Radiance Films: Goodbye & Amen (1978) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Radiance Films

Radiance Films have been showing Italian writer-director a lot of love lately, starting with their deluxe limited edition boxed set of Cosa Nostra: Franco Nero in Three Mafia Tales by Damiano Damiani while Arrow Video recently took a stab at one of his films in their Gothic Fantastico box.  With renewed interest in contemporary Italian crime dramas/thrillers thanks to boutique labels like Radiance who have more or less posited themselves as the new Arrow Academy, their ongoing efforts to publish previously unavailable Eastern European titles in lavishly restored and stacked blu-ray sets, it was only a matter of time before the company would land on arguably Damiani’s finest hour as a film director: the white-knuckle tense espionage/hostage Eurocrime thriller Goodbye & Amen.
 
When a CIA agent stationed in Rome named John Dannahay (Tony Musante from The Bird with a Crystal Plumage) is conspiring a planned coup d'état of the African government with several other higher ups in the Italian government, the elaborate plan is thwarted by the unlikely homicidal actions of corrupt diplomatic colleague turned lone hotel rooftop sniper Donald Grayson (John Steiner from Tenebrae).  Quickly developing into a hostage crisis ala Dog Day Afternoon, the disgruntled diplomat takes a young action movie actor and his mistress Mrs. De Mauro (screen starlet Claudia Cardinale).  Forced to shift gears and postpone the plan in order to bring down the lynchpin that could expose government corruption, the film takes on the structure of a police thriller of increasing tension and an almost domino-like rally of surprise revelations ahead.

 
With its exquisite, precise cinematography of Italian backdrops atop rooftops by Deep Red cinematographer Luigi Kuveiller and its funky, moody prog rock score by Oliver Onions aka Guido and Maurizio De Angelis and its committed yet nuanced performances from the ensemble cast, Damiano Damiani’s Goodbye & Amen is a stone-cold masterpiece of Italian crime cinema.  While not quite a poliziotteschi, it nevertheless is one of the stronger hostage crisis films while also functioning as an existential, almost sardonic examination of the gulf between political corruption and the need to maintain law and order.  As Damiani ratchets up the tension with our antagonist Donald Grayson pouring corn flakes all over the hotel floor in order to hear potential assassins leading towards a heart pounding finale of the killer and hostages trying to exit the hotel cloaked in motorcycle gear and helmets (a common giallo trope), the film builds up to a fever pitch of anxious, nervous excitement.

 
All of the actors in the piece, from Tony Musante, Claudia Cardinale, John Forsythe and John Steiner give pitch-perfect performances across the board, creating realistic and deeply flawed figures who take uncertain risks to try and advance their respective plans.  While ostensibly a hostage negotiation thriller of sorts, as with Damiani’s Cosa Nostra series Goodbye & Amen is also rather sardonic in its investigation of an already deeply corrupt government backed into a corner and forced to do right to avoid exposure of doing wrong.  On the one hand, our hero John Dannahay is intent on gaining control of a dangerous situation posing great harm to the general public, yet on the other hand his whole goal is to simply cover his ass.

 
For no apparent reason, this benchmark of Italian crime cinema remained unavailable on home video for a long time but thanks to the ongoing efforts of Radiance Films, Goodbye & Amen has been fully restored in 2023 in two cuts: the original Italian language cut and, for the first time ever on home video, the English cut.  The blu-ray comes with an audio commentary by Eurocrime aficionados Nathaniel Thompson and Howard Berger as well a newly conducted interview with editor Antonio Siciliano and Wolfango Soldati.  Another bona fide masterpiece of Italian crime cinema from one of its greatest purveyors, Damiano Damiani’s Goodbye & Amen represents one of the pinnacles of Eurocrime as well as sociopolitical satire and one of Radiance Films’ very best releases to open their 2024 roster.

--Andrew Kotwicki