Brian De Palma met Bob Hoskins over a drink in Los Angeles to discuss playing Al Capone if De Palma`s first choice Robert De Niro were to pass on the role. Since De Niro didn`t say yes, Hoskins told De Palma he would do it if he were available. When De Niro finally took the role, De Palma sent Hoskins a thank you note, and the studio paid Hoskins, who had a "pay or play" deal, $200,000. Hoskins called De Palma and asked if there were any more movies the director didn`t want him to be in.
Albert H. Wolff, the last survivor of the real-life Untouchables, was a consultant to the film and helped Kevin Costner with his portrayal of Eliot Ness.
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# Michael Douglas, Don Johnson and Mel Gibson were considered for the role of Eliot Ness and rejected. Harrison Ford was offered but turned down the role before Kevin Costner was signed.
Robert De Niro insisted on wearing the same style of silk underwear that Al Capone wore, even though it would never be seen on camera. The producers, knowing DeNiro`s reputation as a Method actor, gave in.
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# Robert De Niro hadn`t much time to gain the extra weight needed for his role, so that he had to wear pads and pillows for the desired effect of looking like the chunkier Capone.
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# Despite the final courtroom scene in this movie, the real Al Capone and Eliot Ness never came face to face during their battles.
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# In real life, Eliot Ness brought the only non-tax-related charges against Al Capone which resulted in 5,000 separate Volstead Act indictments.
In the original script, the final gunfight had Eliot Ness and George Stone battling Capone gunmen on a stopped train. Brian De Palma conceived the gunfight on the steps in Chicago`s Union Station when Paramount decided that staging the scene and finding a 1930s period train would be too expensive.
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# Kevin Costner, Sean Connery and Andy Garcia engaged in police tactic and weapons training for the film - from the 1950s.
Though the patron saints of Policemen are Michael the Archangel and Saint Sebastian, Irish cops often carried Saint Jude medals, the Patron Saint of Hopeless Causes.
Robert De Niro tracked down Al Capone`s original tailors and had them make him some identical clothing for the movie.
According to Brian De Palma and Art Linson in the DVD documentary, it was Sean Connery`s idea to film the "blood oath" scene between Ness and Malone in a Catholic church. Originally it was going to take place on the street (in the same scene that follows the church scene). Connery felt that a church would be the only "safe" place in Chicago where the two characters would make such a commitment to fight Capone.
On the AMC Network`s "Movies at Our House" (2002), Billy Drago, who portrays the white-suited Frank Nitti, says that while they were filming scenes on the streets of Chicago, he was told about a couple of teenage street gangs getting ready for a gang fight. At the request of the Chicago Police Department, Drago, wearing his costume and armed with his prop tommy gun, went to the place where the fight was supposed to happen. The gang members were in such awe of him that they didn`t fight.
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# Brian De Palma took the idea of the train station scene from the 1925 Russian movie Bronenosets Potyomkin (1925) (better known as The Battleship Potemkin). The sailors who get caught in the crossfire in The Untouchables (1987) are a tribute to Potemkin.
The train station scene was parodied in Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994).
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# The scene where Al Capone (Robert De Niro) suddenly pulls out a baseball bat at a dinner party and beats to death one of his men is based on a true incident that happened on May 7, 1929. Two of Capone`s most feared hitmen, Albert Anselmi and John Scalise, had hatched a plot to kill Capone and take over his gang. Capone got wind of it and invited all his associates to a dinner party, including Anselmi and Scalise. In the middle of the party, Capone pulled out a baseball bat and battered both men to death, then shot them both in the head. A conflicting story has Tony "Joe Batters" Accardo, one of Capone`s hitmen, as the man who bludgeoned the traitors to death.
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# The character of Oscar Wallace (Charles Martin Smith) was loosely based on Frank Wilson, the IRS agent who worked to indict Capone for income tax evasion. Wilson had been working on this project since 1928, and had next to nothing to do with Ness and the Untouchables in real-life. Wilson was not killed by Capone, though Capone reportedly placed a contract on his life which was never carried out.
The set for Capone`s personal barbershop at the Lexington Hotel included a number of small items (cologne bottles, shaving brushes) that belonged to the real Al Capone.
The voice we hear singing in the opera was that of famed tenor Mario Del Monaco who died in 1982.
The radio show listened to by Eliot Ness and his wife early in the movie is an actual episode of Amos and Andy. In the episode they have just bought a clunker for their new cab company from their friend The Kingfish.
The set for Capone`s personal barbershop at the Lexington Hotel included a number of small items (cologne bottles, shaving brushes) that belonged to the real Al Capone.
The voice we hear singing in the opera was that of famed tenor Mario Del Monaco who died in 1982.
Jack Nicholson was also offered the role of Elliot Ness but declined.
The studio`s first consideration for the role of `Al Capone (I)` was John Candy because of his portly stature.
William Hurt was considered for the role of Elliot Ness but was too busy with other projects.
SPOILER: Any police officer seen drinking alcohol on-screen in this film is killed.
SPOILER: For the scene where Malone is killed, Sean Connery did not expect the squibs to be as bloody as they were. After the first take, Connery was taken to the hospital with debris and fake blood in his eyes.
SPOILER: The real Frank Nitti did not die in the manner and at the time depicted in the film. He took over Capone`s empire when Capone was sent to prison. In 1943 Nitti had a violent argument with several bosses of the Chicago mob. Realizing that he had just signed his own death warrant, he went home and committed suicide.
SPOILER: The opera Capone is attending as he is informed of the successful hit on Malone is `Pagliacci`. The aria is "Vesti la Giubba" or "Put on your costume".
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