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IMDbPro

Corléone à Brooklyn

Original title: Da Corleone a Brooklyn
  • 1979
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
465
YOUR RATING
Maurizio Merli and Mario Merola in Corléone à Brooklyn (1979)
CrimeThriller

Italian mobster, Michele Barresi heads for the safer climate of Brooklyn after his chief rival is gunned down in the small Sicilian town of Corleone. Commissioner Berni learns of his involve... Read allItalian mobster, Michele Barresi heads for the safer climate of Brooklyn after his chief rival is gunned down in the small Sicilian town of Corleone. Commissioner Berni learns of his involvement so Barresi takes out a contract on the only two people alive who can put him away. On... Read allItalian mobster, Michele Barresi heads for the safer climate of Brooklyn after his chief rival is gunned down in the small Sicilian town of Corleone. Commissioner Berni learns of his involvement so Barresi takes out a contract on the only two people alive who can put him away. One is Barresi's hired assassin and the other is his girlfriend. Unable to save the girl, Be... Read all

  • Director
    • Umberto Lenzi
  • Writers
    • Umberto Lenzi
    • Anselmo Manciori
    • Vincenzo Mannino
  • Stars
    • Maurizio Merli
    • Mario Merola
    • Van Johnson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    465
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Umberto Lenzi
    • Writers
      • Umberto Lenzi
      • Anselmo Manciori
      • Vincenzo Mannino
    • Stars
      • Maurizio Merli
      • Mario Merola
      • Van Johnson
    • 9User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Maurizio Merli
    Maurizio Merli
    • Lt. Giorgio Berni
    Mario Merola
    Mario Merola
    • Michele Barresi
    Van Johnson
    Van Johnson
    • Lt. Sturges
    Biagio Pelligra
    • Scalia
    Venantino Venantini
    Venantino Venantini
    • Lt. Danova
    Nando Marineo
    • Officer LoCascio
    Salvatore Billa
    Salvatore Billa
    • Peppino
    Sonia Viviani
    • Liana Scalia
    Laura Belli
    Laura Belli
    • Paola
    Massimo Sarchielli
    Massimo Sarchielli
    • Esposito
    Tony Askin
    • Train Man
    • (uncredited)
    Larry Atlas
    • Restaurant Hitman 2
    • (uncredited)
    Luca Barbareschi
    Luca Barbareschi
    • NY Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Joseph Bergmann
    • NY Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Ugo Bologna
    Ugo Bologna
    • Hitman
    • (uncredited)
    Nat Bush
    • Brooklyn Thug
    • (uncredited)
    Sal Carollo
    • Salvatore (NYC Restaurant Owner)
    • (uncredited)
    Giovanni Cianfriglia
    • Fake Medic
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Umberto Lenzi
    • Writers
      • Umberto Lenzi
      • Anselmo Manciori
      • Vincenzo Mannino
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.4465
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    Featured reviews

    8adrianswingler

    Loved It- Molto Ameno!

    At this writing the masses are rating it 6.6/10, which is just too low. 80% of those that took the time to write a review are giving it 8/10. That's more like it.

    I'm glad that it ended when it did. Da Brooklyn a Corleone would make a nice sequel, but not all in one movie!

    There's not a lot you can say in a review of this particular movie without a spoiler cropping up, so I guess I could say in that regard that it's extremely plot-driven. The characters are drawn in a much more believable way than the current crop of mafia orientated movies that suffer from way too much badda-bingness.

    I can't find a subtitles file for this anywhere, so I had to watch in English, which was OK for the Brooklyn scenes. If I ever get my hands on one, I would LOVE to create a version of this movie where the scenes in Sicily are done in Italian with English subtitles, and the scenes in Brooklyn are done in English. The script actually lends itself to that, with one of the locals in NY asking what a particular word is in Italian. That has to be in English, but the scenes in Sicily obviously weren't. Of course the elephant in the room is that real Sicilian wouldn't sound much like standard Italian, but, hey, close enough. That would be a truly awesome improvement to what is already a really solid flick. If someone PM's me with a subtitle file, I will share the result. I promise, it will be awesome. Well, it is already. My copy already has English/Italian sound tracks, so the project is very doable.
    8Coventry

    One Lenzi Poliziotesschi per day keeps the confinement stress away!

    Like the vast majority of the earth's population, yours truly is currently (May 2020) stuck in confinement at home due to a nasty new little virus called Corona. Also like most people, I'm often on the verge of going berserk, not being able to get out of the house and occasionally escape from (otherwise very lovable) wife and children. But, fortunately, I discovered a very effective method to release stress, and I would like to recommend it to as many people as possible! The secret to surviving this lockdown is reverting to the extreme violence and fast-paced action of the Italian Poliziotesschi from the 1970s, and then preferably those directed by Umberto Lenzi, since he was the undeniable master of this wonderfully twisted exploitation sub-genre.

    By 1979, the release year of "From Corleone to Brooklyn", Lenzi had already made more than a dozen euro-crime thrillers, but still he always succeeded in making them refreshingly original, genuinely tense, extraordinary well-scripted and full of exhilarating stunt work. And even though Maurizio Merli never once played another role in his career, he still depicts the role of obsessive police captain with a tremendous amount of passion, energy and persuasion. In this awesome thrill-ride, police commissioner Giorgio Berni (Merli) must escort the apprehended hitman Scalia from Palermo to New York, in order to get him to testify against the fled mafia boss Michele Barresi. The film is called "From Corleone to Brooklyn", but it might as well have been named "Six Million Ways to Die on the Way to the Airport, and another Four Million Ways to Die from the Airport to the Courthouse". Barresi calls upon all his mafia connections to execute Scalia before reaching New York, and Cpt. Berni risks his life, and even that of his loved ones, numerous times to prevent these assassination attempts from happening.

    There are several downright terrific sequences, like the virulent chase in the ultra-narrow streets of Palermo or the confrontation in the apartment block's basement, and the film also benefices from superior production values, a proper budget, a sublime soundtrack and a stellar supportive cast (including Van Johnson). Bring on the next confinement week!
    7Bezenby

    Merli Merli Merli Merli life is like a dream

    Having Maurizio Merli on your tail must be like having a pack of hounds chasing after you (or Pepe Le Pieu, if you want a less scary comparison). The perp in question here isn't even on the same continent - he's high tailed it to New York, and Merli still wants to track him down.

    That said, you can just jump on the next plane to the Big Apple without some sort of evidence. The gangster who fled is a mob boss wanted for ordering the murder of two other mob bosses in Palermo, and the cops in NYC have been tipped off that he's there, which makes him go on the run. Meanwhile, back in Italy, Merli and partner Venantino Venantini are trying to clean up the mess while various witnesses are bumped off by the Mafia. During a hit, Merli (well Venantino really) capture a button man alive, but the guy won't talk...until he finds out the mob boss has killed his sister.

    The main bulk of the film details Merli trying to get this witness to New York without him being killed by the masses of mobsters armed to the teeth, which makes for steamlined, tension filled plot as anyone they encounter could be a hitman, and mostly are! Merli punches, shoots, ducks, runs, scampers and growls through the entire film, even taking on a gang on New York street punks. I don't have a single complaint to make about this film!

    There's never a dull moment in this one, right up to the last second.

    We're also beginning to see a gradual shift of setting here as half of this is filmed in New York, soon to be a trend as we'll get to see The Bronx Warriors, 2019: After The Fall Of New York, Escape from The Bronx, the New York Ripper, Zombie Holocaust, Inferno, Manhattan Baby all taking place in New York city. Maybe the Italians just liked it there. Who knows?
    sangue

    one of the best

    From Corleone To Brookln is one of Umberto Lenzi's best crime films, which is saying lot because he directed many classics in the genre.

    Maurizio Merli plays Berni, the usual P.O. cop, and here he has to escort a lowlife criminal (Biagio Pellegra) from Italy to New York so he can testify against a mafia head.

    the mafia have set up a series of traps along the way, making things a bit difficult for the boys.

    at times very suspenseful, action packed and helped along by one of composer Franco Micalizzi's best scores, From Corleone To Brooklyn gets my highest recommendation.

    sadly, this would be the last "real" crime film Lenzi would make, but at least he went out with a bang!
    7The_Void

    Maurizio Merli runs the gauntlet!

    Umberto Lenzi made some of the best Italian crime thrillers of the seventies. Unfortunately, however, this late entry doesn't rank up alongside his best efforts; but even so, From Corleone to Brooklyn is a breezy and entertaining little thriller that is sure to be appreciated by fans of this genre. The film that had the biggest influence on the Eurocrime genre is most definitely Don Siegal's masterpiece Dirty Harry; but the genre went on to take in elements from many different films; and it would seem that the main influence for this film is the 1977 Clint Eastwood thriller 'The Gauntlet'. As usual, the plot focuses on organised crime in Italy. Maurizio Merli takes up a familiar role as Commissioner Berni (no relation to the better known Commissioner Betti, I think); a cop who puts his life on the line to transport a witness from Corleone to New York City in order to testify against a mob boss on trial for murder. Along the way, Berni and his prisoner face a series of traps set up by the Mafia.

    Maurizio Merli may be more than a little bit one-note; but he plays that one note so well that it's difficult to complain. He really does sleepwalk through the film; but it doesn't matter too much because this is still a very entertaining performance from the Eurocrime veteran. Merli is joined by the distinctive Biagio Pelligra and the pair has good chemistry together as they make the perilous journey from Italy to the USA. At just under ninety minutes; the film does feel rather short, however, and I have to say that it's the pacing that really lets it down. The build up to the central plot takes rather a long time and becomes a little tedious. Once we get into the main plot, things start to become a bit more exciting; but most of the film focuses on Italy, and by the time we get to the USA; there's not a great deal of time left. Still, the film is populated with gun fights and car chases and it never gets boring long enough to become really dull. The ending is rather good and there's a nice little sting in the tail. Overall, I wouldn't quite class this film as a 'must see', but it's certainly worth a look and Eurocrime fans will want to track it down.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Final film of Andrea Fantasia .
    • Goofs
      The main characters travel from Palermo (which is on the island of Sicily) to Rome via driving and a aboard train, with no mention of them having to take a boat across the Straights of Messina.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Eurocrime! The Italian Cop and Gangster Films That Ruled the '70s (2012)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 13, 1979 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • From Corleone to Brooklyn
    • Filming locations
      • Palermo, Sicily, Italy(marketplace shootout)
    • Production company
      • Primex
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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