The Violent Professionals
(1973)
Director: Sergio
Martino
Cast: Luc Merenda, Richard Conte, Silvano Tranquilli
Today, the Italian film industry is just a shell of what
it used to be. Though there are still a few brave Italians today who
make real movies (read: escapist entertainment) like Dario
Argento, the usual product coming out of the country these days is more
or less arty fare. It can be hard at times to believe that until the
collapse of the industry in the late '80s, Italy was one of the biggest
producers of movies not just in Europe, but in the world, and managed
to export their movies everywhere. Though they started with making arty
fare like The Bicycle Thief in the first few years
after the war ended, they soon started to make movies for real men.
First there was the sword-and-sandal craze from the late '50s to the
early '60s, then came the spaghetti western craze from the mid '60s to
the early part of the '70s - practically everyone knows about the
Italian penchant for those genres.
Less known (at least outside of Europe) is the
subsequent genre Italians got crazy about in the '70s - the
crime/police genre, which was probably created by
the popularity of American movies in the period like Dirty Harry
and The French Connection, though
frequently adding an Italian creation (the Mafia) to the mix to give it
that home-grown feeling. I've seen several of these movies - Scarface Killer and The Cop In
Blue Jeans, among others - and I think I know
why this particular Italian genre never made it big over here. What
I've seen has been passable at best, which isn't that often; most of
these movies simply aren't that good. They generally boast low budgets
and the direction, cinematography, editing etc. all come across as
amateurish. It probably isn't surprising that it can be hard to find
one of these movies at your local video store - the few that were
released were in the early days of video, so a lot of the cassettes
have disappeared. Plus, none of them got enough of a cult status to
warrant any kind of re-release. If you absolutely have to see one of
these movies, however, I would recommend you watch (if you can find it)
The Violent Professionals. That's not to say
it works overall, but unlike others of its kind, it does manage at
times to show and properly execute the elements we expect to find in
this genre.
One of the most interesting things about The
Violent Professionals is that at the beginning it manages to
start up and stay, at least for a while, at the right note. It not only
delivers us the stuff that we are expecting from a violent Italian
crime thriller, but it also has a refreshing self-awareness that makes
it clear that everyone involved was taking things with a slight
tongue-in-cheek attitude. This is best illustrated in the opening
sequence, where police lieutenant Giorga (Merenda) is returning home
one morning after a long night. He bumps into his police friend Giano,
and they make small talk. Seems Giano is on his way to an armoured
train that will be transporting some criminals to another city. They're
pretty dangerous and psychotic criminals, but hey, it's "money for all
those mouths at home." You can't help but smile at a movie that so
blatantly stamps on a guy.
Of course, Giano shortly gets killed by the convicts
when they stage the inevitable escape plan. And of course, Giorga is
pissed off enough by this so that he joins the manhunt. When the
convicts are cornered and start raising their hands, he jumps in and
blows away the surrendering fugitive. One or two of the ten or so
witnessing cops raise some (mild) objections, but they are shot down
when someone says, "They were armed! If the lieutenant fired, it means
the lieutenant had to fire." Even Giorga's police chief boss doesn't
seem to object to cold-blooded murder; though he later mutters to
Giorga in his office "You shouldn't have done that," he also indicates
that the worst Giorga may have to face is a temporary suspension.
Though before he can help Giorga get through that, the
chief is murdered, possibly by a certain secret
criminal organization he just happened to briefly mention to Giorga
that he was investigating. Though suspended, Giorga is royally pissed,
and vows to bring the guilty party to justice his way (that
is, if you call cold-blooded murder justice.) Anyway, he seems to know
that to uncover a secret criminal organization such as this, you have
to investigate in an unorthodox manner. That's the only way I can
explain his following actions; first, he does nothing but drive in his
car for six months. Then he robs a hooker at gunpoint and slaps the
spit out of her knife-wielding pimp, afterwards taking over the pimping
duties himself. Then he finds an elderly riverside fisherman and
half-drowns him in the river. And after that, he tries to weasel out of
a lost bet he makes at the local pool hall. When the members of the
other party object, he then beats the crap out of them with his pool
cue. Yeah, it makes no sense, but since immediately after that pool
hall fight, he manages to meet a likely suspect that he starts
investigating, so I can't really deny that this investigating got
results.
If you think that this sounds like a remarkably goofy
movie, you're right. There are a number of other very strange touches
in the movie, such as when Giorga, while undercover, is told to take
off his clothes and change into another outfit while the bad guys watch
- with no explanation given. There's the mansion in the middle of the
city filled with squatting hippies, as well as confusing dubbing with
makes references to a District Attorney (?) as well as the surprising
fact that the guillotine was used by Italy as well as France. The
misguided dubbing job does bring some amusement, but it also brings
some confusion as well. Maybe it was in the original script, maybe some
important information got cut out before the American release, but the
deep mystery that Giorga eventually starts to uncover - something about
a revolutionary group - is quite hard to figure out. About all we find
out is that there is a revolutionary group - we don't find out how
exactly it is being run by these thieves, or even what kind of politics
these radicals are trying to set forth.
These unclear motivations become quite frustrating at
times; even though Giorga seems to have some idea as to what's going
on, we sure as hell don't. In fact, a lot of the mystery is apparently
solved by both Giorga coincidently seeing
something at the right time, as well as just barging into one of the
bad guy's office's to beat the necessary information out of him - not
exactly inspired screenwriting. And even after all that, by the end of
the movie I still had a lot of questions as to what was what, who was
who, etc. It's hard to get engaged in a movie if the central story is
hard to follow, though it's also hard to get engaged when the story is
boring. Not long after Giorga's pool hall fight, the inspired attitude
that was evident previously evaporates before our eyes. What follows is
mostly a talkathon and a walkathon, with Giroga talking to one person,
walking to somewhere else so he can talk to another person, going out
again so he can talk to another party, and so on. It's all quite
boring, especially since little to none of this uncovers anything of
real importance. In fact, there is so much of this, that the inevitable
scene when the undercover Giorga is hired by the gang doesn't occur
until two-thirds of the movie is over.
Note that I said that this part of the movie is mostly
tired and pointless. There is some action that occurs
sporadically, and it does have merit worth writing about. First, there
are some entertaining car chases - though not all of the entertainment
you get from watching them comes from the fast driving and the stunts.
You see, the police cars and the fleeing cars of the antagonists are
typical European vehicles of the day - tiny and quite cheap-looking to
the eye. So seeing the police putting the pedal to the metal in their
wimpy cop cars while chasing equally pathetic getaway cars is quite an
amusing sight; you expect the cars to fall apart right in front of your
eyes. Second, while the other action sequences generally may be a long
time coming as well as being individually brief, you can find a
sadistic or a perverse streak in them that you don't often find in an
action movie. This includes a man being violently shot to death on a
crowded street while happy music is playing on the soundtrack, an
important scene concerning someone getting hit by the car lasting just
five seconds long before immediately cutting to the next scene, and a
screaming hostage getting a full machine gun clip fired into her. Yes,
you don't ever see her twitching and bleeding corpse, but it's really
the thought that counts.
Such wonders that are here are, unfortunately, not
presented well in the one format (the out-of-print video from Paragon)
this movie is available to audiences in North America. This movie was
very obviously shot in a widescreen format, which
makes it look like every other
shot was filmed in extreme close-up - and what we usually see close-up
is mostly the unappetizing sight of sweaty and unshaven faces. The
print they used for the video transfer looks not only quite old (plenty
of nicks and scratches), but the color seems off, so it appears we are
seeing sickly-looking sweaty and unshaven faces. It also
gives the rest of the movie a scummy look, though it does appear that
the bulk of the movie was shot in really rundown areas of Italy. These
uninspired locations are filmed in an uninspired fashion, which adds to
the shoddy look that I talked about previously. The only scene that
shows any creativity from the director is a slow-motion shot during a
chase sequence- though ironically, it shows a car driving through a big
pile of burning garbage. Maybe this movie isn't bad enough to be thrown
on that pile, but I suspect that most viewers - despite some genuinely
pleasing moments - will feel a little burned by the end.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: Deadly Force, One Man Jury, Scarface
Killer
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