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Passeport pour deux tueurs

Original title: La mala ordina
  • 1972
  • 16
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Mario Adorf, Henry Silva, and Woody Strode in Passeport pour deux tueurs (1972)
Dark ComedyActionCrimeThriller

A Milanese pimp is pursued by - and then pursues - a pair of New York hitmen and the gangsters who framed him for stealing a shipment of heroin.A Milanese pimp is pursued by - and then pursues - a pair of New York hitmen and the gangsters who framed him for stealing a shipment of heroin.A Milanese pimp is pursued by - and then pursues - a pair of New York hitmen and the gangsters who framed him for stealing a shipment of heroin.

  • Director
    • Fernando Di Leo
  • Writers
    • Fernando Di Leo
    • Augusto Finocchi
    • Ingo Hermes
  • Stars
    • Mario Adorf
    • Henry Silva
    • Woody Strode
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Augusto Finocchi
      • Ingo Hermes
    • Stars
      • Mario Adorf
      • Henry Silva
      • Woody Strode
    • 39User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos102

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    Top cast49

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    Mario Adorf
    Mario Adorf
    • Luca Canali
    Henry Silva
    Henry Silva
    • David Catania
    Woody Strode
    Woody Strode
    • Frank Webster
    Adolfo Celi
    Adolfo Celi
    • Don Vito Tressoldi
    Luciana Paluzzi
    Luciana Paluzzi
    • Eva Lalli
    Franco Fabrizi
    Franco Fabrizi
    • Enrico Moroni
    Femi Benussi
    Femi Benussi
    • Nana
    Gianni Macchia
    • Nicola
    Peter Berling
    Peter Berling
    • Damiano
    Francesca Romana Coluzzi
    Francesca Romana Coluzzi
    • Trini
    Cyril Cusack
    Cyril Cusack
    • Corso
    Sylva Koscina
    Sylva Koscina
    • Lucia Canali
    Jessica Dublin
    Jessica Dublin
    • Miss Kenneth
    Omero Capanna
    • Tressoldi's Henchman at Carpentry
    Giuseppe Castellano
    Giuseppe Castellano
    • Piero Panunzio
    Giulio Baraghini
    • Tressoldi's Henchman with Nicola
    Andrea Scotti
    • Tressoldi's Henchman
    Imelde Marani
    Imelde Marani
    • Cloakroom Attendant
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Augusto Finocchi
      • Ingo Hermes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    7.13.1K
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    Featured reviews

    lazarillo

    Recommended, but look for the Italian version

    Two vicious hit men (Henry Silva and Woody Strode) are sent by the New York mob to Milan, Italy to "make an example" of a small-time pimp (Mario Adolph) who is believed to be responsible for a missing shipment of heroin. The two hit-man have the support of the local Milan mafia don (Adolf Celli), who may know more than he's telling about the missing heroin, but their target turns out to be much more wily and dangerous than they could have possibly anticipated.

    Although this Ferdinand de Leo crime thriller is regarded as a minor masterpiece of the genre, it has only been released in America so far on a crappy VHS tape which really hampers the enjoyment. It's full-frame, horribly cropped with the kind of muddy, off-color transfer that gives third generation bootlegs a not-so-bad name. The dubbing could charitably be described as indifferent--it's like they pulled random English speakers off the street and had them read from cue cards. The women in these movies are typically just sex objects, but still you would think that an actress of Femi Benussi's stature in Italian exploitation films (maybe a rung below Edwige Fenech and Barbara Bouchet) would at least get CREDIT for the important role of the protagonist's ill-fated, former prostitute girlfriend. (And her patented long, butt-naked nude scene would probably be a little more enjoyable if the ample skin she shows wasn't bluish-gray due to the lousy transfer). Perhaps most ridiculous though, the whole thing is presented as a "blaxploitation" film due to the presence of African-American actor Woody Strode (who's obviously dubbed by a white guy) even though the real protagonist here is a white Italian.

    The action scenes are very effective though despite the transfer. It's also a pretty good basic story. I like these movies where there's a criminal anti-hero taking on the mob rather than the usual vigilante cop. The Italian crime thrillers certainly have their share of vigilante cops (the genre was largely inspired by "Dirty Harry" and "The French Connection"), but even these films at least acknowledge that that there's moral ambiguity in the world and that violence isn't always a clean solution for every problem. Overall, I would recommend this, but if you're going to get it at all, it probably would be worth seeking out a widescreen Italian version with English subtitles. Avoid the laughable "Black Kingpin" version.
    8lastliberal-853-253708

    Who said anything about wasting a bullet on a pimp.

    Poliziottesco, a fusion of the words poliziotto ("policeman") and the same -esco desinence, indicates 1970s-era Italian-produced "tough cop" and crime movies. Recurring elements in poliziotteschi films include graphic and brutal violence, organized crime, car chases, vigilantism, heists, gunfights, and corruption up to the highest levels.

    With directors like Fernando Di Leo, these films replaced the spaghetti westerns. They saw their decline after erotica and horror took over in the late 70s.But it was the spaghetti westerns that gave Di Leo his training. He wrote the script for A Fistful of Dollars, and was assistant director under Sergio Leone in For a Few Dollars More.

    The films of Fernando Di Leo had a great influence on later directors like Quentin Tarantino and John Woo.

    Henry Silva(Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Above the Law) puts in one of his best performances in this film. He is excellent as a sleazy hit-man. Woody Strode (Spartacus, Kingdom of the Spiders) is very good as Silva's partner.

    Lots of action, one car chase, and plenty of big naturals. Mario Adorf stole the show with his huge range of facial expressions.
    9The_Void

    Fantastic Polizi flick!

    I'm a big fan of Italian crime flicks, and I'm an especially big fan of this one as it's one of the best out there! The Italian Connection is a part of a loose trilogy by director Fernando Di Leo, the other two parts being the excellent Milano Calibro 9 and The Boss, which I've not seen yet. As good as Milano Calibro 9 is, this film is better and I'll be very surprised if it's topped by The Boss. Like many Italian cult films, this one has a list of a.k.a. titles as long as my arm. I saw it under the title 'The Italian Connection', but it's alternative title 'Manhunt' is probably the most suitable considering the plot. It's quite a simple tale of crime and revenge. First we are introduced to two American contract killers who are given the task of going to Milan to track down a pimp named Luca Canali who apparently stole a large amount of heroin from the killer's employers. However, it soon transpires that they've been misinformed when the local crime boss also wants to get his hands on Carneli, before it comes to the killer's employer's attention that it was really him that stole the heroin...

    The main reason why this film works is down to the simple plotting. The plot itself actually has quite a lot of angles, but director Fernando Di Leo keeps the focus on one thing at a time and that ensures that the film is always thrilling and easy to follow. Fernando Di Leo is clearly very good at directing crime flicks, aside from the aforementioned trilogy of which this film is a part; he also has a handful of other crime flicks to his name, including the very good Kidnap Syndicate. This film is set up like a chase movie, we have the contract killer chasing our unlikely hero (the pimp) for the first part of the movie, then he's being chased the local crime boss' men and the story is given a nice twist in the final third. Cult actor Mario Adorf is great as the pimp Luca Canali; he makes an unlikely hero, but an engaging and interesting one. Henry Silva and Woody Strode are effective as the contract killers, while the cast is nicely topped off by Adolfo Ceri as Milan's crime boss. I would say that this is a fun film to watch, but it's also rather brutal; a sequence involving a cat in a scrap yard at the end sums that up. Overall, I wouldn't hesitate to name The Italian Connection as one of my all time favourite Italian crime flicks, and this one therefore comes highly recommended.
    matt-201

    The spaghetti-Western CHARLEY VARRICK?

    Now released under the absurdly named Mack Video as the absurdly named BLACK KINGPIN, LA MALA ORDINA, once known as MANHUNT, shows the Italian seventies policier director Fernando DiLeo in peak form. The Italian cops-mob-and-corruption movies often had a neorealist tincture, not far from such British cousins as GET CARTER or THE LONG GOOD FRIDAY. (The best in this vein is the dark, harrowing VIOLENT NAPLES.) But some of them were as ripe and over-the-top as concurrent works of Italian horror; and this saga of a small-town pimp pursued, God knows why, by Mr. Big and two Vincent-and-Jules-looking U.S.-made button men, looks like the product of some torrid motel-room coitus between Sergio Leone and Don Siegel. The faces are sweaty, the beatings (to evoke Roger Ebert's memorable phrase) suggest the sound of ping-pong paddles smacking naugahyde sofas--the only thing that's missing is the groan of an Ennio Morricone score. An evening of Shane Black quips it ain't, but ninety minutes of top-shelf hardboiled groove it is.
    7Bezenby

    More Hard-boiled madness

    Poor Mario Adorf. He just wants to pimp out his girls in Milan and give the cash to his ex-wife and his sickly young daughter. He's not a bad guy really, although he doesn't like it when guys try to rough up his girls. Mario's just getting on with his petty criminal life when all of a sudden he's being hunted down not only by the local crime boss, but by two hard faced American hit men too.

    The hit men, Henry Silva and Woody Strode, have been sent to track him down and kill him in the most violent and brutal way possible as lesson from the US Mafia to those in Italy thinking of stealing heroin shipments. This might be all well and good, if in fact Mario had actually stolen anything. Instead the poor guy spends most of the film being hunted down like a dog while having no idea whatsoever why people want to kill him.

    There's more pressure on Mario as the local don (Adolfo Celi) doesn't like the presence of two American gangsters on his turf and sends his men out to capture Mario. Every petty criminal in Milan knows that Mario's a marked man, so who can he trust? His hookers?

    While this is a little thin story wise, the film itself is rather good. Henry Silva truly looks like a guy who would stab you in the face one minute then put the moves on your wife the next. Woody Strode is the straight man to all Silva's shenanigans, and Adolfo Celi nearly outdoes Silva in the hard-case gangster role, especially at near the end where the demented Mario finally confronts him. It's Mario Adorf that steals the show here as the clueless, but not helpless, Mario, as he jumps from being a flawed but caring father to a man who has been pushed about as far as someone can be.

    Although the first half sets up all the characters and has a punch up or two, the film gradually gets more and more violent as you would expect, and of course it's standard practice to throw in a car chase too. This one goes from a car chase to a foot chase and even has Mario smashing his head through a windscreen in order to get at a gangster. From then it's non-stop until the gunfight in the scrapyard.

    Funky soundtrack too. Loud, with it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Second part of Fernando Di Leo's "Milieu Trilogy" also including Milan calibre 9 (1972) and Le boss (1973).
    • Goofs
      As Nicola is dying, he is shown in a shot, looking at the ceiling, eyes glazed over as dead, but in the following shot, his head is turned to Luca before looking back at the ceiling, jutting his chin up, then settling back down, dead.
    • Quotes

      Don Vito Tressoldi: Whad'ya expect from a hooker? Eternal love?

    • Connections
      Featured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 2 (1996)

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 2, 1972 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • L'empire du crime
    • Filming locations
      • Milan, Lombardia, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Cineproduzioni Daunia 70
      • Hermes Synchron
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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