Arrow Video: Years of Lead: Five Classic Italian Crime Thrillers (1973 - 1977) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Arrow Films

Lasting somewhere between the late 1960s and continuing on until the late 1980s, the so-called Italian Years of Lead was a period of social unrest and upheaval including but not limited to terrorist attacks from the left and right sides of the political fence as well as boundless political corruptions.  Referring to the number of shootings during the period, the term ‘Poliziotteschi’ or police-related crime film (Euro-crime or Italo-crime) gradually emerged from the mayhem plaguing contemporary Italy.  Of this period, an entire subgenre of Italian cinema in response to the Years of Lead as well as a response to the Dirty Harry movies in the United States presented itself, which brings us to Arrow Video’s newly curated Years of Lead blu-ray boxed set.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Consisting of five feature films (two of which are from director Vittorio Salerno), the Years of Lead box gives newcomers something of a smorgasbord of titles illustrating a thematic progression and stylistic journey over the course of the movies in the set.  Transposing the troubling daily news stories of crime and murders onto the silver screen, the Poliziotteschi genre is unique for treading a fine line between entertainment and exploitation.  Gritty, rough and ragged, each film offers a different perspective of a different facet of criminal activity originating within Italy, whether it be tied to robberies or senseless murders or whatever the case of corruption is being dramatized.
 
Often gruesomely hyperviolent and adorned with sex, drugs and nudity, the Years of Lead box is a bumpy but well worthwhile ride through the fast and dangerous life of mid-70s Italy that’s equal parts outrageous and enlightening.  Of a period that cannot be replicated no matter how hard filmmakers of the new millennia try, the Years of Lead is a welcome smattering of the Poliziotteschi genre that’ll please die hard fans as well as shock and enthrall the uninitiated eager to dive into the mire of distinctly Italian cinematic criminal underworlds thanks to the good folks at Arrow Video with what is easily one of the year’s most important blu-ray boxed sets released by the company.
 
*Note: the films being reviewed are presented out of chronological order, instead following the set’s arrangement and thematic journey of the films*
 
 
Savage Three (1975)

One of the more unusual offerings in Joe Dallesandro’s career in Italian film and one of the most brutally violent films in the Years of Lead box, Vittorio Salerno’s Savage Three is unusual for all of the crimes being senseless exercises in egomaniacal sociopathy.  Concerning a Turing office building consisting of punching numbers into an oversized archaic computer, Ovidio (Dallesandro) and two of his co-workers get bored one day and start a brawl at a soccer game.  Turned on by the thrill of vandalism, the trio starts committing random crimes against innocent bystanders for their own amusement, each act increasingly more destructive and vicious than the last.  Only a grizzled veteran commissioner (Enrico Maria Salerno) stands to bring an end to the bored threesome’s goalless bloodletting.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Memorable for an unforgettably nasty murder of a topless woman involving a forklight, Savage Three packs just as hard of a brass knuckled punch as it did for Italian moviegoers in 1975.  From its non-judgmental study of senseless violence feeding a sociopathic ego to its regard for how the mundanities of day to day life can give rise to violence percolating in apathetic individuals, Savage Three presents viewers with a conundrum.  On the one hand, with the film’s pulsating rock track by Franco Campanino, the film invites you to participate with the killers in the havoc being wrought.  On the other hand, the acts of violence are so devoid of motivation and are presented so completely you’re automatically repulsed by their actions anyway.
 
One of the darkest films in the set for depicting Italian social breakdown in microcosm, particularly with the hard-to-watch analogy of caged rats attacking one another followed by the film’s infamous soccer game riot, Savage Three is every bit as bumpy and morally adrift ride as you would come to expect from the Poliziotteschi subgenre.  In the order of the set, it starts off Years of Lead with a brutal bang, letting you know right away the journey is only going to get more complex, more violent and more deathly startling from here. 
 

Like Rabid Dogs (1976)

Picking up where Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange left off with a dose of impishly perverse The Last House on the Left camaraderie among the killers, Mario Imperioli’s nasty and often rapey Like Rabid Dogs thematically follows in the footsteps of Savage Three for continuing the study of senseless unmotivated violence committed purely because the choice is there.  After (like Savage Three) a stadium murder is committed, inspector Paolo Muzi (Jean-Pierre Sabagh) finds himself hot on the trail of four criminals engaged in a killing spree replete with robberies and rapes.  All of which is at the behest of overprivileged maniac Tony (Cesare Barro) who recruits his college buddies as his cronies in the increasingly vicious crime spree.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Loosely based on the Circeo Massacre and the toughest to watch film with many sequences of women’s clothes being ripped off before they’re murdered, Like Rabid Dogs is easily the roughest and bumpiest ride in the set.  Partially a critique of the overprivileged leading lives of lawlessness and exploitation of others in their way as well as a pure offering of exploitation with more than a few sex scenes tossed in for good measure, Like Rabid Dogs comes the closest to crossing over into transgressive territory.  The film also presents the struggle between the long little cop versus the Goliath of wealthy socialites who continue to sweep their dirty little secrets under the rug.
 
Visually the first panoramic film in the set thanks to lush cinematography by Romano Albani and also boasts a funky score by Mario Molini.  Still, of the poliziotteschi’s presented in the set thus far, this one was actually even more brutal and nasty than say Umberto Lenzi’s The Tough Ones which also didn’t leave any act of violence off the table.  As a crime thriller it is a fascinating if not abrasive and occasionally disturbing one.  Fans of the poliziotteschi won’t be disappointed but the uninitiated are in for one seriously rude awakening.  Moving right along…


Colt 38 Special Squad (1976)

Now this is what I’m talking about!  What Have You Done to Solange? director Massimo Dallamano’s Colt 38 Special Squad out of the gate is an instant over-the-top poliziotteschi classic!  While the first two films took some time to develop the crimes onscreen, Colt 38 Special Squad opens immediately on a heated gun battle between cops and a criminal kingpin.  After the police captain Vanni’s (Marcel Bozzuffi) wife is shot dead at point blank range, he takes the law into his own hands and assembles a squad of enforcers armed with .38 colt revolvers, unleashing an unstoppable armada against the kingpin who also start raising the stakes as more and more terrorist bombings in public venues begin to spike.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Featuring some extended gun shootouts rivaling Michael Mann’s Heat and a car door closing on a gangster’s hand you won’t soon forget, Colt 38 Special Squad is truly a home run of a movie.  Not only the most enjoyably brutal and over-the-top violent film in the set with some chase stunt sequences that have to be seen to be believed, Colt 38 Special Squad stands on its own as one of the best Italian action crime thrillers of the 1970s period!  While sadly the last film of Massimo Dallamano who passed away shortly after completing the picture, this could well be his masterpiece he had been working towards all of his career.  Though open to debate which is his best, for my money Colt 38 Special Squad is easily my favorite of his.
 
Visually the film is expertly photographed in widescreen by Gabor Pogany with some arresting sequences involving chases with motorcycles, cars and even one where a car is on top of a train driving towards the front boxcar.  The film also enlists the musical talents of Nightmare City composer Stelvio Cipriani who infuses the piece with an urgency that drives the film forward.  Mostly though the film is a showdown between Marcel Bozzuffi and the crime boss played with gusto by Ivan Rassimov from All the Colors of the Dark with many scenes of colorful set designs such as the nightclub which functions as a sort of hideout for the killers.  All in all, Colt 38 Special Squad gets my pick for favorite film in the set and is one Hell of a crime thriller in its own right, poliziotteschi or not.


Highway Racer (1977)

The first of many collaborations between director Stevio Massi and actor Maurizio Merli who soon became the face of poliziotteschi or Eurocrime itself, Highway Racer is a rare case of the iconic Merli taking on a central starring role devoid of his trademark mustache.  Anyway, the film concerns tough cop Marco Palma (Merli) whose partner is killed during a particularly high-speed chase and is suggested by his girlfriend who works in a car dealership to “soup-up” his own car to keep up with the criminals being pursued.  Meanwhile, his boss suggests he go undercover and temporarily takes him under his wing to train him to be an expert police driver so when the time comes for another chase with the criminal syndicate, he’ll be ready.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Chock full of wild car chases and stunts that would make John Landis blush, a terrific score by the aforementioned Stelvio Cipriani and taut cinematography by Frano Delli Colli and Richard Pallotini, Highway Racer is one of the more energetic poliziotteschi offerings with the legend himself Merli at the forefront.  Though the plot itself isn’t much more than a tough cop wanting to take out the criminal enterprise all by himself, where it soars are in the technically brilliant chase sequences and the stern face of Merli who more or less was born to play in poliziotteschi films. 
 
While tense and fast paced, Highway Racer is the first film in the Years of Lead set with the fewest exploitative elements, instead focusing on the action set pieces and riding on the cool swagger of Merli.  Mostly it’s just a cool good-guys vs. bad-guys thriller with more than a few arresting stunts and some unbelievable car crashes.  Like the films before it, the film also boasts glorious Rome locations and city life with the criminals buzzing around the city like insects.  While fans accustomed to the grittiness of the first three might feel a bit let down here, Highway Racer nonetheless remains a staple of the poliziotteschi genre for Merli and for how it accelerated the car chase rules in the genre itself.


No, the Case is Happily Resolved (1973)
 
Finally the most sobering, melancholy and artistically inclined film in the set, Savage Three director Vittorio Salerno’s still blistering No, the Case is Happily Resolved is something of an outlier for refraining from exploitation and instead using elements of the giallo thriller and poliziotteschi to criticize the criminal justice system itself and its occasional miscarriages of justice.  Opening on a somber cue by legendary composer Riz Ortolani, which sets the mood for the whole thing, the film is a classic study of how easily innocent people can be wrongfully convicted for a crime they didn’t commit and how easily the real culprit can get away with his crimes almost publicly.
 
The other side of the coin that was Elio Petri’s Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion, the film concerns a family man named Fabio Santamaria (Enzo Cerusico) who goes out fishing when he sees a half-naked woman being beaten to death by an older man.  After his eyes lock with the man and he flees the scene, he contemplates going to the police but refrains fearing it’ll only make trouble for his family.  Bad move because it so happens the murderer is a respected college professor named Eduardo Ranieri (Richard Cucciolla) who beats Fabio to the authorities and pins the crime on Fabio who tries to hide out by shaving his mustache and altering his attire.
 
Notable for being the only film in the Years of Lead box armed with a message instead of exploitative entertaining thrills, No, the Case is Happily Resolved is a savage critique of the flaws in the criminal justice system and how the privileged and wealthy have a better shot at escaping conviction than a lowly everyman.  Eduardo is clearly guilty as charged but more or less succeeds in drawing the unwanted attention away from himself.  It’s also critical of a system that is likely to cause more problems for you by going to the police to report a crime.  Fabio knows he has a moral obligation to report the crime he witnessed but fears the systemic repercussions of doing so and thus keeps silent.

Courtesy of Arrow Films
 
Though the earliest release in the set, No, the Case is Happily Resolved is presented at the end of the lineup as it represents a full circle thematic completion of the Years of Lead box.  While the first two start out noisy and abrasive, its fortuitous that the last one would be quiet and contemplative, painting a contemporary legal drama through the mold of giallo and poliziotteschi.  Moreover, it illustrates how corruption and inconsistencies in the system more or less allowed criminals to manipulate the law in their favor even if the rest of the world knows they’re guilty as sin. 
 
Ultimately, No, the Case is Happily Resolved which is compromised somewhat by studio meddling favoring a more user friendly coda, is a good closing chapter to Years of Lead, enthralling and exciting the viewer with its visceral thrills initially while leaving viewers with an intellectually and morally challenging finish, rounding out Arrow Video’s Years of Lead box as one of the most important curated releases of European cinema of 2021!

--Andrew Kotwicki