Radiance Films: A Man on His Knees (1979) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Radiance Films

Damiano Damiani may well be one of the greatest Eurocrime poliziotteschi film directors Italy has ever known and Radiance Films is right here to point nearly all of it in our direction.  From their Cosa Nostra trilogy box of films starring Franco Nero to Goodbye & Amen, the boutique releasing label has saw fit to publish his works for the very first time on blu-ray disc in deluxe ornate special edition packages.  Their latest venture in curating and publishing his work here consists of the 1979 Eurocrime thriller A Man on His Knees starring none other than The Iron Prefect (also by Radiance) actor Giuliano Gemma and Michele Placido in one of the most unexpected David vs. Goliath portraits of an everyman pitted against the empire of organized crime.

 
Nino Peralta (Giuliano Gemma) is an ordinary working man stationed at a food kiosk in Rome trying to make ends meet for his family while fending off mob extortionists when he discovers through a co-worker friend there’s a hit list with Nino’s name on it over the kidnapping of a wealthy woman he had nothing to do with.  Moreover, he starts noticing a well-dressed assassin named Platamona (Michele Placido) is lurking the area, silently picking off other mobsters on the list along the way.  As suspicions and tensions rise, these two disparate characters will cross paths in an unlikely dual race to uncover the truth and clear each other’s names before the trigger is pulled on both of them. 

 
A rugged streetwise mouse taking on a cat sort of Eurocrime yarn and sociopolitical critique of the futility of trying to take on the criminal elite entrenched in wealth and politics, A Man on His Knees marks another excellent turn for director Damiano Damiani in this sardonic matter-of-fact mobster drama.  Told entirely from Nino’s perspective as an everyman with a criminal past slowly catching up to him, trying to care for his ailing daughter and beleaguered wife as powers from the mob afar start tightening the head screws, the film unfolds as our anti-hero takes matters into his own hands in an effort to find the truth.  Almost upstaging him is Platamona the hitman who gets cold feet upon pulling the trigger thus landing him in even deeper hot waters with his superiors. 

 
Co-written by Nicola Badalucco and Damiano Damiani, this scenic yet gritty and rough crime thriller told on the open streets of Rome and enclosed apartment settings in between warehouses where murder hits are carried out is shot beautifully by La Dolce Vita cameraman Ennio Guarnieri.  The original score by Beat the Devil composer Franco Mannino is appropriately understated if not a little funky, underscoring the aura of omnipresent danger as Nino’s actions endanger himself and his family further.  Performances from the two central leads are fantastic with Giuliano Gemma shedding his slick indefatigable crime fighting aura from The Iron Prefect for that of a scruffy criminal trying to go good only to sink further in over his head.  Equally strong and playing off of his gruffness is Michele Placido as the would-be assassin Platamona working his way towards trying to kill Nino only to hesitate and rethink the gravity of the situation upon reaching his target.

 
Made just a couple of years prior to his controversial English language debut film Amityville II: The Possession, Damiano Damiani’s A Man on His Knees represents another solid entry within the Eurocrime/Poliziotteschi subgenre and functions as a stirring social commentary about the nature and dynamics governing the everyman as a cog in the wheel of a mechanized criminal empire.  Largely about the protagonist’s fall from grace as he tries to clear his name by himself as friends and family get swept up in the mob hits, the film joins Radiance Films’ prior Damiano Damiani releases in terms of showing off the director’s best examples of genre filmmaking in a new 4K restoration of the worldwide blu-ray disc premiere replete with a detailed collector’s booklet and plentiful extras.  Thanks to Radiance, Damiani is quickly ascending to the top of my favorite Eurocrime filmmakers next to Enzo G. Castellari or Umberto Lenzi.

--Andrew Kotwicki