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Street Law

Original title: Il cittadino si ribella
  • 1974
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Street Law (1974)
ActionThriller

An engineer seeks vigilante justice against the gangsters who took him hostage, and forms an unlikely partnership with a young robber to bring them down.An engineer seeks vigilante justice against the gangsters who took him hostage, and forms an unlikely partnership with a young robber to bring them down.An engineer seeks vigilante justice against the gangsters who took him hostage, and forms an unlikely partnership with a young robber to bring them down.

  • Director
    • Enzo G. Castellari
  • Writers
    • Massimo De Rita
    • Dino Maiuri
  • Stars
    • Franco Nero
    • Giancarlo Prete
    • Barbara Bach
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Enzo G. Castellari
    • Writers
      • Massimo De Rita
      • Dino Maiuri
    • Stars
      • Franco Nero
      • Giancarlo Prete
      • Barbara Bach
    • 33User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos53

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Franco Nero
    Franco Nero
    • Carlo Antonelli
    Giancarlo Prete
    Giancarlo Prete
    • Tommy
    Barbara Bach
    Barbara Bach
    • Barbara
    Renzo Palmer
    Renzo Palmer
    • Police Inspector
    Nazzareno Zamperla
    Nazzareno Zamperla
    • Carlo's Assailant with Beard
    Massimo Vanni
    Massimo Vanni
    • Carlo's Assailant with Unibrow
    Romano Puppo
    Romano Puppo
    • Ringleader of Carlo's Assailants
    Renata Zamengo
    • Cavallo
    Franco Borelli
    • Borelli
    Mauro Vestri
    Mauro Vestri
    • Bar Italia Bartender
    Luigi Antonio Guerra
    • Gianni Rubei
    • (as Luigi Guerra)
    Adriana Facchetti
    • Bum
    Angelo Casadei
    • Photograph
    • (uncredited)
    Enzo G. Castellari
    Enzo G. Castellari
    • Gangster at Drydock
    • (uncredited)
    Massimo Ciprari
    • Casinò Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Rémy Julienne
    • Gunman with Glasses
    • (uncredited)
    Silvio Klein
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Mickey Knox
    Mickey Knox
    • Michael Gambino
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Enzo G. Castellari
    • Writers
      • Massimo De Rita
      • Dino Maiuri
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    6.81.9K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Coventry

    Not your typical Charles Bronson vigilante rip-off!

    Italian cult/exploitation cinema from the 1970s is definitely my favorite type of film-making, but I just cannot seem to decide whether my number #1 beloved sub genre is the Spaghetti Western, the Giallo or the Poliziotteschi. Recently, and thanks to having seen a couple of brilliant titles like "The Big Racket" and "Revolver", I'm leaning most towards the Poliziotteschi again and evidently my expectations for "Street Law" were also set incredibly high. Of course this has to be a great movie, with a director like Enzo G. Castellari and a cast led by none other than Franco Nero. Due to its vigilante themes and time of release, many ignorant people claim that "Street Law" is nothing but a quick attempt to cash in on the tremendous success of "Death Wish", with Nero copying the famous role played by Charles Bronson, but I swear you this film is much more than an uninspired rip-off. It's an action/thriller classic in its own right with story lines, action sequences and characters drawings that are totally different than anything featuring in "Death Wish", or any other contemporary vigilante-thriller for that matter. During the exhilarating opening sequences, Castellari already shows a lovely montage – guided by adrenalin-pumping music – illustrating that the streets of a nameless big Italian city are infested with violent crime. During broad daylight there are muggings, car and home jacking, robberies, drive-by shootings, nihilistic mafia executions and there are never any police authorities in sight! In this same city, Franco Nero stars as the anonymous lab-worker Carlo Antonelli who's unlucky enough to walk into a bank with his personal savings moments before three savage robbers come storming in. When Carlo too obviously tries to recover some of his own money, the robbers roughly take him hostage and leave him severely beaten up in their getaway car. Frustrated, humiliated and accused by the police of being provocative, Carlo vows to track the criminals himself. This is where the big differences with films like "Death Wish" become unmistakable, because Carlo obviously isn't a forceful fighting machine or strategic genius and spends most of the film's running time either getting physically pulverized or getting busted when trying to infiltrate into the underworld. Come to think of it, this might even be Franco Nero's least heroic role! Carlo's beautiful wife (the yummy Barbara Bach) is worried sick about him and he only starts making some progress when he gets help from small time crook Tommy. "Street Law" is a terrific film, but still plays in a lower league than the absolute most thrilling Poliziotteschi classics like "Almost Human", "Milano Calibro 9", Rome armed to the Teeth" or "Rabid Dogs". There are many fantastic action sequences, most notably the final shootout in the hangar, but I still found this film less sadist and shocking than I secretly hope in this type of cinema… Oh, one more thing: dubbing always matters! This is the second or third time that I watch a film in which Franco Nero's rough and manly Italian voice is dubbed by a rather squeaky and insecure English voice, which gives makes his performance somehow weaker. Still though, a truly recommend Italian 70s cult flick!
    6gridoon

    Slick, violent tale.

    After being taken as a hostage and beaten by three vicious bank robbers, an "average guy" (Franco Nero) becomes outraged by the refusal of the police to take drastic action and decides to go on a personal war against the underworld. The script of this slick-looking, violent tale is standard crime-movie stuff, but director Castellari manages to put in some stylish shots and to stage a gripping final shootout. It's almost as if you're watching a spaghetti crime thriller. (**)
    8adrianswingler

    Best of the "Revenge Flick" Subgenre

    The comments largely have it right, though not always the right conclusion. Many said, "not the usual revenge flick", and a few of the less sentient commentators dissed Franco Nero's performance. Put it all together and that's precisely why this gets 8/10 from me. MUCH better than anything Charles Bronson did, and I think better than a lot of the Spaghetti Western "revenge" movies. Nero's character isn't invincible. He's not even very good at it. But that gives it a realism that owes more to Italian horror films than to the westerns. Perhaps that's why Barbara Bach is in it. Could have changed her name...

    Very much a period piece, if it seems a bit much at times, you need to read up on what Italian society was like when this was filmed. A strike every other day, a bombing on the off days, petty crime rampant, sex drugs and rock 'n roll everywhere, police on the take, mafia shakedowns about anywhere, kidnappings, extortion... If you're not going to make a primo revenge flick in that milieu, I guess you never will. The Italian title is more descriptive. "A Citizen who Rebels".
    7Aylmer

    not the best Euro-crime, but lots of fun

    The best part of this film is definitely the scene where a filthy and beaten-up Franco Nero has to outrun a '66 Mustang in a junkyard, complete with a really good long lens slow motion shot of Nero running toward the camera with a car right behind him.

    The plot details Nero's quest to bring three bank robbers (Romano Puppo, Nazzareno Zamperla, and Massimo Vanni) who took him hostage and beat him up to justice. To do this, he blackmails a local street thug (Giancarlo Prete in a good role) and forces him to show him around the underworld and eventually find them to exact vigilante justice on them. What sets this mundane tale apart are the frequent changes-of-alliance and doublecrosses, as the action sequences are relatively weak (considering it's a Castellari movie). STREET LAW is not really that violent either when compared with most other Italian crime films. (Compare Romano Puppo's final scene here with a similar scene in Lucio Fulci's CONTRABAND.)

    Guido and Maurizio De Angelis's score is certainly similar to their work for the many Bud Spencer / Terence Hill films (though not under their usual Oliver Onions pseudonym), but to me sounds a lot better. While the songs are weird and use seemingly every possible instrument and sound in the book, the "Good Bye My Friend" song is a great song even though the lyrics in most of it make no sense. The same can be said of "Driving All Around". Nero once again plays the same character he plays in every movie, but his character is not totally developed (though that may have been hurt severely by the confusing re-editing of the US version that I saw) and his relationship with his girlfriend Barbara Bach is barely touched on. While the plot is simple, it often becomes uninteresting, and certainly doesn't have the more epic feeling of Castellari/Nero's previous film High Crime. Castellari's next film (the goofy but surreal CRY ONION) tried to capitalize off this one, with Nero once again up against the same trio of thugs along with another over-the-top De Angelis score, though any similarity with this film ends there.

    Watch for an amusing cameo by charismatic American actor Mickey Knox (who made a career as a dubbing voice in many Italian movies and Japanese Anime cartoons) as a gangster who runs a gaming parlor.

    Not a great film, but colorful and different enough to make it entertaining to most casual viewers.
    10freudstein

    One of the best movies from the Italian 70's

    Shot in the same year of the american "Deathwish" with Charles Bronson, has a similar plot but it results much more realistic and exciting. The great Franco Nero's performance and the brilliant music by the De Angelis brothers make of this an "absolutely must see" for all the fans of this kind of movies !

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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Franco Nero did almost all of his own stunts.
    • Goofs
      After two young thugs hit Franco Nero's car and threaten him, a boom mike is reflected in their car as they drive off.
    • Quotes

      Tommy: [Tommy felt unconscious and almost bleed to death, after being shot by the group of muggers] Hah, we made it... We got rid of them.

      Carlo Antonelli: Hah, you bet your ass.

      Tommy: [Carlo put unconscious Tommy aside from the bulldozer] The garage. I deserve... my down payment, huh?

      Carlo Antonelli: You sure do. We are going to open the biggest garage of all time. You'll be famous. Big Tommy, a real personality, and all the girls will come to your garage just to see Big Tommy!

      Tommy: [still straining] Jesus... What a big garage you found...

      Carlo Antonelli: Yeah.

      Tommy: It's the biggest place... I've ever seen.

      Carlo Antonelli: [in tears] And we'll fill it with cars. There'll be so many, there won't be room to work. Over there... Over there we'll put the race cars. The bodyworks will go over there. And the motors, you can fix in that corner. And we'll pipe in music.There will be a beautiful waiting room, and,

      Carlo Antonelli: [Tommy dies] ... and we'll have a place for snacks. What do you think, partner?

      Carlo Antonelli: [looks at the dying Tommy] GOD!

    • Alternate versions
      US VHS release (renamed Street Law) is heavily cut (77 min's). Compared to the UK home video releases it is almost 24 min's shorter (when converted to PAL speed). DVD by Blue Underground is uncut.
    • Connections
      Featured in Street Law: Laying Down the Law (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Goodbye My Friend
      (uncredited)

      Written by Guido De Angelis, Maurizio De Angelis, Cesare De Natale and Susan Duncan Smith

      Arranged and conducted by Guido De Angelis and Maurizio De Angelis

      Sung by Cesare De Natale and Susan Duncan Smith

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 13, 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Ein Bürger setzt sich zur Wehr
    • Filming locations
      • Lido Beach, Genoa, Liguria, Italy(police chase)
    • Production companies
      • Capital Film
      • Rizzoli Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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