The Violent Professionals
The Violent Professionals
R | 01 February 1975 (USA)
The Violent Professionals Trailers

With or without help from law enforcement officers, a lone individual decides to crack down on the syndicate.

Reviews
Ensofter

Overrated and overhyped

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Beanbioca

As Good As It Gets

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ShangLuda

Admirable film.

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Sexyloutak

Absolutely the worst movie.

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Michael A. Martinez

MILANO TREMA boasts some nice Milan location work and some very well-handled action sequences by Sergio Martino. The proceedings however get a little bogged down with a few too many subplots, unlikable characters, and lots and lots of talking about politics. Ernesto Gastaldi was one of the best of Italy's genre movie screenwriters, always able to inject some realism and dimensionality even into the small bit players. There's even some successful intentional humor, particularly during Luc Merenda's successful infiltration of a bank heist racket even though he's (a former?) chief of police.The car chases in this film really take the cake though as some of the best of the genre, and quite early in the cycle too. Footage from the chases popped up in numerous other crime films, particularly Umberto Lenzi's. Also, a lot of the same henchmen would pop up in film to film from here on out. While at first I was irked that the two bumbling goons (Claudio Ruffini and Sergio Smacchi) who get tasked with tailing Merenda around just disappear without any resolution, I was delighted to see teamed again (possibly as the same characters?) in such films as THE CYNIC THE RAT AND THE FIST.Granted, the success of this film, along with HIGH CRIME led to an explosion of Italian crime movies over the rest of the decade. The two films share much in common including featuring a fisticuffs- loving inspector using extreme methods to rid his city of crime to the tune of Guido and Maurizio De Angelis music. Oh yes, and Silvano Tranquilli appears in both, though his character here much less intimidating.

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JohnHowardReid

A Dania Film/C.C. Champion Production. Italian release: 27 August 1973. French DVD title: Rue de la Violence. 104 minutes.COMMENT: I have mixed feelings about this one. I purchased the NEO DVD (which I can most highly recommend, even though they can't spell "giustizia") solely because Richard Conte was billed above the title (Luc Merenda was billed first and then Conte – and that was it for above-the-title billing). Well, Conte is one of my favorite actors and I'd never seen any of his Italian films, so naturally I was quick to pounce on this DVD. As most of you know, Conte is an Italian name and Richard could speak Italian. And doubtless he did so during the shooting. But nonetheless, his voice is dubbed. Disappointment number one.The NEO DVD offers a choice between the original 98-minutes (allowing for DVD speed) Italian version (with French sub-titles) and a censored (to 95 minutes), French-dubbed version. Naturally, I chose the Italian version. The print is impeccable, but in a sense it's too good. The print is so sharp, it's easy to spot that Conte is not doing his own fighting. On the other hand, the other action scenes – and most particularly the car chases – are out of this world. Nonetheless, the sleazy, depressingly dark and bloodthirsty tone of the whole movie made me wish I'd watched the French version instead.

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gavin6942

A renegade Italian cop fears that the law is too restricted when trying to fight lawless criminals, especially after seeing a prisoner escape and kill more people. Why send him back to prison when he already had a life sentence? All future murders are free of charge. Then, a high-ranking cop is killed on the street and the renegade is given an audience -- he is free to fight crime in his own way, which is a bit reckless.I've seen reviews compare this film to "Dirty Harry", which seems about right. If anything, the officer in this film goes beyond what Clint Eastwood's character would do. Working with prostitutes, infiltrating a crime syndicate -- even robbing a bank with them, resulting in the death of a pregnant woman. The title "violent professionals" really sums it up... though, whether this refers to the cop or the criminals is left ambiguous.After seeing another film from the box set I retrieved this from ("Kung Fu Punch of Death") I had very low expectations. But, ignoring the low production value that runs rampant in Italian films, the story and action were pretty amazing. There's a car chase scene that can give "French Connection" a run for its money. If you can tolerate cheap films, this is a truly great crime film.Would I watch this again? Sure I would. I'd love it if someone would clean up the picture, sound and give me subtitles instead of dubbing... but for what the film cost me I more than got my money's worth on it. Don't be afraid to watch "Violent Professionals".

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Camera Obscura

THE VIOLENT PROFESSIONALS (Sergio Martino - Italy 1973).Not all too interesting Dirty Harry variation from Sergio Martino in this crime thriller, starring Luc Merenda as a tough smooth-guy cop who goes undercover as a wheels man to infiltrate a ring of cop-killin' bank robbers. The main problem is main man Luc Merenda who has little charisma and is either permanently smiling or desperately trying to look tough. Either way, his repertoire is a bit limited. The unimaginative screenplay by Ernesto Gastaldi is entirely short on logic. This is less urgent when writing horror or giallos, but the actions of police and crime bosses are supposed to contain some kind of logic, since they're driven by greed and money. In the world of organized crime, there's usually little room for vague motives, but here, most actions lack any kind of motivation. Even a bank robbery is carried out so incredibly clumsy, it was beyond me why the bank robbers were even surprised things went wrong. Occasionally, it's a pretty lively affair with lots of action with some spectacular car chases (one of them probably took half the budget of the entire film), but some of these exciting set pieces can't save this from being a bore most of the time, with Merenda driving around in his car aimlessly or beating the living crap out of everyone he meets to get some answers about his chief's killing. In most cases, the answers don't add up to much or didn't make any sense to me. The English dubbing wasn't a big help in that department either.Camera Obscura --- 5/10

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