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Il cobra nero

Titolo originale: Mean Johnny Barrows
  • 1975
  • R
  • 1h 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,0/10
582
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Elliott Gould, Roddy McDowall, Fred Williamson, and Stuart Whitman in Il cobra nero (1975)
ActionCrimeDrama

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaDischarged from the army, an ex-GI is hired as a hit-man by a crime syndicate that is at war with another Mafia family.Discharged from the army, an ex-GI is hired as a hit-man by a crime syndicate that is at war with another Mafia family.Discharged from the army, an ex-GI is hired as a hit-man by a crime syndicate that is at war with another Mafia family.

  • Regia
    • Fred Williamson
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Jolivett Cato
    • Charles Walker
    • Jeff Williamson
  • Star
    • Fred Williamson
    • Roddy McDowall
    • Stuart Whitman
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,0/10
    582
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Fred Williamson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jolivett Cato
      • Charles Walker
      • Jeff Williamson
    • Star
      • Fred Williamson
      • Roddy McDowall
      • Stuart Whitman
    • 25Recensioni degli utenti
    • 25Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto27

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    Interpreti principali32

    Modifica
    Fred Williamson
    Fred Williamson
    • Johnny Barrows
    Roddy McDowall
    Roddy McDowall
    • Tony Da Vince
    Stuart Whitman
    Stuart Whitman
    • Mario Racconi
    Anthony Caruso
    Anthony Caruso
    • Don Da Vince
    • (as Tony Caruso)
    Luther Adler
    Luther Adler
    • Don Racconi
    R.G. Armstrong
    R.G. Armstrong
    • Richard
    Elliott Gould
    Elliott Gould
    • Prof. Theodore Rasputin Waterhouse
    Mike Henry
    Mike Henry
    • Carlo Da Vince
    Aaron Banks
    • Capt. O'Malley
    Robert Phillips
    Robert Phillips
    • Ben
    • (as Bob Phillips)
    James Brown
    James Brown
    • Police Sergeant
    Jenny Sherman
    Jenny Sherman
    • Nancy
    Victor Rogers
    • Tom
    • (as Vic Rogers)
    Gregory Bach
    • Body Guard
    John LaMotta
    • Antonio Goti
    • (as Johnny LaMotta)
    Frank Bello
    • Joe
    Louis Ojena
    • Louie
    • (as Louie Ojena)
    Al Hansen
    Al Hansen
    • Police Officer
    • Regia
      • Fred Williamson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jolivett Cato
      • Charles Walker
      • Jeff Williamson
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti25

    5,0582
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    3Red-Barracuda

    A bit of a snooze-fest

    This blaxploitation stars Fred Williamson, who also directed it. It's a bit more drama-driven than these films tend to be with Williamson's character being discharged from the army and finding life as a civilian difficult, leading to him getting involved with mobsters. Williamson is a good action star but he is fairly one note actor so he doesn't bring much to the table here with this one. Its actually a bit of a snooze-fest really, with little of it registering at all. It can only really be recommended to the most forgiving blaxploitation fans.
    Wizard-8

    Boring Johnny Barrows

    A dishonorably discharged Vietnam vet soon finds himself homeless and unemployed on the streets of Los Angeles. He gets a job offer from a mobster to wipe out another mob family. Not a thought-provoking premise, but one that could have delivered some action and excitement. But the movie is anything but action-packed and exciting. Our hero doesn't take the mob boss' job offer until more than an hour of the running time has passed! And when he does start delivering business, it's not very compelling - it's as if director Williamson was determined to make all this "action" as slow and boring as the first hour of the movie. The movie looks okay for what was a poverty-row budget, and Williamson in front of the camera has some charisma, but that's nowhere enough to save the movie. And why does the title card of the movie claim the hero is named "Johnny Barrows" when a badge the hero wears in the beginning of the movie states he's named "Johnnie Barrows"?
    iago-6

    Not your typical blaxploitation

    I got this film as part of this budget "Bad Brothas, Mean Mothas" boxed set, and watched this one first, because it stars Fred "Super-stud" Willaimson. I was surprised at what different and ambitous movie this is. Whether it lives up to all that ambition...

    Rather than a typical revenge fantasy (nothing wrong with those, but...) this film follows Johnny B. as he tries to get a job and resist joining the mob after being dishonorably discharged from the army for striking a white officer (after being, to put it lightly, provoked).

    It takes a while as the film unfolds to realize that he's not, as usually happens in these movies, going to get p***ed and get even. He is arrested and tormented by the police to which he won't even give his name or say anything. For a while I thought he was dazed by being beaten earlier, but by the time he gets to the police station he should be more coherent. Then I thought "Well, he's just so COOL that he won't even dignify those cops by talking to them," but then that falls apart as well and... I just don't know why he wouldn't talk. Because it's a plot point, I suspect.

    The main idea of the story is Johnny trying to get a real job, and resist the mobsters who are offering him big money to become a hit man.

    (SPOILERS AHEAD----->)The arc of the movie hinges on Johnny's love for a woman (a WHITE woman, no less), which we are supposed to understand leads to him finally agreeing to work for the mob in order to avenge her rape. Sadly, this entire aspect of the film just doesn't come off at all, as there is barely any connection between him and the woman, there is no discernible chemistry between them... there's just nothing.

    (more spoilers here:) Another interesting thing about the structure of the film is how Johnny ends up the head of this crime organization at the end. It's just kind of interesting and unexpected. Then he offers his love to the woman, and instead of saying "Yes Johnny, take me anywhere and make love to me all day and all night! Do it right here! Do it right now!" like any sane woman or man would do, she... has a different reaction. And this leads to another surprising thing: the ending, which I totally didn't expect, but won't give away.

    This movie being directed by Fred himself adds a dimension to all the adoring shots of himself glaring face-on into the camera, but hey, he looks great and he knows it. I also like the change when he finally gets into those slick suits. The cheap DVD I got REALLY suffers from not being widescreen, as Fred seems to like to place his characters on opposite ends of the screen, and it seemed like more than half of the movie featured half a person's face or shuttled back and forth between the ends of the screen.

    A lot of people posting here have talked about how slow this movie is... I think because they're expecting a traditional revenge tale. This movie is not the greatest, but I think it deserves to be admired for the unconventionality of the story, and the aspects of 70s black culture (namely trying to get a decent job without any credentials, the difficulty of avoiding drawn into crime, in addition to the hammered in "plight of the veteran" aspects) that you don't see covered in other movies, which I think makes it kind of a little gem.

    --- Check out website devoted to bad and cheesy movies: www.cinemademerde.com
    5dworldeater

    Low budget snoozefest that misses

    I just want to say that this is a lot better than the last film I watched with Fred Williamson (Adios Amigo). But Mean Johnny Barrows is a crime film that has an interesting story, but is poorly executed across the big screen due to lousy direction from star Fred Williamson. In this snoozefest he is kicked out of the army for striking an officer. He then has a streak of bad luck starting with a beat down by the police. Then our hero is a hobo, homeless in extreme poverty. He then moves on up by scrubbing toilets in a gas station before taking a job as mob hitman. What else happens is hazy in memory due to struggling to stay awake in this poorly put together snoozefest. As a Fred Williamson fan, Mean Johnny Barrows is a let down and a bummer. Even though some of his films are of shoddy quality, Fred Williamson is a really cool and bad ass dude. His finer qualities don't save this stinker and I would advise interested parties to skip this one.
    6sol-kay

    Destroy yourself with your own gun

    **SPOILER ALERT** Drummed out of the US Army for slugging his CO Capt. O'Malley, Aaron Banks, Johnny Barrows, Fred Williamson, drifts into town looking for a job ending up instead beaten and robbed by a couple of homeboys as soon as he leaves the bus.

    Picked up by the cops thinking that he's a homeless drunk, homeless yes drunk no, Johnny gets worked over again at the jail house until the precinct captain who recognized Johnny as a star high school and collage football player, and decorated Vietnam War Vet, intervenes. At first Johnny is nothing but a shell of his former self going around town looking for a job as well as a free meal. While on skid row Johnny runs into Elliott Gould playing the part of a hobo wise-man who's name, Prof.Theodore Rasputin Waterhouse, is longer then the part that he has in the movie. We see Theodore teach Johnny the fine points of living and surviving on the streets by getting a unsuspecting soul, at a hot-dog stand, to share his frankfurter with him and Johnny.

    Johnny had earlier gotten to know Mafiso bigwig Mario Racconi, Stuart Whitman, when he tried to get a free meal of spaghetti and meatballs at his restaurant which Mario overruled his angry chef, Jan J. Madrid, and gave him. Johnny also met Mario's girlfriend Nancy, Jenny Sherman, who took a strange liking to the wandering and homeless vet. It's when Mario offered Johnny a job as a hit-man for his organization he respectfully turned it down having done enough hit's in Nam then he would like to remember.

    Still out to make an honest living Johnny ends up cleaning bathrooms and mopping floors at Richard's, R.G Armstrong, gas station but the cheap and ungrateful Richard, after Johnny broke his back working for him, gives Johnny a measly 21 dollars that comes out to something like .70 a day, for the month that he was employed by him. This leads Johnny to lose his cool and Richard to lose a couple of his teeth. Ending up again at the jail-house Johnny is set free with the help of the Racconi mob who got the now scared to death Richard to drop all charges against Johnny.

    Mario together with his father Mafia Don Racconi, Luther Adler,had been gunned down by the rival De Vince Mob at a meeting of the minds between the two gang leaders about the trafficking of deadly and illegal drugs on the streets of L.A which Don Racconi was deathly against. With Mario surviving the shoot-out, his father Don Racconi didn't, he gets Johnny to agree to hit the De Vincie mob as a favor to him and Nancy whom Johnny has since fallen in love with.

    Knocking off the entire De Vince Mob that included Don De Vince, Anthony Caruso, and his young and schmucky son Tony, Roddy McDowall, Johnny didn't realize that Tony was actually Nancy's man! Tony was planning with Nancy to get his father's and the Racconi Mob to kill each other off and then take take off with Nancy and both mob's assets to Mexico.

    During the final stages of warfare with the De Vince mob Johnny come to battle it out again with the former Capt. O'Malley Johnny's old Army CO, who got him canned out of the service, who's now a martial arts hit man for the De Vincie's. O'Malley was no pushover using karate and judo tactics on Johnny but in the end Johnny get's the upper hand by returning a deadly flying star back to O'Malley throat.

    The ending of "Mean Johnny Barrows" was a bit confusing not that Johnny was doubled-crossed by Nancy, whom we already knew was two-timing him, but the way Nancy was finished off seemed a bit out of place; stepping on a land mine in lovely and crime-free Malibu?

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Star Fred Williamson's MASH (1972) co-star Elliott Gould came in for a half-hour's work to help out his friend. Gould completely improvised his part on the spot.
    • Blooper
      Johnny's name is misspelled "Johnnie" on his army name tag.
    • Citazioni

      Don Da Vince: [Notices the two construction workers have not put up the front sign on their new flower shop] Hey, Carlo! Tell them to hurry up with that sign. It should have been up by now.

      Carlo Da Vince: I'll take care of it, papa. Hey, what's taking you assholes so long? What do you think we're paying you, for?

      Don Da Vince: Carlo, don't talk dirty! How many times I gotta tell you that? You know I don't like that!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Dedicated to the veteran who traded his place on the front line for a place on the unemployment line. Peace is Hell.
    • Versioni alternative
      The DVD and Blu-ray by Code Red is the 96-minute director's cut that includes differences from the theatrical version released on VHS in the 1980s by Unicorn Video and numerous public domain DVD releases (sourced from the Unicorn tape master). There is a graphic sex scene between Johnny and Nancy, the killings are more bloodier and the climatic karate fight with Johnny and O'Malley is much longer, the scene with Johnny calling Nancy on a payphone is seen before his fight with O'Malley, instead of after, and an ascending helicopter shot is seen before Nancy steps on the landmine.
    • Connessioni
      Referenced in The Cinema Snob Movie (2012)
    • Colonne sonore
      Strung Out
      Composed by Paul Riser

      Performed by Gordon Staples And The String Thing

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 27 novembre 1975 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Italiano
    • Celebre anche come
      • Mean Johnny Barrows
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Southern California, California, Stati Uniti(Location)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Po' Boy Productions
      • Brut Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 30 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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