Umberto
Lenzi was one of the most prolific Italian genre directors working in Italy,
but he is virtually unknown here in the States outside of the circles of the most
die-hard of genre fans. In fact, his work is so obscure at times that even adherents
to his most extreme horror movies don't even follow the other dramatic work for
which he is also known despite his roster of titles on the IMDB. Much of
International Cinema is “inspired†by American filmmaking (i.e. outright ripped
off from) and following the Oscar-winning success of William Friedkin’s masterful
1971 crime drama The French Connection, with its astounding subway/car
chase, Italy dove head-first into the Eurocrime, or poliziotteschi, genre headfirst making a slew of action films
where the camera’s point-of-view is inspired by Owen Roizman’s work on the
aforementionedreal-life-inspired crime film. Filmed in late 1975 in
Rome and released in New York in July 1978 under the title of Assault with a
Deadly Weapon, The Tough Ones is yet another one of those films that
is known by multiple titles too numerous to even list. Upon superficial
investigation of the beautiful and colorful poster art for the film, one might
assume (as yours truly did) that actor Franco Nero is the star. Rather it’s the
late Maurizio Merli who, not surprisingly, began his career because he looked
like Mr. Nero when the latter was unavailable for White Fang to the Rescue,
the 1974 sequel to both Challenge to White Fang (1974) and White Fang
(1973).
Mr.
Merli plays Inspector Leonardo Tanzi, a hot-headed, self-appointed crime
fighter who makes Gene Hackman’s Jimmy “Popeye†Doyle and Clint Eastwood’s
“Dirty†Harry Callahan look timid in comparison as he tears up each scene that
he appears in, slapping and kicking bad guys and even suspected bad
guys, at the slightest hint of guilt or provocation. He’s fed up with the crime
plaguing his jurisdiction, dishing out his own version of justice by breaking
up a hidden casino, tackling a pair of purse-snatchers on a motor scooter, and diving
into a bank robbery and killing some of the robbers. One of his best bits is
when he is flagged down by a man whose girlfriend has been raped by a gang
headed up by a rich kid who was released from jail just hours earlier. Taking a
clue from the crime scene, he hunts down the spoiled brat and his cronies, smashing
the ringleader’s face into a pinball machine before kicking all their asses in
a crazy set piece. Anyone who gets in his way of getting to another criminal
gets their ass handed to them. This
doesn’t bode well for his girlfriend who is nearly sent to her death when
criminals drop her car into a car crusher, stopping it just before it crushes
it – with her in it! There’s a weird, typical living-on-the-fringe-of-society
character named Vincenzo Moretto (played wonderfully by the late Tomas Milian) who
seems frail and timid at first, but he proves to be a lunatic and is later told
to swallow a bullet (literally) by Tanzi in a strange exchange at Moretto’s
sister’s house.