The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist (1977) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
19 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Another crime masterpiece from Umberto Lenzi!
The_Void22 August 2006
The Cynic, The Rat and The Fist clearly takes influence regarding it's central theme from the Sergio Leone masterpiece 'The Good, The Bad and The Ugly', and here we follow the fortunes of three strong male characters as their lives intertwine in the name of crime. Director Umberto Lenzi plied his trade in a number of Italy's most popular genres, and his resume includes the likes of zombies, cannibals and Giallo; but the only field he's a master in is the Dirty Harry inspired sub-genre, 'Polizia'. This is only my third Lenzi crime flick, but I wouldn't be surprised to find that it's one of the best he ever made, as the masterpiece 'Almost Human' only just edges it out. Umberto Lenzi packs his film with all the things you'd expect from the crime genre; with things such as shootouts, car chases and sadism featuring strongly. The actual plot is a little convoluted, and follows Italian mob boss 'The Chinaman', as he hooks up with New York crime lord Frank Di Maggio. The cop looking to take the pair of them down is Leonardo Tanzi, a man not afraid to break the law in order to bring in his man.

Exactly which of the title monikers apply to which of the three characters is never really explained; although personally, I wager that Tomas Milian's Chinaman is 'The Cynic', John Saxon's mob boss is 'The Rat' and Maurizio Merli violent copper is the aptly named 'The Fist'. One of the film's strongest elements is undoubtedly the cast list, as the central trio of characters are brought to life by three of cult cinema's best actors. Tomas Milian certainly knows his way around a sadistic part, while the underrated (and sadly here underused) John Saxon's resume speaks for itself. Maurizio Merli is perhaps the least accredited member of the cast, but lead roles in this and Lenzi's Violent Naples certainly shows that the man can play the gritty copper. The plot flows very well, and Lenzi's direction continually impresses. It can be a little hard to follow at times, but there's always enough shooting and murders to keep genre fans happy. The ending is a major strongpoint too, as Lenzi spends the entire film building up to a showdown, and when it hits; it doesn't disappoint. Overall, this is a first class example of the Italian crime thriller and comes highly recommended.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Another Gritty & Great Poliziottesco by Umberto Lenzi
Witchfinder-General-66613 October 2009
With great works in a variety of genres, such as Gialli, Poliziotteschi and Cannibal Flicks, Umberto Lenzi is doubtlessly one of the most productive and versatile directors in Italian Exploitation/Cult-Cinema. And, along with Fernando Di Leo, he is arguably the ultimate master of the Italian crime-genre. Though maybe just not quite as great (and neither quite as brutal and uncompromising) as its predecessor "Roma A Mano Armata" ("Rome Armed To The Teeth", 1976) or the masterpiece "Milano Odia: La Polizia Non Può Sparare" ("Almost Human", 1974), "Il Cinico, L'Infame, Il Violento" aka. "The Cynic, The Rat And The Fist" of 1977 is yet another gritty and great Poliziottesco by Lenzi.

Its title doubtlessly being derived from Sergio Leone's 1966 masterpiece "Il Buono, Il Brutto, Il Cattivo" (better known as "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", and arguably the greatest Western ever made), "The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist" stars three iconic actors in Italian genre-cinema, Maurizio Merli, Tomas Milian and John Saxon. This is a sequel to Lenzi's own "Roma A Mano Armata", in which Maurizio Merli reprises his role of the super-tough and uncompromising Inspector Leonardo Tanzi. Tanzi is a supremely bad-ass, unorthodox Rome cop who hates criminals as he hates crime and whose methods make Dirty Harry seem tame in comparison. Tomas Milian is back with greatness, in a different villain-role than that he played in the predecessor. Leonardo Tanzi, who has retired from the police in this one and yet keeps chasing down (and beating up) criminals is targeted by Luigi 'Er Cinese' Maietto ("Tomas Milian") a brutal and unscrupulous criminal whom he helped bring to justice and who has just been released from prison. After an attempt on his life, Tanzi fakes his own death, which gives him the opportunity to secretly carry on with his investigations. 'Er Cinese', in the meantime, has founded an alliance with the Italian-American mob boss Frank Di Maggio (John Saxon), a man who likes to feed enemies to his dogs...

It isn't explained which titular attribute refers to whom of the characters. Even so, Merli is doubtlessly 'the Fist' ('Il Violento'), and it's safe to assume that Milian is 'the Cynic', which would make Saxon 'The Rat' ('L'infame'/the infamous). All three leading men are great as always. Merli is great in his typical leading role of the unorthodox and super-tough copper and John Saxon shines as the slick Mafia Don; however, one might still say that the number one performance in this film comes from Tomas Milian, who is once again downright brilliant in the role of another cynical and sadistic thug. The supporting cast includes many regulars of Italian genre-cinema, such as Guido Alberti or Bruno Corazzari. The film is action-packed, full of violent shootouts, chases and sequences of genre-typical brutality. As Lenzi's other Poliziotteschi, the film is accompanied by a great score, this one being composed by Franco Micalizzi, who also did the scores for "Roma A Mano Armata" and "Napoli Violenta". Even this does not quite reach the level of "Milano Odia" and "Roma A Mano Armata", in my opinion, it is still a gritty, violent, immensely entertaining and simply great Crime offering by Umberto Lenzi, carried by loads of action, three sublime leading men and Lenzi's magnificent direction. Not to be missed by lovers of cinematic bad-assery!
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Lived up to the hype
bensonmum26 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
After watching a bunch of less than stellar Poliziotteschi in recent months, I am happy to report that this one lived up to just about every positive review I've read. With a cast that includes Maurizio Merli (doing less "posing" than in some of his other films), Tomas Milian, John Saxon, and a bunch of other familiar faces, Umberto Lenzi's The Cynic, the Rat & the Fist gets off to a fast start and keeps going at a good pace through most of the film's runtime. Nice action, violence, direction, and a catchy score (by Franco Micalizzi) also add to the enjoyment. Of all the great moments in the film, the sparring scenes between Milian and Saxon are easily my favorites.

My only real complaint comes at the films climax. It's over too quickly. There's a nice setup for the film's finale, but it's over before you know it. An ending that didn't feel so rushed would have made this one a real standout in the genre.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
THE CYNIC, THE RAT AND THE FIST (Umberto Lenzi, 1977) **1/2
Bunuel19762 September 2006
This is one of the better poliziotteschi I've seen - written by Lenzi with two other Euro-Cult stalwarts, Ernesto Gastaldi and Dardano Sacchetti - and also, perhaps, the quintessential Maurizio Merli film (not that this, in itself, is a guarantee of quality!).

From the title, one presumes that this was intended to be THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966) of crime films - although, here, the shifty alliance is made between two baddies (Tomas Milian - dubbed "The Chinaman", for some reason a favorite nickname in films from this subgenre! - and John Saxon). Again, having just watched COP IN BLUE JEANS (1976) the previous day, I couldn't help noticing just how many of these films open with a robbery sequence; likewise, the leading man's girlfriend generally emanates from the wrong side of the tracks and is victimized for aiding our hero during the course of the film!

As is to be expected, the film's pace never lets up by providing a steady quota of highly proficient action scenes - culminating in a heist committed at one of Saxon's offices by Milian's thugs(!) and which also involves Merli and "The Professor", an elderly pint-sized expert in gadgetry, in the elaborate diffusion of the building's security system. Still, characterization is not entirely neglected: Merli is obsessed with catching Milian (even if the two only come face to face at the climax) and, feigning his own death, works undercover to this end but remains in contact with his chief; Milian is a small- time hood with ambitions of taking over the territory of American mobster Saxon; the latter, then, is the typical gangster - wealthy, ruthless (with a penchant for leaving traitors at the mercy of his enormous hounds!) and apparently omnipotent. The scenes in which the villainous duo clash - each with his own agenda which sees no place in the scheme of things for the other! - constitute some of the film's highlights; Franco Micalizzi's score is also notable.

Even if the film's in no way a spoof as COP IN BLUE JEANS had been, its script features a comparable surfeit of hard-boiled dialogue which is so over-the-top as to be quite funny - extending even to the notes of condolences passed on amongst the criminals as a means of heralding someone's death sentence!
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Godible plot and acting
giusedf12 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This Lenzi's movie tries to put togheter two types of movies: the comedy and the poliziesco, which tryed to replace the western movies in those years, at that time not popular anymore. The comedy elemens are visible in some points of the movies, not that funny but well mixed into the plot (like the scene of the two lover caught in the bed). One example of the poliziesco element is the canonic characters such as the commissary, the bandits, even if the presence of two negative characters brings new details.

* PLOT: Godible plot if you are a poliziesco fan, but a little tasteless in some point. 6/10

* ACTING: A good performance from both the principal actors. Milan gave a little bit of depth to his charachter and it almost seems to me a predecessor of the most famous Tony Montana by Al Pacino, even if the plot did not allow this depth to come out at best. Merli was good in his acting but he gave better performances in other movies. 7/10

*MUSIC: I didn't like this soundtrack, a bit repetitive in some points. 5.5/10

*OTHER: The lack of reflections on society and on the division of social classes, evident in another film by lenzi, "La banda del gobbo", has slightly disappointed me.

In conclusion, this movie is recommended, but only if you have already seen masterpieces of the genre poliziesco such as: -La banda del gobbo 9/10 -Squadra volante 9/10 -Il cittadino si ribella 9/10.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Umberto Lenzi a prolific director!!!
elo-equipamentos26 February 2019
I've always remember of Umberto Lenzi in "La Montagma di Luci" that never hear about and hope one day see it again on DVD, fantastic picture from one the most prolific italian director of all times, he made several movies in every genre you can imagine, in this poiziotteschi he made an another crime movie exploited a famous underground of the gangs which have to launder the dirty money from their so many felonies, the leading trio Milian, Merli are a true italian, already John Saxon is an Oriundi, specifically speaking over Merli l've have to confess never saw a thing from him, but undoubtedly a fine actor (Franco Nero's Cover??) the plot is unusual and intense pace, Lenzi does it again!!!

Resume:

First watch: 2019 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.5
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Action-packed police movie
emilian778 August 2001
A war between the young, cynical, astute Italian delinquent "Chinaman" (Tomas Milian) and the experienced, cold, pitiful, New-york boss Frank Di Maggio (John Saxon) has started. And is a war for the criminal domination of Rome.

Only a really stubborn policeman can stop these crime giants.

In fact, this man is inspector Leonardo Tanzi (Maurizio Merli) that is as though as he comes...

Solid, action-packed police movie with very intense characters.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
a typical, yet excessively fun Italian police movie
Aylmer2 December 2001
This is probably the best example of a 70's Italian crime movie, though not the "best" movie of the genre (does that make sense?). It has, besides Saxon, an entirely Italian cast but most of them are pretty recognizable regulars in very amusing roles. Maurizio Merli is best as the role he was born to play, that of yet another ticked off Police commissioner. His very charismatic, yet level-headed performance is the one thing that keeps this movie moving along so well, and it is notable that of Lenzi's crime movies, this is probably the one that entrusts Merli with the most screentime (besides FROM CORLEONE TO BROOKLYN - though that is not so much a crime movie).

It's a pretty sloppily-shot, and haphazardly edited film (probably because most of Lenzi's films from this time were made with little money and over the span of 2-3 weeks), but has some very memorable shots (Merli charging across the foot-bridge, Merli pulling a bandage off of his newly healed arm, etc.) and a killer soundtrack by Franco Micalizzi (probably his best one). What's not to like about poorly-dubbed Italians smacking each other, breaking chairs over each-other's heads, shooting people in hospital beds, and stealing women's cars? The only weaknesses in this film are the fact that the heist sequence is far too long and drawn out, and the ending shootout is too quick and confusing (centering only on Milian vs. Merli when there is a whole gang war going on). Otherwise, a solid and action-packed film. It should also be noted that this probably has the most swearing of any 70's Italian movie, at least in the English version, making it the polar opposite of THE BIG RACKET.
11 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good poliziottesco flick
dopefishie10 May 2022
Good poliziottesco flick

Maurizio Merli plays a tough, Chuck Norris lookalike ex-cop on the case to bring crime bosses to justice (AKA: to kill them). It's fun. There's a lot to like here. Chase scenes. Fight scenes. Heist scenes. The acting is pretty average. All in all, it's worth a watch if you're a fan of this kind of film!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Great title for a movie anyway
hswasserman15 November 2023
It appears that Umberto Lenzi has made loads of films in every genre you can think of and you likely have seen at least one of his cannibal, zombie, giallo, or crime films. Please don't tell me any of them are masterpieces. That is a word movie fans love to throw around but as foolish as I have been in continuing to watch Lenzi's films there has yet to be a single one which can even be described as good.

Here we see a former policeman who possibly now is a writer of crime fiction played by the very handsome bleached blonde Maurizio Merli. Does the fact that he is no longer a cop stop him from chasing bad guys around? You know the answer to that. The cast is rounded out by two other familiar faces, which is to say Tomas Milian and John Saxon. You have likely seen Milian in other European westerns and crime movies and of course Saxon was in Tenebrae and the eminent Cannibal Apocalypse.

Saxon and Milian play two bigwigs in the underworld. Milian plays the Chinaman. Why is he called the Chinaman? Well after you've figured that out maybe you then can let me know why he goes around with a bandage on his head for the whole film. As far as I know there is no explanation for either thing. Later on in the film Saxon ends up in jail. Now possibly I dozed off but as far as I know there is no explanation for that either.

If you're just looking to kill some time you can do worse than this film but otherwise good luck knowing what the hell is going on. Tanzi receives a kind of greeting card at the beginning of the film which lets him know he will be killed and his uncle (who looks a lot like my dad) is roughed up and robbed by a couple of hoodlums so that is enough to get the ball rolling for him. Again Saxon and Milian are a couple of gangsters who either are working together or who mean to wipe the other one out. You may interpret that Tanzi has decided to eliminate them both by turning them against each other, that might be it. Tanzi runs into some dame at some point. You must forgive me for referring to her that way. Of course the characters in the film use even less respectful terms for women. Is she a love interest, does Tanzi screw her? I don't know. At the drop of a hat Tanzi gives her her walking papers.

Narratively speaking this film fails completely. It is just a lot of guys running around hitting and shooting each other, driving around in their cars, and wrecking their cars. Loot is stolen, women are treated poorly.

I really need to stop watching Umberto Lenzi movies. If a person is bad at something you would think they'd stop doing it, no one would want anything to do with him. But somehow Lenzi never made a good movie in his whole life and has made countless movies anyway.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Umberto does it again!
Bezenby12 January 2012
My estimation of Umberto Lenzi has risen over the years. Maybe I shouldn't have started with his late-era movies like House of Lost Souls etc, but during the seventies he was one of the great. This is a perfect example of what I'm talking about.

If there's a bad Italian crime movie, I haven't seen it. This one has Maurizio Merli as a cop driven to fake his death as Tomas Milian gets out of jail and swear revenge. You seen these films, right? I don't have to explain any more (gunfights, fistfights, car chases, showdowns).

These films, above all Italian genre movies, make me feel like a little kid again, from the music, to the style, to John Saxon's moustache, you just can't beat them. This is benefits from having Merli, Saxon, and especially Milian trying to out act each other.

The Cynic, The Rat and The Fist makes me want to go out, by a kipper tie and flared pastel suit, grow a moustache, grab a bottle of J&B, light up a Malboro, slip the safety of a sub-machine gun and jump onto a moped with a hooker with a heart of gold (who isn't averse to a friendly smack in the chops if she gets lippy).

Get it now - you can get box sets of these from the US for pennies.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Better than average, entertaining Eurocrime
Groverdox3 October 2020
"The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist" is definitely one of the better Poliziotteschi flicks. These movies are usually boring, incomprehensible wastes of time for everybody concerned. "Cynic" is head and shoulders ahead of the pack because it is actually consistently entertaining, though I was still confused and left in the dark for parts of it. It also has legendary actor Tomas Milian as the bad guy, though he isn't as memorable here as he was in the classic Eurocrime, "Almost Human".

The movie has a lot of action, but not so much violence. What do I mean by that? There are a lot of punches thrown in the movie, not to mention slaps and backhands, and actors convincingly take these blows when they topple over backwards. However, it often doesn't look real. You can tell the blows didn't really connect, and nor is there much make-up work to depict bruises as a result of them.

There is one shocking scene in which a woman has acid thrown in her face. It wouldn't be an Italian crime flick without a surplus of violence against women. I think every woman in the movie gets roughed up somehow. Interestingly, there is a scene where the hero reacts unfavourably to a guy beating a prostitute. There is so much violence against women in these movies - and particularly movies by the director, Umberto Lenzi - that you feel obliged to assume that he was a proponent of it. Of course, the hero later gets his own hands dirty in this regard later in the flick.

Be on the look out for a ridiculous scene later in the movie where the hero and some other guy break into a building that uses invisible laser beams for security, and you can clearly tell that, when they appear, these laser beams are made out of string.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Lenzi crime!
BandSAboutMovies29 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
In Italy, they call this movie Il cinico, l'infame, il violento, which means The Cynic, the Infamous, the Violent. This poliziotteschi is a sequel to another Umberto Lenzi film, 1976's The Tough Ones, with Maurizio Merli playing the role of Inspector Leonardo Tanzi in both movies.

Luigi "The Chinaman" Maietto (Tomas Milan, The Big Gundown, Django Kill... If You Live, Shoot!) escapes from prison and sends two of his men to kill the man who put him away - Tanzi. He's left for dead and even the newspapers print that he's dead, but he's just biding his time, waiting to get revenge.

Tanzi just wanted to stay retired - it looks like he's become a giallo author - but now he's a vigilante who comes up against Maietto and American syndicate boss Frank Di Maggio (John Saxon).

This movie boasts three writers whose work pretty much hits every side of the Italian exploitation experience. There's Lenzi himself, who made everything from Eurospy films (Super Seven Calling Cairo, The Spy Who Loved Flowers, 008: Operation Exterminate), Westerns (A Pistol for a Hundred Coffins), giallo (Orgasmo, A Quiet Place to KIll, Oasis of Fear, So Sweet...So Perverse, Seven Bloodstained Orchids, Spasmo, Eyeball), cannibal movies (Man from Deep River, Cannibal Ferox), peplum (Ironmaster, Samson and the Slave Queen), horror (Nightmare Beach, Ghosthouse, Demons 3, Hitcher in the Dark) and so much more. Then you have Ernesto Gastaldi, who wrote so many films that I love, including The Whip and the Body, The Possessed, The Sweet Body of Deborah, Day of Anger, All the Colors of the Dark, Torso, My Name is Nobody and tons of other great films. And then there's Dardano Sacchetti, who wrote just about any Italian genre film worth watching.

Man, somehow Junesploitation has led me to many Italian crime films. For this I am very excited!
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent Italian police films!
Zar30 May 2000
THE CYNIC, THE RAT AND THE FIST is an excellent Italian police film directed by genre meister Umberto Lenzi. Despite his cannibal movies notority this is what Lenzi is really best at. Stylish, well scripted, with catchy scores and starring tough guys like Tomas Milian, Maurizio Merli, John Saxon, Henry Silva and other genre vets his police films always offer great entertainment. The plot (as in his other films) isn't very important, but has basically something to do with tough cop Merli hunting down and beating up criminals, while dodging counterattacks from gangsters Milian and Saxon.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
an exhilaratingly intense example of J&B-fuelled, ferociously Fiat-fragging Italian action!!
Weirdling_Wolf24 January 2014
'The Cynic, The Rat & The Fist' boisterously remains a most genial Lenzi-helmed poliziottesco classic, starring the appealingly familiar Teflon-tough triumvirate of Merli, Milian and Saxon; replete with so much scene chewing testosterone, it's a miracle that any celluloid remained for the final print!!! Sinful Saxon plays the boorish crim, Frank Di Maggio with charismatic muscularity, and there really can be only one avenging, fists-first, triumphantly thug-baiting copper up to the titanic task of carving a crimson swathe of retrograde justice through the ubiquitously iniquitous backstreets of Rome, and that man is the icon of hep-cat Poliziotteschi cool; an uber bellicose, bullet-blasting geezer with a majestic moustache fashioned out of living granite; give it up for, Maurizio Merli!!! The protean arch nemesis to sordid skeezers, blood-thirsty blaggers, and pernicious pimps, be they vertical inebriate, or horizontal degenerate; you foolhardily cross that intractable line on murderously macho Merli's gimlet-eyed watch and you're going home in a gore-spattered, snug-fitting zip lock tuxedo! The swarthy Saxon fatally bites off more than he can chew, and ends up choking on the fist-sized, jaw-breaking, righteously roundhouse-rocking might of Maurizio Merli!

While 'The Cynic, The Rat & The Fist' isn't the greatest Merli/Lenzi pairing, it's pretty damn close, and that can only mean one thing, my Eurocrime-loving compadres, an exhilaratingly intense example of J&B-fuelled, ferociously Fiat-fragging Italian action!
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Awesome Poliziotesschi! But ... who's who?
Coventry25 February 2020
With "The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist", Umberto Lenzi proved once more what he had already proven numerous times before, namely that he was Italy's greatest and hardest-working crime-movie director! Even during the second half of the 70s decade, when the heydays of the Poliziotesschi were actually over already, Lenzi still made a handful of downright awesome genre classics. "The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist" is even one of the best Poliziotesschi ever, with a very eventful but nevertheless solid script, no less than three of the finest contemporary lead actors and a truckload of impressively staged action footage. The title, and quite many of the themes as well, are obvious (and sublime) references towards Sergio Leone's landmark western "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly". However, in Leone's film, it was unmistakably clear who was who, whereas here the three main protagonists are never referred to with one of the aliases/nicknames of the title and it's not all that obvious to guess, neither! I presume Maurizio Merli - Tanzi the good guy - is "the Fist", since he's battling the organized crime in Rome with his bare vigilante hands now that he quit the police. I also daresay John Saxon's character Di Maggio is "the Rat", since his filthy mafia activities infest the entire city like a disease. And finally, Tomas Milian - in a truly superb performance - is probably "the Cynic" because, well, he's one of the cruelest and most relentless villains to ever appear on screen (just look at the hospital execution sequences for evidence).

Great movie, ditto soundtrack and particularly the sequences that feature Tomas Milian and John Saxon together rank as some of the most powerful ones in Italian cult cinema history!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
First Rate Italian Crime Film
trevoranndouglas10 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This title is available on the Mafia Kingpin Collection from the great Pop Flix label. It is a superb wide screen print with expertly dubbed English voices. John Saxon has his own voice which adds to the enjoyment of the piece. The music is also first rate. The action is non-stop and the supporting cast excellent. Superb location filming add to the enjoyment.

The Pop Flix DVD also includes: Mister Scarface (Fullscreen), (Jack Palance) The Cop In Blue Jeans (Fullscreen) (Jack Palance), Rome Armed To The Teeth (Widescreen) (Arthur Kennedy, Maurizio Merli) Violent Naples (Widescreen) (Maurizio Merli, John Saxon, Barry Sullivan)
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Fast-paced Italian police film with added action and torture
Leofwine_draca31 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
A fast-paced, action-fuelled Italian "polizia" movie which is certainly regarded to be one of Umberto Lenzi's best and almost up there with his own previous VIOLENT NAPLES. It's action from the word go with this film which never lets up, offering fist fights, shoot-outs and chases in equal measure right from the very beginning. Of course with movies of this variety, it's not really the plot (which is interchangeable with a dozen others) which is important but the way the film is made: with great, catchy and jazzy music, fine acting from three genre veterans, occasionally hilarious tough dialogue and more action than in any American equivalent, the story is not of importance, a simple retread of the plot of YOJIMBO but with a harder and more sadistic edge.

This film offers up the usual criminal activities, from protection rackets, robberies, prostitution rackets and murder; although not as gruesome as VIOLENT NAPLES, Lenzi gives us a hard-edged golf ball torture scene that isn't to be forgotten, and a scene where a man's leg is broken in excruciating detail. The fight scenes are well-staged and enjoyable to watch, the chases (including a rooftop battle) are exciting and well choreographed. None of the scenes drag at all, the pacing is spot on and the film is largely coherent.

Maurizio Merli returns to his (somewhat clichéd) role of the tough cop who doesn't take any grief from anybody. Also appearing are Tomas Milian as a slimy, long-haired gangster who double-crosses and tortures people, and John Saxon as a short-tempered rival gangster who spends most of his time swearing and shouting when things don't go according to plan. Glamour is lent by the beautiful Gabriella Lepori who spends most of her scenes getting beaten up! With a high death toll and lots of assorted bloodshed and violence, Lenzi's film is impossible not to like and oozes style in every scene. A highlight of the Italian genre that is highly recommended to all.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fast moving, varied and colourful
christopher-underwood2 February 2013
Fast moving, varied and colourful, this is a violent, although not particularly bloody tale of gang against gang and police against gangs with renegade cop doing all the work. Maurizio Merli is that ex-cop here, looking much like Franco Nero and doing almost as well. John Saxon is fine as one gang leader and Thomas Milian (barely recognisable as the other). There is some debate as to who takes which part of the title but for my money Saxon is the 'cynic', Milian the 'rat' with Merli undoubtedly the 'fist', but see the movie and make up your own mind. Some nice set pieces and some humour also in the mix and if there is less emphasis on the girls in this one there is at least one most memorable and violent scene.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed