A cop pursues the Mob for revenge as well as personal honor.A cop pursues the Mob for revenge as well as personal honor.A cop pursues the Mob for revenge as well as personal honor.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter his double murder, Jacopetti leaves from Roma Ostriense train station.
- Quotes
Stella: [to Prostitute Client] Whadya say to some head?
Thug in car: [pulls Stella's wig off from back seat and puts "her" in a choke hold] Ah, shut up! Take a deep breath. It's gonna be your last, smartass!
Stella: [jumps up] No! No,no! I didn't talk!
[Client shoots "her" point blank]
- Crazy creditsThe opening titles are spliced, at random intervals, over the opening scene, a jailbreak. Whenever a credit appears, the escape is interrupted, in freeze frame, and the letters are cast over the frozen image long enough to be read, then vanish as the film advances forward, and the escape continues until the next credit, and so on, till all titles have been shown, then the prisoners burst out of jail.
Featured review
Overnight, in Rome, 12 (!) criminals escape from prison and 4 police informants are brutally murdered. The DA reluctantly calls upon Commissioner Murri, who previously was suspended due to his unorthodox methods and "shoot-first-no-questions-asked" mentality. In between shooting gangsters in the back, Murri discovers that mob-boss Lettieri led the escape, and that one of the convicts was an elderly man who only had 40 days of his sentence left to serve. He was probably forced to join, and Merri gradually finds out why via his gorgeous niece Laura.
My fellow reviewers around here, some of them guys I usually always agree with, have referred to "Fear in the City" as a lesser Poliziotesschi outing and one of the weakest crime thrillers in which Maurizio Merli plays the heroic copper. Yours truly begs to differ. Well sure, if you watch "Fear in the City" straight after "Rome Armed to the Teeth" and right before "The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist", it'll definitely be the weakest link. But, as a stand-alone, this is a highly entertaining and action-packed thriller. It has brutal executions, bank robberies gone wrong, car chases, motorcycle chases, vigilante action and a virulent climax at the railway station. The best scene involves a nasty assassination attempt at a cemetery. James Mason stars as the obligatory prominent Hollywood star-on-his-return, but he clearly wasn't too enthusiast. Raymond Pellegrin and Fausto Tozzi, on the other hand, are excellent in their supportive roles, and the heavenly beautiful Silvia Dionisio decorates the film with her natural charm and her ravishing naked body.
My fellow reviewers around here, some of them guys I usually always agree with, have referred to "Fear in the City" as a lesser Poliziotesschi outing and one of the weakest crime thrillers in which Maurizio Merli plays the heroic copper. Yours truly begs to differ. Well sure, if you watch "Fear in the City" straight after "Rome Armed to the Teeth" and right before "The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist", it'll definitely be the weakest link. But, as a stand-alone, this is a highly entertaining and action-packed thriller. It has brutal executions, bank robberies gone wrong, car chases, motorcycle chases, vigilante action and a virulent climax at the railway station. The best scene involves a nasty assassination attempt at a cemetery. James Mason stars as the obligatory prominent Hollywood star-on-his-return, but he clearly wasn't too enthusiast. Raymond Pellegrin and Fausto Tozzi, on the other hand, are excellent in their supportive roles, and the heavenly beautiful Silvia Dionisio decorates the film with her natural charm and her ravishing naked body.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Fear in the City
- Filming locations
- Roma Ostriense Train Station, Rome, Lazio, Italy(after his double murder, Jacopetti leaves)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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