
significant films in '70s Italian crime cinema, High Crime served as a dramatic (and very
popular) announcement for its director, Enzo G. Castellari (who had mostly made spaghetti westerns before this along with odd outliers like Eagles Over London and Cold Eyes of Fear). It also served as another major boost for its temporarily blond star, Franco Nero, who was one of the biggest names in Europe and had already excelled in multiple socially-conscious crime films for Damiano Damiani, though here he delivers one of his most agitated performances. Obviously inspired by American hits like The French Connection and (according to Castellari) Bullitt, it's a tough and engrossing gem that still plays beautifully today, packed with chases (including stellar work by driving legend Rémy Julienne), plot twists, a propulsive score by Guido and Maurizio De Angelis, and great Italian location shooting including striking use of Genoa that put it on the moviemaking map. In a busy year that also saw such classics as Revolver, Tony Arzenta, The Boss, The Violent Professionals, and The Great Kidnapping, this is still one of the best.
between Genoa and Marseille. However, a transfer ends up getting the prisoner killed, which forces Belli
to go his superior, Chief Commissioner Scabino (Whitmore), for every possible bit of unsanctioned evidence at his disposal. Belli suspects a powerful, corrupt businessman named Griva (Del Prete) is behind it all, which also means going to a rival criminal gang headed by Cafiero (Rey) to come up with a plan of attack... but at a great personal cost.
Inspired Corporation for many years. That release reflected the U.S version which abbreviates the ending
to indicate a different, much darker fate for Belli, which is what was usually seen when the film was given revival screenings. Various European and Japanese VHS and DVD editions turned up over the years, while U.S. company Blue Underground had this one slated very early on in its history as a release in 2004. That didn't come to pass (despite bonus features being created at the time), and the film didn't hit Blu-ray until 2022 under very strange circumstances. A StudioCanal release prepped for the U.K. and France was a complete misfire, omitting the entire climax and instead ending with a confusing editorial jump. The U.K. release features English and Italian audio options with English dubtitles; the Italian track sounds pretty rough, and since the film was shot almost entirely in English anyway (including the leads' distinctive real voices), that option is preferable. Also included are three interview featurettes: "A Criminal Conversation" with Castellari, "The Scene of the Crime" with camera operator Roberto Girometti, and "High and Dry: The Stuntwork of Massimo Vanni" with the actor and stunt man. A better, almost simultaneous option came from German label FilmArt, featuring the complete version of the film with German, English, and Italian audio with optional German subs. That disc also features the alternate short ending, an option to play the whole film with that ending, Italian and German credits, an English trailer, and a gallery.
The UHD benefits from Dolby Vision bringing out some surprisingly vivid moments of colorful production design that contrast with the dreary exterior scenes, and it's hard to imagine this possibly looking better. As with the German release, the quality dips a bit during the climactic footage missing from the other releases, indicating this was missing from the negative or too damaged to use. Grabs seen in this review are from the Blue Underground Blu-ray; 4K ones will be added as soon as possible. The DTS-HD
MA 1.0 English and Italian tracks both sound solid, with optional English (SDH or translated), French, and Spanish subtitles. Three commentaries are included, the first recorded in 2004 with Castellari (along with unbilled son Andrea Castellari and Blue Underground's Bill Lustig); it's a great chat loaded with talks about pitching the story to Edmondo Amati, casting Nero, working from various American influences, and making use of the Genoa locales. Interestingly, they all seem to agree the film should have ended with the U.S. option. A new commentary with Nero and Eurocrime!'s Mike Malloy (plus an uncredited Lustig again) is a fascinating look at the film from the actor's perspective, including his decision not to make the sequel (which essentially kicked off Maurizio Merli's career), the role he turned down to make this film, and lots of memories from the set. A third track features Troy Howarth, Eugenio Ercolani, and yours truly, so no comments on that one!BLUE UNDERGROUND BLU-RAY
FILMART BLU-RAY