Luciano Lutring is a dangerous fugitive in Italy, he meets Candida, a nightclub singer and they fall in love. On their back is Candida's lover Franco Magni, a two-bit gangster. Powered by hi... Read allLuciano Lutring is a dangerous fugitive in Italy, he meets Candida, a nightclub singer and they fall in love. On their back is Candida's lover Franco Magni, a two-bit gangster. Powered by his new-found fame and reputation, Lutring increasingly becomes more and more reckless, robb... Read allLuciano Lutring is a dangerous fugitive in Italy, he meets Candida, a nightclub singer and they fall in love. On their back is Candida's lover Franco Magni, a two-bit gangster. Powered by his new-found fame and reputation, Lutring increasingly becomes more and more reckless, robbing as many jewelry stores as he can and pawning them before the cops catch up with him. O... Read all
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- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
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Featured reviews
Great remaster of this Italian classic
He gets involved with other gangs and goes on a crime spree across Europe but mainly France and Italy. The film tells his story and it does it in a style that was very much the sixties. Lutring is a bit of a misogynist with a violent temper but Hoffman plays him brilliantly. Those of a certain age will remember him from the sixties TV series 'Robinson Crusoe' that was a staple of children's summer TV on the BBC etc. There are some continuity errors and the plot seems to jump in places but they are fairly minor in the overall scheme.
The quality of the print does vary from excellent to passable which is fine for a transfer of a film this old. The sound is all dubbed as was the way then but I got used to that fairly quickly too. It is also a great time capsule with regards to the fashions, the cars, music dancing – everything. At two hours too I felt this may out stay its welcome but far from it. This is one for those who love Italian crime capers of a certain era, but do not expect modern techniques to be on show here and you will be far from disappointed – recommended.
Gian Maria Volontè, but not at his best!
shorter version
Poliziotteschi Based on a True Story
This movie deserves more attention because of how well-constructed it is and how engaging it remains nearly 60 years later despite a run time of over two hours in the original Italian version. Part of the fascination is that the subject matter is taken from the front page news of the time, but also that the crime drama so seriously focuses on the self-destructive nature of the man.
Lurting's wife Candida works with the police in an attempt to stop him without it ending in his death, blinded by a love that only a young abused wife could possibly muster, as the film depicts him lying to her, slapping her around, and being utterly ungrateful for her attempts to have him taken alive.
Wake Up and Kill shows the true nature of the sociopath, addicted to the thrill of a life of crime even when faced with loneliness and hunger. I'm afraid this classic film is not getting the love it deserves for that aspect alone.
Carlo Lizzani's adrenaline-fuelled, hugely influential Poliziotteschi classic!
This consistently exhilarating 60s true crime drama forcefully grabs you from the explosive intro, as screenwriter, Ugo Pirro's cogent script keeps the viewer wholly immersed in misguided misfit, Lutring's cavalier, hubristic, whiskey-soaked Riviera crime spree that inexorably attracts the mercenary attentions of the over-mythologizing press, hyperbolically dubbing him the 'machine gun soloist'; a glib moniker that wily inspector, Moroni (Gian Maria Volonté) ardently hopes he might be able to stop becoming a statistical fact! The autobiographical film's vivid action sequences are no less dynamically rendered than the morbidly fascinating, increasingly desperate relationship between steadfastly loyal, Angela, and her fractious, machine gun-toting hoodlum husband, ostensibly leading them both to an inevitably destructive climax! 'Wake Up & Kill' might still be highly regarded as an influential true-crime masterpiece even without its scintillating score by, Ennio Morricone, yet sonorously endowed with such an enthralling theme, Carlo Lizzani's muscular, torn-from-the-headlines thriller is vertiginously elevated to that of a minor genre masterpiece! The beautifully restored Arrow Video Blu-ray is a fantastic addition to any avid film fan's Euro-Cult collection.
Did you know
- TriviaItalian censorship visa # 46763 delivered on 2 April 1966.
- GoofsWhen stopped at the gas station, you can see the front of their car, which is clearly a Chevy. When they're back in the car and driving, you can now see by the hood ornament that they're driving a BMW.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Witches (1967)
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- I Kill for Kicks
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- Runtime
- 1h 42m(102 min)
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- 1.85 : 1




