Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA man is arrested and condemned to five years in jail for robbery. After serving his term, he is out for revenge on the gang members he considers were to blame for his arrest. The prize for ... Alles lesenA man is arrested and condemned to five years in jail for robbery. After serving his term, he is out for revenge on the gang members he considers were to blame for his arrest. The prize for this deadly fight is a large cache of diamonds.A man is arrested and condemned to five years in jail for robbery. After serving his term, he is out for revenge on the gang members he considers were to blame for his arrest. The prize for this deadly fight is a large cache of diamonds.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Empfohlene Bewertungen
A truly masterful and terrifically riveting 70s actioner from the rightfully lauded high-stylist of Italian genre cinema, Fernando Di Leo. 'Blood & Diamonds' is a definite keeper for both euro-crime junkies and lovers of dynamic, compellingly plot-heavy action thrillers. The brooding, charismatic Claudio Cassinelli delivers yet another immaculate performance, and uber-gorgeous gangster's moll, Barbara Bouchet is sweet enough to engender a diabetic swoon in even the most robust of males (or females, natch!). All of the gloriously unfiltered honour or death, macho slam-bang-gangster man, revenge-fuelled dynamism is excitingly punctuated by yet another blazing jazz-funk score from the supremely talented Luis Bacalov. A taut, melancholic, expertly crafted, diamond hard 70s poliziotteschi that is most certainly ripe for re-discovery.
Judging the film by its attributes on forehand, you'd think this movie is a diamond heist action movie with a lighter tone. The movie does include diamonds, but this is actually a very serious mafia thriller, much like Manhunt and Milano Calibre 9. It contains several of Di Leo's classic ingredients; good acting, good soundtrack, very complex fight scenes, some effective twists, and not least human relations that are believable. Nothing is entire black or white. It was good to see this on a nice looking high definition transfer today, as I've had the film on DVD for 15 years or so, but never took the time to see it (maybe because it's lower rated than Di Leo's classic crime films). If you like Manhunt, then you will probably appreciate this one as well as they share that mix of action and melancholy.
Just released ex- convict Guido watches his girlfriend get killed on the way home from prison. He thinks the killing is connected with the events that led to him going to jail five years back. Guido starts to investigate...
In many ways a typical late DiLeo- crime film: unimaginative lightning, boring sets, unimpressive action sequences. Yet I think just because of the grittiness of the script, this one easily rises above the other DiLeo- turkeys I've seen.
Decent acting in the form of especially Barbara Bouchet and Guido's main adversary Martin Balsam, who stand out positively. Most importantly, the plot really thickens towards the end climaxing in a truly memorable final scene between Guido and Martin Balsam's Rizzo.
Released on video in Finland in the eighties.
In many ways a typical late DiLeo- crime film: unimaginative lightning, boring sets, unimpressive action sequences. Yet I think just because of the grittiness of the script, this one easily rises above the other DiLeo- turkeys I've seen.
Decent acting in the form of especially Barbara Bouchet and Guido's main adversary Martin Balsam, who stand out positively. Most importantly, the plot really thickens towards the end climaxing in a truly memorable final scene between Guido and Martin Balsam's Rizzo.
Released on video in Finland in the eighties.
After serving a jail term, a man goes out for revenge on the gang members he considers were to blame for his arrest.
Blood and Diamonds (Diamanti sporchi di sangue) is wonderfully directed by Fernando di Leo, the locations give credence to his crime thriller story and screenplay. Amedeo Giomini's editing is tip-top especially in the action scenes littered throughout.
Steely Claudio Cassinelli is perfectly cast as understated restrained Guido Mauri. Cassinelli (taken before his time in a helicopter accident while filming in 1985) offers a great performance, impressively helping to ground the film even when gun toting or going mano a mano. It's a crying shame, but pivotal to the plot that striking Olga Karlatos' (Zombie Flesh Eaters (1979)) Maria has such little screen time. Karlatos is memorable in the films first act and best setup where a bus is attacked. Stunning Barbara Bouchet is at the top of her game, but is given little to do as club go-go-dancer Lisa. The crime boss Rizzo is played by American acting veteran Martin Balsam (12 Angry Men (1957), Psycho (1960), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) to name a few) who is on his usual fine form. Pier Paul Capponi is notable as Rizzo's annoying henchman, who confronts Guido at every opportunity.
It was originally conceived as a name cash-in connection to 'Rome caliber 9' to Di Leo's similar film Caliber 9 (1972). Luis Enriquez Bacalov music is perfect, the action cues notable and reused in Virus (aka Zombie Creeping Flesh and 'Hell of the Living Dead') (1980). As the police harass Guido and the local mafia boss try to get rid of him there's betrayal, shootouts and toplessness. There's a memorable violent garage scene that sets up the third act. Surprisingly it doesn't sell itself out and builds to a poignant low-key ending which works in its favour.
Overall, don't expect an all out Italian action film, it shares more with Get Carter (1971) its slow burning pace may not be for everyone, but this perfectly encapsulates the time and offers a mighty fine brooding turn from Cassinelli.
Blood and Diamonds (Diamanti sporchi di sangue) is wonderfully directed by Fernando di Leo, the locations give credence to his crime thriller story and screenplay. Amedeo Giomini's editing is tip-top especially in the action scenes littered throughout.
Steely Claudio Cassinelli is perfectly cast as understated restrained Guido Mauri. Cassinelli (taken before his time in a helicopter accident while filming in 1985) offers a great performance, impressively helping to ground the film even when gun toting or going mano a mano. It's a crying shame, but pivotal to the plot that striking Olga Karlatos' (Zombie Flesh Eaters (1979)) Maria has such little screen time. Karlatos is memorable in the films first act and best setup where a bus is attacked. Stunning Barbara Bouchet is at the top of her game, but is given little to do as club go-go-dancer Lisa. The crime boss Rizzo is played by American acting veteran Martin Balsam (12 Angry Men (1957), Psycho (1960), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) to name a few) who is on his usual fine form. Pier Paul Capponi is notable as Rizzo's annoying henchman, who confronts Guido at every opportunity.
It was originally conceived as a name cash-in connection to 'Rome caliber 9' to Di Leo's similar film Caliber 9 (1972). Luis Enriquez Bacalov music is perfect, the action cues notable and reused in Virus (aka Zombie Creeping Flesh and 'Hell of the Living Dead') (1980). As the police harass Guido and the local mafia boss try to get rid of him there's betrayal, shootouts and toplessness. There's a memorable violent garage scene that sets up the third act. Surprisingly it doesn't sell itself out and builds to a poignant low-key ending which works in its favour.
Overall, don't expect an all out Italian action film, it shares more with Get Carter (1971) its slow burning pace may not be for everyone, but this perfectly encapsulates the time and offers a mighty fine brooding turn from Cassinelli.
Disappointing late entry into the De Leo poliziotesschi canon. An at best functional (but not compelling) plot, low budget, lacking style or swagger, with fairly restrained content and an awful lot of incredibly poor acting give this the feel of a watered down "made for TV" version of his much better early 70s outings.
Worth watching if you're an Italian crime film completist. Otherwise give it a miss.
Worth watching if you're an Italian crime film completist. Otherwise give it a miss.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesLuis Bacalov's action music is later recycled in Hell of the Living Dead (Italian: Virus - l'inferno dei morti viventi) (1980) and erroneously attributed to Goblin (although Goblin's music from Dawn of the Dead (1978) is also used in the aforementioned film).
- VerbindungenReferenced in Die Hölle der lebenden Toten (1980)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
- How long is Blood and Diamonds?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 43 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen