Young southerner Marco Russo moves to Northern Italy and finds work with the powerful Manzetti family. He then proceeds to stir the pot between the Manzettis and their top rivals, the Belmon... Read allYoung southerner Marco Russo moves to Northern Italy and finds work with the powerful Manzetti family. He then proceeds to stir the pot between the Manzettis and their top rivals, the Belmondos.Young southerner Marco Russo moves to Northern Italy and finds work with the powerful Manzetti family. He then proceeds to stir the pot between the Manzettis and their top rivals, the Belmondos.
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Luisa Maneri
- Lisa
- (as Annaluisa Pesce)
- Director
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- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAnother uncredited adaptation of Dashiell Hammett's novel Red Harvest. Other uncredited adaptations of the hardboiled gumshoe novel include Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo with Toshiro Mifune, Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dollars with Clint Eastwood and Walter Hill's Last Man Standing with Bruce Willis. Ironically, the novel has never been officially adapted into film. The plot of the novel follows a detective who arrives at a town plagued by gang warfare where no one knows him and then patiently proceeds to pit the two main rival criminal factions in town against one another hoping that they'll wipe themselves out.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Furia, las peleas de Carlos Monzon (2019)
Featured review
I've got a new theory - Italy was actually relatively crime free during the seventies, but the sheer volume of Italian crime films being made gave the impression that Rome, Palermo, Milan and Genoa et al were hovels of violence, car chases and street executions. I cannot believe how many of these films there are, even in 1976 alone! Along with this film, Stelvio Massi directed another two Poliziotesschi films in 1976. Umberto Lenzi made three the same year. Fernando Di Leo got two under his belt in 1976 and wrote Live Like a Cop, Die Like A Man, directed by Ruggero Deodato in 1976. That's just the tip of the iceberg.
So, with this saturation in mind, let's cut The Last Round some slack for repeating the 'stranger plays two rival gangs off each other' plot of Fistful of Dollars. It's still a good film nonetheless, full of action, grimness, and Luc Merenda glaring at things, only this time he's the bad guy!
The good guy is a fella called Marco, who travels from the South to find a job, taking with him a small music box that contains pictures of two women (and yes, that's straight from For A Few Dollars More). Marco immediately clashes with some goons from the Manzetti clan, and even though he lays out about eight of them, he still ends up knocked out and left in a dump at the edge of town. Here, he makes friends with a blind girl and her surrogate father, then heads off back to the Manzetti's for round two.
By this time the Manzetti crime boss (Merenda) is more intruiged by Marco's fist action and hires him as a goon, just in time for Marco to realise that Merenda has a thing for teenage girls, as evidenced by him drooling over his step-daughter while wife Mariangela Giordano scowls at him. Time for Marco to get all Eastwood on this gig and go to the rival gang, led by Mario Brega.
So it's a mix of Fistful of Dollars, for a Few Dollars More, with a bit of Django thrown in there for good measure too, but who cares? It's full of action, double crosses, and a bit where the blind girl psychically senses that Marco is getting a kicking across town, something that isn't even remotely explained but is welcome anyway, as is Luc Merenda's ridiculous gun skills and the full on battle at the end of the film. Not sure about that blind girl rape bit though.
So, with this saturation in mind, let's cut The Last Round some slack for repeating the 'stranger plays two rival gangs off each other' plot of Fistful of Dollars. It's still a good film nonetheless, full of action, grimness, and Luc Merenda glaring at things, only this time he's the bad guy!
The good guy is a fella called Marco, who travels from the South to find a job, taking with him a small music box that contains pictures of two women (and yes, that's straight from For A Few Dollars More). Marco immediately clashes with some goons from the Manzetti clan, and even though he lays out about eight of them, he still ends up knocked out and left in a dump at the edge of town. Here, he makes friends with a blind girl and her surrogate father, then heads off back to the Manzetti's for round two.
By this time the Manzetti crime boss (Merenda) is more intruiged by Marco's fist action and hires him as a goon, just in time for Marco to realise that Merenda has a thing for teenage girls, as evidenced by him drooling over his step-daughter while wife Mariangela Giordano scowls at him. Time for Marco to get all Eastwood on this gig and go to the rival gang, led by Mario Brega.
So it's a mix of Fistful of Dollars, for a Few Dollars More, with a bit of Django thrown in there for good measure too, but who cares? It's full of action, double crosses, and a bit where the blind girl psychically senses that Marco is getting a kicking across town, something that isn't even remotely explained but is welcome anyway, as is Luc Merenda's ridiculous gun skills and the full on battle at the end of the film. Not sure about that blind girl rape bit though.
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- Also known as
- In den Klauen der Mafia
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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