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Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

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

Luc Merenda as  Vice commissario Caneparo
Richard Conte as  Padulo
Silvano Tranquilli as  Gianni Viviani
Carlo Alighiero as  Commissioner Nicastro
Martine Brochard as  Maria
Luciano Bartoli as  Giacomo
Lia Tanzi as  Prostitute
Bruno Corazzari as  Anarchist
Rosario Borelli as  Pepe
Antonio Casale as  Casarde

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Reviews

bkoganbing
1975/02/01

About the only thing I can say good about Milano Trema is that it has some nice shots of Milan in it. This Italian production with a native cast is a poor ripoff of some of our cop dramas like Bullitt or The Seven Ups or even the Dirty Harry series.Luc Merenda an orthodox cop with a Dirty Harry style of doing business does one thing that Harry Callahan would never do, go undercover because too many criminals know his face. He is however suspended for an execution of a pair of escaped criminals.After that his main booster the ever so tolerant police chief of Milan is assassinated by a criminal gang. Merenda goes undercover to find them.The gang is headed by American expatriate Richard Conte who after playing Don Barzini in The Godfather played a lot of cheap grade z productions for a paycheck. He has the look of a man waiting for his paycheck to clear as he mouths his dialog.There's a nice police chase similar to the one in Bullitt in this film. But all in all it's all stuff we've seen better on American cinema.

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Coventry
1975/02/02

There are good cops, there are bad cops… and then there also are awesomely barbaric Italian cops! Back in the early 70's, when the best scoring films in Hollywood were raw & violent crime-thrillers like "Dirty Harry" and "The French Connection", the Italian film industry immediately attempted to cash in on this trend and produced films that easily surpass the excitement-level of their American counterparts. The already hard-working local directors, who almost exclusively made horror films and westerns until then, like Umberto Lenzi, Fernando Di Leo and Enzo G. Castellari, suddenly also became specialists in the fields of outrageous car chases, deafening gunfights and aggressive personal vendetta techniques. Even though usually filmed on a tight schedule and wasting a minimum amount of budget, these crime-thrillers always are highly professional and technically superior films with impressively fast-paced camera-work and flawless editing. Sergio Martino joined the temporary hype as well, and – as it was the case with his splendid gialli-achievements – he delivered one of the absolute greatest efforts in the sub genre. His "Violent Professionals" has it all! The script is great and terrifically convoluted (courtesy of Ernesto Gastaldi – him again), the lead hero is immensely charismatic and merciless and the action sequences are so incredibly outrageous they're guaranteed to make your head spin. Practically all of these Italian crime-thrillers introduce heroic coppers who literally balance on the edge between right and wrong themselves. They're supposed to uphold the law and arrest criminals, but they rather act as judge, jury and executioner in one and prefer to kill a gangster rather than to bring him in for questioning. The opening sequence of "Violent Professionals" makes this perfectly clear, as the handsome and rough Inspector Giorgio Caneparo pursues a couple convicts through the Italian countryside after they escaped from a prison transport and killed several policemen and innocent civilians. Even after the criminals had already surrendered themselves, Inspector Giorgio guns them down anyway! This sequence is rather irrelevant to the rest of the movie's plot, but it's a terrific appetizer nevertheless and it gives you a good idea of the main character's personality. The actual plot revolves on the same Inspector Giorgio infiltrating in the organized crime network of Milan, because he wants to find and personally punish the bastard who killed the Milan police commissioner (and his own best friend). With his aggressive fighting style and vast knowledge of bank robbing techniques, Giorgio quickly gets himself noticed and he's soon hired as the getaway driver of one of Milan's most notorious mob bosses. The script isn't always waterproof, but the basic premise of "Violent Professionals" is compelling and engaging enough to keep you close to the screen throughout the whole playtime. The action is top-notch, with some of best car crashes/chases ever shown (the same ones actually feature in Lenzi's "Almost Human") and a whole lot of bloody executions. It's also an amazingly raw and relentless film! Poor, defenseless children and innocent hostages die just as brutally as the real baddies and you shouldn't count on a happy ending in which the hero walks towards the sunset with his loving girlfriend. Quite the contrary, Sergio Martino often captures a surprisingly gripping & melodramatic atmosphere here; especially in the sub plot centering on the affair with Inspector Giorgio and the drug addict informant Maria Ex. The De Angelis Brothers' score is one of the most enchanting ones I ever heard and it's perfectly appropriate for all the uneven differences in the film's tones. Luc Merenda is just as imposing and memorable as his fellow bad-cop actor colleagues Tomas Milian, Ray Lovelock and Maurizio Merli. Very much recommended if you're looking for thrills and suspense.

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The_Void
1975/02/03

Many of the best Giallo directors tried their hand at the Dirty Harry-inspired Polizi sub-genre at some point, and The Violent Professionals is Sergio Martino's classy effort. The film isn't as good as Martino's Giallo efforts (few films are), but it still stands up as one of the better Polizi films. Martino packs the film with all the elements that make this sort of thing successful; we've got car chases, gun fights, fist fights, a headstrong lead character etc. Unfortunately, despite working from a script by ace writer Ernesto Gastaldi, The Violent Professionals does suffer from the classic Italian film problem of a confusing plot. The plot follows the murder of a police chief. Lieutenant Giorga doesn't take this very well, and decides to follow up the chief's investigation by going undercover in a local gang of low lives. His plan is to build up enough of a reputation for himself that will enable him to get close to the leaders of the group and learn their secrets; but this foolhardy plan runs into a lot of adversity...Like many Italian crime flicks, this one takes place in Milan. I've never been to Milan, but I'm guessing that it was one hell of a sleaze den back in the seventies as these films don't exactly paint a pretty picture! Sergio Martino does well at presenting a gritty urban atmosphere, and this hugely benefits the film. Martino's direction is solid throughout, and he can certainly take his place as one of the finest directors that Italy ever produced. Even when I wasn't completely sure what was going on, Martino keeps the tension bubbling and the film ticks over nicely all the way through. The standout moment takes the form of a car chase through the streets of Milan, and cinematic chases have rarely been better. The acting is strong also, and the film features a brilliant performance from Luc Merenda in the lead role, as well as film noir regular Richard Conte in support. The film lacks a good female lead, but other than that it pretty does everything you would want it to. Overall, The Violent Professionals isn't the best film of its type - but it's certainly a good one and gets high recommendations from me.

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Blaise_B
1975/02/04

So far I've seen five of these 70's Italian crime thrillers, 3 of them being straight up, Don Siegel and William Friedkin-influenced "cop on the edge with an axe to grind" Dirty Harry rip-offs. Out of those three, all of which are great, this has got to be the one with the coolest story-line (the other two being "High Crime" and "Violent Naples," to give you an idea of the standard here). While it is neither perfect nor entirely realistic, it is action-packed, bloody and riveting, a cocktail of elements common to the genre. And this particular "cop-on-the-edge," played by Luc Merenda, is so on-the-edge that he "poses" as a pimp muscling in on prostitution rackets with the facility of an old pro, gets innocent bystanders killed without hardly batting an eye, and cold-bloodedly executes surrendering criminals in front of the entire police department!While he lacks quite the level of charisma and intensity delivered by Franco Nero or Maurizio Merli, Merenda holds his own. The primary reason he is able to do so here (the two secondary are Sergio Martino's competence in directing pulse-pounding action and the fact that the extremity I've come to expect from these films is as present here as anywhere) is the sucker-punch, no, make that downright subversive plot-line. Without giving too much away, suffice it to say that what appears to be shaping up into a slanted portrayal of fanatical domestic terrorists (not that groups like the Red Brigade need any slanting to look bad, just that dishonesty bugs me even if it's on the right side) proves later to be something entirely different. The ending of this film, while it would be typical in another context, blew me away.To top it off, you've got a killer score by the mad De Angelis brothers (if you've seen "Keoma," note that it helps that the only song with words isn't translated into English), and the only fatal car crash I've ever seen in an action movie where the car doesn't inexplicably burst into flames. Three cheers for this gleefully brutal mayhem-fest with the added plus of an intelligent plot!

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