Rent The Violent Professionals (1973)

3.3 of 5 from 61 ratings
1h 35min
Rent The Violent Professionals (aka Milano trema: la polizia vuole giustizia) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
  • General info
  • Available formats
Synopsis:
Tough cop Giorgio (Luc Merenda) doesn't like to play by the rules, going as far as gunning down a ruthless criminal in broad daylight. After he's suspended from the force and his boss is murdered, he goes on a brutal undercover dive into the criminal underworld to expose a criminal organisation with no respect for authority.
Actors:
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , Anna Eugeni, ,
Directors:
Producers:
Luciano Martino, Carlo Ponti
Writers:
Ernesto Gastaldi
Aka:
Milano trema: la polizia vuole giustizia
Studio:
Vipco
Genres:
Action & Adventure, Classics, Drama, Thrillers
Collections:
Heist Movies: Masterminds and Mavericks, A Brief History of Film...
Countries:
Italy
BBFC:
Release Date:
25/07/2005
Run Time:
95 minutes
Languages:
English
Subtitles:
None
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Trailers
  • Gallery
  • Filmographies
BBFC:
Release Date:
02/08/2021
Run Time:
100 minutes
Languages:
English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono, Italian DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono
Subtitles:
English
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 2.35:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
  • Audio Commentary by Kim Newman and Barry Forshaw
  • Out for Justice - An Interview with Actor Luc Merenda
  • Story of Ex - An Interview with Actress Martine Brochard
  • The Rules of Crime - An Interview with Writer Ernesto Gastaldi
  • A Violent Professional - An Interview with Director Sergio Martino
  • Luciano Ross - A Tribute by Kier-La Janisse
  • English Trailer

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Reviews (3) of The Violent Professionals

Dirty Harry, Italian Style - The Violent Professionals review by Count Otto Black

Spoiler Alert
02/04/2015

This is a "cult" movie. In other words, the violence is nastier than you'd expect from a mainstream movie made in 1973, and the budget correspondingly lower. Unfortunately it isn't very good.

The basic plot is that the hero, a cop so ruthless that he guns down criminals who are trying to surrender because life imprisonment's too good for them, wants to avenge another cop who died at a very early stage in the film, therefore he goes undercover as a pimp, and proceeds to behave so ultra-violently that the gang his late buddy was trying to track down will doubtless hire him for their next caper. Or something along those lines, anyway. Even for an Italian exploitation film, the English dubbing's atrocious, and clearly not written by somebody whose first language was English, so it's sometimes hard to tell exactly why people do things. Though I suspect it wouldn't make much more sense in Italian. Amazingly, this loopy scheme works! Though not before our... er... hero?? has arranged a vacancy for himself by cunningly sabotaging a bank raid, resulting in the deaths of several people, only some of whom were criminals as opposed to innocent passers-by.

Along the way we get a few frantic but under-populated car-chases (by the way, weren't early seventies Italian cars terrible?) in which the feat of driving at speed through a pile of burning cardboard boxes is supposed to be so impressive that we see it from several different angles in slow motion, and no matter how badly they crash, cars don't explode into fireballs like they're supposed to because the budget didn't run to it. Also, this is an Italian exploitation movie with no nudity whatsoever, despite featuring a palatial mansion filled with dozens of hippies indulging in a 24/7 orgy of sex and drugs. Which, in case you think that sounds interesting, resembles a refugee camp during an outbreak of sleeping sickness, a wasted opportunity that would have had Roger Corman spinning in his grave, had he been dead. As for the violence, it's no more excessive than you'd get in the average spaghetti western, and there isn't really a lot of it. There is, however, quite a lot of poorly dubbed Very Strong Language - always a cheap way to get an 18 certificate.

The biggest problem, though, is the hero. Luc Merenda is no Clint Eastwood, and that's putting it mildly! At absolutely no point did I care about him in the slightest, because when he's not smirking annoyingly, which he does most of the time, he doesn't really seem to have any emotions at all. Since he's the worst cop ever, allowing numerous people to die, some of whom are entirely innocent, just to avenge some other cop who was in the movie for about a minute, a wee bit of acting would help considerably, if only he could do it. But alas, he can't. Striking cheekbones though. However, there's nobody else in the movie you care about either, apart from a few minor villains so horrendous that you pay attention to them because you want them to die.

The twist ending is, I suppose, quite original, in that it isn't directly lifted from every other gritty thriller made just before this one, and it's very fashionable in terms of what radical young film-goers wanted to see back them (and maybe still do), but it needs more than a surprise baddie going all Bond Villain to save this weak effort. Especially as the criminal mastermind whose grandiose (and ludicrous) plans are revealed at a very late stage is trying to achieve them with the aid of a small gang of incompetent hippies, uncontrollable psychopaths, and of course undercover cops he hired by mistake. You have to wonder how they ever got to be a serious problem in the first place.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

Coulee have been better - The Violent Professionals review by sb

Spoiler Alert
16/12/2022

FILM & REVIEW AKA The Violent Professionals - Effective if overly complicated Italian Cop Thriller. Meranda plays a Dirty Harry type cop who when 2 violent inmates break out of a train taking them to prison and then hijack a car killing the passengers he sneaks behind them during a stand-off and kills them both just as they are surrendering. This gets him suspended - meanwhile a senior detective that he looked up to gets assassinated and Meranda goes undercover. He gets himself hired by a bank robbing gang led by Conte but it soon becomes apparent that Conte is only the front man for a shadowy neo-fascist conspiracy that intends to restore order to Italy. It has shoot-outs and car chases and Meranda is very good in the lead but the plot is very muddled at times…..he takes up with a hooker for reasons that are never explained plus a posh hippy girl but again that never seems to go anywhere and the reveal at the end is less than convincing so 3/5

0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.

Smashing cult drama - The Violent Professionals review by NP

Spoiler Alert
08/05/2024

‘The Violent Professionals’ – originally known in its native Italy as ‘Milano trema: la polizia vuole giustizia’ – is a riot from start to finish. After a frenzied first few minutes, in which characters either dispatch or are dispatched with shocking regularity, you can hardly blame smouldering ‘tec Giorgio (Luc Merenda) for wanting to walk away. Except he doesn’t – he becomes one of those maverick cops who doesn’t play by the rules. You know the type. But he does it with a scowl and a pout that makes his journey irresistible.

The pace doesn’t slacken; each set piece is meticulously orchestrated and directed (by ever-reliable Sergio Martino). If it occurs to you that some parts of this twisting, complex story might be a little improbable, the violence and car chases make it easy just to go with it: it’s one heck of a ride, and I had a lot of fun for the entire 95 minutes. Terrific. My score is 8 out of 10.

0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.

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