Radiance Films: The Iron Prefect (1977) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Radiance Films

The true story of Italian fascist prefect Cesare Mori who took on the Sicilian Mafia with a brutally ruthless iron fist, earning him the moniker The Iron Prefect, began in the 1920s when he took office as the prefect of Bologna before being appointed prefect of Trapani and eventually Palermo under the personal appointment of Benito Mussolini.  Given carte blanche over all of Sicily tasked with the mission of eliminating the Mafia by any means necessary however fascistic, Cesare Mori proceeded in 1926 with what became known as the occupation of the village of Gangi, which was a hiding ground for gangsters. 

 
House by house, carabinieri and police forces searched homes and snuffed out criminals using smoke, fire and other weaponry.  Over 11,000 people were arrested and the prefect sought to establish a bond between the populace and the state showing criminality would not prevail over the people.  But in so doing, the prefect also inadvertently discovers collusion between the Mafia, the State and the Fascist party and his own position of power as The Iron Prefect becomes threatened as he finds himself in a moral quandary before being dismissed while the Fascist party conveniently formally declares the defeat of the Mafia.
 
Circa 1977, The Climber director Pasquale Squitieri and screenwriter Ugo Pirro sought to bring the tale of The Iron Prefect and specifically his invasion of Gangi to the silver screen, resulting in a powerful David di Donatello award winning crime epic that follows in the bleak, mordantly satirical outlook of Radiance Films’ own recently released Cosa Nostra box which highlighted growing criminality and corruption within the government and police systems.  Played by A Pistol for Ringo actor Giuliano Gemma as a stoic indefatigable man often considered as having cleaned house with the Mafia, the role which won the actor the top prize at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival comes against what we expect from the actor as a conflicted hero who bulldozes over Gangi and finds himself at crossroads after doing so. 

 
Coming against the prefect is Anna Torrisi (legendary actress Claudia Cardinale), a villager who finds herself and her family being torn apart by the arrests who represents the people of the village of Gangi in microcosm.  Walking barefoot across rocky and ragged terrain among other villagers just scraping by for survival on what little means they have.  While initially the prefect tries to meet Torrisi in the middle, offering her food and clothing for her family which she flatly refuses, eventually he is forced to turn off the water of the village prior to the invasion, further turning up the heat on the populace to snuff out the mobsters.  An integral counterpoint to the prefect’s sense of perfected righteousness, over time Torrisi begins to peel back layers that cast the whole endeavor of the prefect in a different light.
 
Visually speaking The Iron Prefect looks breathtaking, lensing the open rocky terrain of Sicily with wide angled open vistas interspersed between tight close-ups of the actors faces by The Great Silence cinematographer Silvano Ippoliti.  A striking, recurring vista involves the golden desert lands being invaded by a tiny cloaked-in-black figure with a rifle representing the prefect’s propensity to simply appear at the doorsteps of those he’s either about to arrest or kill.  Washing over the whole film with somber melancholy is legendary Italian composer Ennio Morricone’s downbeat original score.  While we’re witnessing what’s often referred to as the cleanup of the mafia, the film isn’t too happy about it and soon the film’s mood representing the feelings of the people of Gangi starts to catch up with the prefect.

 
Starting out as a historical crime drama before becoming a satirical and somber critique of crime fighting doing little more than fostering bigger crimes in the political hierarchy, The Iron Prefect also named I Am the Law in some territories was not without its measure of controversy.  Critics complained the film tended to downplay the fascism of Cesare Mori, though looking at it now it is hard to concur as the whole point of the film seems to involve the warring mob, the fascists and the state being one in the same.  Moreover, the film’s version of Cesare Mori begins to question everything he thought he knew about his mission and position of power and whether or not anything substantive in combating Italian crime syndicates was achieved at all.  The Iron Prefect curtailed crime with an iron fist, but did it really make one iota of difference in the end?

--Andrew Kotwicki