Un poliziotto duro e rispettoso delle regole insegue un gobbo maniaco dal grilletto facile, un rapinatore di banche con una mano sola e i loro compari, nel tentativo di consegnare alla giust... Leggi tuttoUn poliziotto duro e rispettoso delle regole insegue un gobbo maniaco dal grilletto facile, un rapinatore di banche con una mano sola e i loro compari, nel tentativo di consegnare alla giustizia il più potente signore del crimine di Roma.Un poliziotto duro e rispettoso delle regole insegue un gobbo maniaco dal grilletto facile, un rapinatore di banche con una mano sola e i loro compari, nel tentativo di consegnare alla giustizia il più potente signore del crimine di Roma.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Sandra Moretto
- (as Sandra Cardini)
Recensioni in evidenza
This movie has a great supporting cast. Besides Arthur Kennedy (who was in movies like "Let Sleeping Corpses Lie" and "Rico, the Mean Machine"), the movie features Ivan Rassimov, perhaps somewhat wasted as a low-level thug who gives his girlfriend an overdose of heroin simply because she's a "pain in the ass". The best of all though, is the great Tomas Milian as a psychotic hunchback, who starts out as a sympatheic figure, but turns out to be a frightening heavy. In one scene Meri's detective slaps him around and makes him swallow a bullet, which he later he craps out and vows to shoot the detective in the face with face with it for revenge!
The real weakness of this movie is the loose plotting. There's a lot of action set pieces, but the whole thing doesn't really hold together, especially whenever Milian is not on screen. The movie also could have used more women. Merli does have a pretty girlfriend (who the villains at one point threaten to put through a car compactor), but her role is pretty perfunctory.Still this is definitely a fun movie and I would recommend it.
The best scenes in this movie have to be the extended car chases. Milian hijacks an ambulence and kills all the people on board for no reason. When it crashes in a crowded flea market, Milian jumps out of the ambulence and just starts randomly firing his sub-machine gun into the crowd to create enough confusion to get away. Another great scene has a gang of upper-class teenagers led by the baby-faced Stefano Patrizi who get bored of nightclubbing and proceed to rape a girl and beat up her boyfriend in a vacant lot. Patrizi is wholely unsympathetic as he punches the boyfriend in the gut repeatedly and knees him in the face, then making weird gestures with a nearby piece of wood. Merli later pops by their nightclub and smashes Patrizi's face right through a pinball machine and then simultaneously beats the tar out of the six or so members of the gang!
This film comes fast and furious. Good performances all around by a veteran cast (with Arthur Kennedy, Ivan Rassimov, and Luciano Pigozzi along for the ride). It's not the most coherent of Lenzi's works, but it's definitely a genre classic. Where's the DVD?
Even more than the foregoing "Milano Odia...", this delivers the absolute opposite of political correctness. Commissario Leonardo Tanzi (Maurizio Merli) is a super-tough and relentless cop with a mustache, whose unorthodox methods make Dirty Harry look like a peace-loving social worker. Respectless towards his (hypocritical) superiors and without any form of sympathy for offenders, Tanzi hates criminals as much as he hates crime, and he has no scruples to beat information out of suspects and bend the law whenever it is necessary to do the right thing. Tanzi is super-tough and the role seems as if it was written for Maurizio Merli. The great Tomas Milian (one of my personal all-time favorite actors) plays 'Il Gobbo', a hunchbacked and psychotic gangster. Milian is excellent in any role I see him play, and this particular role of the malicious and sadistic criminal fits him like a glove. Apart from Merli and Milian, who are both excellent in their roles, the cast includes a bunch of other regulars of Italian genre-cinema, such as Giampiero Albertini, who plays a cop, Luciano Catenacci, and, most prominently, Ivan Rassimov as a sleazy drug dealer. The film contains a vast amount of sleaze and brutality, and is definitely not for those who are very sensitive when it comes to violence. For my fellow lovers of Italian genre-cinema from the 70s, however, this is an absolute priority. The score by Franco Micalizzi is absolutely brilliant, the cinematography is excellent, and the film is tantalizing from the beginning to the end. Tough-minded and gripping throughout, "Roma A Mano Armata" is an ultra-violent and wonderfully politically incorrect Poliziottesco that no lover of Italian-genre cinema can afford to miss. In short: Brutal, brilliant, and an absolute must-see for all fans of Italian Crime cinema!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen Terry Levene distributed this film in the late 1970s, he replaced a few of the establishing shots with those of American locations. For an establishing shot of the Rome youth center where Tanzi meets Stefano, Levine used a shot of the Manhattan nightclub "Fascination". Strangely enough, in the later Umberto Lenzi film Da Corleone a Brooklyn (1979) (which also starred Maurizio Merli as an Italian policeman), Merli drives by the club "Fascination" after he arrives in New York.
- BlooperWhen Tanzi slams Stefano's face into the pinball machine, his line "My face!" overlaps with his screams.
- Citazioni
Commissioner Leonardo Tanzi: [Last lines] Freeze!
Vincenzo Moretto, 'Il gobbo': Sorry if I'm interrupting you, copper! Let's go back tot he old ways, huh?
[Holds up a 9mm bullet]
Vincenzo Moretto, 'Il gobbo': Come on, be a good man. Remember this? I crapped it out for you?
Commissioner Leonardo Tanzi: Yeah, go on . Kill me. You and Ferrender are done for. This place is surrounded.
Vincenzo Moretto, 'Il gobbo': You heard him? He's still talking about Ferrender. You bloody fool! I killed him 3 months ago, arsehole! Who do you think it was at the morgue?
[Kicks Tanzi]
Vincenzo Moretto, 'Il gobbo': Who the fuck do you think it was?
Commissioner Caputo: Stop! Drop the gun. Drop it!
[Moretto does so]
Commissioner Caputo: Turn around.
[He does so]
Commissioner Caputo: There are no suicide attempts this time, because I'll kill you myself. Like a wild dog.
Commissioner Leonardo Tanzi: No, Caputo! You can't!
Commissioner Caputo: [sighs] OK.
[Proceeds to handcuff Moretto]
Commissioner Leonardo Tanzi: [Caputo is shot] Caputo! NO!
[He takes Caputo's gun, and goes after Moretto, who is escaping, and corners him in a dead end, and yells loudly]
Commissioner Leonardo Tanzi: FREEZE!
[Shoots him several times, killing him, and Moretto falls to the floor, firing one round from his handgun, and dies]
- Curiosità sui creditiThe opening credits are played while the camera in first person view mode (From a criminal's POV) drives through Rome looking at banks and building societies and leaves the city through a long, dark tunnel as the credits end.
- Versioni alternativeThe American release by Aquarius Distribution entitled "Assault with a Deadly Weapon" is missing the first 10 minutes, the beginning credits, and the ending credits. The American version also has several of the scenes reshot so that the originally Italian words on buildings and on people's notes appear in English. Also, the beginning credits list a variety of made-up Americanized names and credit Terry Levene (the head of Aquarius Distribution) as the film's producer.
- ConnessioniEdited from Milano trema: la polizia vuole giustizia (1973)
- Colonne sonoreSe l'avrebbe saputo
(If he'd known)
Composed by Roberto Donati (as Donati) and Fiamma Maglione (as Maglione)
Sung by Fiamma Maglione
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 35 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1