The
1974 ‘Euro-crime’ film Street Law is
one of my personal favourites of the cycle. I took a risk on it when I imported
Blue Underground’s DVD release of the film back in 2006. But I’ve always found
that particular distributor to be very reliable in terms of quality and
interest. The film was my entry point into the violent, exciting, reactionary,
and uncompromising world of the Italian ‘Euro-crime’ cycle and for this I owe
the film a debt of gratitude. The director of the film was Enzo G. Castellari
who was no stranger to the various cycles that constituted popular cinema in
Italy in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Castellari’s early westerns were rather drab
and predictable affairs, singularly unmemorable, and offered little promise of
the films to come. The first hint of Castellari’s capabilities came in the war
film Eagles over London (1969). He
followed this with the dour and lacklustre giallo Cold Eyes of Fear (1971), which unsurprisingly remained his only
entry in this cycle. For the next few
years Castellari concentrated on crime pictures, creating an impressive and
consistent body of work which included High
Crime (1973), The Big Racket
(1976), The Heroin Busters (1977),
and Day of the Cobra (1980).
Showing posts with label Enzo G. Castellari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Enzo G. Castellari. Show all posts
Thursday, 17 July 2014
Saturday, 3 March 2012
Keoma (1976)
Dir: ENZO G. CASTELLARI
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Desperado
Django Rides Again
Keoma: The Avenger
The Violent Breed
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Desperado
Django Rides Again
Keoma: The Avenger
The Violent Breed
By the late 1970’s the landscape of the Euro-Western was limp and lifeless, the generic terrain parched and infertile. The occasional production little more than tumbleweed in a dusty and decaying town. The Spaghetti Western Database lists a paltry eight productions for 1976 and it would be fair to say that Enzo G. Castellari’s entry Keoma stands head and shoulders above the rest. Some argue that Keoma was not only the last important spaghetti western, but also one of the best ever made. Whilst I find the former possesses a nugget of truth, the latter is a lot harder to substantiate. However one fact that is undeniable is that out of the eight westerns that Castellari directed, Keoma is probably the most accomplished. I’ve argued elsewhere that although Castellari worked in a multitude of genres, his films, structurally at least, adhered very closely to the conventions of the western. So it’s something of a surprise to discover that until Keoma, he hadn’t directed a truly important or genre defining example. One of the major ingredients lacking in previous Castellari westerns is the sort of barnstorming and forceful performance that Franco Nero puts in as the beleaguered half-breed Keoma. With his wild and unkempt beard, penetrating blue eyes and long hair (actually a wig) Nero makes an indelible impression the likes of which audiences hadn’t enjoyed since Django (1966). Nero has his critics, but you won’t hear any negativity from me. Nero is at his charismatic best here and so dominates proceedings that the films director becomes totally overshadowed.
Sunday, 14 August 2011
The Heroin Busters (1977)
Dir: ENZO G. CASTELLARI
Country: ITALY
AKA:
La vie della droga
Drug Street
Country: ITALY
AKA:
La vie della droga
Drug Street
The Heroin Busters was director Enzo G. Castellari’s fourth poliziotteschi flick after High Crime (1973), Street Law (1974), and The Big Racket (1976). By now Castellari was as firmly associated with adrenaline pumping contemporary set thrillers as he was with the dust and bloodshed of the Euro-western. The difference between his westerns and poliziotteschi efforts was purely cosmetic. All of these films follow the narrative structures of the western and The Heroin Busters is no exception. This particular title has a reputation for being the weak link in Castellari’s 1970’s poliziotteschi quartet, but I find it to be the most entertaining and enjoyable. It has a certain hyper-stylised excessiveness that is lacking in the other three, and whilst this might be used as a criticism by some, I find the absurdity of The Heroin Busters to be one of its charms. It has a certain operatic ebullience that distances it from the gritty aesthetics of High Crime and lacks the hard edged cynicism and despair of Street Law and The Big Racket. In short this film is a lot of fun, and it is clear the filmmakers had a lot of fun putting it together.
Friday, 12 August 2011
Enzo G. Castellari Poster Gallery
SETTE WINCHESTER PER UN MASSACRO aka PAYMENT IN BLOOD aka RENEGADE RIDERS (1967) - UK Quad poster
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VADO...L'AMMAZZO E TORNO aka BLOOD RIVER aka ANY GUN CAN PLAY aka FOR A FEW BULLETS MORE (1967) - Italian poster
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QUELLA SPORCA STORIA NEL WEST aka JOHNNY HAMLET (1968) - Italian quad poster
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I TRE CHE SCONVOLSERIO IL WEST (VADO, VEDO E SPARO) aka I CAME, I SAW, I SHOT aka ONE DOLLAR TOO MANY (1968) - Italian poster
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Wednesday, 10 August 2011
The Big Racket (1976)
Dir: ENZO G. CASTELLARI
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Il grande racket
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Il grande racket
The Big Racket was director Enzo G. Castellari’s third poliziotteschi thriller after the tremendous commercial success of High Crime (1973) and Street Law (1974). These two films were marked by high octane chase and action sequences, remarkable stunts, and imperiously charismatic lead performances by Franco Nero. In many ways both films were a fascistic celebration of rampant machismo and unchecked masculinity. A perfect case study for the concurrent feminism of the day. Suffice it to say The Big Racket continues Castellari’s macho ethos. The only female characters being a vile masculinised thug who is more at home kicking the shit out of honest businessmen than burning her bra, and a schoolgirl who commits suicide after being raped. Yes, we are once again in the polarised social firmament that marks the writing of Massimo De Rita and Arduino Maluri. Instead of Nero’s bristling moustache and piercing blue eyes we have the dark and swarthy casualness of Fabio Testi. Testi lacks Nero’s charisma, and seems to struggle with the burden of being the films moral centre. He is on much firmer ground playing the laid back undercover cop in Castellari’s fourth poliziotteschi The Heroin Busters (1977). In that film Testi is quite magnificent, but he seems ill at ease with the character of Inspector Nico Palmieri, and at times his performance is stilted and unconvincing.
Monday, 8 August 2011
Street Law (1974)
Dir: ENZO G. CASTELLARI
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Il cittadino si ribella
Vigilante II
The Citizen Rebels
The Anonymous Avenger
Country: ITALY
AKA:
Il cittadino si ribella
Vigilante II
The Citizen Rebels
The Anonymous Avenger
Like most filmmakers working in the environment of popular Italian cinema between the mid 1960’s to the mid 1980’s Enzo G. Castellari found switching from one genre to another an easy task. It was made easy to him because the only difference between his westerns, crime thrillers, war movies, and post-apocalyptic science-fiction adventures was iconography and setting. At their heart almost all of Castellari’s films are westerns. It was rare for him to step out of the terrain of the action movie, and the narrative structures associated with westerns. When he did the results were almost always unspectacular, as his only giallo production Cold Eyes of Fear (1971) proves. Street Law was Castellari’s second bite at the poliziotteschi cherry after High Crime (1973) which also featured Franco Nero in the lead and is often overlooked due to its unavailability. It is in fact marginally superior to Street Law. But where Street Law does succeed is in its high degree of polish and the precision of its stunt work and action set pieces. High Crime can be seen as something of a dress rehearsal One that has descended into the murky abyss of a distribution limbo. Street Law’s prominence and longer lasting appeal is almost certainly due to is closeness to Death Wish (1974) and the torn from the tabloid hysteria that informs the opening montage.
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