definitely recommend it. Rating: A-

Jun 23, 2021
tmdb28039023
6.0

Howard Hawks defined a great film as “three good scenes and no bad ones.” The Untouchables has one of the greatest scenes in the history of cinema, and not just because it’s patterned after the best known scene in Battleship Potemkin; this has actually become iconic in its own right. This Brian D ... e Palma movie has several other good scenes, and arguably not a single bad one; it does have, however, a couple of scenes that don’t make a lick of sense — some of the good ones, even. The bat scene, in particular, is a lot of fun, but I still have no idea who the guy is that Al Capone (Robert De Niro) beats the ever-loving crap out of, nor what he did to deserve such fate (I’ve come across a few explanations on Internet, including what my best guess would be, but nothing that stands up to scrutiny). Of course, Al Capone personally and literally whacking some random asshole to death is as likely as Eliot Ness (Kevin Costner) fatally pushing Frank Nitti (the diabolical Billy Drago) off of a roof — that is to say, not bloody likely; Nitti shot himself dead long after the events of the film (though in a possible nod to the historical facts, De Palma has Ness shooting a hole in Nitti’s hat; according to Wikipedia’s account of Nitti’s suicide, “The first shot fired by Nitti’s unsteady hand missed and passed through his fedora”). Now, historically inaccurate movies usually make me go ballistic; however, The Untouchables is not a history lesson — if anything, it’s a tall tale with a folk hero (and they don’t get any folksier than Costner) and an archetypal villain (and that’s as close to an answer as we’re going to get to the bat scene question; Capone does what he does For the Evulz). More importantly, the facts may have been tampered with, but the film’s moral compass always points towards true north, and it knows that dura lex sed lex.

Sep 03, 2022