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Young, Violent, Dangerous

Original title: Liberi armati pericolosi
  • 1976
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
622
YOUR RATING
Eleonora Giorgi and Tomas Milian in Young, Violent, Dangerous (1976)
CrimeDramaThriller

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

  • Director
    • Romolo Guerrieri
  • Writers
    • Fernando Di Leo
    • Giorgio Scerbanenco
    • Nico Ducci
  • Stars
    • Stefano Patrizi
    • Benjamin Lev
    • Max Delys
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    622
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Romolo Guerrieri
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Giorgio Scerbanenco
      • Nico Ducci
    • Stars
      • Stefano Patrizi
      • Benjamin Lev
      • Max Delys
    • 11User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos33

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Stefano Patrizi
    Stefano Patrizi
    • Mario Farra
    Benjamin Lev
    • Giovanni Etrusco
    Max Delys
    • Luigi Morandi
    Eleonora Giorgi
    Eleonora Giorgi
    • Lea
    Tomas Milian
    Tomas Milian
    • Commissario
    Venantino Venantini
    Venantino Venantini
    • Sign. Morandi
    Salvatore Billa
    Salvatore Billa
    • Forger
    Antonio Guidi
    • Head Forger
    Diego Abatantuono
    Diego Abatantuono
    • Lucio
    Giulio Baraghini
    • Commissario's Assistant
    • (as Luciano Baraghini)
    Ruggero Diella
    • Supermarket Robber
    Giorgio Locuratolo
    • Friend of Lucio
    Valeria Gagliardi
    • Friend of Lucio
    Gloria Piedimonte
    • Friend of Lucio
    Tom Felleghy
    • Prof. Farra
    Maria Rosaria Riuzzi
    Maria Rosaria Riuzzi
    • Friend of Lucio
    Carmelo Reale
    • Forger
    Giancarlo Bastianoni
    • Policeman in Car
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Romolo Guerrieri
    • Writers
      • Fernando Di Leo
      • Giorgio Scerbanenco
      • Nico Ducci
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.4622
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    Featured reviews

    chriscuomo

    Italian aged cheese

    Silly '50s style juvenile delinquent flick with a '70s Eurotrashy touch. Three teenaged punks kidnap a rich girl and force her to accompany them as they terrorize the streets of Milan. Fun car chases in dumpy Euro-subcompacts and a surprise ending add to the fun.
    6MajesticMane

    Bloody Crimes and High-Speed Escapes

    Young, Violent, Dangerous is a classic example of Italian exploitation cinema. While the film doesn't always prioritize logical plotting or character development, it excels in creating elaborate cinematic set pieces. Director Guerrieri delivers intense shootouts and adrenaline-fueled car chases, even if they don't quite match Hollywood's big-budget productions. The movie also doesn't shy away from skin-baring moments, adding to its gritty appeal.

    The standout performances come from Stefano Patrizi, who portrays the conflicted Mario Farra, and Benjamin Lev as the impulsive Giovanni Etrusco. Tomas Milian, in the role of Commissario, adds depth to the cat-and-mouse game between law enforcement and the criminals.

    While Young, Violent, Dangerous won't win any awards for its storytelling, it's a thrilling ride for fans of exploitation cinema. The film's raw energy and unapologetic violence keep viewers engaged, even if the plot occasionally veers into absurdity. If you're in the mood for a fast-paced crime thriller with a touch of Italian flair, give this one a watch.

    Verdict: With its mix of bloodshed, high-speed escapes, and a dash of romance, Young, Violent, Dangerous is a guilty pleasure for genre enthusiasts. While not a masterpiece, it delivers on its promise of excitement and keeps you guessing until the very end.

    Remember, though, that this film isn't for everyone. If you're looking for intricate character development or a tightly woven plot, you might want to explore other options. But if you're up for a wild ride through the criminal underworld, buckle up and hit play!
    6Bezenby

    Young, loud, annoying

    In the days before those innocent acts of trolling each other on Facebook and revenge porning each other, the youth of yesterday were content simply to drive around Milan acting like jerks, robbing banks, and shooting innocent people in the face. This is their story.

    Three young guys - Blondie, Hunky and the annoying Joe, plan to rob a petrol station in Milan, but they don't know that Hunky's girlfriend has gone to the police and tipped them off. She does make the mistake of telling cop Tomas Milian that they have toy guns though, toys that turn out to be real as several cops and a petrol station owner are gunned down. Now Blondie and the rest are on the run, but instead of keeping their heads low they hit banks, recruit others to rob supermarket, then kill said others with hot lead.

    Milian can't figure out why some rich boys would go on such a crime spree, but at least he takes time out to blame the parents for their lack of attention to their kids. To be honest that's the only time he shows any emotion here as Milian doesn't have much to do besides try and track down the trio as they kill everyone they meet, and get Hunky's girlfriend caught up in it too. Milian really just looks concerned, smokes, and becomes increasingly dishevelled.

    We spend a lot more time with the youngsters instead. Hunky never kills anyone, but goes along with the crime spree and only seems to enjoy things when he's outrunning the police in a car chase. Blondie however is the leader, and although he doesn't show much emotion, he's might have a thing for Hunky (Hunky's girlfriend spots it during the car chase too, plus he doesn't get involved in a gang bang earlier in the film, which someone ruins by farting!). That leaves Joe, the weak link in this film as his character is so annoying. He's the hyperactive 'joker' of the pack, but his jokes are only funny to himself and he laughs at them in a shrill moronic bray (at least in the Italian language version). The only time he calms down is when one of Blondie's mates refers to him as being the village idiot, which results in said mate being machine-gunned in the face.

    I'm sure writer Fernando Di Leo is trying to say something here, but I didn't catch it. This is a nihilistic cavalcade of violence, all set to Tomas Milian's jaw clenching. That cheesy song at the start was awful though - maybe that's what made them go nuts?
    lazarillo

    Interesting Italian crime thriller

    This is an interesting movie. It is a tendency of Italian exploitation movies in general to eschew logical plotting and character development to focus on elaborate cinematic "set pieces". While this usually works with gialli (and some would say cannibal and zombie films)it is often problem in the Italian crime films where the set pieces usually involve shoot-outs and overlong car chases, two areas where the Italians had NO chance of outdoing bigger-budget Hollywood films (although they often did their damnedest). This film is interesting therefore because it DOES have a lot of character development especially among the villains, three privileged youths that become desperate criminals after their clean-cut but increasingly psychotic leader, "Blondie", starts a gun battle during a botched gas station robbery. One of the other youths is a more obviously deranged thrill seeker, while the third youth, the "wheel-man" is decidedly non-violent but loyal to a fault to his two friends.

    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.
    8Coventry

    Check, Double-check & Triple-check!

    First and foremost, I love it when a movie fulfills the promise of its own title! Far too often this isn't the case, though. With a title like "Young, Violent, Dangerous" director Romolo Guerrieri and writer Fernando Di Leo generate quite high expectations, but they also definitely deliver them to the max! The anti-heroes in the film are young, they behave incredibly violent and they become gradually more and more dangerous! It's also quite remarkable how a relatively small subgenre of exploitation cinema, like euro-crime, brought forward so many different and versatile streams. Within euro-crime, you have the regular Poliziotteschi movies (tough coppers chasing robbers), mafia sagas, gang war movies and vigilante thrillers. There also exists another and much lesser known stream focusing on rich, spoiled and derailed teenagers that go on a murder rampage for no other apparent reason than kicks. "Terror in Rome/Violence for Kicks", starring Antonio Sabato, is an example of this and "Young, Violent, Dangerous" pretty much falls in the same category as well. The film starts with the beautiful Lea nervously sitting at the desk of grumpy police commissioner Tomas Milian. She comes to report that her boyfriend Lucio, together with his friends Blondie (Mario) and Joe, is about to rob a gas station with fake toy guns. The police prepare an ambush, but the the guns turn out to be very real and Blondie and Joe kill four policemen. Instead of showing remorse, they continue to terrorize the streets of Milan. Lucio is reluctant but he cowardly follows Blondie, who's the leader of the trio, and the completely nihilistic madman Joe. They rob banks, only to threw out the money back in the streets, and invade a crowded supermarket where they even massacre a "befriended" gang in cold blood. When Blondie discovers that Lucio's girlfriend Lea betrayed them to the police, they kidnap her and try to drive out of Milan. The DVD-cover proudly announces that contemporary big star Tomas Milian plays the lead role, but actually his role as the embittered commissioner is rather dullish and familiar. He smokes a lot, gives lectures to the fugitive teenagers' parents about how it's their fault and commands his squads to pull up road blocks, road blocks and more road blocks! The crooks stay well ahead of the police, but the intrigues come to the surface. Lea grows increasingly disgusted by her weak boyfriend Lucio, and Blondie takes advantage of this. Di Leo, the genius behind "Milano Calibro 9" and "La Mala Ordina" which are arguably the two greatest Poliziotteschi movies ever made, once more delivers a fast-paced and action-packed screenplay full of unexpected twists, uncompromising violence and deeply unpleasant characters. In other words, genuine and hard-boiled exploitation cinema like they could only make it in Italy during the seventies! Stefano Patrizi is excellent as the cool and stoic anti-hero. Benjamin Lev's character Joe (or Giovanni) is often quite irritating, especially because of his exaggeratedly moronic laughter, but I do like the idea of an utterly relentless lunatic. "Young, Violent, Dangerous" definitely contains a lot more character development than the average euro- crime thriller, but it's not at the expense of the action and excitement. There's a bit of gratuitous (yay!) nudity, principally provided by beautiful lead actress Eleonora Giorgi, and also – of course – a typically cynical and downbeat climax. Most certainly recommended if you like Italian cinema of the '70s; - and who honestly doesn't?

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tomas Milian was reluctant to star in this film.
    • Goofs
      Joe'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!

    • Connections
      Featured in Italian Gangsters (2015)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1983 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Young, Violent, and Desperate
    • Filming locations
      • Piazza del Duomo, Milan, Lombardia, Italy
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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