The Boss

1973 [ITALIAN]

Action / Crime / Thriller

5
IMDb Rating 6.9/10 10 2372 2.4K

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Plot summary

A hitman finds himself embroiled in the middle of a Mafia war between the Sicilians and the Calabrians.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
June 27, 2021 at 01:51 AM

Top cast

Henry Silva as Nick Lanzetta
Richard Conte as Don Corrasco
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1006.16 MB
1280*700
Italian 2.0
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 49 min
Seeds ...
1.82 GB
1872*1024
Italian 2.0
NR
us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 49 min
Seeds 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Bezenby 7 / 10

Hardcore Silva!

Henry Silva is literally the scariest looking bastard I have ever seen in an Italian film, and if you think the same, this film is going to disturb you. Here he plays a man who seemingly feels no emotion whatsoever, and that makes him a terrifying figure, even amongst the mob. Put it this way, when we first meet Henry, he's firing grenades into a porn cinema filled with mob bosses, and on his way out one of their goons tries to shoot him, so he just fires a grenade at him too. Without blinking. He does however tell an entreating projectionist "Jesus doesn't like porn!" Henry works for mobster Don Daniello (continually referred to on the Italian audio as Don Gabrielle) and both of them work for Mega-don Richard Conte, and now they 've gotten rid of a rival mob boss, they seem to have spawned a monster in Don Ciccio, who takes over his exploded boss and aims to get even with Don Daniello. When we first meet Don Ciccio, he's having a bit of a conflab with crooked cop Gianno Garko (suitably slimy in this role) while the blown up bodies of the mobsters are wailed over by their families. Garko works for Daniello (or Richard Conte, I can't remember) and tells Ciccio to get out of town.

Garko's boss seems to be the only remotely good guy in the film and also seems to know what Garko is up too. Just like Fernando De Leo's Milano Calibro, this guy seems to provide the social commentary needed on all the going's on, like why Garko may be doing what he's doing in the first place (and it may not just be for money). Meanwhile, Don Ciccio kidnaps Daniello's daughter, which causes the Don to go into meltdown and raises concern for Conte, to whom the mob is everything and family are expendable...and he suggests that Silva might want to keep an eye on Daniello so that their family don't appear weak. As for his daughter, well, turns out she's a nymphomaniac drug addict so she's happy enough!

Due to him just staring malevolently at everything, you have no idea where Henry's thoughts are going, who he's going to cold-bloodily murder, or even who he's loyal too. His face betrays nothing which makes it worse when he suddenly explodes into violence. Hell, even when a woman is draping herself all over him he barely moves. Silva totally outshines Garko and Conte, and they are both great too. Both of them seemingly present a different side to the whole argument - Garko's 'better the devil you know' philosophy reflects Conte's 'stay true to mafia tradition' policy. Garko is a lot more animated and forthright in his views, but Conte plays the same resigned mob boss he played in six other films that year including Tony Arzenta, Mean Frank and Crazy Tony, and Anna, the pleasure, the torment. I guess the 'to be continued' at the end was some kind of statement, eh?

Reviewed by Red-Barracuda 7 / 10

Fernando Di Leo and Henry Silva come together to great effect

The opening scene from The Boss shows what the 70's Italian crime film was all about. A mafia hit-man wipes out most of a rival family when he fires a grenade launcher at them from the projection booth while they sit back and watch Danish porn. In other words, the genre was about serious action, violence and a distinct lack of subtlety. This opening action duly sets into motion a violent mob war and we are off.

Fernando Di Leo shows here once again, that when it comes to poliziotteschi he was the undoubted master. The Boss is the third in an excellent loose trilogy about Italian organised crime. Milan Calibre 9 and The Italian Connection are the other two entries. This one is more specifically about the Mafia and its machinations. As such it's set in the Mafia homeland of Palermo, Sicily. I like how the poliziotteschi films are so city specific. This gives them all distinctive atmospheres; the city is almost a separate character. But in this flick there is no doubt Henry Silva is the star of the show. He plays the hit-man Nick Lanzetta and shows precisely why he is considered an Italian crime genre great. His stone-faced, monosyllabic approach is perfect for this ruthless character. Lanzetta is certainly one of the hardest screen gangsters ever. The movie basically depicts his rise through the ranks of the Mafia. He, like all the other characters is out for himself alone and he is pretty ruthless in getting to the top. There are no good characters in this film, no matter which side of the law they are on everyone is immoral to at least some degree. I think the Italians are so good at this kind of movie because they seemed to think nothing of populating entire movies with shady characters. It's not just the crime films that do this but a lot of the gialli take the same approach. It works especially well in these noir style flicks though, as they usually are making statements about corruption in the Italian authorities as well as looking at the crime gangs. The Boss does detail some of the inner workings of the Mafia too. But more than anything, this is a film that is so very enjoyable because it is loaded with lots of stylish violent action.

Reviewed by zardoz-13 10 / 10

One Massacre After Another Mob Style with Henry Silva Pulling the Trigger!

"Mister Scarface" director Fernando Di Leo has a high-ranking Italian police official compare Mafia gang wars with the Vietnam War in "The Boss," the final explosive chapter of his "Milieu Trilogy" that began with "Caliber 9" (1972), aka "Milano calibro 9" (1972) with Frank Wolff and followed with "Manhunt" aka "La Mala ordina, " (1972) co-starring Henry Silva and Woody Strode. If you're looking for no-holds-barred violence on a grand scale, "The Boss" antes up more than enough mayhem and murder during its 100 minute running time to satisfy your thirst for blood. Skull-faced heavy Henry Silva delivers another monosyllabic performance as a cold-blooded Mafia executioner. Veteran Hollywood star Richard Conte lends strong support as the top-most Mafia chieftain.

"The Boss" covers several weeks of action. It begins inconspicuously enough with a guy carrying a package under his arm who enters an anonymous building. Di Leo shrouds this uneventful activity with composer Luis Enríquez Bacalov's slightly paranoid jazz soundtrack and create a modicum of tension. An entirely different guy in a red shirt delivers a film reel to the projectionist upstairs so we now know that the building houses a movie theater. Downstairs, a well-dressed, loud-talking mobster leads a group of mobsters in business suits into an auditorium. He proclaims that they are about to watch a Danish porn movie with "the best looking broads in the world." Meanwhile, the man with the package, Nick Lanzetta (Henry Silva of "Ocean's 11"), relieves the projectionist of his duties, clobbers him over the head, and get him out of his way. Nick assembles a rifle with a grenade launcher. He turns the auditorium where the mobsters are sawing the porn movie into a inferno. The implicit message that pornographic films are bad for you is unmistakable.

Commissioner Torri (Gianni Garko of "Bad Man's River") runs the Mafia types out of the police morgue where the charred remains of the burned bodies lay on slabs. Torri explains his theory to his boss, Il Questore (Vittorio Caprioli of "Mister Scarface"), that the government is to blame for the bloodshed. "It's the fault of the government," Torri argues, "The results of a policy that is a failure. Since the government forced the old bosses into exile, their families have been left fighting for position. That results in complete disorder. All your newer families begin to feel impatient—I'm talking about the oldest ones they suddenly get the ideas that they can start grabbing for power because their own coppo was around to keep it under control." Torri argues that everything is liable to explode if they don't bring back the old dons. Tension exists between Torri and Il Questore because the latter knows that the former receives bribes from the Mafia. Il Questore cannot make any charges stick against Torri and he cannot transfer him out of his department.

The massacre in the movie theatre was triggered when an outsider, Cocchi, (Pier Paolo Capponi of "My Name is Pecos"), who is not a Sicilian, wanted to get into the family. Cocchi wants to deal in drugs. Don Corrasco (Richard Conte of "The Violent Professionals") doesn't want drugs in Sicily. Hmn, sounds like "The Godfather." Anyway, Do Corrasco refuses to have anybody in his family that has survived for 40 years who isn't a Sicilian. Fifteen minutes later in the movie, the remaining members of the crime family that Nick wiped out in the porn movie abducts the daughter, Rina Daniello (Antonia Santilli), of Don Giuseppe Daniello (Claudio Nicastro of "A Man Called Magnum), who set Nick on them. The abductors specify their demands: "We don't want money and we don't want the girl. Nothing is going to happen to her, if we can have you, your life for hers. We figure that's a fair exchange." Meanwhile, Cocchi's perverted hoodlums ply poor Rina with liquor and rape her with gleeful abandon.

The Don refuses to let Don Giuseppe exchange himself for his daughter. "They would torture you first, would just kill you, they would torture you first. They'd eventually make you tell them who the family contacts are. I'm not thinking of myself but the family it existed for forty years, Giuseppe. We've built it up and defended it together. Nothing is yours not when it interferes with the family." Nick suggests that they offer Cocchi money to stall for time. He insists also that they tell the kidnappers that Don Giuseppe has suffered a heart attack.

When Don Giuseppe wants to buy his daughter back without Don Corrasco's permission, Nick shoots Giuseppe and has his body cremated. Nick is an orphan who Don Giuseppe Daniello was raised as his own son, but he has no qualms about killing Giuseppe and Giuseppe's right-hand man. Nick arranges a deal with another gangster, the brother of the Mafia chieftain that he exterminated in the movie theatre. The guy reveals the whereabouts of Rina. Single-handedly, Silva rescues her as two thugs are raping her and kills them without a qualm. He drives through a wall and smashes another car into three pieces.

By this time, all the bloodshed has upset Mafia leaders in Rome. They want to see Cocchi and Don Corrasco strike a deal so the killing can stop. Don Corrasco dispatches Nick to finish off Cocchi's gang. The Mafia liaison from Rome urges Don Corrasco to eliminate Nick. According to Don Corrasco, Nick is a man of "infinite resource." Nevertheless, the Don arranges a deal with Torri to arrest Nick and find incriminating evidence that Nick was behind the movie theatre massacre. Torri confronts Nick at his apartment. Nick turns the tables on Torri and forces him at gunpoint to call up Cocchi and invite him to visit him.

"The Boss" chronicles one bloodbath after another with double-crosses galore in a Mafia power struggle over territory. This is one of the very best Mafia melodramas to come out of Italy.

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