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A en crever

Original title: Morte sospetta di una minorenne
  • 1975
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2K
YOUR RATING
A en crever (1975)
ActionComedyCrimeHorrorThriller

While investigating the brutal murder of a young prostitute, a detective uncovers a sex-trafficking ring with connections to powerful people.While investigating the brutal murder of a young prostitute, a detective uncovers a sex-trafficking ring with connections to powerful people.While investigating the brutal murder of a young prostitute, a detective uncovers a sex-trafficking ring with connections to powerful people.

  • Director
    • Sergio Martino
  • Writers
    • Ernesto Gastaldi
    • Sergio Martino
  • Stars
    • Claudio Cassinelli
    • Mel Ferrer
    • Lia Tanzi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sergio Martino
    • Writers
      • Ernesto Gastaldi
      • Sergio Martino
    • Stars
      • Claudio Cassinelli
      • Mel Ferrer
      • Lia Tanzi
    • 27User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos76

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Claudio Cassinelli
    Claudio Cassinelli
    • Paolo Germi
    Mel Ferrer
    Mel Ferrer
    • Police Superintendent
    Lia Tanzi
    • Carmela
    Gianfranco Barra
    Gianfranco Barra
    • Teti
    Patrizia Castaldi
    Patrizia Castaldi
    • Marisa
    Adolfo Caruso
    • Giannino
    Jenny Tamburi
    • Gloria
    Massimo Girotti
    Massimo Girotti
    • Gaudenzio Pesce
    Carlo Alighiero
    Carlo Alighiero
    • Chief S.M.C.D. Office
    Franco Alpestre
    Franco Alpestre
    • Il Menga
    Fiammetta Baralla
    • Landlady
    Barbara Magnolfi
    Barbara Magnolfi
    • Floriana
    Aldo Massasso
    • Listri
    Roberto Posse
    • Killer With Sunglasses
    Carlotta Wittig
    Carlotta Wittig
    • Director of S.M.C.D.
    Bruno Alias
    • Man at Press Conference
    • (uncredited)
    Umberto Amambrini
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Ettore Arena
    • Pimp
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Sergio Martino
    • Writers
      • Ernesto Gastaldi
      • Sergio Martino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.51.9K
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    Featured reviews

    6thalassafischer

    Not What I Expected and Not in a Good Way

    Technically, The Suspicious Death of a Minor is a giallo. It has a mystery, and all of the exploitation elements of prostitution, crime, and violence. Too bad this film wanted to be trashy American tv.

    As an American watching Italian films, part of what I appreciate about giallos is that they are very Italian (though some are also Spanish) and differ from American mysteries and horror from the 1970s in significant ways - with the exception of Alfred Sole's Alice Sweet Alice and the British film Don't Look Now. These last two films are excellent English-language tributes to the giallo. But The Suspicious Death of a Minor is decidedly NOT an excellent tribute to American cinema.

    Essentially, it's a buddy comedy featuring an adult man in his 30s befriending a younger petty thief of about 20, who showers his mother and siblings with gifts he steals by snatching purses from street walkers and other tacky ventures. They team up to solve a murder, and from there it's all downhill.

    This mediocre giallo is filled to the brim with fist fights, numerous car accidents, and slapstick comedy better suited to an episode of The Dukes of Hazard and features mystery elements reminiscent of the cop soap Hart to Hart rather than of giallo-inspiration Agatha Christie. I mean, I can see why some people would like this sort of thing, but I just don't. There was some physical comedy which appeared to be an intentional homage to 1920s silent film which I appreciated, but it just wasn't enough to carry the flick. I cannot believe Sergio Martino was even involved with this.
    lazarillo

    Strange and mediocre for a Martino movie, but still pretty OK

    As other reviewers have said this is a strange movie. It is kind of an "unofficial" sixth entry to the series of excellent gialli directed by Sergio Martino in the early 1970's (although, as such, it is definitely step down from his previous film "Torso"). It has a very familiar "giallo-esqe" starting point where the investigation of a murdered underage prostitute leads to a lot of equally nasty killings. It also functions as a "poliziani" with lots of action and chase sequences and a cynical plot involving high-level political intrigue. Claudio Cassinelli plays a cop who makes Dirty Harry look restrained and by-the-book. He sleeps with prostitutes, consorts with minor criminals, feels up underage girls, shoots at civilians, and even leads the regular police on a wreckless high-speed chase for no real reason. The people he is after though are even worse, involved in everything from kidnapping to drugs and teenage prostitution to money laundering.

    But if all this isn't a little too much, the movie also tries to be a comedy. Cassanelli has a comical side-kick, and there is a running gag where he keeps breaking his glasses. Sometimes the comedy works, but other times it tends to sabotage the drama, like when he incorporates slapstick pratfalls into what is already a very over-long car chase (a bane of these type of movies ever since "The French Connection" was released in Italy). Fortunately, Cassinelli has charisma to spare in his first of many roles for director Martino (he didn't have the impressive breasts of Martino's other frequent collaborator Edwige Fenech, but he was no doubt a better actor). Jenny Tamburi, on the other hand, was pretty much wasted (both as an actress and pair of impressive breasts). But Mel Ferrer and most of the other obscure more actors acquit themselves pretty well. Not as good as Martino's earlier movies, but better than his later ones, and it has just been released in widescreen with English subtitles on (import) DVD. So check it out for yourself.
    7christopher-underwood

    It's just that it's not what you would expect

    If you are expecting a 'giallo' to unfold, and with the title, box art and opening of the film, you have every right to do so, you will be a little disappointed.

    For instead this is a right hotchpotch of styles and levels of seriousness. Once aware that this is going to go all over the place and include social comment and slapstick comedy whilst retaining a sleazy back story of under age prostitution one can relax and enjoy, at face value, a most likable film.

    Made after most of his 'giallo' greats this is always watchable with fine moments. It's just that it's not what you would expect.
    6rundbauchdodo

    Funny mix of giallo, crime movie and... comedy!

    This quite rare movie by Sergio Martino is an odd thing. As the title presumes, it starts off like a typical giallo: A man with sunglasses stalks and slashes a young woman. But after the murder, the movie becomes a film in style of the "poliziescho", the Italian crime movie of the 1970s, as the audience follows an undercover cop searching for the killer and also for the kidnappers of a young boy (but the audience doesn't know for a long time either that the cop really is one and that the murder case and the kidnapping rely to each other). All this culminates (within the first half of the movie) in a car chase which offers enough gags to make the scene pure slapstick.

    After that, the giallo style returns as the sunglassed killer goes on a killing spree. The crime movie is back as the plot unfolds to have its motive in mob-style drug dealing. And let's not forget: The killings have also to do with professional child prostitution and abuse. A really wild mix, even more so if one considers that the film sometimes boosts cheap (if mostly funny) humor.

    The cool sound track is reminiscent of the early scores by "Goblin" for Dario Argento's films, and it seems that Ernesto Gastaldi, who wrote the story and co-wrote the screenplay with director Martino, was influenced by Massimo Dallamano's great "La Polizia Chiede Aiuto" that was made one year earlier.

    All in all, this surely is not Martino's best film (his "pure" gialli are more enjoyable), but if one gets used to the unusual concoction of such different topics and styles, it's an entertaining and sometimes hilariously funny, fast paced and thrilling movie that even boosts some harsh social comment.
    7Bunuel1976

    SUSPECTED DEATH OF A MINOR (Sergio Martino, 1975) ***

    I had never heard of this before its Sazuma "Special Edition" DVD came along (though I actually acquired it recently from ulterior sources); consequently, I took the film to be a very minor Martino effort – so that I went into it without much expectations. However, I was pleasantly surprised by how enjoyable it all turned out to be – more so, in fact, than some of the director's more popular titles…though I can see how anyone hoping for a typical giallo will be confused and disappointed by its overriding poliziottesco elements, and even more so the sometimes daft comedy touches (on which I'll elaborate later on). Thematically, SUSPECTED DEATH OF A MINOR is an unofficial companion to the Massimo Dallamano trilogy of gialli revolving around teenage prostitution rackets – WHAT HAVE YOU DONE TO SOLANGE? (1972), WHAT HAVE THEY DONE TO YOUR DAUGHTERS? (1974) and RINGS OF FEAR (1978; completed by Alberto Negrin after the film-maker's tragic demise in a road accident); in that regard, it's hardly original, but Martino (whose last genre outing this proved to be) lends it his customary flair – aided a great deal by a splendid Goblinesque score courtesy of the obscure Luciano Michelini. Casting is another asset, led by Claudio Cassinelli – who would himself suffer an untimely death 10 years later in a helicopter crash while filming another Martino film! – as the unconventional hero (forever breaking his spectacles, he starts off as mystery-man and rogue but is eventually revealed to be a special undercover cop), Mel Ferrer as his long-suffering superior, and Massimo Girotti as the obligatory would-be respectable but all-powerful businessman pulling the strings. While there are obviously a number of female figures here (though, uncharacteristically, little nudity), none really emerges to take center-stage – including late starlet Jenny Tamburi who, despite a severely underwritten role, is still given an unwarranted cruel fate! The film comes to life principally in a handful of well-staged set-pieces, which take the form of chases rather than murders – an assassination attempt aboard a roller-coaster ride, a cliff-hanging sequence involving the opening roof of a cinema (which, according to an online review, is showing Martino's own YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY [1972]!), and the climactic across-the-water showdown between Cassinelli and Girotti. However, the most memorable (because it is so unexpected) certainly emerges the comical one in which the hero and his petty-thief pal take the Police on a wild ride – driving a rickety machine whose doors are constantly getting dislodged, Cassinelli asks his companion to throw them at their pursuers…but there's also a bit where a man riding a bike is left with a mere tricycle following a brush with the speeding vehicles and another which, hilariously, has a hit-and-run victim literally land and roll (repeatedly) on his head!

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    Related interests

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    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally called Commando terreur (1976), which became the name of a film, again for Claudio Cassinelli, the following year.
    • Goofs
      While chasing Paolo and Giannino, police run into another car, initially seen occupied by a driver and a passenger. By the shot at the point of collision, the passenger has disappeared, and in the shot immediately following, the car is empty of riders.
    • Quotes

      Paolo Germi: Italy is the asshole of Jurisprudence and the Law fucks it!

    • Connections
      Features Ton vice est une chambre close dont moi seul ai la clé (1972)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 12, 1975 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Mort suspecte d'une mineure
    • Filming locations
      • Cascina Gobba Metro Station, Milan, Italy(Giannino radios Paolo)
    • Production company
      • Dania Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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