How tall is cinema icon Al Pacino? After making his acting debut with plays like America Hurrah, Al Pacino made a real impression with 1971's film The Panic In Needle Park, where he played a heroin addict. He would follow with a string of acclaimed films, with The Godfather officially making him a movie star. Director Francis Ford Coppola would somehow top his work with 1974's The Godfather Part II, which featured a dual prequel/sequel narrative and charted the moral descent of Pacino's Michael Corleone. Pacino would later return for 1990's The Godfather Part III, but despite winning acclaim for his performance, the film is easily the weakest of the trilogy.

Outside of The Godfather films, Al Pacino would star alongside Gene Hackman in 1973 dark comedy Scarecrow and played the lead in superior cop drama Serpico. The hits kept on coming, where he again won raves for heist drama Dog Day Afternoon, which is still considered one of his great performances. He closed out the decade with racing drama Bobby Deerfield - which received mixed reviews - and Norman Jewison's legal drama ... And Justice For All.

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Al Pacino got off to a controversial start in the 1980s thanks to William Friedkin's Cruising. He played a cop hunting a serial killer of gay men, and while the film has been reappraised as a great thriller in the years since, it was a critical and commercial disappointment upon release. Pacino bounced back with 1983's Scarface, which was no less controversial for its graphic violence, but it received strong reviews and was a hit. The same can't be said for historical drama Revolution from 1985, which was a huge flop and led to Pacino focusing on stage work. He returned to film after a four-year gap with steamy thriller Sea Of Love. According to the site Celeb Heights, Al Pacino stands at approximately 5ft 5 inches.

Vincent screaming in Heat

Al Pacino starred in several great movies during the 1990s, including Glengarry Glen RossDonnie Brasco and Heat, the latter of which famously united him onscreen for the first time with Robert De Niro. Pacino also won an Academy Award for his work in Scent Of A Woman and reunited with director Michael Mann for intense thriller The Insider in 1999. His work in the 2000s was something of a mixed bag; he did fantastic work in Insomnia and miniseries Angels In America, but also made many duds like The Recruit and Righteous Kill.

The 2010s were also a wild ride in terms of quality for Al Pacino fans. There were dizzying lows like Jack & Jill and Hangman - though he was still great in both - but also stellar highlights like Once Upon A Time In Hollywood and The Irishman, the latter reuniting him with Robert De Niro. Al Pacino most recently appeared in Amazon series Hunters and is still a regular presence in theatre productions.

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