The Boss (1973)
9/10
'Il Boss' remains a sinuous, stiletto-sharp, heroically hard-boiled Mafiosi-noir!
23 January 2014
The indelibly iconic, 'Il Boss' remains a sinuous, stiletto-sharp, heroically hard-boiled Mafiosi-noir from famed poliziotteschi stylist, Fernando Di Leo. Starring the notably stern, Stoic to the point of terminal rigidity, Henry Silva, delivering yet another coolly charismatic performance as the vicious,ice-veined terror-thug, Nick Lanzetta, with fading Hollywood matinee idol, Richard Conte lending his swarthy, old world gravitas to the meaty role of octogenarian Sicilian king pin, Don Carrasco. All this uniquely explosive, stylishly rendered retribution is excitingly catalysed by another funky, uber infectious score by long-time, Di Leo collaborator, maestro Luis Enriquez Bacalov. 'Il Boss' thunderously remains an absolutely essential, mongoose mean Spaghetti shoot 'em up, and thankfully, Di Leo flinches not a jot from the requisite Mafiosi movie mantra of seriously squib-happy ultra violence! If you have yet to be dazzled by any of maestro, Fernando Di Leo's strikingly stylish, meticulously crafted gangster epics, one should manifestly start here, as the Neolithically nasty, Nick Lanzetta is one of the most mesmerically Machiavellian, blithely blood thirsty hit man to have ever blazed a ballistically bellicose swathe across the Silva screen!
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed