Friday, August 31, 2007Kriminal
DIGG THIS ARTICLE. 1966, Italy. Starring Glenn Saxson, Helga Line, Andrea Bosic, Ivano Staccioli, Esmeralda Ruspoli, Dante Posani, Franco Fantasia, Susan Baker, Armando Calvo, Mary Arden, Rossella Bergamonti. Written by Umberto Lenzi and David Moreno. Directed by Umberto Lenzi.
Round about 1992 or so, when I was but a young sophomore in college, this guy Shannon started turning me on to all sorts of swanky adventure films which, in my myopic kungfu- and horror-centric worldview, I had yet to see. This was good stuff, the sort of films that would become the basis for my goals in life: The President's Analyst and the "Flint" movies starring James Coburn, Robin and the Seven Hoods starring the Rat Pack, Dean Martin's "Matt Helm" spy comedies, and a candy-colored slice of pop-art brilliance called Danger: Diabolik, directed by none other than acclaimed Italian horror master Mario Bava and based on an Italian comic book -- or fumetti if you are feeling all cultured and wantin' to use words from whatever the hell crazy moon-man language it is they speak in Italy (Yoruba, I believe). I vowed on that fateful night, with a thunderstorm raging through the heavens and the rain beating down mercilessly upon my half-clothed body (I was tan and didn't have a beer gut back then, so it's cool), that come hell or high water my life would one day reflect the lives of these heroes and anti-heroes, these capering criminals and swingin' spies who populated these Technicolor adventure confections, with the high-water mark for success being one of two -- preferably both -- scenes: either I would have a waterbed that would, at the press of a button, slide me and a chosen scantily clad bombshell (or two -- I'm a decadent libertine, after all) across the room, tilting as it goes so that we are dumped gracefully into a waiting Jacuzzi, at which time a fully stocked bar would conveniently lower itself from the ceiling (thank you, Matt Helm); or I would drive my black 1967 Jaguar E-Type Series I 4.2 Roadster down a ramp into my secret, underground space-age lair so I could go make love to me beautiful woman on a rotating circular bed covered in piles of recently stolen hundred dollar bills (a moment referenced so many times on Teleport City over the years that I shouldn't even need to tell you where it's from at this point). Truly, the inclusion of either or both of these elements into my daily schedule would signal that I had, indeed, made it. Anyway, it's a work still in progress. Seeing Diabolik was -- well, to call it life-altering is to be a bit overly dramatic, I think. But it was something like that, and the movie did have a curious influence on me. For years, there had been this certain look and style of movie playing in my head. I knew it existed, but I had no clue where to start looking for it. Keep in mind that this is some years before the widespread adoption of the World Wide Web, DVD, and the rise of digitally remastered two-disc special collectors' editions of Porno Holocaust. I knew these movies I wanted were very much like James Bond without being James Bond movies -- sometimes a little cheaper, often more fanciful and outlandish. But just as in those disconnected days with a dearth of information I was unable to find a manufacturer or store where I could purchase a black, slim-cut three-button suit (I'm quite particular about such things), so too was I at a lost as to where I might find these mythical movies I'd invented in my mind and filled with go-go dancing Eurobabes and dudes in fezzes and sunglasses throwing stiletto daggers at each others' backs. Diabolik realized many of these visions, and pointed in the direction I needed to face (Italy) to begin digging up the titles for which I'd been searching (though getting the movies associated with those titles, even in today's era of widespread easy availability, is still proving difficult). It was the key to unlocking a whole world I'd sort of known was out there but could never get to. In that sense, it was much the same as that fateful (oooh!) night that I, a confused teen in Buckner, Kentucky floundering for a sense of identity, stumbled across a broadcast of the USA Channel's Night Flight that was focusing on this stuff called punk rock. As corny -- or disturbed --as it sounds, there was much in this brightly-colored, fast-paced comic book of a movie that I found worth admiring. I appreciated Diabolik's amoral hedonism. He wasn't really a bad guy. He simply disregarded the agreed-upon rules of an over-governed society. He had his own code. And he had a bad-ass pad.
The years filed past, and with the spread of the World Wide Web in the latter half of the 1990s, I was able to start digging up bits and pieces of information about Eurospy films, Diabolik, and much to my elation, the many copycats and offshoots that, like me, had been inspired by this diabolical mastermind (I also found the right suit). Among these, and of particular interest to a guy who, even in his older age, still listens to The Misfits, was a cat named Kriminal, and he wore a skeleton suit. But lets turn the clock back even further, to the era of pulp stories, to where these super-criminals like Diabolik and Kriminal, and lots of other characters who wore cool masks and spelled their names with K's instead of C's (Krispy Kreme was among them, and possibly the most salacious -- certainly the most delicious), trace their roots. In 1911, France was introduced to the character of Fantomas, a suave master of disguise and, in stark contrast to many of the pulp characters with whom people were familiar (like Edgar Rice Burroughs' swashbuckling uber-man John Carter, or any number of smilin' cowboys), a thief. It wasn't the first case of a traditional villain being recast as a charismatic anti-hero, but it certainly opened the door for a wave of similar lawbreakers and misunderstood vigilantes. During the 1930s, there was an explosion in pulp culture of these mysterious costumed characters and anti-heroes, including The Shadow, The Spider, and Robert Howard's Conan the Barbarian. When superhero comic books made the scene in the 1930s, American tastes shifted toward brightly costumed do-gooders like Superman, though at least one notable character remained firmly rooted in the darker elements of the pulp stories: The Bat-Man. Inspired by Zorro and a character from the 1930 film The Bat Whispers, The Bat-Man, as his name was written at the time, is also heavily rooted in the amoral (or at least morally ambiguous) philosophy of pulp anti-heroes, and although Fantomas remains a great influence on the European comic market (and perhaps on The Bat-Man as well -- though both Fantomas and Batman seem to owe a debt to Dumas' Count of Monte Cristo), it's in the brutal origins of The Bat-Man that we can find many of the traits that would be commonplace among the fumetti stars of the 1960s. The tragic past, the vengeful mindset, the playboy alter ego, a distinct lack of superpowers compensated for by near superhuman levels of discipline and training, the willingness to kill and maim the guilty -- these things were in sharp contrast to Superman (though not entirely uncommon in early comic books) but would have been perfectly at home in the Italian comics of the 60s -- which is funny, in a way, considering that during the 60s, DC Comics turned Batman into a smiling boy scout.
Some combination of Batman and Fantomas (who would enjoy his own revival in the 1960s via a series of colorful French productions) cross-pollinated with James Bond beget Diabolik in 1962, the creation of sisters Angela and Luciana Giussani. As many post-war comics, Batman included, became more fantastical and juvenile, diabolic was a brash return to the seedy days of the pulps. He was an accomplished thief, a master of disguise, and an ace at killing anyone who meddles with his ambitions. Clad entirely in a black suit that show sonly his eyes, and accompanied by a beautiful woman who shares his vision, diabolic cut an audacious path through the otherwise sunny, happy era, reflecting no doubt the growing tension and frustration bubbling beneath the veneer of the perfect 50s and that would explode into a time of social upheaval and unrest during the latter half of the 60s. Diabolik's amoral mayhem struck a cord with readers, who quickly catapulted the master thief to the upper limits of pop culture stardom, thus making it obvious that others would follow in Diabolik's steps, each one trying to be more outrageous and offensive than the last. Among the many characters inspired by Diabolik was Kriminal, created by Luciano Secchi working under the pseudonym Max Bunker. Kriminal was a master thief from England, most notable for his curious choice in clothing for a grown man: a black and yellow skeleton suit with a creepy skull mask. It's a difficult look to pull off, but he makes it work. Kriminal -- whose alter ego was Anthony Logan -- did his best to one-up Diabolik, exhibiting sometimes absurd levels of cruelty and violence, as well a parade of increasingly scantily-clad females that he couldn't help but menace. I mean, the dude was wearing a skeleton suit. You either have to menace or be laughed at. It was this potent combination of violence and hitherto unheard of levels of near-nudity that got Kriminal in trouble with so many critics and censors -- and also made it such a hit with readers. Like Diabolik, Batman, Fantomas, and the Mexican luchadores lead by El Santo, Kriminal had no actual superpowers. He couldn't fly or run at super-speeds, and if he needed to kill you, he usually did it with a Luger. In time, as with Batman and Diabolik, Kriminal's sadistic streak was softened, until eventually he really only killed those who were asking for it anyway, though as far as I can tell, he never did get over his need to continually menace a buxom babe whose blouse was falling off. No worries, though, because another skeleton suit wearing anti-hero was waiting to take up the slack and commit depraved acts of which even Kriminal couldn't approve. But we'll come to him in a later review of a different movie.
Although he followed in the footsteps of Diabolik in print, Kriminal beat him to the big screen. In 1966, Kriminal made the jump to movies in a feature film directed by Umberto Lenzi. Among American fans of Italian cult films, Lenzi is probably one of the best known and most misunderstood directors. And in fact he's most misunderstood because of what he's best known for. Lenzi's two best known films in American happen to be his two worst films: 1981's grubby Make Them Die Slowly (aka Cannibal Ferox), a nonsensical cannibal exploitation film that exists for little more reason than to showcase a carnival of primitive tortures in the half hour; and 1980s City of the Walking Dead (aka Nightmare City), a giddily idiotic, totally incompetent, but highly entertaining zombie film. They're both terrible, though amusingly so. Judged on the merits of these two movies, Lenzi perhaps would deserve to placed at the bottom of the barrel. But these are barely his films, and it's obvious that he was just cashing a paycheck. Lenzi's true talent was in the crime film, and during the 1970s he directed a string of blistering hits that are brutal, fast-paced, and proof of what a phenomenal director he could be when the material moved him. If you've poked around Teleport City for any length of time, you know that , Violent Naples is one of my absolute favorites, but it's hardly the only great cop film he made. From Corleone to Brooklyn, The Cynic, The Rat, and The Fist, Gang War in Milan -- these are all top notch films, and alongside Enzo G. Castellari, Lenzi practically created the poliziotteschi genre. In 1966, Lenzi was already a veteran of the Italian exploitation market, having worked his way through Eurospy films, sword and sandal adventures, and historical hellraisers. Making the shift from Eurospy to comic book super-villain hijinks was no problem, as the fumetti-inspired films of the late 60s were a direct outgrowth of the espionage genre and shared many of the same trappings and stylistic flourishes. His big-screen adaptation of Kriminal looks very much like a big budget Eurospy film, taking the strangely clad anti-hero on a globe-trotting adventure that leads from the gallows of London to Spain, and finally to Istanbul in pursuit of some diamonds. Or something. To be honest, the DVD I have of this movie isn't subtitled, and I learned enough Italian to get by in the country on a two-week long road trip. So my grasping of some of the nuances of the plot -- if indeed Kriminal can be said to have nuances -- is tenuous in many spots.
Dutch actor Rolf Boes (under the pseudonym Glenn Saxson, which is Italian for "Son of Clarence Clemens") stars as the titular Kriminal, about to be hanged for attempted robbery of the Crown Jewels of England -- a fate he escapes by somehow turning out the lights. Look, if you go into a movie about a guy who runs around in a skeleton costume and immediately start complaining about the implausibility of his escape trick, then you're not going to get anywhere in life. He is pursued by Inspector Milton of Scotland Yard, because all costumed villains need an arch-nemesis at Scotland Yard, where they have a whole division dedicated to opposing garishly costumed super-villains from Italy (like Marco Materazzi). Kriminal then gets involved with a diamond heist, and along the way he romances ladies, kills people, and plants a bomb in the inspector's office that is specifically designed to blow off the shirts of attractive women (or so it seems when we witness the aftermath of his bomb). Kriminal doesn't need to steal -- he could just market this bomb to anyone who attended college in an 80s teen sex comedy, and he'd rake in millions. When Lenzi is at his best as director, his films are snappy and crisply paced. Kriminal is one of his best. It never slows down, but it never goes so fast that you can't stop to luxuriate in all the exotic location work or admire all the swank 60s fashion. It's a much more down-to-earth film than Danger: Diabolik, which two years later would take the genre to a level of pop-art gorgeousness unmatched even by the mighty Barbarella (herself another saucy comic book character), but being less phantasmagorical than Danger: Diabolik leaves plenty of room for swingin' style, and Kriminal has it in spades. The skeleton costume looks a bit ludicrous, but even Glenn Danzig could never really pull a skeleton body stocking off. Within the context of the film, set in such a bizarre universe as the one inhabited by all the fumetti anti-heroes, we can quickly learn to accept the skeleton costume. Plus, as goofy as it looks, it's also sort of awesome. I mean, he puts on a skeleton costume, throws daggers at people, steals from the Queen of England, and makes love to gorgeous Italian women. Truly, Kriminal leads THE LIFE. And Glenn Saxson looks suave and dashing as the lady-killer (among others he kills). Saxson had previously starred in Alberto De Martino's spaghetti western Django Shoots First (De Martino, incidentally, directed a number of great films, including the top notch Eurospy capers Special Mission Lady Chaplin and Operation Kid Brother starring Neil Connery, as well as the infamous poliziotteschi meets giallo , Blazing Magnum starring Stuart Whitman and John Saxon). He would go on to star in a follow-up Kriminal film (which I've yet to see), a couple other actioners, and then a string of saucy 70s erotica with titles like The Hostess Also Likes to Blow the Horn and School of Erotic Enjoyment. He's perfectly suited for the role of Kriminal, and somehow, he manages not to look completely ludicrous when he's strutting around with his mask off and the rest of the skeleton suit still on. Supporting him is a cast of Italian exploitation stalwarts lead by Andrea Bosic as the harried Scotland yard inspector (he would later be a harried bank manager endlessly hassled by Diabolik in that movie). Bosic had appeared previously in Lenzi's Sandokan the Pirate adventures starring American muscleman and Hercules star Steve Reeves, and he starred in something called Two Mafiosi Against Goldfinger, which sounds like something I really need to see. The bombshell factor is fulfilled by a couple of chicks whose character names I couldn't keep straight because I was too busy yelling, "Dove il bagno! I know what that means!" Look, when you speak like five lines of Italian, you get excited when you can understand what the hell someone says. But I do know German-born Helga Line plays ravishing twin sisters Inge and Trudy, hired to transport jewels so Kriminal won't know which one to follow (he still figures it out, because he wears a fuckin' skeleton costume). Line's been in tons of films where I caught myself admiring her: War Goddesses, Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon, Mission Bloody Mary, Special Mission Lady Chaplin, Password: Kill Agent Gordon; she was even in another fumetti-inspired comic book adventure, 1968's Avenger X, as well as a Santo film! She also made a lot of horror films in the 70s, including Vampire's Night Orgy and some Paul Naschy films where he doesn't even turn into a werewolf. Far and away one of the all-time great Euro cult beauties, she looks painfully beautiful (in double, no less) here as the woman pursued by the diabolical master of evil.
Highlighting the wonderful art design and snappy pace is an incredible swinging score by Roberto Pregadio and Romano Mussolini. While I would still class Kriminal the movie slightly below Danger: Diabolik, the score for Kriminal is outstanding, going so far as to outclass and out-swank Ennio Morricone's great Diabolik score. It keeps perfect pace with the movie and, like the movie, is equal parts suave, menacing, and playful. Even working with the language barrier, Kriminal is a great movie. Lots of action, lots of wit, sexy ladies, and a guy in a skeleton outfit swimming around in ponds and stuff. It easily proves the equal of even the best espionage and comic book capers, qualifying for such rarefied company as Danger: Diabolik, Deadlier than the Male, the Flint movies, and the Connery Bonds. There wasn't a minute of the film that didn't thoroughly delight me, and if I had to drum up any sort of complaint, it would be the cliffhanger ending (Diabolik did the same thing). I know, I know. There's a sequel, with the lead cast all back in place (and directed by Fernando Cerchio). But I haven't been able to find that one yet. No matter -- Kriminal is incredibly cool and highly recommended, even if you don't speak a lick of Italian. Hot dames and a guy in a skeleton suit are, after all, the international language we can all understand. In addition to a sequel, the fact that much of this film was shot in Istanbul inspired Turkish filmmakers to launch their own Kriminal franchise. Kriminal the fumetti character was eventually succeeded by the even more brutal and irredeemable Killing in a series of photonovels -- comic books that use still photography of live-action scenes. As outraged as people were by the Kriminal comic books, Killing was even worse. Kriminal had been banned in France and eventually toned down even in Italy, but Killing more than made up for it, with our skeleton-clad evil-doer sometimes crossing the line into outright psychopathic terrorist and serial killer. In love with the Kriminal movie and inspired by the even more absurd Killing photonovels, Turkish producer-director Yilmaz Atadeniz made Kilink Istanbul'da, and our favorite murderous thief in a skeleton suit found a new home in Turkey. To be continued... Labels: Action: Superheroes, Director: Umberto Lenzi, Eurospies, Fumetti, Guys Dressed as Skeletons, Series: Kriminal and Kilink, Year: 1966 posted by Keith at 5:53 PM | 4 Comments Monday, February 27, 2006Violent Naples
1976, Italy. Starring Maurizio Merli, John Saxon, Barry Sullivan, Elio Zamuto, Maria Grazia Spina, Silvano Tranquilli, Massimo Deda, Guido Alberti, Pino Ferrara. Directed by Umberto Lenzi. Written by Vincenzo Mannino.
Click here for Man with a Moustache Month Roll-Call This post brings us full circle, back to the beginning of the article and the film that sparked my initial interest in poliziottechi and the tough Italian cops with big, thick moustaches that have served as the defining characters for Teleport City's Man with a Moustache Month. If we do this again next year, maybe we'll focus on Indian or Filipino films, two national cinemas that have traditionally and still enthusiastically embrace heroes with moustaches. I didn't initially mean for this month to focus solely on poliziottechi films, but it sort of turned out to be a brief introductory history to the genre, regardless of my original intentions to also review at least one 1970s Burt Reynolds films. After all, what would a moustache month be without Burt? But one thing led to another, and I didn't want to write about Violent Naples without tracing its roots back to High Crime, or without covering Violent Rome, the first film to introduce Maurizio Merli as the quintessential poliziottechi cop. And then it seemed like good form, before moving on to Violent Naples, to touch on director Umberto Lenzi's first foray into the genre, in the form of Milano Rovente. So now, finally, we've come to the beginning again. Violent Rome was good but not great. Milano Rovente was much the same, only slightly less so. It seems inevtibale, at least looking back, that Umberto Lenzi would end up directing a poliziottechi film starring Maurizio Merli. The intersection of careers finally happened in Violent Naples, in my opinion the best of all the many poliziottechi that came out during the 1970s. This was, as I stated (I think -- perish the thought I would go back and reread my own material for confirmation), the first poliziottechi I saw, and to say it blew me away would be a mild understatement. My initial review was so half-assed, however, that I vowed on the grave of my long lost twin brother who was killed by Communist agents in Vietnam, to one day rectify the situation and rewrite the review. Also, to bring down Communism and avenge my brother's death. On the second count, I can say, "Mission accomplished." Now it is time to finally turn my attention to the first count. ![]() I started my career as a cult and obscure film aficionado by growing up on Godzilla, Mazinger, and kungfu instead of Sesame Street, Smurfs, and Disney films, though I did see a smattering of each of those as a wee one. I think it was Pinocchio that initially put me off Disney films. You see, the first film I remember seeing in a movie theater was Jaws, and I adored it. Oh ho ho! The shark is biting Quint in half? What a grand old time this is! Very shortly thereafter, I went with my mother to see a re-release of Disney's Pinocchio, and spent a considerable amount of time screeching like a banshee with a stubbed toe as I crouched and hid in the aisle, terrified beyond belief, as I was, by the big, aggressive whale. My parents then vowed to only let me see movies in which salty sea captains are bitten in half amid a vibrant splash of blood, and forever protect me from seeing things like a cartoon whale with angry eyebrows drawn on it. Years later, I still get a shudder down my spine any time I walk by a Carvel (the ice cream parlor or James) and see Fudgy the Whale staring back at me...waiting...waiting... My third movie was one of the Herbie films, but all I remember about that was a scene where they're driving across a lake or ocean and some guy is taking a shower atop Herbie. I do seem to also recall regretting that no shark showed up to bite him in half, but I hear it wasn't meant to be that kind of film. Some couple of decades after becoming conscious of my status as a film fan, it's very difficult to wow me. It's easy to please me. Hell, put a guy in a ninja suit or a go-go dancing woman on screen, and you've pretty much got my vote. Throw in some ass-kicking midgets and you got a classic. But it's been rare lately that I am totally blown away by anything anymore. Happily, we seem to be entering a golden era of truly batty films finding exposure on DVD thanks to companies like Mondo Macabro and plenty of others, and I am constantly assured by the fact that no matter what I see, there is always something else waiting in the wings to say, "You thought that was insane? Wait 'til you see this one, baby." Yes, in my dreams all weird cult films refer to me as "baby." What's your point? Umberto Lenzi's Violent Naples -- also known as Napoli Violenta and Violent Protection (not to be confused with Violent Professionals) -- is one of those films that altered my perception of cinema significantly. I'd never seen anything like it, or rather, I'd seen things like it, but never anything quite so dramatically over-the-top. Violent Naples opens with Maurizio Merli reprising his Violent Rome role as Inspector Betti, freshly transferred down to sunny, one assumes given the title, violent Naples. He isn't in Naples five minutes before he stumbles upon a group of young punk car thieves just begging him to slam a car hood on them and bounce their skulls off a windshield a couple of times. After all, he wouldn't want to show up for his first day at his new job empty-handed. The film establishes a savage tone from the opening scene and never relents in its grim study of cops and criminals gone mad. Merli's main goal, and the main plot of the film, is to bust up the protection rackets. But that doesn't stop him from beating the ass of pretty much every other type of criminal he crosses paths with. And the crime in Naples is rampant. Rapists, fencers, thieves -- you name 'em, he's probably stomping on their head and yelling such memorable lines as "You make me want to box your ears in!" A dapper bank robber (Elio Zamuto) proves to be a particularly irksome thorn in Betti's side, as every time a heist occurs, the thief walks in mere moments later to sign in with his parole officer, thus supposedly exonerating himself from any suspicion -- well, from any suspicion except Betti's, causing the grim inspector to run his own high-speed experiment through the streets of Naples to see just how quickly a man could flee the scene of a crime and make it to the police precinct. In fact, in Violent Naples world, it would seem that roughly 90% of the population of Naples is actively involved in mugging, raping, murdering, roughing up, or stealing from the other 10%, who were apparently transplanted there expressly so they could be victimized by the rest of the population. Now, I've heard plenty of stories about how everyone in Naples in a con artist, thief, and all-around criminal, but Violent Naples goes to great lengths to take the complete insanity of crumbling urban centers in the 1970s and ratchet the madness up well past the breaking point. Amid the chaos, Betti befriends a streetwise young kid, the son of a mechanic who refuses to pay protection money to the local thugs. He's even been rallying the people to stand up for themselves and not be bullied. Betti first encounters the kid when he sees him slowly crossing the street, holding up traffic, and pretending to be a cripple. When the kid gets to the other side, he laughs and flips everyone off before running merrily down the street. This delights Betti to no end. And in case you're wondering, why yes, a film like Violent Naples pretty much does guarantee that at some point, sweet sweet irony will result in the kid becoming an actual cripple. I said the movie was good; I never said it wasn't somewhat heavy-handed. Lenzi showcases a tight, relentless pace that I think remains unmatched by any film in the genre. Along with From Corleone to Brooklyn and The Cynic, The Rat, and the Fist (both also starring Maurizio Merli), this is the best film he's ever made, and as I said in the review of Milano Rovente, it's a shame Lenzi isn't known for these films instead of the slapdash splatter stuff that came later in his career. His command of mood, and his ability to infuse every scene with both tension and pathos is amazing. It's because the film takes the time to generate sympathy with the characters that the tension becomes so heightened. These aren't character studies or anything, but the script by Vincenzo Mannino wastes no time in creating archetypal characters that quickly become easy to identify with. Mannino was one of the most reliable poliziottechi screen writers, having previously worked on scripts for both Violent Rome and High Crime. Violent Naples takes the strong points from each of those films and blends them into a truly enthralling mix of outrageous action and high melodrama. He'd go on to pen the scripts for Italia Mano a Armato, which is the second film in the Commissario Betti series that began with Violent Rome (and sadly, I haven't seen it yet), and From Corleone to Brooklyn, not to mention writing the script for Ruggero Deodato's completely loopy Raiders of Atlantis. Beyond Lenzi's frantic direction and Mannino's solid script, this movie belongs to Maurizio Merli. His portrayal of the hero with a broken heart, the cop on the edge, is as picture perfect a performance as you're ever likely to see in an action film hero. Every expression, every line drips with seething rage that betrays a sorrowful belief in compassion and justice at its core. Merli gnashes his teeth, grimaces, and exudes world-weary grimness at a level that will never be matched. He always seems five seconds away from having steam shoot out his ears accompanied by the sound effect of a steam locomotive's whistle. He's over the top, but in a way that matches the material perfectly and makes you notice the many strengths while being crazy enough that you miss the weak points. It's been said that Merli took the role very seriously, that he never approached it with anything but the utmost seriousness, and the acting job definitely benefits from the force of his conviction. So into his role was Merli that he often went (they say) a bit overboard in the fight scenes as well as the dramatic scenes, throwing extras and stuntmen around with such force that more than a few injuries resulted. Another actor might have been tempted to wink at the camera from time to time, to engage in a little good-natured camping up of the material. But not Merli. From beginning to end, through all his teeth grinding and fist shaking, you have no doubt that this man believes fiercely in Commissario Betti, and that ferocity comes through in the role and propels the film. He's also helped by a superb supporting cast which includes familiar workhorse John Saxon as a seedy businessman who ends up, more or less against his will, helping Betti take down the protection rackets. Saxon is always a dependable performer, even if like most working actors he's appeared in a colossal number of stinkers. Other dependable stalwarts include Barry Sullivan as a slimy mafioso behind the protection game, Luciano Rossi, and Pino Ferarra (who also starred in a movie with one of my all-time favorite titles: Ubalda, All Naked and Warm starring my undisputed all-time favorite cult film actress, Edwige Fenech). No one lets the film down, and even our child actor is tolerable (but just barely). But let's not forget the action. Umberto Lenzi pours on the thrills thick as molasses in January, and he films and edits the action sequences with an expert hand. Violent Naples delivers an almost uninterrupted orgy of brutal violence. Fistfights, shoot-outs, car chases, tram chases, the shaking of young punks by determined police inspectors -- there's plenty of fist-shaking action to get the blood pumping. Some of the violence is, as is common for the genre, gratuitous, gruesome, and over-the-top, but none of it is of the splatter variety. Everything is possessed of that gritty 70s realism that makes even the most unbelievable moments seem perfectly acceptable and more intense than if they'd happened in a film with more vibrant colors or less grainy film stock. Free from the glitz and shiny sheen that would undermine action films in the 1980s, Violent Naples -- like many of the action films that defined the "ultra-violence" trend that began with Dirty Harry -- feels completely and believable and understated even when it's being completely fantastical and over-the-top. There's very little in the way of subtlety on display in Violent Naples. This isn't the film for understated nuance or hidden meaning. This is bloody melodrama played on the grand scale, holding nothing back. When a moment is symbolic, Violent Naples delivers it wit a heavy-handed thud to make sure you get it. But everything is played with such earnestness that it remains compelling despite the blunt delivery. The final scene marks the best moment in Merli's tragically short career (when the police film fell out of vogue in the 1980s, Merli devoted himself to physical fitness, but died at the age of 49 of a sudden heart attack during a game of tennis). Betti, disgusted with everything he has seen in Rome and Naples, decides to throw in the towel. Burned out and disillusioned, Betti turns in his badge and heads for the airport. He's sick of trying to work inside a corrupt system, one that allows you to yell the required line, "This damn system is designed to protect the guilty and punish the victims!" He's tired of the pain, the frustration, and the ultimate futility of the brutal war he wages every day. He's heading for a new life in the sun and a chance to simply relax and forget it all. Until he sees that little kid again, once again limping slowly across an intersection and wincing with pain as he holds up traffic. Only this time, he's not pretending to be maimed. Betti stares at the boy as he struggles through the crosswalk. When the light changes, Betti flashes a devastating look of battered, world-weary grimness (his signature expression) and turns the car around. Back to the precinct. Back to the fight. It's not an especially unique or unexpected sort of ending, but Merli's expression during this final moment amplifies its power considerably. Like the classical warrior with a broken heart, try as he might, he can't turn his back on a world in need. Bloodied and saddened, he must continue. And it is in this moment that the underlying compassion that fuels this and many of the best poliziottechi shines through. Because it's not about power -- Betti has had it made perfectly clear that a man like him has no power, will never have power, and will never ultimately beat those who do have the power. Betti can't turn his back on the world because, although it has broken his heart, even though the struggle may be futile, it's still worth fighting for. As he heads back into the maelstrom accompanied by the superb score from Franco Micalizzi, it's hard not to get carried away by the raw emotion of the moment. For my money, what little of it I have, action films simply don't come any better than Violent Naples. And moustaches and grim cops don't come any better than Maurizio Merli. Labels: Director: Umberto Lenzi, Poliziotteschi, Stars: Maurizio Merli, Year: 1976 posted by Keith at 3:03 PM | 1 Comments Tuesday, February 14, 2006Milano Rovente
1973, Italy. Starring Antonio Sabato, Phillipe Leroy, Antonio Casagrande, Carla Romanelli, Alessandro Sperli, Franco Fantasia, Tano Cimarosa, Marisa Mell. Directed by Umberto Lenzi. Written by Franco Enna, Ombretta Lanza, Umberto Lenzi. Purchase from Amazon.com.
Click here for Man with a Moustache Month Roll-Call Like Enzo Castellari, Umberto Lenzi is no stranger to followers of global cult and genre cinema. And like Enzo, it's a shame that Lenzi is best known for his worst films. Invariably, mentioning Lenzi is going to cause a person -- the type of person who wouldn't just say, "Who the hell are you talking about" -- to think of either Cannibal Ferox (better known to many as Make them Die Slowly or Nightmare City (also known to many as City of the Walking Dead). Though each film has its fans, and Nightmare City has zombies that wear sweater vests and can pilot huge military transport planes, neither is an especially high water mark in the history of cinema in general, or even Italian genre film in particular. Memorable? Sure. Entertaining? Well, Nightmare city sure is. But as examples of the notion that Umberto Lenzi might be anything other than a hack exploitation director whose skill level just barely managed to surpass Bruno Mattei and Claudio Fragasso, those two films aren’t going to give you a whole lot with which to work. Which is kind of a shame, because Umberto Lenzi was, for a time, a director who showed a remarkable panache for directing gritty, action-packed cop films. Poliziotteschi ended up being Lenzi's forte, but like most Italian directors, he could only settle into one genre for as long as that genre was wildly popular. As soon as box office returns and public interest waned, the entire Italian exploitation film industry would fold up camp like a bunch of Mongolian nomads in search of the greener pastures of whatever genre or subgenre caught movie-goers' fancies. During the late 1970s and into the 1980s, that meant plying one's trade in zombie and sleazy cannibal exploitation pictures. But just as zombie film auteur Lucio Fulci proved he couldn’t leave splashy horror film gore behind when he tried to make a gangster film (Contraband), Lenzi could never really divorce himself from the street crime and action with which he enjoyed so much success during the early 1970s. So you get an army of zombies that fire Uzis and develop invasion tactics in Nightmare City, and you get an excessively drawn-out big city Mafia subplot that seems like it was taken from an entirely different film and grafted onto the emerald-green gore of Make Them Die Slowly in more or less random spots. Prior to his entry into the poliziottechi genre, Lenzi was tinkering with the usual types of films, including giallo (some better than others) and the film that would serve as the kick-off for the Italian cannibal craze, Man from Deep River. In 1973, he made his first foray into the poliziottechi film, or rather, into a poliziottechi-style crime film since Milano Rovente (Gang War in Milan) is more about gangsters than cops -- something that would become fairly common, though both cop and gangster films tend to get lumped into the same category. Milano Rovente is a pretty basic film: Italian pimps with moustaches battle French drug dealers who don't have moustaches. From time to time Italian cops, also with moustaches, show up to survey the aftermath. But of course, most poliziottechi films take a very lean, basic premise and lump ten tons of convoluted insanity on top of it. ![]() Milanese pimp Toto and his partner Lino (Antonio Casagrande, whose last name is also a place many people want to live) are enjoying the sweet life as the top pimps in the fashion capitol of Italy. They also run a fruit and vegetable wholesale company on the side. The sweet life is rudely interrupted, however, when some of their ladies start turning up dead in pools and other inconvenient locations, thus cutting into their business and attracting the unwanted attention of the police. It turns out that French drug dealers lead by the imaginatively named Frenchie (I'm sure his full name was Frenchie McFrench, The Frenchest Frenchman in Frenchtown) is trying to get Toto's attention. He has a deal for the A number one pimp: let the French gang use Toto's women to distribute drugs, and vastly increase both gang's profits. If Frenchie wanted to enter into a business partnership, he probably should have picked a friendlier way than killing off Toto's best prostitutes just to get an audience with the man. Obviously, Toto isn't all that thrilled with the proposition. But Frenchie is adamant: cut them in on the action, or ignite a gang war. So Toto takes a look at himself and sees a lean, good looking Italian guy with an impressive moustache and flaired slacks that flap majestically in the wind every time he lifts his leg to kick someone's ass, so he and Lino chose the war. Which is why, I suppose, the title of this film translates to Gang War in Milan instead of Gang Cooperation in Milan, which would be more of an instructional video than an action film, something that clues in young up-and-comers in both the drug and prostitution rackets to the benefits of working together. Anyway, the French drug dealers don't have moustaches, so what use does Toto have for them? Knowing that they are outgunned, however, Lino calls in the help of Milanese gangster Billy Barone to provide some serious firepower as the Italian pimps fight for nationalistic glory and their right to smack women around and feel their boobs. On the surface, Milano Rovente isn't much of a film. It lacks the immediate emotional impact of High Crime and the over-the-top violence of Violent Rome, though it is plenty violent. But where as Castellari got a kick out of grinding human bodies beneath the hard metal and rubber of motor vehicles, and Violent Rome spent its time watching Maurizio Merli strut around down and kick everyone's ass, the violence in Milano Rovente centers largely on watching drug dealers or pimps smack women around. When the French drug dealers want to strike a blow to tough pimp Toto Cangemi (Antonio Sabato), they do it by roughing up or killing off some of Toto's hookers (yes, Wizard of Oz fans, relish that last sentence). When Toto wants to get back at Frenchie, he usually seems to do it by smacking some woman around. Beating up prostitutes just isn't cool. It's not like watching Maurizio Merli throw on his raincoat to walk down the block and box the ears of some punks on a cheap little motorbike. When the gangs finally go head to head, Umberto Lenzi showcases a steady hand in the direction. Everything is tightly plotted and paced, and there are plenty of the shoot-outs and car chases in little Fiat type cars that Italian action films demand. Antonio Sabato is a convincing bad-ass with a great moustache, and he turns in a solid performance. The main problem is that his character is pretty rotten. He's shallow, selfish, mean, and not at all heroic. He's not even a heroic anti-hero. He just kind of a scumbag, no better or worse than the drug dealers in the film; the protagonist only because the narrative has chosen to focus on him. He's not one of those pimps with a heart of gold who cares for and really protects his ladies. He'd probably be throwing them into pools himself if the French guy hadn't beat him to it. That seems to be his main beef: that there are his women to beat up and exploit and kill when they piss him off, and he's taken umbrage at some outsider stepping in and getting rough in his stead. When Toto falls for beautiful Jasmine (Marisa Mell, one of our favorite and most tragic Euro starlets, last seen around these parts in Danger: Diabolik!), he's more than willing to stab Lino in the back and jet off to Switzerland, leaving the whole mess on the shoulders of his friend. When, in the end, he discovers the price of burning your bridges and being an asshole, you can't really sympathize with him. He's a dog, and he dies a dog's death, only not one of those cute dogs or one of those dogs who travels across the Arctic tundra to save someone. So maybe not a dog. Let's just say he gets what he deserves. Still, Sabato's performance is strong and engaging even if you come to hate his character. He's not quite Stuart Whitman in Blazing Magnum despicable, but that's only because he starts out as a pimp, rather than as a cop who does things like ram hot curling irons up the arse of kungfu-powered transvestites (yeah, Blazing Magnum is really something, even without any significant moustache action). Sabato is also surrounded by a solid caste of Italian genre film regulars. Marisa Mell turns in a good performance and looks dazzling with long black hair. Lenzi's direction is steady but not outstanding. This was his first foray into the genre, and he seems in many places to be feeling things his out. This is his Titus Andronicus as I like to call these types of films -- the testing of the waters, raw and unpolished but packed with the themes and stylistic touches, albeit in cruder form, that would come to fruition in later works. The despicable protagonist seems to foreshadow Thomas Milian's grotesque thug in Almost Human, for example. Whatever the case, even this ultimate footnote in the world of the Italian crime film is light years better than any of the gorier, more sensational films that Lenzi is best known for. It wasn't completely obvious in Milano Rovente that the genre had found its signature director. It was as mean-spirited as Violent Rome without the redemption of a solid main character like Merli's Inspector Betti. And it definitely lacks both the emotional engagement and mind-blowing action of High Crime. Still, it was still decently entertaining, and Lenzi had a nice touch. The test would be to see what would happen if you took Lenzi and paired him with Maurizio Merli. What happened was Violent Naples, a film that is consistently (along with High Crime and another Lenzi-Merli vehicle, From Corleone to Brooklyn) tagged as one of the absolute best action films of the seventies. Continued... Labels: Director: Umberto Lenzi, Poliziotteschi posted by Keith at 4:55 PM | 2 Comments Tuesday, November 20, 2001The Executioner (Henry Silva)
1974, Italy. Starring Tomas Milian, Laura Belli, Henry Silva, Gino Santercole, Anita Strindberg, Guido Alberti, Ray Lovelock. Directed by Umberto Lenzi.
You know, you think you've seen it all, and then along comes something like this to make you realize the world still has so much to offer you, so much worth living for. After Violent Rome, I thought I'd seen the paramount in cinematic cynicism and poliziotteschi brutality. Ha! I was just being primed for this little baby, which like most poliziotteschi films, actually caused me to howl with wild abandon and run around the living room. I was even tempted to climb up through the skylight and do a suggestive dance on the snowy rooftop, but then I figured my Hasidic neighbors would not be as happy about that as I was. For starters, reviewing The Executioner allows us to right a fairly heinous wrong. Frankly, I'm a bit astonished that we got this far at Teleport City without ever reviewing a film featuring Henry Silva. It's something of a miracle, really, to review so many 1970s B-movie actioners and not run across Henry Silva. It's like reviewing 1970s/1980s made-for-tv movies and not mentioning Clu Gulager, or doing a website that reviews only films made for the Lifetime Network, yet never reviewing a film that either stars Meredith Baxter Berney or is about a woman who is pursued by an abusive ex-husband but no one believes her (and that woman would probably be played by Meredith Baxter Berney). Silva is one of those guys few people can name, but everyone can recognize, sort of like Al Leong and Eddie Deezen. Maybe those three should make a movie together. Boy, that sure would be something. So get this -- if Teleport City ever becomes one of those internet sensations you read about in the papers, and I become fabulously wealthy, I will take my first several million and make a movie starring Henry Silva, Al Leong, and Eddie Deezen. And you know, since I'm a relatively nice guy, I'll throw Tim Thomerson and Antonio Fargas in as well! Silva was in hundreds of films, usually playing a crazy-ass (not just crazy, but crazy-ass) villain or henchman. This is probably because, much like Christopher Walken, Henry Silva looks absolutely psycho when he does the angry face, and he looks even more psycho when he tries to look happy or sane. He's also a character who, like Tim Thomerson or even Vincent Price, can usually deliver a performance that is far better than the movie around it. With a good publicist or agent, Silva could have probably been a big star. Instead, he took damn near every role that came his way and became one of the most beloved and respected character actors in the vast realm of B-movies, which is where we want him, and where we ourselves would all be happiest. I mean, would you rather hang out with Ben Affleck and Bruce Willis, or would you rather hit the town with Henry Silva and Eddie Deezen? Whoa, there is something infinitely bizarre about the thought of a night on the town with Henry Silva and Eddie Deezen. I want that. I want that. If you want to ever get me a present, buy me a night on the town with those two. I promise I'll bring a camera. So finally, with this review, the glorious Henry Silva can take his rightful place alongside other B-grade (and lower) staples like John Saxon. Now all we have to do is get a Tim Thomerson film done, and we'll have most of the bases covered. Normally, when a recognizable American star shows up in an Italian film, it's to make a quick buck and is what we like to call "slumming." But given Silva's body of work, which include such spectacles as the mega-expensive mega-flop Mega Force, you can hardly call his career in Italy slumming. Weirdly enough, some time in the 1970s or early 1980s, this film was released theatrically in the United States and sold as a horror/monster movie! I guess if you look at murderers and thugs as monsters, then yeah, that's correct, but I don't think anyone is trying to sell The Godfather as a horror film, or Goodfellas as a monster movie. Yet this film was retitled Almost Human and sold to audiences as a scary monster movie. That's even weirder than adding the word "ninja" to kungfu movies that have no ninjas on them, just so you can cash in on the early 1980s ninja craze. Eventually, they just pissed everyone off, gave up, and the film was called The Executioner, which actually fits the bill (the original Italian title was Milano odia: la polizia non puo sparare). I knew from the credits this was going to be a good one. A violent Italian cop film starring Henry Silva and Tomas Milian (Hit Squad) and directed by my man Umberto Lenzi (Violent Napoli, Cannibal Ferox). And hey, a kick-ass score by Ennio Morricone to boot! Lenzi sure as hell knows how to make an action-packed cop film, and he didn't let me down here. Milian, clean-shaven for once, plays Guilio, a three-time loser with a vicious psycho streak. During a bank robbery, he blows away a cop for no reason in particular, which sort of pisses off his cohorts. They kick his ass and severe their ties with the nutcase. Actually, they kick his ass twice, I think, because in a poliziotteschi film, you never kick anyone's ass just once. Milian decides to start his own little gang made up of a bunch of small-time hoods who have bought into his frequent bragging. When a cop happens by one night while Guilio is stealing money out of a vending machine, he stabs the guy to death. Jeez, that's his answer for everything. The murder brings tough Milan cop Henry Silva onto the scene to survey the aftermath, which is pretty much all he does throughout the entire movie. Milian stands in the crowd that eventually gathers around the scene. After that is done, Milian and two buddies decide to kidnap a rich man's daughter and hold her for ransom. Milian steals his girlfriend's car for the job. I just have to mention a quick little something about Milian and the girlfriend. They have a love scene, and god damn it, Tomas Milian wears the same little cherry red bikini briefs that disturbed me so in Hit Squad! What is it with this guy and bright red underwear? Let me tell you something, whether you are straight, gay, bi, male female -- skimpy red underwear simply look better on women than they do on Tomas Milian. How many other movies feature Milian cavorting around in his red underwear? They should put a parental advisory sticker on these films: "Warning! Contains scenes of Tomas Milian prancing around in little red bikini briefs." He also steals some machine guns from an old guy in the usual "Actually, I don't think I will pay for them" type scene. You'd think that after about a billion gun smugglers have been shot by crazy clients, they'd stop selling them the guns and the bullets at the same time. But no, every damn time, they give them loaded guns so they can get shot instead of getting paid. A day later, Henry Silva shows up to grimly survey the scene. Guilio's gang consists of a quiet tough guy and a nervous young guy who doesn't want things to get out of control. Pretty much your standard issue gang. The kidnapping goes exactly as Guilio (Milian, remember) wants it to, in that they get to machine gun the girl's boyfriend, then chase her to a mansion in the woods where they get to torture, rape, and murder partygoers (male and female alike -- Guilio makes some snooty rich guy take a close-up look at those little red underwear). Then after they get done with the massacre-ing, they hang the corpses from the chandeliers. Obviously, this exceeds the whole "getting out of control" thing the young guy was worried about, so Guilio just feeds him some drugs. Sure enough, Henry Silva shows up after the fact to go, "Looks like our man was here." With the rich girl tied up in some old river front shack, Guilio decides to confess the multiple murders and kidnapping to his girlfriend so he can then kill her for knowing too much. He goes through friends pretty quickly. If you think that a day after her murder, Henry Silva shows up to grimly survey the scene and pronounce that it does indeed look like their man was here, well give yourself a prize. But nothing too expensive or nice, because it really wasn't that hard to figure out. When Silva finds out she was Guilio's girlfriend, he tries to think of something to connect Guilio to the kidnapping and murders. When he remembers seeing Guilio in the crowd at that totally unrelated stabbing incident, he realizes that Guilio is indeed the murderer. Yeah. Yeah, I know. If you don't really follow the train of thought there, you're probably sane but not very in touch with the whole "cop on the edge" style of investigation. Unfortunately, Guilio has an ironclad alibi. He blackmails his old pals from the bank robbery, telling them that if they don't cover for him, he'll rat on them about the bank job. If they play along and say he was with them all night, he'll give them a load of the ransom money. So they go along, but they still kick his ass anyway just because it's an Italian cop film. Guilio takes enough time out from his killing to set up the whole ransom thing. Once the old rich guy agrees to pay the ransom, Guilio kills the daughter because, well, he's crazy. The young guy protests, so Guilio kills him too. And then the quiet tough guy protests Guilio killing the young guy, so, you guessed it, Guilio kills him too. He then grabs some of the ransom money and, shoots Henry Silva in the leg, and disappears into the night without anyone ever actually seeing him. So there you go. The cops have absolutely zero evidence against Guilio. He has an alibi and absolutely nothing to connect him to the kidnapping and murders. His girlfriend was dead, but she was drowned in a car wreck (which he forced, of course), so there's not even anything to connect that death to all the murders. Silva being convinced that Guilio's being in the crowd gathered around the murdered cop makes him inarguably guilty of the other crimes is, at best, totally insane and off-the-wall. The cops have absolutely no reason at all to even have the slightest suspicion about Guilio. So what happens? Silva limps up to Milian, who is minding his own business at a sidewalk cafe, and blows him away. The end! No, really! I swear! Every shred of common sense, not to mention evidence, screamed that Guilio was innocent, but Silva shoots his ass dead anyway. Why? Because it's a poliziotteschi film, that's why! I knew that, at some point, Silva would blow Guilio away. Poliziotteschi films are downbeat and violent, but the criminal always gets wasted in the end. There was no question that Silva was going to eventually kill Guilio, but I thought they would at least make some sort of effort to make Guilio appear guilty. But no, even though we all know he's a murdering bastard, the cops don't have any reason at all to suspect him. I mean, they could have had one of his girlfriend's friends identify him as having been in her car the day she was killed. They could have found the machine gun. Something to make them think he might be guilty. They find nothing, but Henry Silva kills him anyway because he was in the crowd at that cigarette machine incident, thus proving beyond any shadow of a doubt that he was also the mastermind of a series of brutal murders and kidnapping. Well, unless you are a sane person possessed of taste, you can't help but love a movie with sort of cockeyed reasoning. And if you were one of the aforementioned sane people with taste, it's hardly likely you'd be patronizing a website devoted to weird personal stories, punk rock music, and films about midget spies, murderous cops, and kungfu fighters. So with your Teleport City passport firmly in hand, you are invited to partake in the relentlessly violent, totally ridiculous smorgasbord of death-dealing that is The Executioner. It's not as good as Lenzi's Violent Napoli, but it's still a wild trip. The politics come in the form of some speeches Milian's character makes about how unfair it is that fat cats sit perched atop a mountain of wealth while the rest of us grovel in the mud for some meager scraps. Of course, that doesn't really make Guilio a likable or a sympathetic villain in the least. He's vile the whole way through, which, in this era of smarmy politically correct villains with no guts, is pretty nice. And nothing politically ever really justifies Silva's actions in the end. It's not like his investigation was sabotaged by bureaucrats or corrupt officials. I think he got to give the whole "cop on the edge" speech about how the system protects the guilty, but that's actually required by law in a film like this. Basically, his character was pissed that Milian pulled off the more or less perfect crime, even though he picks Milian out as the guilty one at more or less random. But hey, no one ever accused the Italians of making sense, at least not by our standards (ummm, as if Armageddon made any damn sense). What they do make, or at least what Umberto Lenzi has made here, is a brutal, violent, wildly entertaining action film that is sure to offend many, and generally, if a film is offensive, it gets our seal of approval. The logic is so inane and the motivation so absurd that we can't help but approve of everything that happened with the exception of once again seeing Tomas Milian in his little red underwear. So what lesson can we walk away from this movie having learned? Don't linger around in the crowd gathered round dead cops. If Henry Silva walks toward you with his hand inside his coat, don't wait around to see what he's going to do. That we are all equally as likely to be shot by Henry Silva? Don't be in a gang with Tomas Milian. Honestly, the political and social content of this film is so wildly skewed that it fails to really make any sense. A police state is bad but criminals are worse? You would think with all the speeches about how the rich constantly oppress the poor that they would try to make Guilio out to be more likable. Instead, he is nothing more than a murderous thug who hides behind a veil of rhetoric and ... wait a sec ... yep, I got it! In various reviews, we've talked at some length about groups like The Red Brigade and other terrorist organizations (check out the Violent Rome review) running wild in Italy during the 1970s. For the most part, they were gangs of thugs and murderers who tried to distinguish their crime by dressing it up in the rhetoric of a Communist revolutionary group. Red Brigade, indeed. They, like most groups, were nothing but criminals. They used politics to justify their bloodlust, though they most likely would have been criminals with or without the political disguise. It's no different than when murderers cite religion as their aegis and motivation. Milian's Guilio is just like the terror squads running rampant in Italy. He justifies his brutality with talk of a working class revolution, of the lower class rising up to fight against the rich. Guilio's rhetoric is exactly like the bullshit espoused by groups like The Red Brigade. And just like them, Guilio's speeches are total crap. He's a rapist and a murderer, and nothing else. Not a revolutionary; just a thug. He uses the class struggle, which was also at the forefront of Italian social life at the time, as a convenient excuse for his psychopathic desire to rape, kill, and hurt others. Lenzi exposes him for what he is, stripping away the romantic notions of being a freedom fighter to expose the cold-blooded sicko beneath. Of course, that still doesn't really lend much justification or credibility to the actions of Silva's cop character. But it does make some sense of the movie anyway, which has just become that much cooler now that I've had my little epiphany about its meaning. See, all those film theory classes didn't go to waste after all! Now I'll learn your asses some shit about mais en scene! No wait! I take that analysis back! The true lesson to be learned from The Executioner, besides the fact that Italian cop films are bad-ass through and through, is that if you are an arms dealer, you should not sell the guns and the bullets at the same time to crazy people, because they won't pay you. They'll just shoot you. And then Henry Silva will come by and stare grimly at the aftermath. Labels: Director: Umberto Lenzi, Poliziotteschi, Stars: Tomas Milian, Year: 1974 posted by Keith at 12:39 PM | 0 Comments Friday, May 11, 2001Cannibal Ferox
1980, Italy. Starring Giovanni Lombardo Radice, Lorraine De Selle, Danilo Mattei, Zora Kerova, Walter Lloyd, Meg Fleming, Robert Kerman, John Bartha, Venantino Venantini. Directed by Umberto Lenzi. Available on DVD (Amazon).
Hey kids, it's another Italian cannibal film! Collect 'em all! Just like a Pokemon, they're all basically the same, with very minor alterations to keep the boys and girls coming back time and time again. I don't know if I've seen more Italian cannibal films or Italian zombie films. I certainly enjoy the zombie films more, but there's room for everyone in my black little heart. I don't think any country embraced the cannibal film like Italy did. I mean, I've seen a couple Hong Kong cannibal films, a few American cannibal films, but Italy made a whole genre out of it, sort of like how Jess Franco and Joe D'amato worked together to create and populate the Satanic Lesbian Nun genre -- one of my personal favorites, of course. Followers of this site probably know the name Umberto Lenzi. Among other things, he directed one of my all-time favorite films, Violent Napoli, as well as the only movie I have seen that actually features zombies standing around with their hands in their pockets (City of the Walking Dead). Lenzi's work, while uneven, is always full of gusto and energy. So when he set his sites on the blossoming cannibal market, it seemed like a sure thing. Usually, when I or any other writer uses the phrase "it seemed like a sure thing," that means that something didn't work out, and it was all a huge failure. That is not the case here. Cannibal Ferox became one of the most popular and controversial of all the cannibal films, taking its place on the pedestal right next to Deodato's Cannibal Holocaust. Like that film, it has the same basic message and the same basic faults. However, it has one thing no other cannibal film I have seen possesses -- a Mafia sub-plot! I know, I know, how can you possibly tie together a tribe of cannibals deep within the Amazon and New York city Mafia thugs? Well, if you are Umberto Lenzi, it's a snap! Lenzi loves crime films. The greatness of Violent Napoli is all the testament we need to the man's skill at directing a slick, action-packed crime film. The problem is that Lenzi can't stop. City of the Walking Dead features zombies that haul ass, fly helicopters, and use machine guns. Cannibal Ferox has it's Mafia subplot, which is tangential at best. The action begins in New York, where Italian law requires all cannibal movies to begin. A junkie, a girlfriend, and a couple of fairly worthless thugs are all looking for some drug dealer, only he's nowhere to be found. Why? Because he's in another movie, called Cannibal Ferox, which takes place in the Amazon Jungle. So let's go there, shall we, and meet our future main courses. There's "the guy," his sister Gloria (the good girl), and their slutty friend. Gloria is going to the Amazon to prove that cannibals don't exist. THIS NEVER WORKS!!! When will people learn? If you go to the jungle to prove there are no cannibals, there will be! Come on, people! Get with the program! But this is all for Gloria's college thesis. Heh, you know, I have a lot of friends who wrote a thesis, got their master's degree, and none of them had to go to the Amazon and battle cannibals in the process. They spent most of their time in the library actually (this was before the internet, way back when). I sure am glad I never took an anthropology class with whatever professor told Gloria to go down the Amazon and snoop around for cannibals. The Amazon is dangerous enough as it is without cannibals running around. But I guess this professor isn't too bad. After all, Gloria's entire paper hinges on proving that recent accounts of cannibalism in one particular spot are false will somehow disprove all claims of cannibalism every anywhere. I only got a degree in English and film, but even I can see some problems with this thesis. But along the same lines, I'd like to offer up the fact that no square dancing has ever taken place in my household. Therefore, using Gloria's logic, no square dancing has ever existed anywhere. It's just another myth perpetrated by The Man. But Gloria's brother is the adventurous type, and hey! It never hurts to bring a slut along! They get about ten feet into the jungle before their jeep gets stuck in the mud. Well, what would you do? Walk back along the road, or plunge headfirst into the jungle on foot? That's right, you'd walk back to town. That's because you're not a character in an Italian cannibal movie. Hell, you probably wouldn't even be down in the Amazon looking for cannibals in the first place. But then, you'd be a pretty boring movie, wouldn't you? So our intrepid trio trudged into the unexplored vastness of the Amazon Jungle, where they meet an old guy sitting by himself eating grubs. Okay, whatever. I guess this guy just likes to hide behind big leaves while he eats grubs. Maybe he's ashamed. I don't know. Maybe he's friends with those zombies from Zombie 3 who hide in the jungle just waiting for someone to randomly happen by. While the grub eatin' guy is only of minor concern to our hearty travelers, they are taken aback by the appearance of two white guys -- Mike and, umm, the other guy. No need to learn his name; he dies pretty soon anyway. Mike and his pal are running like hell through the jungle and claim to have been attacked by cannibals. Mike's li'l buddy is dying of jungle fever, which does not mean he has a thing for Pam Grier, though I would be surprised and disappointed if he didn't. Our trio of city slickers seems to find nothing remotely suspicious about stumbling upon two white guys in the jungle who claim to be running from cannibals. They simply accept the story at face value and start killing animals. This is the part most people have a problem with, same as Cannibal Holocaust. The animal mutilation is real stuff. This became a staple of cannibal movies for some reason, and every one of them it seems had to feature scenes of turtles getting disemboweled and animals shredding each other. You know, the harsh reality of nature and all. Only it always comes across as exploitative, cheap, and sadistic on the part of the film makers, not of the characters they are supposed to be holding up for criticism. I'm no hippie, but killing animals for the purpose of making a movie doesn't sit well with me -- and it's made even worse by the fact that none of this, absolutely none of this, would hurt the film if it was removed. It's sadistic filler and nothing more. Once we're over that, we get back to the business of gore effects and killing humans, which is fine with me. Our group wanders into the village Mike alleges they just escaped from. Once again, you have a chance to test your cannibal movie chops. You are hiking with two coke-snorting strangers you met in the jungle. Together, you find the cannibal headquarters. Do you haul ass out of there, or set up camp in the middle of town? That's right, you haul ass out of there. Which is why our cast decides the middle of the cannibal village is a fine ol' place to sit and rest a spell. Gloria begins to notice strange things however. Like the entire village is comprised of old folks, women, and children. These inhabitants are terrified of Mike. When Mike and the slutty girl get coked up and rape and murder a couple of the locals, Gloria gets even more suspicious that maybe Mike is not that nice a guy. Gee, you'd think a coke-snorting rapist-murderer would set off some alarms, but remember, this is the same woman who is writing that asinine thesis about cannibals. I'm sure she thinks that despite the fact that Mike gloats about his murderous, drug smuggling ways, society has forced him to be this way, and thus, if she can just reach him, he will turn out to be a dandy dude. At some point we cut back to New York, where the thugs are still pursuing the woman who is dating the drug dealer we can, at this point, assume is Mike. She is giving a tour of Chinatown, filling some out-of-towners up with a story about seeing the most famous opium den in Chinatown. New York residents will recognize the "opium den" as the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory, home of some of the best ice cream in the world. I guess Italians don't much care either way, but you'd think they would pick a storefront that isn't underneath a giant yellow flag depicting a squat, happy dragon gobbling down some ice cream. Or maybe it's opium in his bowl. Back in the Amazon, Mike's sick buddy finally spills the beans via a deathbed flashback. To no one's surprise but Gloria's and her brother's, Mike is actually a murderous thug who came to the village in search of emeralds after running afoul of a drug cartel in New York (hey, remember those guys?). When no emeralds turned up, Mike flipped out and began torturing the natives in the cruelest of ways. Pulling out eyeballs, gutting, castrating -- Mike is most definitely insane. As soon as the men of the tribe come back from their hunt, they will probably extract gory cannibalistic revenge on Mike and anyone in his party. I guess we're supposed to feel bad for Gloria and her brother -- the nice ones -- but shit, they made the decision to wander off into the jungle with coke dealers. I say they deserve whatever horrors the cannibals visit upon them. As usual, the locals didn't start out as cannibals. Mike's barbarism drove them to it. I've heard a lot of things -- I'm so mad I could spit. I'm so mad I could punch you. I'm so mad I could kill you. I've never heard of anyone being so mad they simply had to eat their fellow man. Yet the barbarisms of modern society driving the primitives into a state of cannibalism is the crux of almost all cannibal films, so we'll go with it. Well, when you camp out in a village full of cannibals you just murdered, eventually those cannibals get all riled up and kick your ass. It doesn't take an NYU doctoral candidate to figure that one out. Sure enough, the cannibal men come home and are simply delighted at all the new guests. They make a quick dinner out of Mike's buddy, then throw everyone else into one of those half-submerged bamboo cages like people always put Rambo in. They trot Mike out, and sure enough, take revenge on him by executing one of the movie's two prize scenes. It's not just that the castration is shown in all it's blood-spurting detail; it's that Mike's penis stretches and snaps! Ow! And to top it off, the blade-wielder pops it in his mouth like a gumball. Err, bad pun. Sorry. But things have only just begun. The melt his stump shut and throw him in the cage. Gloria spends time doing that heart-felt "Help us!" to the nearest cannibal, as if he can understand English or really gives a shit. Her brother get's killed during a botched escape attempt. The slutty girl gets to star in the film's second signature scene, where she his hung on metal hooks piercing her breasts. I didn't know breasts were strong enough to hang by, but I guess so. Mike gets his cranium split open so the locals can dine on his brain. And even though they were not cannibals until Mike made them be that way, they just happen to have a "top of the head slicing" table around. I guess they just never throw anything out. They probably still have Apple IIe's as well. I assume at this point Gloria is seriously rethinking her thesis, but then again, this is the woman who marched off into the jungle with coke dealers, so all bets are off on her common sense. With the help of a sympathetic cannibal, Gloria escapes and is picked up by a helicopter carrying Mike's now ex-girlfriend and the police chief from New York. The hell? Since when do local police chiefs go on Amazon expeditions to bring back small-time drug dealers? And since when do they let the guy's ex come along? But whatever. They pick Gloria up, she goes home, writes her thesis, and becomes a college graduate. Ha! All I had to do was a week's worth of research in the library. For her blood-soaked ordeal, Gloria is now qualified for a low-paying job as a museum tour . I guess everyone bought her thesis, which is doubly silly since obviously cannibalism does exist. Didn't the professor wonder what happened to her brother and the slutty woman? But it was good enough for the board of directors, I suppose. And thus ends Umberto Lenzi's feel-good hit of the summer, which may or may not be the inspiration for Mosquito Coast starring Harrison Ford. It makes all the typical cannibal movie statements about man's inhumanity to man, how we in the civilized world are the true savages, so on and so on. True, but at least I don't have to eat live grubs behind a big leaf. Whatever laudable political message this movie has is undermined by it's frequent use of animal murder footage, which was totally gratuitous. Still, as far as cannibal movies go, Cannibal Ferox is entertaining. It's fast-paced, and the whole Mafia subplot is so silly you can't help but admire Lenzi's bizarre train of thought. It's like he started out making one movie and ended up with another. And he actually manages to tie it all together, which is impressive in itself. If you can get past the animal scenes, this is a nasty little flick with great gore, a brisk pace, and plenty of gut eating. Ever wonder why all cannibals eat people in the same way, by just sort of mashing the innards on their face? You never see an organized cannibal meal. Just because you eat the same thing as a zombie doesn't mean you can have the same table manners. Labels: Director: Umberto Lenzi, Horror: Cannibals, Year: 1980 posted by Keith at 12:17 AM | 0 Comments |
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