PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
621
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be thei... Leer todoA crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be their accomplice in disguise.A crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be their accomplice in disguise.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Reseñas destacadas
The Italians were second to none in virtually inventing new sub-genres by subverting to their own terms the conventions of classic Hollywood cinema; thus, after the Peplum (Epics), Gothic (Horror), Spaghetti (Westerns) and Giallo (Thriller), the 1970s ushered in the era of the Poliziotteschi which was basically an Italian version of DIRTY HARRY (1971) - although, to be fair to them, the seeds of the genre had been sown a few years earlier. Astonishingly there were practically innumerable similar movies made between 1966-80, a phenomenon which can easily be attributable to Italy's tumultuous political climate rife with corruption and kidnappings which marked the 1970s. Admittedly, I used to be very skeptical about the worthiness of these films (something which held true for the mainstream Italian film industry itself at the time) but having now gotten a fair share of them under my belt, I have to say that I've changed my stance somewhat.
This is the final entry - following VIOLENT ROME (1975) and VIOLENT NAPLES (1976) - in the "Commissario Betti" trilogy, with Maurizio Merli (the poor man's Franco Nero) gnashing his teeth throughout the film at untouchable "honest" businessman John Saxon; here, the hero even shares an unconvincing romance with the sister of a kidnapped child. While it certainly features plenty of action, ensuring an unrelenting pace and occasional excitement (though I would say that, ultimately, it provides one chase too many!), the film is nothing really special - the English title notwithstanding - and, worse, virtually interchangeable with any other of its ilk...apart from the unexpected downbeat ending which, apparently, was a deliberate act on the part of director Girolami (who here actually uses the pseudonym Franco Martinelli!) because he had been bypassed for the second installment; not having watched the first entry in the series, I can't comment on its quality but VIOLENT NAPLES - directed by the more highly-profiled Umberto Lenzi - is certainly superior to the third!!
This is the final entry - following VIOLENT ROME (1975) and VIOLENT NAPLES (1976) - in the "Commissario Betti" trilogy, with Maurizio Merli (the poor man's Franco Nero) gnashing his teeth throughout the film at untouchable "honest" businessman John Saxon; here, the hero even shares an unconvincing romance with the sister of a kidnapped child. While it certainly features plenty of action, ensuring an unrelenting pace and occasional excitement (though I would say that, ultimately, it provides one chase too many!), the film is nothing really special - the English title notwithstanding - and, worse, virtually interchangeable with any other of its ilk...apart from the unexpected downbeat ending which, apparently, was a deliberate act on the part of director Girolami (who here actually uses the pseudonym Franco Martinelli!) because he had been bypassed for the second installment; not having watched the first entry in the series, I can't comment on its quality but VIOLENT NAPLES - directed by the more highly-profiled Umberto Lenzi - is certainly superior to the third!!
Third mission for Commissario Betti - gangster hunt in Turin and Milan with Maurizio Merli and John Saxon
After stints in Rome (Roma violenta, 1975) and Naples (Napoli violenta, 1976), the not-so-squeamish inspector was transferred (criminally) to the industrial city of Turin. And things get tough there too. Hijacking of a school bus with the subsequent taking of the children hostage, bank robbery with a false hostage, attempted rape of a random victim, death of a captured child, Betti offers herself as a hostage in exchange for freeing the other children, is thrown out of the car while driving at speed. There's a lot going on in Turin and the surrounding area! As a viewer, you hardly get to think. Behind all of these perfidities there is probably a tough businessman named Albertelli (John Saxon (1936-2020)), who promptly knows everything. An exposed police informant from Milan, who works for Commissario Arpino (Raymond Pellegrin), is brutally dragged to death. Turin and Milan? You can see that crime in Italy doesn't stop at the city limits ;-) After all, the original film is called "Italia a mano armata" and no longer just "Roma violenta" or "Napoli violenta" like in the first two Split. So it's all about it! It's a good thing that Inspector Betti didn't fall on his head even after falling on the motorway. So the clever fox was able to smuggle in his own man (Toni Ucci) as a driver for the nasty Albertelli. He even manages to fake a serious accident with the villain, so that Albertelli can be persuaded that he has to stay injured in the hospital. The astonished mafia boss promptly tells his chauffeur the meeting point with his cronies. A lot of things are going in the right direction for Betti. Privately, there are even signs of a happy ending for the tough detective with the charming sister (Mirella D'Angelo) of the boy who died in the kidnapping. But will someone like him ever find peace?
With this trilogy, Maurizio Merli (1940-1989) played his way into the front row of the extremely successful poliziottesco genre. However, unlike the better actor and GOLDEN GLOBE nominee Franco Nero, he remained too attached to this role in the future. In any case, Maurizio Merli takes no prisoners in his role. The type he played corresponded to the spirit of the times in a decade that - not only in Italy - was characterized by many upheavals and violent upheavals. The film contains one of the best car chases you could see in the cinema. It's better not to know anything specific about the exact circumstances of the shooting.
The famous GOLDEN GLOBE winner John Saxon plays very solidly as usual. You take both sides off him. As in "Cross Shot", which was filmed in beautiful Bari, he could have played the tough detective.
After stints in Rome (Roma violenta, 1975) and Naples (Napoli violenta, 1976), the not-so-squeamish inspector was transferred (criminally) to the industrial city of Turin. And things get tough there too. Hijacking of a school bus with the subsequent taking of the children hostage, bank robbery with a false hostage, attempted rape of a random victim, death of a captured child, Betti offers herself as a hostage in exchange for freeing the other children, is thrown out of the car while driving at speed. There's a lot going on in Turin and the surrounding area! As a viewer, you hardly get to think. Behind all of these perfidities there is probably a tough businessman named Albertelli (John Saxon (1936-2020)), who promptly knows everything. An exposed police informant from Milan, who works for Commissario Arpino (Raymond Pellegrin), is brutally dragged to death. Turin and Milan? You can see that crime in Italy doesn't stop at the city limits ;-) After all, the original film is called "Italia a mano armata" and no longer just "Roma violenta" or "Napoli violenta" like in the first two Split. So it's all about it! It's a good thing that Inspector Betti didn't fall on his head even after falling on the motorway. So the clever fox was able to smuggle in his own man (Toni Ucci) as a driver for the nasty Albertelli. He even manages to fake a serious accident with the villain, so that Albertelli can be persuaded that he has to stay injured in the hospital. The astonished mafia boss promptly tells his chauffeur the meeting point with his cronies. A lot of things are going in the right direction for Betti. Privately, there are even signs of a happy ending for the tough detective with the charming sister (Mirella D'Angelo) of the boy who died in the kidnapping. But will someone like him ever find peace?
With this trilogy, Maurizio Merli (1940-1989) played his way into the front row of the extremely successful poliziottesco genre. However, unlike the better actor and GOLDEN GLOBE nominee Franco Nero, he remained too attached to this role in the future. In any case, Maurizio Merli takes no prisoners in his role. The type he played corresponded to the spirit of the times in a decade that - not only in Italy - was characterized by many upheavals and violent upheavals. The film contains one of the best car chases you could see in the cinema. It's better not to know anything specific about the exact circumstances of the shooting.
The famous GOLDEN GLOBE winner John Saxon plays very solidly as usual. You take both sides off him. As in "Cross Shot", which was filmed in beautiful Bari, he could have played the tough detective.
There are a lot of things that go into a crime film, from car chases to clever plots by the crooks to betrayals and turn-arounds, power struggles, etc. This one is memorable in that it gets full marks for all the bits that go into one, and it delivers that for more than an hour and a half full stop. The dialogue was a bit trite at times, which is why I gave it 9/10, but if you like *any* kind of crime movie, I think you would not only like this one, it's one of those that has you thinking about it for a while afterwards. I grabbed a big pizza pie and a nice red wine and really enjoyed watching this. The director did all the usual Italian filone, but was pretty mediocre with his Westerns and it took him a while to get going with this filone, but I think in this one he hit his straps. I think this was actually better than his good, later, Roma Violenta. Has to get 9/10 in my book as it's a good example of the genre that transcends it to compete across the broader genre, in every era.
In director Franco Martinelli's highly regarded crime classic, 'Italia a mano armata' aka 'Special Cop in Action' (1976), the super-svelte, bullet-dodging pugilist, Maurizio Merli reprises his most incendiary role as the maverick,majestically moustachioed, skin-tight shirt wearin', all fists blazin', zero tolerance, Commisario Betti, for yet another gonzoid, thrillingly non-PC eruptions of hard-boiled, Italian Poliziotteschi action! The craven, ill-dressed thugs foolhardy attempt to kidnap a group of school children on Commisario Betti's watch, bloodily unleashes a delirious deluge of exhilarating retribution from the inimitable, golden-haired paragon of righteous vengeance, whose mesmerizingly macho modus operandi of brutally annihilating balaclava bovver boys with his jubilant, jaw-smashing roundhouses, proves more than adequate when Betti finally confronts his arch nemesis, Albertini, energetically played with obvious gusto by fellow Euro-crime icon, John Saxon!
Maestro Martinell's exciting 70s actioner 'Special Cop in Action' is demonstratively one of the most appealingly hotheaded Euro crime epics, galvanized by a scintillating squall of thrilling, adrenalized action set pieces, the Berretta blasting mayhem made all the more deliriously entertaining by bravura composer, Franco Micalizzi's gritty, funkier-than-thou, street-tough, heart-poundingly groovy score! This is dynamic crime funk par excellence, adding considerable elan to an already essential Italian cult classic! If for some wholly obscure reason you only watch one high octane, head-knockingly heroic Maurizio Merli poliziottesco, I have little doubt that witnessing the pulse-wreaking whirlwind of unbridled bellicosity fuelling 'Special Cop in Action' will make you a hardcore Merli maniac for life!
Maestro Martinell's exciting 70s actioner 'Special Cop in Action' is demonstratively one of the most appealingly hotheaded Euro crime epics, galvanized by a scintillating squall of thrilling, adrenalized action set pieces, the Berretta blasting mayhem made all the more deliriously entertaining by bravura composer, Franco Micalizzi's gritty, funkier-than-thou, street-tough, heart-poundingly groovy score! This is dynamic crime funk par excellence, adding considerable elan to an already essential Italian cult classic! If for some wholly obscure reason you only watch one high octane, head-knockingly heroic Maurizio Merli poliziottesco, I have little doubt that witnessing the pulse-wreaking whirlwind of unbridled bellicosity fuelling 'Special Cop in Action' will make you a hardcore Merli maniac for life!
This is probably the most action-packed film I have ever seen - and I have seen quite a few. Unlike in many Italian films of the seventies, not much time is wasted on phony emotional slush. There are no slow-motion shots and few "face studies" so typical of cheap cinema,where poliziottesci generally belong. The story is usually quite believable and logical but also pleasantly fresh and unpredictable. Action scenes are imaginative and realistic - I particularly liked the car chases - though some fight scenes do look rather wooden and the the punches are always much too loud. Maurizio Merli does not overact too much (especially if compared with Franco Nero). He does a really nice job as a tough but likable inspector. He chases the criminals, but can also be lenient with those who want to mend their ways. There is also a nice romantic element in the story. Another advantage of the film is the absence of politics. One is frequently unpleasantly surprised at the amount of naive leftist brain-washing in Italian action cinema of the 70s. (eg. Milano callibro 9) I don't understand the undeservedly low rating of this film in imdb(5.9. I have also seen 'La polizia incrimina, la legge assolve' by Castellari, rated at 7.5, and I think this is a much better film. The dialogues are good though I can't guarantee for the translations. Learn Italian and see the original. However, this is not a family cinema. A few scenes are really rough, so I wouldn't recommend the film to anybody under 15.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesFinal part of police commissioner Betti's trilogy, also including Roma violenta (1975) and Nápoles violenta (1976).
- PifiasWhen commissioner Betti is sitting in his bureau in the police headquarters of Turin. the map on the wall represents the city of Milan.
- ConexionesEdited into La tua vita per mio figlio (1980)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y añadir a tu lista para recibir recomendaciones personalizadas
- How long is A Special Cop in Action?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 41 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugerir un cambio o añadir el contenido que falta
Principal laguna de datos
By what name was Italia a mano armada (1976) officially released in Canada in English?
Responde