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Kidnapped

Original title: Cani arrabbiati
  • 1974
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Don Backy, George Eastman, Lea Lander, and Maurice Poli in Kidnapped (1974)
Following a bungled robbery, three violent criminals take a young woman, a middle-aged man, and a child hostage and force them to drive them outside Rome to help them make a clean escape.
Play trailer1:35
1 Video
58 Photos
Dark ComedyCrimeDramaThriller

Following a bungled robbery, three violent criminals take a young woman, a middle-aged man, and a child hostage and force them to drive them outside Rome to help them make a clean escape.Following a bungled robbery, three violent criminals take a young woman, a middle-aged man, and a child hostage and force them to drive them outside Rome to help them make a clean escape.Following a bungled robbery, three violent criminals take a young woman, a middle-aged man, and a child hostage and force them to drive them outside Rome to help them make a clean escape.

  • Director
    • Mario Bava
  • Writers
    • Alessandro Parenzo
    • Mario Bava
    • Cesare Frugoni
  • Stars
    • Lea Lander
    • George Eastman
    • Riccardo Cucciolla
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    5.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mario Bava
    • Writers
      • Alessandro Parenzo
      • Mario Bava
      • Cesare Frugoni
    • Stars
      • Lea Lander
      • George Eastman
      • Riccardo Cucciolla
    • 53User reviews
    • 88Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:35
    Trailer

    Photos58

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Lea Lander
    Lea Lander
    • Maria
    George Eastman
    George Eastman
    • Trentadue
    • (as Luigi Montefiori)
    Riccardo Cucciolla
    Riccardo Cucciolla
    • Riccardo
    Don Backy
    Don Backy
    • Bisturi
    • (as Aldo Caponi)
    Maurice Poli
    Maurice Poli
    • Dottore
    Erika Dario
    • Marisa
    Marisa Fabbri
    Marisa Fabbri
    • Maria Sbravati
    Luigi Antonio Guerra
    • Employee
    • (as Luigi Guerra)
    Gustavo De Nardo
    Gustavo De Nardo
    • Gas Station Attendant
    • (as Francesco Ferrini)
    Emilio Bonucci
    • Taxi Driver
    Pino Manzari
    • Toll Collector
    Ettore Manni
    Ettore Manni
    • Bank President
    Mario Bava
    Mario Bava
    • Crowd extra
    • (uncredited)
    Anna Curti
    Anna Curti
    • Maria's Friend
    • (uncredited)
    Stefano De Sando
    • Captain Diotallevi (version 'Kidnapped')
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Ehringer
    • Woman behind the window (1996 prologue restoration)
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Nina Gueltzow
    • Woman behind the window (1996 prologue restoration)
    • (uncredited)
    Mario Pascucci
    • Paymaster
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mario Bava
    • Writers
      • Alessandro Parenzo
      • Mario Bava
      • Cesare Frugoni
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    7.45.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8christopher-underwood

    brutal outing from the master

    Far better than I remember from a viewing a few years back, this is a taught and most assured thriller from Bava. What it lacks in colour and theatricality from a lot of his work it certainly makes up for in down right dirty gritty realistic nastiness. These ruthless robbers are quite clearly capable of anything and we never for a moment doubt the sincerity of their various threats of violence and worse. For most of the film the action is confined within a car and with these mixed and varied characters, becoming more desperate all the time, the tension is considerable. George Eastman is at his most manic and some of the close-ups of him and his immediate sidekick are really scary. Riccardo, beautifully underplayed, in contrast to the rest, is hijacked in his car and together with a sick child and a woman hostage are forced to endure a remarkable journey, incredibly well paced. Full of surprises, but nasty all the time, this brutal outing from the master is well worth seeing.
    9Billy Edwards

    A masterwork of violence, irony and vulgarity.

    The master of Italian Horror, Mario Bava, makes a heist film that is equal parts violent, ironic and vulgar, most of which takes place in the claustrophobic atmosphere of a small car. Three robbers shot their way out of a police blockade by taking a woman hostage. They soon hijack a small automobile with a man and a sick child. Tension builds as power plays amid the crooks and escape attempts by the hostages lead to a violent conclusion which is both unexpected and ironic. Ranks with Dog Day Afternoon and Reservoir Dogs as a unique and disturbing heist film, with several scenes designed to make you squirm. A must for fans of both Bava and the genre.
    9EdgarST

    One of Bava's Best

    I often say that «La maschera del demonio» (Black Sunday) is my favorite film. If I make an inventory of what I remember that I have seen in 66 years, it would probably be ousted by something else, but it was definitely the movie that made the first big impact on my mind. So excuse me, but I will first make a brief summary about its director. Mario Bava was extremely skilled at narrative, visual and budget economy. A master of cinematography, he saved more than one film by directing additional scenes of unfinished projects under the orders of Riccardo Freda, Raoul Walsh, Sergio Leone, Jacques Tourneur and others, for which --as a "prize"-- he was given the opportunity to direct the first film of his own. The result was the classic Italian horror film «La maschera del demonio» in 1960. Thirteen years later, after directing more classics («The Three Faces of Fear», «The Whip and the Body», «Diabolik») and cult movies («Hercules at the Center of the Earth», «The Girl Who Knew Too Much», «Terror in Space») and contributing to the emergence of the "giallo" genre («6 Women for the Murderer», «The Red Sign of Madness», «5 Dolls for an August Moon») that influenced the careers of his son Lamberto, Dario Argento and Quentin Tarantino, Bava went into decline and in 1973 set out to win again his place with this motion picture in which he would demonstrate that he was able to adjust to the times and make an effective police film, following the scheme of a road movie, according to the story "Man and Boy" by Michael J. Carroll. Unfortunately Bava faced great obstacles. The budget was so low that he also had to assume the cinematography, its producer went bankrupt and the courts seized the footage. When Bava died in 1980, the film was still incomplete and was not released until March 1996, at the Brussels Festival of Fantasy Films, thanks to the effort made by actress Lea Lander, Lamberto Bava and producer Alfredo Leone. I did not expect much, but believe me, what a good movie this is! As it has been written, it is a true journey to hell: a tense, cruel, violent, disturbing, repellent, virulent story of a brutal robbery in which the savage assailants take for hostages a man with a car, his sick son who needs urgent medical attention and a woman who went shopping. The number of dead and the humiliation of the hostages increase as the films advances guided by the firm hand of Bava, who introduces humor in the midst of the terror (in the character played by Maria Fabbri, for example), until he leads us to a surprise ending. Riccardo Cucciolla (Sacco in "Sacco e Vanzetti") is very good as the father, calm, explosive at times, unpredictable. There are at least six versions of the film, but certainly the best is the one close to the original screenplay, also known as «Semaforo rosso». Mind you, do not let anyone ruin the end. This is without question one of Mario Bava best films.
    9claudio_carvalho

    A Masterpiece of Tension and Suspense

    After the heist of the payment of the employees of a chemical industry where the treasurer and a security guard are murdered, the driver of the runaway car of the criminals Dottore (Maurice Poli), Bisturi (Don Backy) and Trentadue (Luigi Montefiori) is shot and a bullet hits the gas tank. The car runs out of gas and the trio is forced to run to the parking lot of a mall where they kill one woman and kidnap her friend Maria (Lea Lander) and use her car to escape from the police. They are chased by the police but they carjack the car of the middle-aged Riccardo (Riccardo Cucciolla), who is driving his unconscious ill son to the hospital for an emergency surgery. They force the calm RIccardo to drive them out of the city using secondary roads to escape from the blocks in the highway. During the trip, the tension increases but Riccardo and Dottore manage to control the situation until an unexpected conclusion.

    "Rabid Dogs" is a masterpiece of tension and suspense by Mario Bava. The immediate association that I made was with the famous Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs" that is visibly inspired in this movie, but less realistic and tense. This is the first time that I have seen "Rabid Dogs" and the dialogs and situations are still very impressive; imagine thirty-five years ago the impact of this movie. The claustrophobic location inside a car where most of this feature was shot transmits the horror of Maria with the cruelty and sadism of Bisturi (that means scalpel and not blade) and Trentadue. The final twist is totally unexpected but makes a perfect sense to the plot. Now I intend to see the restored version "Kidnapped" also available on the DVD. My vote is nine.

    Title (Brazil): "Cães Raivosos" ("Rabid Dogs")

    Note: on 19 June 2020 I saw this film again.
    10joeydoa

    A Car-Jacking Tour de Force

    In only the first half hour, Rabid Dogs has more tension and psychological insight into the criminal mind than all of Reservoir Dogs making Tarrantino look like an amateur. Even Scorese has admitted the influence of Bava, this movie has Mean Streets starting to look pale in comparison. The master cinematography, confined setting, brilliant camera angles, and editing brings to mind some of Orson Welles best laid out scenes. This all presides over a backdrop of overwhelming despair abundant in nihilism which begs yet another comparison to another admitted admirer, David Lynch, who looks like a student to the teacher - the breadth of brechtian super realism truly achieves it peak, of which an entire generation of filmmakers have aspired to, including Fellini - all of whom had never had the chance to see the film until the late nineties. The movie crashes through the fourth wall and the viewer becomes a passenger in this unfortunate circumstance. The film is a tribute to the genius of Mario Bava and in a way the culmination of all his talent and influence neatly compacted into a ninety minute film school. One of the finest crime dramas ever made. The intricate dialog which illustrates a pure hatred of life and total lack of respect of all that is good - even makes one start to question if Coppola missed the boat with the Godfather a little bit in making his characters a little too heroic and romantic, rather than the base individuals they are supposed to portray. One comes from this film with a horror of the criminal rather than a wish to emulate. In this real time robbery, murder and car-jacking, Bava takes us to the precipice, the edge of reason and finally beyond all semblance of humanity.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was seized by the courts when the producer went bankrupt in 1974, during the final stages of production. Tied up in legal wrangling, it wasn't released theatrically until 1997.
    • Goofs
      When Doc looks up from tinkering with a car's engine in his first scene, the camera crew is reflected in his sunglasses.
    • Quotes

      Passenger in passing car: [to Riccardo, as Treintadue rapes Maria in the backseat] What are you thinking? Are you a mobile motel? You drive up front, while your friends fuck in the back?

    • Alternate versions
      Originally shot in 1974 under the title 'L'uomo e il bambino', this film was shelved when one of the film financial backers died and ownership of the picture became entangled in bankruptcy proceedings before post-production had been completed, which prevented its theatrical release. The film sat on a shelf for almost 25 years until actress Lea Lander rescued it from oblivion by helping finance a DVD release: a new short prologue was shot, according to Bava's original script, and editing and scoring were completed using existing available materials. In 2002 producer Alfredo Leone and director Lamberto Bava (Mario's son), allegedly dissatisfied with the DVD edit, produced a new restored version of the film. Lamberto Bava and his son Roy shot additional footage and original composer Stelvio Cipriani created a new complete musical score (though the DVD release employed some of Cipriani's cues and themes, the film was never properly scored in 1974). This restored version, produced by Kismet Entertainment Group and retitled "Kidnapped", premiered theatrically in the US on May 31, 2002 as part of a Mario Bava retrospective at the American Cinematheque's Egyptian Theater in Hollywood
    • Connections
      Featured in End of the Road: Making 'Rabid Dogs' & 'Kidnapped' (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Hold On To Me
      (Appears in the 'Kidnapped' version)

      Words by Myriann D'Antine

      Music by Stelvio Cipriani

      Sung by Simona Patitucci

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 25, 1998 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Rabid Dogs
    • Filming locations
      • Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Spera Cinematografica
      • International Media Films
      • Kismet Entertainment Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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