Dir: STELVIO MASSI
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Mark il poliziotto
Blood, Sweat and Fear
Mark of the Cop
The
big three directors who inhabit the murky, tough, and violent world of the Italian
‘Euro-crime’ cycle are Fernando Di Leo, Umberto Lenzi, and Stelvio Massi. It
seems that history has been the kindest to Di Leo, who has selected titles
available in high definition and is generally regarded as an important
filmmaker in the landscape of popular Italian cinema. Fairing slightly worse is
Umberto Lenzi, and this is almost entirely due to his risible cannibal
escapades rather than his solid, if unexceptional, entries in the ‘Euro-crime’
and ‘Giallo’ cycles. Due to the vagaries of distribution the filmography of
Massi is the least explored of the three, and as a result Massi is not
discussed anywhere near as prolifically as the other two men. Although all
three filmmakers owe debts of gratitude to the Hollywood films that inspired
them, perhaps Massi most of all showed his influences a little too freely. This
can be seen most keenly in his 1975 thriller Mark the Narc which is one of the most rigorous pastiches of the
first two films to feature Clint Eastwood as San Francisco detective Harry
Callaghan.
Italian
actor Franco Gasparri plays maverick cop Mark Terzi who embodies all the values
that made Harry Callaghan such a lethal public servant. Gasparri is not a
particularly expressive actor. When called upon to show emotion he is found
wanting. But what Gasparri does possess is good looks and charisma, and he
brings to the role an effortless cool, which works in stark contrast to his
despairing and bleak outlook on life. Terzi is also anti-establishment to the
core, a maverick that chooses to keep his superiors in the dark, and is
determined to prove that Milan is not just a city that drugs pass though, but a
base of operations. Terzi is almost entirely alone in his belief that local
businessman Benzi (Lee J. Cobb) is the mastermind behind the drugs scene in
Milan, save for the loyalty of his affable, but put upon, partner Questore
(Giorgio Albertazzi). Terzi and Questore make an excellent team, the one super
cool and in excellent physical condition, the other dishevelled and world weary
with a penchant for sweets. Questore is also incredibly indulgent toward the
younger man’s flights of fancy, and is the facilitator of much of Terzi’s
rule-breaking conduct.
Aside
from using an identical weapon to Harry Callaghan, Terzi also gets to thwart a
bank robbery in exactly the same way as Callaghan does in Dirty Harry (1971), with several shots fired into the windscreen of
the getaway car with the predictable chaotic results. Dardano Sachetti’s
screenplay resists the urge to mimic the famous words Callaghan speaks in
favour of following this sequence with an unexciting chase on foot. Later in
the film as Questore closes in on the criminals he is eliminated by a
motorcycle cop in exactly the same way as several sequences in Magnum Force (1973). The name Dardano
Sachetti attached to the screenplay should alert veterans of popular Italian
cinema to the ways in which women will be treated in the film. We see three
women in this film; the main female character is played by Sara Sperati and is
a heroin addict whom Terzi takes a shine too and assists in breaking the habit.
The film goes to some lengths to explore her addiction, her willingness to
prostitute herself, and her desire to stay clean. But she is also desperate to
bed Terzi. In the end her enslavement to heroin is too strong, and she ends up
overdosing on pure heroin administered to her by criminals who want her out of
the way. The second female character is her mother, a bizarre character who
rants and raves about societal degeneracy, but does little to help her
daughter. The third female character is a woman Terzi picks up outside a phone
box for a one night stand. The sub-plot involving Irene’s drug addiction is
half baked and perfunctory, it feels tacked on as if to give the film some kind
of moral weight. The whole episode is unconvincing, and the film is far more
comfortable within the masculine realm of cops and criminals.
For
a ‘Euro-crime’ flick Mark the Narc is
singularly lacking in truly exciting set pieces. The pacing is lethargic at
times, as if the director believes Gasparri doing very little, other than
looking cool is enough. The criminals
are severely under-used, especially Lee J. Cobb who has very little to do aside
from lend his name to the production. One of the better characters is Gruber
(Carlos Duran), a German thug who gets his kicks from murder and beating on
women, but he is eliminated far too swiftly in a fight with Terzi. One thing I
always enjoy about these films is the locations and this one is no exception.
The film uses its Milan locations very well, and they are brought to vivid life
by the cinematography of Marcello Gatti. This is a very light and airy film,
with much of the action taking place in daylight in open locations. In keeping
with the general unhurried pace of the film, the final chase sequence as Terzi
closes in on the predictable villain ends in a particularly un-climactic fashion,
and continues a general trend of subtle disappointments that are seen
throughout. The one area that doesn’t disappoint is the soundtrack by Stelvio
Cipriani, which adds a touch of needed class to the subdued proceedings. Mark the Narc was a sizeable enough hit
to ensure two sequels; the first entitled Mark
Shoots First (1976), the second entitled Mark Strikes Again (1976). All directed by Massi and all starring
Franco Gasparri. I’m not sure Marc the
Narc warranted several sequels, it is ultimately a solid, but entirely
unremarkable entry into the cycle.
No comments:
Post a Comment