5 figli di cane (1969) Poster

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6/10
Explosives experts at work
unbrokenmetal21 October 2020
USA in the 1920s. 5 men escape from a prison, and afterwards they are offered a dangerous, but well paid job by a gangster boss: to destroy a rival gang's storage facility with plenty of explosives. Sounds like fun, doesn't it? Just that many enemies are trying to stop them...

The cast is good featuring Wayde Preston (Grim), George Eastman ('Firehead' in the German dubbed version), Tano Cimarosa (Mancho), Archie Savage (Jeremias) and José Suárez (the engineer) are starring as the team of anti-heroes. Firehead holds some prejudice against Jeremias, the only black guy in the team, but learns to respect him until they become friends - nice touch for a movie from the 1960s. Otherwise it's an average action flick, plenty of ammo is used to keep the audience awake at all times.
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4/10
The usual late sixties war plot...with spatz
Bezenby30 December 2018
Hey! This is one of those late sixties Dirty Dozen rip-offs disguised as a Eurocrime film just to confuse me. Sure it's all about bootlegging and the tommy guns and zoot suits, but it's about five guys who break out of jail in order to infiltrate an enemy stronghold in a suicide mission. That's the plot of every sixties Italian war film ever made. Except Eagles Over London.

Let's look at our Dirty Five then - there's George Eastman as Irish, dubbed by a guy who is probably from Hampshire but read about Irish people one time. Then there's a mysterious guy who looks like Richard Harrison but isn't, Gaetano Cimarosa playing a...knife guy or something, and two other fellows, one an explosives expert and one of which is black so therefore Irish hates him. That's your crew - what you gonna do?

Wait - I forgot about the hooker lady they rope in to pretend to be starting a new job at the fortified bootlegging place they are supposed to be destroying, because instead of the usual Nazi citadel these neer-do-wells are roped in to attack, this time around they are working for a rival bootlegging firm led by Luciano Pigozzi (there's not enough of him in this film if you ask me). According to Luciano, there are only three bootlegging operations in the US and he wants to wipe the others out. He even has a high tech map hidden behind a picture for reasons that were lost on me.

As usual, there's a lot of fannying about before we get to the big battle at the end, so the film is filled with double crosses, a comedic bar fight, and an awful lot of racial tension between Irish and the other fella, but it really is just Battle of the Damned, Five for Hell, Churchill's Leopards all over again. Not the best.
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5/10
Little-known Italo crime flick
Leofwine_draca31 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
THE GREAT GANG WAR is a somewhat pedestrian Italian crime flick that mixes up a few genres in a bid to tell a fresh tale. It has spaghetti western stylings and a prison setting for the first part, with a bunch of gangsters teaming up to plot a jailbreak. Once they're on the outside they head off to a remote convent in Mexico to destroy a rival organisation and take over their bootlegging operation. The cast is spear-headed by a typically dour and imposing George Eastman, who is one of the most interesting things about the production. The rest features a little romance, some action, character twists, and a general fast pace to help you forget there's nothing particularly memorable about it. Director Alfio Caltabiano was best known as a bit-part actor in peplum films including GOLIATH AND THE SINS OF BABYLON and THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES.
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