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A Special Cop in Action

Original title: Italia a mano armata
  • 1976
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
621
YOUR RATING
A Special Cop in Action (1976)
ActionCrimeThriller

A crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be thei... Read allA crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be their accomplice in disguise.A crime syndicate starts a crime wave in Turin, they rob a bank, taking a hostage to get away from Police Inspector Betti and Ferrari, his partner. However, the hostage turned out to be their accomplice in disguise.

  • Director
    • Marino Girolami
  • Writers
    • Vincenzo Mannino
    • Gianfranco Clerici
    • Leila Buongiorno
  • Stars
    • Maurizio Merli
    • Raymond Pellegrin
    • John Saxon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    621
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marino Girolami
    • Writers
      • Vincenzo Mannino
      • Gianfranco Clerici
      • Leila Buongiorno
    • Stars
      • Maurizio Merli
      • Raymond Pellegrin
      • John Saxon
    • 12User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos30

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    Top cast38

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    Maurizio Merli
    Maurizio Merli
    • Betti
    Raymond Pellegrin
    Raymond Pellegrin
    • Arpino
    John Saxon
    John Saxon
    • Albertelli
    Mirella D'Angelo
    Mirella D'Angelo
    • Luisa
    Toni Ucci
    Toni Ucci
    • Cacace
    Daniele Dublino
    Daniele Dublino
    • Luzzi
    Sergio Fiorentini
    • Mancuso
    Franco Borelli
    • Bertoli
    Dino Mattielli
    • Attardi
    Rocco Oppedisano
    Carlo Valli
    • Rocchi
    Marcello Monti
    • Torri
    Massimo Vanni
    Massimo Vanni
    • Fabbri
    Fortunato Arena
    • Morel
    Enzo Andronico
    Enzo Andronico
    • Boretti
    Fernando Arcangeli
    • Prisoner
    Aldo Barberito
    • Ferrari
    Stelio Candelli
    • Forestier
    • Director
      • Marino Girolami
    • Writers
      • Vincenzo Mannino
      • Gianfranco Clerici
      • Leila Buongiorno
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.6621
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8seveb-25179

    Violent Milan

    It's all happening in this one, great opening theme music backed up by plenty of nasty 1970s action from the get go. Poor man's Franco Nero, bottle blond Maurizio Merli, has his hands full before the opening credits finish rolling, with not only a violent bank robbery but also a mass kidnapping of children on their way to school. Later there are a couple of the best car chases I've seen in a "Poliziotteschi" movie, as well as the obligatory rape scene, and a particularly graphic "dragged behind a car" execution. All this and a surprise ending thrown in for good measure, what more could you ask?
    5Bunuel1976

    A SPECIAL COP IN ACTION (Marino Girolami, 1976) **

    The Italians were second to none in virtually inventing new sub-genres by subverting to their own terms the conventions of classic Hollywood cinema; thus, after the Peplum (Epics), Gothic (Horror), Spaghetti (Westerns) and Giallo (Thriller), the 1970s ushered in the era of the Poliziotteschi which was basically an Italian version of DIRTY HARRY (1971) - although, to be fair to them, the seeds of the genre had been sown a few years earlier. Astonishingly there were practically innumerable similar movies made between 1966-80, a phenomenon which can easily be attributable to Italy's tumultuous political climate rife with corruption and kidnappings which marked the 1970s. Admittedly, I used to be very skeptical about the worthiness of these films (something which held true for the mainstream Italian film industry itself at the time) but having now gotten a fair share of them under my belt, I have to say that I've changed my stance somewhat.

    This is the final entry - following VIOLENT ROME (1975) and VIOLENT NAPLES (1976) - in the "Commissario Betti" trilogy, with Maurizio Merli (the poor man's Franco Nero) gnashing his teeth throughout the film at untouchable "honest" businessman John Saxon; here, the hero even shares an unconvincing romance with the sister of a kidnapped child. While it certainly features plenty of action, ensuring an unrelenting pace and occasional excitement (though I would say that, ultimately, it provides one chase too many!), the film is nothing really special - the English title notwithstanding - and, worse, virtually interchangeable with any other of its ilk...apart from the unexpected downbeat ending which, apparently, was a deliberate act on the part of director Girolami (who here actually uses the pseudonym Franco Martinelli!) because he had been bypassed for the second installment; not having watched the first entry in the series, I can't comment on its quality but VIOLENT NAPLES - directed by the more highly-profiled Umberto Lenzi - is certainly superior to the third!!
    8Bezenby

    The man, the moustache

    Maurizio Merli returns as Inspector Maurizio Merli in full ass-kicking mode, hell bent on capturing mob boss John Saxon, a crime boss so slippery people rub bread on him in an attempt to make some sort 'man oil' bruschetta. This time, Saxon's organised a mass-child kidnapping and a band robbery but can Merli link these jerks to the main, head jerk? Not without heaps of trouble.

    First off, the kidnappers hide the kids in an empty grain silo and are supposed to be keeping a low profile, so of course one of the kids gets ill and dies, and one of the kidnappers attempts to rape a local girl and brings the cops right to the door of the place they're hiding in. This results in Merli himself being thrown from a moving car as he bravely substitutes himself for the kids that didn't die, and the kidnappers bravely killing and burning the jerk that messed up the kidnapping.

    Luckily, Merli's got a man on the inside in the form of kick-ass stuntman/actor Massimo Vanni, who leads him to the kidnappers, but not before Vanni himself gets tied to the back of a car and dragged around a quarry until dead. Vanni also does a bit of disco dancing and wears a neat white disco suit for all you out there obsessed with diminutive Italian actor Massimo Vanni.

    Not too give too much of the plot away (and there is a plot) this is a top notch Euro-crime film with all the usual car chases, gun fights, moustache action, police brutality, prison scenes, children being slapped about, women being threatened, fighting on roofs, whiskey drinking, and Massim Vanni that you need. What can you say about John Saxon other than 'his hair hasn't changed shape or length for three decades'? The man is Italian movie gold.

    Mirella D'Angelo turns up as a grieving sister to the dead kid which blossoms into a romantic sub-plot with Merli. I was totally confused that Massimo Vanni got killed because I'm certain he turns up in later Euro Crime films as Maurizio Merli's sidekick.
    10Weirdling_Wolf

    Gonzoid, thrillingly non-PC expressions of bravura Italian Poliziotteschi action!

    In director Franco Martinelli's highly regarded crime classic, 'Italia a mano armata' aka 'Special Cop in Action' (1976), the super-svelte, bullet-dodging pugilist, Maurizio Merli reprises his most incendiary role as the maverick,majestically moustachioed, skin-tight shirt wearin', all fists blazin', zero tolerance, Commisario Betti, for yet another gonzoid, thrillingly non-PC eruptions of hard-boiled, Italian Poliziotteschi action! The craven, ill-dressed thugs foolhardy attempt to kidnap a group of school children on Commisario Betti's watch, bloodily unleashes a delirious deluge of exhilarating retribution from the inimitable, golden-haired paragon of righteous vengeance, whose mesmerizingly macho modus operandi of brutally annihilating balaclava bovver boys with his jubilant, jaw-smashing roundhouses, proves more than adequate when Betti finally confronts his arch nemesis, Albertini, energetically played with obvious gusto by fellow Euro-crime icon, John Saxon!

    Maestro Martinell's exciting 70s actioner 'Special Cop in Action' is demonstratively one of the most appealingly hotheaded Euro crime epics, galvanized by a scintillating squall of thrilling, adrenalized action set pieces, the Berretta blasting mayhem made all the more deliriously entertaining by bravura composer, Franco Micalizzi's gritty, funkier-than-thou, street-tough, heart-poundingly groovy score! This is dynamic crime funk par excellence, adding considerable elan to an already essential Italian cult classic! If for some wholly obscure reason you only watch one high octane, head-knockingly heroic Maurizio Merli poliziottesco, I have little doubt that witnessing the pulse-wreaking whirlwind of unbridled bellicosity fuelling 'Special Cop in Action' will make you a hardcore Merli maniac for life!
    9adrianswingler

    All the Bits in the Right Place

    There are a lot of things that go into a crime film, from car chases to clever plots by the crooks to betrayals and turn-arounds, power struggles, etc. This one is memorable in that it gets full marks for all the bits that go into one, and it delivers that for more than an hour and a half full stop. The dialogue was a bit trite at times, which is why I gave it 9/10, but if you like *any* kind of crime movie, I think you would not only like this one, it's one of those that has you thinking about it for a while afterwards. I grabbed a big pizza pie and a nice red wine and really enjoyed watching this. The director did all the usual Italian filone, but was pretty mediocre with his Westerns and it took him a while to get going with this filone, but I think in this one he hit his straps. I think this was actually better than his good, later, Roma Violenta. Has to get 9/10 in my book as it's a good example of the genre that transcends it to compete across the broader genre, in every era.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Final part of police commissioner Betti's trilogy, also including Violent Rome (1975) and Violent Naples (1976).
    • Goofs
      When commissioner Betti is sitting in his bureau in the police headquarters of Turin. the map on the wall represents the city of Milan.
    • Connections
      Edited into La tua vita per mio figlio (1980)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 27, 1976 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Cop Hunter
    • Filming locations
      • Incir De Paolis, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production company
      • New Film Production S.r.l.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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