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IMDbPro

Salut les pourris

Original title: Il poliziotto è marcio
  • 1974
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Salut les pourris (1974)
ActionCrimeThriller

A police lieutenant suddenly faces the consequences of his choice to part for the local mobs.A police lieutenant suddenly faces the consequences of his choice to part for the local mobs.A police lieutenant suddenly faces the consequences of his choice to part for the local mobs.

  • Director
    • Fernando Di Leo
  • Writers
    • Fernando Di Leo
    • Sergio Donati
  • Stars
    • Luc Merenda
    • Richard Conte
    • Delia Boccardo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Sergio Donati
    • Stars
      • Luc Merenda
      • Richard Conte
      • Delia Boccardo
    • 13User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos39

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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Luc Merenda
    Luc Merenda
    • Police Commissioner Domenico Malacarne
    Richard Conte
    Richard Conte
    • Dr. Nazzari
    Delia Boccardo
    Delia Boccardo
    • Sandra
    Raymond Pellegrin
    Raymond Pellegrin
    • Pascal
    Gianni Santuccio
    • Superintendent
    Vittorio Caprioli
    Vittorio Caprioli
    • Esposito
    Salvo Randone
    Salvo Randone
    • Marshal Malacarne
    Rosario Borelli
    • Detective Pietro Garrito
    Monica Monet
    • Barbara
    Elio Zamuto
    • Rio
    Gino Milli
    • Gianmaria
    Sergio Ammirata
    • Vice Commissioner Curcetti
    Massimo Sarchielli
    Massimo Sarchielli
    • Rabal
    Loris Bazzocchi
    • Killer
    Salvatore Billa
    Salvatore Billa
    • Detective Rizzo
    Marcello Di Falco
    • Killer
    Attilio Duse
    • Detective Aniello
    Luigi Antonio Guerra
    • Young Detective
    • Director
      • Fernando Di Leo
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Sergio Donati
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.61K
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    Featured reviews

    9andell-2

    Great crime thriller - a must for fans of the genre!

    Funky soundtracks, delicious 70's fashion styles, macho men living life in the fast lane and dames so exquisite even you might consider a life of crime. There are many reasons to love the Italian crime movies of the 70's. They have a certain lovable charm. They can be funny but they can also be nihilistic and grim.

    You never know who will live or die. In the world of Italian gangster flicks no-one is safe. The love interest, the children, the parents, even the hero himself and everyone who is around him are in constant danger of meeting a cruel and painful death at any moment. Because of this you get very tense and unforeseeable plots that will have you sitting on the edge of the seat until the credits roll down the screen.

    "Shoot first, die later" is also one of the better titles of the genre. So you should definitely check it out. It might be a little talky for some people but it never gets boring. The plot is simple but perfectly executed and there is always something exiting happening to keep my interest.

    There are a couple of nice car-chases, a few explosions and some standard gunfare but the true excitement lies in the tense and emotional plot. Luc Merenda is no Fabio Testi but he delivers a solid performance as the corrupt cop who get tangled in a increasingly bleak situation that might be the end for both himself and those who stand him near. He is actually quite perfect for movies of this type. Di Leo, probably the best director in the genre, have once again delivered a great crime movie that should be seen by everyone who is even remotely interested in the world of Italian action-thrillers.

    I love these movies and if you are into this stuff you should definitely check out the two volumes of Fernando Di Leo crime collection (amongst others this movie is found in this collection) put out on both DVD and blu-ray by Raro Video. The Blu-rays look and feel great and they are reasonably cheap to buy. So i would absolutely recommend those collections even for newcomers. Now i am of to watch another one and dream of the next GTA title paying homage to the Itallian crime genre ala Vice City for "Scarface" and "Miami Vice". I can tell you that i would be first in line to get a taste of that. It could be titled something like "GTA: Roma Violencia"... ooooh i would like that.
    7elo-equipamentos

    Cars chase at Milano is a true highlights of this Poliziotteschi!!!

    Fernando Di Leo made another great Poliziotteschi, the cars chase are the true highlights of the entire picture, a young Police commissioner Domenico (Luc Merenda) has an fair agreement of the Milano's Mob, meanwhile the things are changing, now the drugs and arms smuggling were introduced by force, his father a honest and humble policeman didn't know a thing over his son, the Boss and his lawyer Mazzanti played by the already older Richard Conte are pushing more, ending up in retaliatory measures in both sides, including a sudden killing of his beloved father and his girlfriend, Domenico gonna crazy, fabulous picture, somehow has a little mistake on the plot, the triggering event is too shallow, when the Boss asking to Domenico a little favor that includes his proudly father in a minor and meaningless fact spoils the whole project, Di Leo should be change this weak point, certainly will be more realistic, nevertheless it's largely enjoyable and has an unexpected ending!!!

    Resume:

    First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.5
    7radiobirdma

    Papa's Got a Brand New Body Bag

    Though generally a tad overrated (neither Milano Calibro 9 nor Il Boss are the transgressive "masterpieces" some Italocinema fetishists want them to be), so-called "cult" director Fernando di Leo manages to strike some grippingly dissonant chords in Shoot First, Die Later, the original title being less sensationalistic than bone dry: The Rotten Cop. While most poliziotteschi are essentially feelgood movies, the degenerates and lowlifes getting what they justly deserve, this one marches to an entirely different drum. At its core a father-son story – the excellent Salvo Randone playing Pops to the opposite of leading beau Luc Merenda –, it's a cynical morality play about a model cop appropriately named Malacarne (literally meaning "bad meat") who feels perfectly comfortable with being on the payroll of the mafia until things go terribly awry: Unlike the cheap-thrills roller coaster violence of other Eurocrime movies, the stark brutality here comes across as callous, pitiless, not even nasty, but unpleasant through and through; actually, the two car chases, skillfully done by stunt coordinator Rémy Julienne, feel like a concession to the regular poliziotto crowd. In its acidly sarcastic Weltanschauung and the complete lack of redeeming qualities, Shoot First, Die Later is doubtless more akin to the cinema of Rosi, Damiani or Elio Petri than to the staccato over-the-top action of Castellari or Lenzi: A doom loop of human failings.
    8Coventry

    "Bad Meat" is Rotten!

    Umberto Lenzi was the Italian director responsible for delivering the – hands down – most exhilarating, gratuitously violent and smuttiest Poliziotesschi thrillers of the 1970s, but his colleague Fernando Di Leo was the genius who arguably made the ones with the best screenplays, most unsettling atmospheres and most intriguingly profound character drawings. Evidence for this opinion/statement can be found in his vastly superior crime trilogy (containing the masterworks "Milano Calibro 9", "La Mala Ordina" and "Il Boss") but further proof also comes from this truly overpowering "Il Poliziotto è Marcio" aka "Shoot First, Die Later". Di Leo's films are slightly more qualitative and memorable because he thinks outside of the box and continuously adds new elements to the successful Poliziotesschi formula that he co-created himself. Lenzi's films, for example, are mostly straightforward thrillers in which one unbreakable super-cop (usually Maurizio Merli) battles against entire crime networks but also against the corrupt political system. Domenico Malacarne, the protagonist here, is an utterly corrupt detective himself! The original Italian title is therefore a lot more meaningful as the popular international title; as it literally translates as "The Cop is Rotten" and even the anti- hero's last name (meaning "bad meat") gives a good indication of the story content.

    Malacarna is the most successful lieutenant of his Milanese precinct and often gets applauded by his superiors as well as in the local press for uncovering minor drug-trafficking rings and arresting small time crooks. His dark secret, however, is that he simultaneously works as informant for the local mafia boss Pascal and his nefarious attorney Mazzanti. When the mafia starts demanding favors that are even for Malacarna too immoral, his whole empire falls apart and his loved ones become endangered. It may sound unusual, perhaps, but the strongest moments in "Shoot First, Die Later" are the dramatic and emotional scenes rather than the violent ones. Notably the sequences where Malacarne's proud and deep-honest father discovers the truth and gets confronted with the true nature of his beloved son are intense and genuinely painful to observe. Of course, Di Leo never forgets that he's busy making an unhinged Poliziotesschi and thus the film is luckily also full action and brutality, including two virulent car chases, shocking annihilations and senseless cruelty (poor kitten!). Luc Merenda ("The Violent Professionals", "Kidnap Syndicate") is sublime as the simultaneously loathsome and charming anti-hero, and he receives good support from the entire ensemble cast. The intelligent script, in combination with Di Leo's craftsmanship and the smooth soundtrack (Luis Bacalov) make this a top-10/must-see Poliziotesschi.
    5jordondave-28085

    I did not like the way it ended

    (1976) Il Poliziotto è marcio/ Shoot First, Die Later (In Italian with English subtitles) CRIME DRAMA/ ACTION

    Interesting familiar premise but with expected results starring Luc Merenda as Domenico Malacarne a young corrupt police lieutenant who always had no problems working with a particular don for illegal booze and cigarettes, until some elder bystander files a complaint regarding being blocked from the inside from getting out. For cautionary reasons the mob is pressing Domenco to go to the police station where the file is located and then retrieve it for the mob so that he can have it destroyed since it contains the license plate number that can connect a particular person with a current murder that happened nearby. Written and directed by Fernando Di Leo has some interesting things to say regarding the problems that can exist regarding corruption that involves the law of authority, which can be used as a scare tactic not to do business with the mob under any circumstances, that I have no doubt in my mind some of it is based on fact. I just wished there was a better result I guess would've made the film unrealistic.

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    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The two iconic car chase scenes in the film reportedly took up half the film's budget.
    • Quotes

      Police Commissioner Domenico Malacarne: Well, if it isn't Gianmaria in his Chinese dressing gown: Gianni in front and Maria in the behind.

      Gianmaria: Which side do you want to try first?

      Police Commissioner Domenico Malacarne: [walks past him to the group of men assembled] What a fine crowd! Bunch of studs, but where are the ladies? Or will Gianmaria do the honors for all of us? ... Listen, if you want to keep this fag as a personal pet, fine, but he disgusts me, understood? And I don't want him calling me at headquarters. Is that clear?

    • Alternate versions
      Compulsory cuts in accordance with BBFC Guidelines and policy on animal cruelty were required to release the film in the UK. Removed was a sequence in which a live cat is placed inside a plastic bag, which is then sealed, with subsequent sight of the live cat struggling inside the bag.
    • Connections
      Featured in Italian Gangsters (2015)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 24, 1978 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Shoot First, Die Later
    • Filming locations
      • Milano, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Cinemaster S.r.l.
      • Mara Films
      • Mount Street Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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