Search - The Big Racket on DVD


The Big Racket
The Big Racket
Actors: Fabio Testi, Vincent Gardenia, Renzo Palmer, Orso Maria Guerrini, Glauco Onorato
Director: Enzo G. Castellari
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Mystery & Suspense
UR     2006     1hr 44min

Studio: Wea-des Moines Video Release Date: 02/05/2008

     
1

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actors: Fabio Testi, Vincent Gardenia, Renzo Palmer, Orso Maria Guerrini, Glauco Onorato
Director: Enzo G. Castellari
Creators: Marcello Masciocchi, Enzo G. Castellari, Gianfranco Amicucci, Galliano Juso, Arduino Maiuri, Massimo De Rita
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Mystery & Suspense
Sub-Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Mystery & Suspense
Studio: Blue Underground
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen
DVD Release Date: 04/25/2006
Original Release Date: 01/01/1976
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/1976
Release Year: 2006
Run Time: 1hr 44min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 4
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: English

Similar Movies

Street Law
Director: Enzo G. Castellari
4
   R   2006   1hr 45min
The Heroin Busters
Director: Enzo G. Castellari
2
   UR   2006   1hr 33min
Contraband
3
   UR   2003   1hr 37min
How to Kill a Judge
Director: Damiano Damiani
?
   UR   2006   1hr 51min

Similarly Requested DVDs

Hellboy
Two-Disc Special Edition
Director: Guillermo del Toro
   PG-13   2004   2hr 2min
   
A Bucket of Blood
Director: Roger Corman
   UR   2000   1hr 6min
   
Star Trek - The Motion Picture The Director's Cut
Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition
Director: Robert Wise
   PG   2001   2hr 12min
   
MASH - Season One
Collector's Edition
Directors: Bruce Bilson, Don Weis, E.W. Swackhamer, Earl Bellamy, Gene Reynolds
   UR   2002   10hr 12min
   
GoodFellas
Two-Disc Special Edition
Director: Martin Scorsese
   R   2004   2hr 26min
   
Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan - The Director's Cut
Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition
Director: Nicholas Meyer
   PG   2002   1hr 56min
   
Heat
Two-Disc Special Edition
   R   2005   2hr 51min
   
Angels in America
Director: Mike Nichols
   UR   2004   5hr 52min
   
 

Movie Reviews

Stop That Racket!
Stanley Runk | Camp North Pines | 07/10/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"From the cover you'd think this flick was about Fabio Testi getting fed up with some noisy neighbors, but that's not it. The "big racket" is one of those protection racket schemes where a bunch of weasley turds threaten store owners to pay dues or have their business trashed. Fabio's a cop(of course) who's been after these guys for awhile, but anybody that watches action flicks knows that trying to bring criminals to justice through legal means never works. Whenever Fabio thinks he's got these guys, they manage to get off on some technicality or some other b.s. Once he starts using tactics that go outside the law, he's fired of course. Once fired, he decides to go Bronson and assembles an A-Team-like group that consists of some of the racket's past victims. One poor guy is a shop owner who was driven nearly insane by the rape and suicide of his daughter(A very good performance from this guy! His daughter looks 12!! Aren't there laws about sex scenes involving minors?). Another unfortunate dude witnesses the rape and murder(by fire) of his wife coz he had killed a few of the racket members and they decide to retaliate. The last act of the film is the best where this group gets together and plans a big assault on the racket. For those familiar with these kinds of films(especially Castellari's work), this one should be a treat. Not as good as Street Law, but much better than the Heroin Busters. Those used to Hollywood's version of an action film will just think it's dumb and cheesy. Fabio Testi is always a strong looking leading man, and able to carry a film even if he isn't the best actor in the world. The film definitely has it's corniness due to the year and country it was made in. One particularly funny scene is the last shot in the film that reminds me of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre. After Fabio emerges victorious(and that's not a spoiler. Like you didn't know he would), for no particular reason he starts yelling and beating a car(at least I think it's a car, you can't quite tell coz of the camera angle) with the butt of his shotgun, and the film freezes on Fabio's manic and comical facial expression as the credits begin to role. This is the stuff good flix are made of. Mindless crimefighting fun-Italian style!!"
Superior Euro Crime Film
Lunar Strain | United States | 11/07/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"When it comes to Euro Crime films The Big Racket comes at top of the game. Of course what can you expect from the great Euro Crime director Enzo G. Castellari and the ever likeable Fabio Testi.

Testi plays a rough police officer that is getting sick and tired of the gang protection racket going on in a small Italian town. Gangs are using violence and destruction to get small business owners to pay. When Testi goes beyond the law to put the Racketeers away, he gets fired and then turns vigilante.

This is a violent, gritty film full of fantastic camera work and colorful anti-hero like characters. Testi here comes off looking like a true bad***. The uncut version provided here by Blue-Underground Entertainment does contain some harsh scences such as two brutal rape sequences so be forwarned.

Coming from a seasoned Euro Crime fan.....you can't get much better than this. There's enough tough guy posturing, cool camera shots and action to make any fan of Italian cinema happy."
Dirty Harry a la Roma!
Trevor Willsmer | London, England | 06/19/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Enzo G. Castellari's The Big Racket one-ups it's rivals by shooting its obligatory car somersaulting down a hill sequence from the inside of the car, with a visibly uncomfortable Fabio Testi obviously thanking God he remembered to fasten his seatbelt with every turn. Despite his protestations that "I'm a different kind of cop," Testi's hero is a predictably close Italian relative of Harry Callahan in a plot that ends up like a cross between The Magnificent Seven and Death Wish as he recruits the victims and criminal rivals of a ruthless protection racket carving up Rome to take the law into their own hands in an engagingly OTT factory floor shootout finale. Thankfully Testi seems to have loosened up a bit from his ramrod straight block of wood earlier performances, though the dubbing may have something to do with that. It's not exactly demanding stuff, and there's laziness to spare, not least with a jailbreak that happens offscreen and is never explained presumably for no better reason than no-one being able to think of a convincing one, but within its limited ambitions it gets the job done, and there's a likeable turn from this films contractually obligatory American co-star Vincent Gardenia

However, there are some real double standards in the American dubbing script: murder, rape and bloody mayhem, no problem, but no naughty words whatever you do. Thus our "dumb basket" hero is warned that if he doesn't cool it, he'll be "in deep diddly." In fact, whoever wrote the dubbing script is obviously having the time of his life, inserting the word "diddly" into as many scenes as many times as possible ("If I'm gonna be in deep diddly, I'd like to know what I'm in deep diddly for!"). Maybe it was a drunken dare after drinking too much Crodino - and boy, did the Crodino boys get their product placement money's worth in this one, with their posters and logos appearing in so many of the exterior and the restaurant scenes that you're just amazed they didn't slap a banner on the side of the Coliseum as well just to cover all the bases!
"