In this riveting Italian exploitation thriller, three young men embark upon a terrifying series of bloody crimes, engaging in robbery, gunplay, and murder. As the entire police force mobiliz... Read allIn this riveting Italian exploitation thriller, three young men embark upon a terrifying series of bloody crimes, engaging in robbery, gunplay, and murder. As the entire police force mobilizes to track down the malefactors, they make a fast pit stop to pick up a girlfriend and th... Read allIn this riveting Italian exploitation thriller, three young men embark upon a terrifying series of bloody crimes, engaging in robbery, gunplay, and murder. As the entire police force mobilizes to track down the malefactors, they make a fast pit stop to pick up a girlfriend and then speed towards Switzerland. More blood will be shed (and more skin bared) before their s... Read all
- Commissario's Assistant
- (as Luciano Baraghini)
- Policeman in Car
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
While Tomas Milian gets top billing, he really does very little other than smoke cigarettes, talk on a police radio, lecture people, and stay about three steps behind the young criminals. Eleonora Giorgi and Stefano Patrizi are the real stars as the kidnap victim and head of the gang respectively in a couple of very nice performances. The low point of the film is the character played by Benjamin Lev, Joe. He's supposed to be the clown of the group (Why do all gangs have one of these guys?) but he comes off as an utterly ridiculous, hyena-laughing moron who I grew to detest more and more as Young, Violent, Dangerous wore on.
Rounding out the cast is the girlfriend of the wheel-man (Eleanora Giorgi) who ironically sets the whole thing in motion by reporting the robbery plans to the police (and mistakenly telling them that the trio only have toy guns). The head cop meanwhile is played by Tomas Milan, usually the psychotic heavy in these type of films. Milan lends an iconic presence and is an interesting character in that he is not unsympathetic but is also not the usual borderline-fascist "rebel with a badge" often seen in these movies. Mostly he just proves tragically incompetent at stopping the rampaging youths.
The plot is mostly pretty believable except for a scene where they hook up with another group of youths and shoot-up and rob a grocery store, even killing their own accomplices for no good reason. There's some pretty gratuitous nudity including a pretty sorry excuse to get Giorgi topless (but who's gonna complain about that too much?). The ending is typically cynical, but that's one thing I admire about these films over the violence-glorifying Hollywood versions. See this if you like Italian crime thrillers--or even if you don't.
Did you know
- TriviaTomas Milian was reluctant to star in this film.
- GoofsJoe's expressed impatience to hurry up and get to the gas station thy're robbing before it closes seems well founded, as, 30 seconds after his comment, their car is seen passing the came corner they'd just past 30 seconds before.
- Quotes
Giovanni Etrusco: [throwing stolen bank loot from a car in an open air market] Here y'are, ladies, stock up on the pill now! You'll never get caught short again! Money, money, money! Get rich quick!
[as crowd scrambles for cash]
Giovanni Etrusco: Look at all those fat-ass old broads! They'd kill each other for two bits!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Italian Gangsters (2015)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Young, Violent, and Desperate
- Filming locations
- See more company credits at IMDbPro