Fearless (1978) Poster

(1978)

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6/10
Maurizio, the Stand-Up Moustache Comedian
Coventry9 April 2019
The Italians are genuine masters in deconstruction their own successful cult/exploitation cinema streams! As soon as the popularity or ticket sales were slightly diminishing, the writers and directors began throwing in aspects of other genres and bucket-loads of dumb humor; - slapstick even. It happened to the legendary Spaghetti Westerns at the end of the sixties, and it happened to the Poliziotesschi flicks a decade later. It's almost saddening to see how, in a span of barely 5-6 years, the films that were initially brutal, relentless and non-stop violent are slowly becoming light-headed parodies. "Poliziotto Senza Paura" still offers a reasonably well-balanced mix between action, thrills and chuckles, but the sub-genre would rapidly deteriorate further, notably with the "Delitto" franchise starring Tomas Milian. For most contemporary Italian actors and directors, the slow disappearance of the Poliziotesschi wasn't a big tragedy, as they sought out new and different horizons. For Maurizio Merli, however, the Poliziotesschi movies were literally all he had, so he kept playing his familiar roles, even if it meant acting like a clown or depicting supportive characters (like in "Convert Action").

In good old Italian tradition, "Poliziotto Senza Paura" has a lot of alternate titles. I watched it as "Fearless Fuzz", but it's also known as "Magnum Cop", "Fearless", "Fatal Charm", "The Private Detective" and "A Matter of Honour". Despite several bad omens, like the comedy elements and recycled poster images, it is still an entertaining film that benefices from a solid plot and the presence of Joan Collins! To my knowledge, it's Diva Collins' only appearance in an Italian exploitation movie ever, but she does a terrific job and still looks astonishing as the 44-year-old stripper. Walter "Wally" Spada is a former cop now working as a financially struggling private detective. Austrian colleague Gaston Moschin subcontracts Wally to trace the runaway daughter of his wealthy businessman client, but the child is brutally kidnapped in front of him. Wally then travels to Austria himself, and via the related case of a murdered schoolgirl, he slowly uncovers a filthy network of teenage prostitution led by the owners of a sleazy nightclub. The first 10 minutes, as well as the final 15, are extremely compelling and chock-full of hard-boiled Poliziotesschi action. A few of the death sequences are unexpected and quite shocking and there are some clever plot twists. Unfortunately, the entire middle-section is too talkative and dull, and the non-stop, supposedly humorous gasconading between Merli and Moschin becomes irritating quite fast. Nevertheless, the more than decent score by the reliable Stelvio Cipriani and the above-average directing competences of Stelvio Massi contribute to making "Poliziotto Senza Paura" a recommendable viewing experience for fans of Italian 70s cult.
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5/10
I can't believe I'm saying this, but more Joan would have also been a plus for the film.
bensonmum223 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Maurizio Merli plays a small-time private detective hired to find a missing girl. His hunt leads him to Austria and the case of a dead girl that he's sure is connected to the girl he's looking for. He learns that the girls were involved with a gang dealing in child prostitution. Merli has to get act fast if he's to save the life of the girl he's looking for.

The more I see of Maurizio Merli, the more I enjoy his performances. After my first experiences with him, I saw Merli as little more than a pretty-boy, Franco Nero wannabe. But recently, I've begun to see he's got a lot to offer of his own. He's as good in the action scenes as Nero and probably better at the more comedic moments. He shows both in Fatal Charm. Whether it's taking out the bad guys or pulling a scam on the local police, he's got real screen presence and a definite charm.

Fatal Charm (aka Fearless, aka Poliziotto senza paura, aka Magnum Cop) could have been so much better had the plot not been so muddled and confusing. Part of it may be due to the dubbing, but the film definitely goes off in tangents that would have been best left alone. It seems to take forever for Merli to get to the bottom of things. For example, there's a whole series of scenes with Merli playing up his operations to an Austrian detective. It's pointless and doesn't really work. A tighter script would have served Fatal Charm well.

My copy of Fatal Charm gives top billing to Joan Collins. And while her scenes are memorable (she gets naked for God's sake), she only has about 15 minutes of screen time. I can't believe I'm saying this, but more Joan would have also been a plus for the film.
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7/10
We always love Joan.
f11oyd@aol.com19 March 2022
The first half hour is so fast paced and campy you can't look away. (Crazy cartoon dubbing) But then... after that it's kinda hard to find the plot.

Joan doesn't show up for a long time. But after she does the plots becomes more clear and I personally had to stay to find out what happens.

For the most part this is for dire hard Joan fans only.
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6/10
Blazing Magnum.
morrison-dylan-fan10 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Opening the Italian Crime Big Guns DVD box set,I decided that thanks to owning Violent Professionals separately I would just stick to the other 4 flicks in the set. Finding this to have the shortest run time of the 4,I dipped for a sweet magnum.

View on the film:

Going against the brute grain of the era, the screenplay by co-writer/(with Fulvio Gicca Palli/Franz Antel and Gino Capone) director Stelvio Massi refreshingly brings a knowing Comedy side to the Italian Crime genre, barrelling down in a Taxi Driver spoof and Brigitte's Hare Krishnas trance. Whilst the comedic side brings a playfulness to the movie, the writers sadly have it dent the building of tension in Wally's investigation, due to a abrupt stop/start of going from serious to funny.

Whilst spinning the wheels on the Italian Crime genre staple of roaring car chases, director Stelvio Massi & cinematographer Riccardo Pallottini stylishly place the viewer in the front seat of the action, via tightly placed cameras inside the cars which run on the adrenaline of being up-close to the gangsters firing from their car. Along with the welcomed sleazy eye candy, Massi brings a slickness to the Italian Crime grit, via a terrific use of glass reflecting clues to Wally (a great,rough and ready Maurizio Merli.)

Stripping in a attempt to distract Wally, Joan Collins gives a great, mean-spirited turn as Brigitte,who Collins has sizzle on the magnum force.
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4/10
Nothing Memorable
zardoz-139 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Franco Nero look-alike actor Maurizio Merli stars as an agile private eye in "Emergency Squad" director Stelvio Massi's "Magnum Cop" with Joan Collins. Although Merli did his share of Italian 'Polizi' films as a "Dirty Harry" style inspector, he plays an ordinary gumshoe, Walter 'Wally' Spada, in this yarn about betrayal and blackmail. Somebody is running a blackmail and prostitution ring and Joan Collins has a hand in it. She shows up 41 minutes into the action when our hero heads off to Vienna to do his sleuthing. Collins works in a night club as a stripper and she bares all. She is shown nude in the final quarter-hour. Nothing memorable but nimble enough to be distracting. There is nothing really cool here. You could go your entire life without watching this atmospheric thriller and not feel like you have missed anything. Merli is his usual charismatic self. Spaghetti western villain Franco Ressel plays a mustached coroner in Vienna who is in league with Collins. Predictably, complications ensue, one involving a wealthy businessman whose daughter has been kidnapped and held for $ 5-million ransom.
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5/10
Conventional Italian crime
Leofwine_draca11 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Here's a fairly typical Italian crime film, partially shot in Austria to make the locations more authentic and interesting. Like most Italian films it's poorly dubbed as usual, with no attempt to make the voices sync with the lips, and some of the dialogue hasn't translated well either. Saying that, FEARLESS FUZZ (gotta love that retitling) has a great, jazzy soundtrack to recommend it, a complex plot with plenty of twists and turns you won't see coming, and I guess the sheer rarity of it makes it more interesting too.

Things open with a hilarious slow-motion action scene involving Merli shooting two would-be kidnappers. The police force aren't too happy about this but Merli manages to avoid them by pretending to give them publicity! Other than that he hangs around in his dirty office while his partner in crime pretends to be Robert De Niro. Eventually Merli receives a cheque in the post from a rich Austrian businessman to track down the man's daughter, so he's on the case.

Merli's case takes him to Austria, where he is repeatedly attacked, beaten and nearly killed by a gang of hoods and thugs (one of whom is the German guy from Thunder Squad). He discovers an English stripper (Joan Collins) called Brigitte who initially helps him out before leaving him to be killed. In the mean time, he investigates the disappearance of a school girl and discovers a secret child prostitution ring. After many double-crosses and murders, Merli solves the case.

Well what can I say? A tape that's almost impossible to find today, I managed to pick up a copy on the scarce Hokushin label from a market, sadly it was growing mildew on it though! Some might say that this movie is deservedly obscure, being as it is a conventional crime thriller that doesn't really offer much originality or moments that make you sit up on your seat. I'm sure that there are loads of similar films like this made in Italy which have never been released in this country; the only reason that this one was is the participation of Joan Collins playing a topless stripper! Merli himself is pretty good as the Franco Nero lookalike tough cop; likewise the supporting Italian cast are quite memorable in their varied roles - I especially like the Austrian detective bloke who doesn't seem to do much! Sadly most of the action and chase scenes take place at night-time, so it's actually fairly hard to make out what's going on. Funnily enough, the Hokushin tape has a PG rating, although I find it hard to believe that a film containing lots of nudity and violence could seriously get a PG certificate this day and age. Other than the distinctive music score and the interesting location work, FEARLESS FUZZ is a conventional crime thriller only of note to those who are fans of the genre.
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Spada, Wally Spada...
azathothpwiggins16 June 2021
Opening with a bongo drum-driven, slow-motion shootout, MAGNUM COP gets underway.

Private investigator, Wally Spada (Maurizio Merli) is on the case of a zillionaire's missing daughter. Dressed in Junior Samples' overalls, Spada brings his reddish, blondish hair helmet, and Burt Reynolds' mustache along for the ride. Slipping out of his Hee Haw tuxedo, and into Mr. Rogers' sweater, he's ready for action!

When thugs attack, it's karate time! Spada's overwhelming, perfectly-placed blows ignite, sounding like frozen turkeys being slapped against sacks of cement!

Next, it's off to the strip club to look for clues. Therein, Wally witnesses the lovely performer, Brigitte (Joan Collins), giving forth her glorious gift to humanity. Apparently, Wally needs her help.

Fans of Ms. Collins take note: Indeed, she doth disrobe delightfully!

Oh no!

More thugs attack, pounding Wally's melon with sounds not unlike those caused by 10-lb. Salamis hitting wet pavement! This all leads to an interminable foot chase, and a sinister turn in the plot.

Have no fear! Brigitte returns, and yes, her clothing dissolves like magic before our eyes! All followers of Ms. Collins simply must see this movie before taking their last breath!

Now, back to whatshisname, and whatever it was he was supposed to be doing.

If it weren't for the long stretches of dullness, this could have been a cheeeze classic. Next time, more karate! Less wally! More Brigitte!...
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5/10
Needed More Moustache Action
Bezenby9 November 2018
It was hard for me to adjust, but I finally managed to cope with the fact that Maurizio Merli is not playing a cop in the film. He's playing a private detective who used to be a cop. After some therapy, I was able to cope with this cataclysmic change and watch the film.

Merli doesn't seem to be that great a PI either. He's totally broke and lets his sidekick Vinnie (Massimo Vanni) deal with all the debts. When trying to mooch a meal in a restaurant, Merli gets a big break - someone in Austria is looking for their daughter and it's up to Merli to track her down. This opens up a whole can of worms that leads Merli to Vienna and a Massimo Dallamano giallo-style plot involving school girls.

Merli hooks up with Gastone Moschine in Vienna and gets caught up trying to solve a different case involving the suspicious death of a minor that leads him to hang around in a car outside of school asking a young girl if she'd like to go for a ride with him. He hasn't got sinister motives though, but icy-eyed Werner Pocath might have, and where does Joan Collins fit in with all this? Don't ask me - ask her boobs!

Look, i'll level with you. This isn't the greatest Stelvio Massi film, nor is it the best Maurzio Merli film (although he's a charmer as usual). It takes far too long for an actual plot to emerge from all the comedic bits at the start of the film (Vanni moaning about not getting paid, annoying the cops, pretending to Gastone that he's a rich James Bond type) and when it does the teenage-prostitute angle doesn't quite fit with the funny bits. About half and hour from the end things get more violent and one character is run down by a car in a scene that's shocking in its abruptness, but it's too little too late.
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10/10
exciting Maurizio Merli euro-crime entry, with Joan Collins at her sexiest!
django-117 February 2005
The late Maurizio Merli was a staple in many excellent Italian crime films of the 1970's, reminding me at times of both Franco Nero and Chuck Norris (!!!). FEARLESS (as the US video of this is known) is an exciting Italian police film, largely shot in Austria (which looks beautiful!), with Merli as a low-rent private investigator and former cop who is sent to Austria on a job, and while there sees a number of seemingly unrelated coincidences that lead him into a strange web of corruption and decadence. But at the forty-minute point, the film enters a new sphere with the arrival of JOAN COLLINS, looking incredibly sexy, doing a striptease in a club, and giving the film a wonderful shot in the arm. This film was made right before her "comeback" with the films THE STUD and THE BITCH, based on literary works by her sister Jackie. I've always admired Ms. Collins and the way she took charge of her career and showed the world how sexy an over-35 lady can be. The crime elements of the film work well, Merli is exciting and witty (as he usually was), and Joan Collins is a seductive femme-fat ale in a role that her fans simply must see. I've watched this film a number of times over the years, and I can't recommend it highly enough...an exciting 70's Italian crime film with the added attraction of Joan Collins at the height of her powers is a dream come true for this viewer!
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8/10
Excellent Italian crime thriller!
The_Void26 May 2008
This film slots into the Italian 'Polizi' genre, although it's something of a black sheep as the focus is not on police officers or police procedure. The film is still similar to other genre entries, however, and although the lead character is a private detective; he's not really far away from being a police officer. Fearless is directed by Stelvio Massi who previously made the disappointing Polizi flick Emergency Squad with Tomas Milian and went on to make the decent Convoy Busters with the star of this film; Maurizio Merli. The plot in this one focuses on Merli's private detective character who is put on the trail of a missing girl in Austria. After the investigation goes pear shaped, he finds himself on another case; this time revolving around a dead girl and by chance realises that the two are connected. His investigation leads him into the underworld of Austria which is inhabited by several very shady characters and he soon discovers links between the girls he's investigating and a prostitution racket.

The biggest draw of Fearless is undoubtedly the presence of the great Maurizio Merli; he may be just slightly ridiculous, but he has a great screen presence and while most of his screen roles are more than a little bit similar; in this film, he actually gets a chance to show that he has some range and overall it's one of the best performances I've seen from him. The film also stars Joan Collins in her only Polizi flick role as a seductive femme fatale. She looks good and fits into the role well, although it's disappointing that she obviously refused to do a nude scene and the edited nude sequence towards the end is not convincing. The plot itself moves at a steady pace and while it does get a little muddled and hard to follow at times; it manages to remain entertaining throughout, which is to its credit. The film doesn't completely take itself seriously either, and there's plenty of comedy thrown in - particularly during the first half of the film, which actually creates a bit of an odd mood when the film turns darker later on. Fearless is topped off by an excellent score and overall this is a well done and entertaining Italian thriller.
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8/10
Magnum Cop
BandSAboutMovies30 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Poliziotto senza paura also known as Fearless, Fatal Charm, Fearless Fuzz and A Matter of Honour is directed by Stelvio Massi (Convoy Busters, Highway Racer), who wrote the screenplay with Gino Capone from a story by Fulvio Gicca Palli.

In the lead role of Walter Spada is poliziotteschi star Maurizio Merli, who was encouraged by Massi to act like Phillip Marlow and only shoot his fun once in the entire film, to which the actor replied, "Come on, he must be shooting like mad, or else nobody's going to watch this movie!"*

Wally and his partner Benny (Massimo Vanni) are off the police force and now private detectives who make their own kind of law for criminals. This takes them to Austria, where a child prostitution ring has already taken one of his friend's daughters. Unlike other Merli films, Wally is more of a fan of action movies than one himself, as he smiles and laughs more in this movie than in all of his others put together, even if this gets really grim.

Once Walter saves Annalize von Straben (Annarita Grapputo, Don't Look In the Attic, Like Rabid Dogs) twice - criminals take her back from his apartment at one point - he gets on the case of a dead girl and her still-living friend Renata (Jasmine Maimone, Nancy from Demons) and gets seduced by the mystifying Brigitte (Joan Collins). And yes, if you love Joan Collins, well, this is the movie for you, as she's not only an evil seductress, she actually does an exotic dance, the kind that never showed up in I Don't Want to Be Born even though her character is a stripper.

This has Merli wearing overalls, which is certainly odd, in the beginning action scenes. After an entire movie waiting for him to go nuts, man, he sure does, busting through windows and fist fighting his way through an entire film's worth of bums. Even after - again - all this darkness, it still has a wacky sitcom ending too.

I loved this movie so much that I yelled out loud at one point and my wife thought I was having some kind of medical emergency.

*Credit to Roberto Curti's Italian Crime Filmography, 1968-1980.
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