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Caliber 9

Caliber 9 (Italian: Milano calibro 9, lit.'Milan caliber 9'; also released as The Contract[4]) is a 1972 Italian noir-poliziottesco film written and directed by Fernando Di Leo and starring Gastone Moschin, Mario Adorf, Barbara Bouchet, Philippe Leroy, Frank Wolff, Luigi Pistilli, and Lionel Stander. The film takes its title from the short story collection of the same name by Giorgio Scerbanenco, and is partially based on three of its stories.[5] The musical score was composed by Luis Enriquez Bacalov and performed by the progressive rock band Osanna.

Caliber 9
Italian theatrical release poster by Renato Casaro[2]
ItalianMilano calibro 9
Directed byFernando Di Leo
Screenplay byFernando Di Leo[3]
Based onMilano calibro 9
by Giorgio Scerbanenco
Produced byArmando Novelli[3]
Starring
CinematographyFranco Villa[3]
Edited byAmedeo Giomini[3]
Music by
Production
company
Cineproduzioni Daunia '70[1]
Distributed byLia Film
Release date
  • 15 February 1972 (1972-02-15)
CountryItaly[1]
Box office₤754 million

Caliber 9 is the first part in Di Leo's Milieu Trilogy of poliziotteschi films. It was followed by La mala ordina (The Italian Connection) in 1972 and Il Boss (The Boss) in 1973.[6]

Plot edit

After a stint in prison, small-time Milanese gangster Ugo Piazza is immediately harassed by his old associates, led by a powerful American launderer known simply as "The Americano" (or "The Mikado" in the English dub), who believe that he stole 300,000 US dollars during a handover, shortly before his arrest for robbery. Piazza emphatically denies the theft, even under coercion from The Americano's volatile right-hand man Rocco. His girlfriend, go-go dancer Nelly Bordon, also believes he stole the money, as does the police commissario, who unsuccessfully attempts to turn him informant.

Piazza meets his former godfather Don Vincenzo, now a blind old man, and his sole remaining capo Chino. Though Rocco mocks Vincenzo's authority, they still hold a begrudging respect for Chino, who has refused to leave his godfather even after everyone else has. The Americano gives Piazza an ultimatum to return the money and resume working for him, but he still insists he doesn't have it and doesn't know who does. Paranoid about more, similar thefts, Rocco begins killing off his money couriers.

Piazza is sent on an exchange of $30,000, happening in a bowling alley. The exchange is crashed by a mysterious assailant in a white scarf (who has been stalking Piazza since his release), who kills their client and steals the brown leather bag containing the money. The Americano sends Rocco and Piazza to kill the men he believes responsible, but when they arrive they're revealed to be Chino and Don Vincenzo. Piazza refuses to slay his former godfather, but Rocco coldly shoots the old man, while Chino narrowly escapes. The Americano has Piazza beaten for his insubordination and is about to have him killed. However, Piazza’s is spared when he convincingly argues that Rocco and the crew were behind the theft of the $30,000.

The Americano retreats to a rural estate with his bodyguards, including Piazza, but is shot and killed in an ambush by a vengeful Chino. Piazza turns his gun on the Americano's men and finishes them off, before Chino dies of his injuries.

Piazza travels to an abandoned church off Milan and retrieves a blue bag with the $300,000 - revealing he had stolen the money from the Americano years ago and orchestrated everything to get him killed. However, he's picked up by police for driving with an expired license and forced to go to the station for an interview.

While in the waiting room, Piazza runs into Rocco (who's being questioned for the shootout at the Americano's house). Rocco, seeing the bag containing the money, shows no animosity and offers the two become partners. Piazza turns him down and is released. He heads to Nelly's house with the money, planning for the two to run away together. Nelly is with Luca, one of Rocco’s crew and the man in the scarf who was behind the theft of the $30,000 at the bowling alley. Nelly had conspired with her secret lover Lucato get the $300,000 from Piazza for themselves.

Luca shoots Piazza, but he manages to kill Nelly with a single punch before expiring. Rocco, who had followed Piazza home, bursts in and beats Luca to death in a fit of rage for his betrayal and disrespecting of Piazza's criminal stature. The police, who had in turn followed Rocco, drag him away from Luca’s bloodied corpse.

Cast edit

Production edit

Caliber 9 was Di Leo's second film to be based on the works of writer Giorgio Scerbanenco, following Naked Violence (1969). According to film historian Roberto Curti, the director saw Scerbanenco's works as "ground-breaking", and believed that they shared similarly "bleak, disillusioned" worldviews, noting that the writer would have enjoyed the film's "terrible yet bitterly ironic game of appearances, coincidences and double-crosses which moves the story to its inevitable conclusion". Credited as being based on Scerbanenco's 1969 short story collection Milano calibro 9, the script is largely an original work, although it was partially influenced by three of the book's stories: its depiction of an exchange of two packages between a series of couriers, culminating in both packages simultaneously exploding upon reaching their final destination, is taken from "Stazione centrale ammazzare subito", while minor references are made to "Vietato essere felici" and "La vendetta è il miglior perdono".[5]

The film's working title was Da lunedì a lunedì ("From Monday to Monday"), with the script indicating that title cards were to denote the time and day of each scene. Editor Amedeo Giomini revealed that while these title cards appeared on the film's workprint, they were not used on the theatrical prints.[7]

While discussing Caliber 9 years after its release, Di Leo regretted not deleting the scenes between Frank Wolff's right-wing Police Commissioner and his left-wing colleague Fonzino/Mercuri, played by Luigi Pistilli, believing that their inclusion hampered the film's pacing and diverged from its focus on the criminal characters.[8]

Music edit

The soundtrack for the film, Preludio Tema Variazioni e Canzona, is a collaboration album between Luis Enríquez Bacalov and the Italian progressive rock group Osanna.[9]

Soundtrack edit

Preludio, tema and Canzona are written by Bacalov and performed by Osanna, the Variazione songs (Variation) are composed by Lino Vairetti and performed by Osanna. All the songs are instrumental except My Mind Flies and Canzona. The movie also includes 2º tempo: Adagio (Shadows) performed by New Trolls.

  1. Preludio
  2. Tema
  3. Variazione I (To Plinius)
  4. Variazione II (My Mind Flies)
  5. Variazione III (Shuum...)
  6. Variazione IV (Tredicesimo cortile)
  7. Variazione V (Dianalogo)
  8. Variazione VI (Spunti)
  9. Variazione VII (Posizione raggiunta)
  10. Canzona (There Will Be Time)

Release edit

Caliber 9 was released in Italy on February 15, 1972 where it was distributed by Lia Film.[1] To qualify for a VM14 rating, the Italian film ratings board requested cuts to the scene in which Rocco tortures a courier with a razor, and the climactic sequence in which Rocco bludgeons Luca to death; Giomini felt that the censorship of the latter scene lessened its intended impact.[7] It grossed a total of 754,443,000 Italian lire on its theatrical run in Italy.[1]

The film was released on Blu-ray by Raro Video on February 22, 2011.[10] It was released again on Blu-ray and DVD by Arrow Video on June 16, 2015.[11]

Reception edit

From contemporary reviews, a 98-minute English-dubbed version of the film, titled The Contract, was reviewed by John Raisbeck of the Monthly Film Bulletin. Raisbeck stated that "after a briskly edited pre-credits sequence, [...] The Contract degenerates into a patchy gangster thriller". The review noted that the film "announces a number of themes-the crime syndicate's big business connections, the Melvillian respect shared by the two professionals Ugo and Chino-without developing any of them satisfactorily", and criticized Mario Adorf's portrayal of Rocco as "often verg[ing] on caricature".[4]

Legacy edit

Di Leo's later film Blood and Diamonds (1978) is considered by Curti to be a "reversal" of Caliber 9, with the relationships in the film being contrary to each other. Blood and Diamonds' working title was Roma calibro 9, and Barbara Bouchet plays similar roles in both films.[12]

Moschin would later play a gangster character, Don Fanucci, in The Godfather Part II (1974).

The film was referenced in Kobe Bryant's Nike Italia advertisement campaign short entitled "Milano Kalibro Kobe", and featured Italy international footballers Giampaolo Pazzini, Gennaro Gattuso, Alberto Aquilani, Claudio Marchisio and Marco Materazzi, Dutch international footballer Wesley Sneijder and Italian NBA star Marco Belinelli in parodies of the original characters. The commercial was directed by Enzo G. Castellari, who, like Di Leo, was a prominent director of poliziottesco films.[13][14][15]

Sequel edit

A direct sequel film, Calibro 9, was produced in 2020.[16] It is directed by Toni D'Angelo and produced by Gianluca Curti, whose father Ermanno was a co-producer of the first film.[17] The cast stars Marco Bocci as Fernando Piazza, the son of Moschin's character, with Barbara Bouchet reprising her role as Nelly Bordon.[17] It also features Michele Placido, Alessio Boni, and Kseniya Rappoport.[16]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Curti 2013, p. 52.
  2. ^ "Milano calibro 9 - art by Renato Casaro!". www.emovieposter.com. Retrieved May 23, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e Credits (booklet). Arrow Video. 2015. p. 3. FCD929.
  4. ^ a b Raisbeck, John (1974). "Contract, The "(Milano Calibro 9)"". Monthly Film Bulletin. 41 (480). London: 11. ISSN 0027-0407.
  5. ^ a b Curti, Roberto (2015). Film Noir, Italian Style: Giorgio Scerbanenco, Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 (booklet). Arrow Video. p. 10. FCD929.
  6. ^ . Tate Modern. Archived from the original on 24 December 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2007.
  7. ^ a b Curti, Roberto (2015). Film Noir, Italian Style: Giorgio Scerbanenco, Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 (booklet). Arrow Video. p. 20. FCD929.
  8. ^ Curti, Roberto (2015). Film Noir, Italian Style: Giorgio Scerbanenco, Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 (booklet). Arrow Video. p. 17. FCD929.
  9. ^ "Osanna". ItalianProg. Retrieved 7 January 2007.
  10. ^ . Raro Video USA. Archived from the original on September 27, 2015. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  11. ^ "Milano Calibro 9". Arrow Films. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  12. ^ Curti 2013, p. 237.
  13. ^ Youtube
  14. ^ . kobebryant.com. 29 February 2012. Archived from the original on 15 May 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  15. ^ "Milano calibro Kobe. Bryant sbarca in tour in Italia". sport.sky.it. 23 September 2011.
  16. ^ a b "Caliber 9". Minerva Pictures International. Retrieved 2021-04-10.
  17. ^ a b "Review: Caliber 9". Cineuropa - the best of european cinema. Retrieved 2021-04-10.

References edit

  • Curti, Roberto (2013). Italian Crime Filmography, 1968-1980. McFarland. ISBN 978-0786469765.

External links edit

  • Caliber 9 at IMDb  

caliber, italian, milano, calibro, milan, caliber, also, released, contract, 1972, italian, noir, poliziottesco, film, written, directed, fernando, starring, gastone, moschin, mario, adorf, barbara, bouchet, philippe, leroy, frank, wolff, luigi, pistilli, lion. Caliber 9 Italian Milano calibro 9 lit Milan caliber 9 also released as The Contract 4 is a 1972 Italian noir poliziottesco film written and directed by Fernando Di Leo and starring Gastone Moschin Mario Adorf Barbara Bouchet Philippe Leroy Frank Wolff Luigi Pistilli and Lionel Stander The film takes its title from the short story collection of the same name by Giorgio Scerbanenco and is partially based on three of its stories 5 The musical score was composed by Luis Enriquez Bacalov and performed by the progressive rock band Osanna Caliber 9Italian theatrical release poster by Renato Casaro 2 ItalianMilano calibro 9Directed byFernando Di LeoScreenplay byFernando Di Leo 3 Based onMilano calibro 9by Giorgio ScerbanencoProduced byArmando Novelli 3 StarringGastone Moschin Barbara Bouchet Mario Adorf Frank Wolff Luigi Pistilli Ivo Garrani Philippe Leroy Lionel StanderCinematographyFranco Villa 3 Edited byAmedeo Giomini 3 Music byLuis Enriquez Bacalov 3 OsannaProductioncompanyCineproduzioni Daunia 70 1 Distributed byLia FilmRelease date15 February 1972 1972 02 15 CountryItaly 1 Box office 754 million Caliber 9 is the first part in Di Leo s Milieu Trilogy of poliziotteschi films It was followed by La mala ordina The Italian Connection in 1972 and Il Boss The Boss in 1973 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 4 1 Soundtrack 5 Release 6 Reception 7 Legacy 8 Sequel 9 See also 10 Notes 10 1 References 11 External linksPlot editAfter a stint in prison small time Milanese gangster Ugo Piazza is immediately harassed by his old associates led by a powerful American launderer known simply as The Americano or The Mikado in the English dub who believe that he stole 300 000 US dollars during a handover shortly before his arrest for robbery Piazza emphatically denies the theft even under coercion from The Americano s volatile right hand man Rocco His girlfriend go go dancer Nelly Bordon also believes he stole the money as does the police commissario who unsuccessfully attempts to turn him informant Piazza meets his former godfather Don Vincenzo now a blind old man and his sole remaining capo Chino Though Rocco mocks Vincenzo s authority they still hold a begrudging respect for Chino who has refused to leave his godfather even after everyone else has The Americano gives Piazza an ultimatum to return the money and resume working for him but he still insists he doesn t have it and doesn t know who does Paranoid about more similar thefts Rocco begins killing off his money couriers Piazza is sent on an exchange of 30 000 happening in a bowling alley The exchange is crashed by a mysterious assailant in a white scarf who has been stalking Piazza since his release who kills their client and steals the brown leather bag containing the money The Americano sends Rocco and Piazza to kill the men he believes responsible but when they arrive they re revealed to be Chino and Don Vincenzo Piazza refuses to slay his former godfather but Rocco coldly shoots the old man while Chino narrowly escapes The Americano has Piazza beaten for his insubordination and is about to have him killed However Piazza s is spared when he convincingly argues that Rocco and the crew were behind the theft of the 30 000 The Americano retreats to a rural estate with his bodyguards including Piazza but is shot and killed in an ambush by a vengeful Chino Piazza turns his gun on the Americano s men and finishes them off before Chino dies of his injuries Piazza travels to an abandoned church off Milan and retrieves a blue bag with the 300 000 revealing he had stolen the money from the Americano years ago and orchestrated everything to get him killed However he s picked up by police for driving with an expired license and forced to go to the station for an interview While in the waiting room Piazza runs into Rocco who s being questioned for the shootout at the Americano s house Rocco seeing the bag containing the money shows no animosity and offers the two become partners Piazza turns him down and is released He heads to Nelly s house with the money planning for the two to run away together Nelly is with Luca one of Rocco s crew and the man in the scarf who was behind the theft of the 30 000 at the bowling alley Nelly had conspired with her secret lover Lucato get the 300 000 from Piazza for themselves Luca shoots Piazza but he manages to kill Nelly with a single punch before expiring Rocco who had followed Piazza home bursts in and beats Luca to death in a fit of rage for his betrayal and disrespecting of Piazza s criminal stature The police who had in turn followed Rocco drag him away from Luca s bloodied corpse Cast editGastone Moschin as Ugo Piazza Mario Adorf as Rocco Musco Barbara Bouchet as Nelly Bordon Philippe Leroy as Chino Ivo Garrani as Don Vincenzo Frank Wolff as the Commissario Luigi Pistilli as Vice Commissario Mercuri Fonzino in the English version Lionel Stander as L Americano The Mikado in the English version Giuseppe Castellano as Nicola Salvatore Arico as Luca Giorgio Trestini as Franceschino Ernesto Colli as Alfredo Bertolon Mario Novelli as Pasquale Talarico Franco Beltramme as Lorenzo Omero Capanna as Alfredo Fernando Cerulli as Hotel ClerkProduction editCaliber 9 was Di Leo s second film to be based on the works of writer Giorgio Scerbanenco following Naked Violence 1969 According to film historian Roberto Curti the director saw Scerbanenco s works as ground breaking and believed that they shared similarly bleak disillusioned worldviews noting that the writer would have enjoyed the film s terrible yet bitterly ironic game of appearances coincidences and double crosses which moves the story to its inevitable conclusion Credited as being based on Scerbanenco s 1969 short story collection Milano calibro 9 the script is largely an original work although it was partially influenced by three of the book s stories its depiction of an exchange of two packages between a series of couriers culminating in both packages simultaneously exploding upon reaching their final destination is taken from Stazione centrale ammazzare subito while minor references are made to Vietato essere felici and La vendetta e il miglior perdono 5 The film s working title was Da lunedi a lunedi From Monday to Monday with the script indicating that title cards were to denote the time and day of each scene Editor Amedeo Giomini revealed that while these title cards appeared on the film s workprint they were not used on the theatrical prints 7 While discussing Caliber 9 years after its release Di Leo regretted not deleting the scenes between Frank Wolff s right wing Police Commissioner and his left wing colleague Fonzino Mercuri played by Luigi Pistilli believing that their inclusion hampered the film s pacing and diverged from its focus on the criminal characters 8 Music editThe soundtrack for the film Preludio Tema Variazioni e Canzona is a collaboration album between Luis Enriquez Bacalov and the Italian progressive rock group Osanna 9 Soundtrack edit Preludio tema and Canzona are written by Bacalov and performed by Osanna the Variazione songs Variation are composed by Lino Vairetti and performed by Osanna All the songs are instrumental except My Mind Flies and Canzona The movie also includes 2º tempo Adagio Shadows performed by New Trolls Preludio Tema Variazione I To Plinius Variazione II My Mind Flies Variazione III Shuum Variazione IV Tredicesimo cortile Variazione V Dianalogo Variazione VI Spunti Variazione VII Posizione raggiunta Canzona There Will Be Time Release editCaliber 9 was released in Italy on February 15 1972 where it was distributed by Lia Film 1 To qualify for a VM14 rating the Italian film ratings board requested cuts to the scene in which Rocco tortures a courier with a razor and the climactic sequence in which Rocco bludgeons Luca to death Giomini felt that the censorship of the latter scene lessened its intended impact 7 It grossed a total of 754 443 000 Italian lire on its theatrical run in Italy 1 The film was released on Blu ray by Raro Video on February 22 2011 10 It was released again on Blu ray and DVD by Arrow Video on June 16 2015 11 Reception editFrom contemporary reviews a 98 minute English dubbed version of the film titled The Contract was reviewed by John Raisbeck of the Monthly Film Bulletin Raisbeck stated that after a briskly edited pre credits sequence The Contract degenerates into a patchy gangster thriller The review noted that the film announces a number of themes the crime syndicate s big business connections the Melvillian respect shared by the two professionals Ugo and Chino without developing any of them satisfactorily and criticized Mario Adorf s portrayal of Rocco as often verg ing on caricature 4 Legacy editDi Leo s later film Blood and Diamonds 1978 is considered by Curti to be a reversal of Caliber 9 with the relationships in the film being contrary to each other Blood and Diamonds working title was Roma calibro 9 and Barbara Bouchet plays similar roles in both films 12 Moschin would later play a gangster character Don Fanucci in The Godfather Part II 1974 The film was referenced in Kobe Bryant s Nike Italia advertisement campaign short entitled Milano Kalibro Kobe and featured Italy international footballers Giampaolo Pazzini Gennaro Gattuso Alberto Aquilani Claudio Marchisio and Marco Materazzi Dutch international footballer Wesley Sneijder and Italian NBA star Marco Belinelli in parodies of the original characters The commercial was directed by Enzo G Castellari who like Di Leo was a prominent director of poliziottesco films 13 14 15 Sequel editA direct sequel film Calibro 9 was produced in 2020 16 It is directed by Toni D Angelo and produced by Gianluca Curti whose father Ermanno was a co producer of the first film 17 The cast stars Marco Bocci as Fernando Piazza the son of Moschin s character with Barbara Bouchet reprising her role as Nelly Bordon 17 It also features Michele Placido Alessio Boni and Kseniya Rappoport 16 See also editList of Italian films of 1972Notes edit a b c d Curti 2013 p 52 Milano calibro 9 art by Renato Casaro www emovieposter com Retrieved May 23 2016 a b c d e Credits booklet Arrow Video 2015 p 3 FCD929 a b Raisbeck John 1974 Contract The Milano Calibro 9 Monthly Film Bulletin 41 480 London 11 ISSN 0027 0407 a b Curti Roberto 2015 Film Noir Italian Style Giorgio Scerbanenco Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 booklet Arrow Video p 10 FCD929 Milano calibro 9 Milan Calibre 9 Tate Modern Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2007 a b Curti Roberto 2015 Film Noir Italian Style Giorgio Scerbanenco Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 booklet Arrow Video p 20 FCD929 Curti Roberto 2015 Film Noir Italian Style Giorgio Scerbanenco Fernando Di Leo and Milano Calibro 9 booklet Arrow Video p 17 FCD929 Osanna ItalianProg Retrieved 7 January 2007 Caliber 9 Milano Calibro 9 Raro Video USA Archived from the original on September 27 2015 Retrieved September 19 2015 Milano Calibro 9 Arrow Films Retrieved September 19 2015 Curti 2013 p 237 Youtube Milano Kalibro Kobe kobebryant com 29 February 2012 Archived from the original on 15 May 2015 Retrieved 15 June 2015 Milano calibro Kobe Bryant sbarca in tour in Italia sport sky it 23 September 2011 a b Caliber 9 Minerva Pictures International Retrieved 2021 04 10 a b Review Caliber 9 Cineuropa the best of european cinema Retrieved 2021 04 10 References edit Curti Roberto 2013 Italian Crime Filmography 1968 1980 McFarland ISBN 978 0786469765 External links editCaliber 9 at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caliber 9 amp oldid 1142171023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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