Order to Assassinate (1975) Poster

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4/10
An Ordinary Euro-Thriller Without Flair
zardoz-1315 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Spanish writer & director José Gutiérrez Maesso has helped pen screenplays for several exciting actioneers, including "Ricco, The Mean Machine," "Train from Durango," "The Hellbenders," "Minnesota Clay" and "Django." Maessco's co-scenarist Massimo De Rita has an interesting list of screenplay credits: "The Valachi Papers," "Companeros," "Violent City," and "Hell's Brigand: The Final Assault." If this surfeit of talent weren't enough, Eugenio Martino of "Bad Man's River," "The Ugly Ones," and "Horror Express" contributed to the "Order to Kill" screenplay. Arduino Maiuri co-scripted De Rita's credits. Finally, Santiago Moncada added his pen to "Ricco, The Mean Machine" as well as "Hatchet for a Honeymoon." As collaborators, this talented quintet should have delivered more exciting showdowns between more colorful characters with enough last-minute reversals to distract us from the obvious ending. Instead, they have concocted a routine potboiler. Occasional outbursts of violence enliven the otherwise dreary "Order to Kill." Essentially, this lackluster crime and corruption melodrama concerns a feud between a veteran cop, Inspector Fred Reed (José Ferrer of "The Caine Mutiny")and a wealthy villain, Ed McLean (Kevin McCarthy of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers") who loves to fly around in a Bell Jet Ranger helicopter.

"Order to Kill" shows initial promise. Appropriately, it opens with a murder, a rather elaborate but far-fetched execution. An assassin, Albert Webster (Romano Puppo of "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly"), relies on a gadget that will indicate when the railway car in which his target is riding in will align itself with his own railway carriage. At the precise instant, when the two railway cars are opposite each other, Albert empties a burst of machine gun fire into the opposing carriage, killing his target. Albert later describes his target as a McLean competitor. No sooner has Albert carried out this assignment than he finds himself the target of a manhunt. Clyde Hart (Helmut Berger of "The Damned") has trouble killing his friends.

Clyde's girlfriend Anne Holden (Sydne Rome of "Sundance and the Kid") tries to persuade him not to accept the murder contract. This will be Clyde's first actual hit-man contract, and Clyde reminds Anne that they need the money. Clyde has orders to kill Albert, but he balks when he recognizes his old friend Albert. This doesn't stop another assassin from shooting Albert. Afterward, Clyde goes to the casino to pick up his money. Peter Costello already knows Clyde didn't liquidate Albert. Gastel wants to know why Clyde wants out. "I'm tired of palm trees," Clyde groans. Gastel reminds Clyde about Jamaica, "Try and remember this is an island. No one can leave it unless McLean says it's okay. And in your case, I'm afraid he's not going to say it's okay." A brief gunfight erupts, and Clyde kills three of Peter's men. Later, another McLean mobster, Richard Prentice (Howard Ross) shows up and kills Gastel in cold-blood because McLean is not happy with Gastel.

Meanwhile, Clyde relaxes with Anne at the beach. He assures his blond girlfriend that they will make it off the island. The following day they go to get their boat and discover that McLean's thugs have not only beat up the boat owner but destroyed the outboard engine. Clyde doesn't get far before McLean's ruffians beat him down to the ground and leave him sprawled unconscious in the street. Anne takes him to a native woman they both know and Clyde recuperates there. Plainclothes police turn up and they take Clyde into custody. Inspector Fred Reed (José Ferrer) pulls strings and has Clyde put into his custody. Reed knows everything about Clyde's background. For example, Reed knows Clyde emigrated to America with his German parents. After spending to two years at USC, Clyde went to Vietnam, deserted and then got on McLean's payroll. He is tired of running when Reed picks him up. Reed shows Clyde that there is no way off the island. Reed wants Clyde to train three other men--Juan, Danielle, and Hugo--and then hit McLean and kill him. Reed warns Clyde that one of the three will be watching him.

Meanwhile, Reed has a telephone conversation with McLean. McLean knows Reed plans to retire in a couple of months. Instead of leaving McLean alone, Reed still wants to kill him. McLean accuses the inspector of nursing a 15-year personal grudge against him. He points out to Reed that Reed refused to accept bribes and doesn't abide by the orders of his superiors to leave Mclean alone. Clyde and the three men practice getting atop a 18-wheeler without being seen. Reed has laid out a plan for them to break into McLean's compound, obliterate the big rig, and kill McLean. By now Anne regards Clyde as "a walking corpse" and wants nothing to do with him.

Later, Richard locates Reed and lines up the cross-hairs of his sniper scope on the old cop. Clyde and his men sneak aboard the 18-wheeler heading into McLean's place. They blow up the tractor-trailer, wipe out McLean's men, but Clyde doesn't kill McLean. Hugo winds up having to shoot McLean. When Clyde calls Reed to inform him of their success, he gets Richard to shoots and kills Reed on the phone so Clyde can hear it. Clyde heads off to tangle with Richard. Basically, everybody bites the dust in this cynical melodrama.

The obvious moral of this conventional shoot'em up is if you live by the gun, then you will die by the gun. "Order to Kill" never generates any momentum. Everything is rather matter-of-fact. The quintet of scribes do serve up some spicy dialogue: "It's funny, whenever they give me a dirty job to do, they wish me good luck." "It's too late for doubt." "You're under orders to do it." The premise about a cop resorting to illegal means to dispose of a high-level mobster is mildly intriguing, but the film falls apart half-way into the second act that not even the sloppily handled combat scenes in act three can salvage.
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6/10
The future today with a little bit of the past thrown in during the present
Bezenby14 June 2018
Strangely, this seventies-made Italian crime film has a plot derived from a late sixties Italian Dirty Dozen rip-off, but is set in a late eighties Italian action film location! That's different.

It all starts off with a hitman (Romano Puppo) killing a guy on a train, and another mobster (Berger) being given the task of taking him out. Berger doesn't know the target is his friend, and when he stalls during the hit, another fella wastes Puppo and Berger ends up with a price on his head. To add to the trouble, he's on a Caribbean island and the mob boss who wants him dead has all means of escape cut off.

Berger, and his glamourous Charlie's Angels style girlfriend, go on the run anyway and after Berger gets a drubbing from a bunch of locals (one of which has a superb afro) he ends up at an old girlfriend's house. To add insult to injury his current girlfriend runs off with the mob bosses right hand man! Berger has no choice but to work for a local police chief who wants him to kill the mob boss, who is played by Kevin McCarthy from Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and, to a lesser extent, the seventies remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

This is where things get a bit Dirty Dozen. Berger has to train up three crooked cops to invade Kevin McCarthy's compound and kill everyone, but in the Seventies things were more laid back so we don't get a training montage: we just get a long sequence of people training before the action packed ending where everyone gets blown away.

So, there you have it. What I learned from this film is that Jose Ferrer was Miguel Ferrer's father, and not Mel Ferrer, star of Blood and Roses and Nightmare City. I'm glad that's cleared up.
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7/10
70's Potboiler
Falconeer1 February 2016
Helmut Berger, leisure suits, Jamaica, the 70's..you know what you are in for. "Order To Kill" delivers all the style, the great music and atmosphere that we expect from this genre. Helmut is down in the tropics, an assassin targeted by other assassins. He's got a gorgeous, but emotionally messed up girl, who happens to be the possession of his arch rival. There are prostitutes and gangsters and espionage. And the only 70's figure that can match the coolness of Helmut Berger, is Fabio Testi who, sadly is not in "Order To Kill." Recommended for fans of the genre. I would love to find an original widescreen print because this movie contains some beautiful location photography as well. Also check out "Mad Dog Killer," also with Helmut..you won't be disappointed.
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7/10
Obscure but decent Spanish/Italian thriller with great international cast , noisy action and interesting roles
ma-cortes25 June 2022
Unknown and violent thriller with a lot of twists, turns and evil characters , being professionally directed by Jose Maesso . A curious and little-known Spanish/Italian co-production with awesome cast and acceptable filmmaking . A very violent feature film dealing with an engaging story concerning a mob family , headed by gambling czar (Kevin McCarthy) whose main enemy is a police chief Reed (Jose Ferrer) . When one of family's hit men named Clyde Hart (Helmut Berger) fails to come up to expectations , Reed orders the man's execution. Along the way , Clyde's got a beautiful but unsettling , drunk woman , who subsequently happens to be the possession of his arch rival (Juan Luis Galiardo) . She was forced to love the man she hated...or the man she loved would die!

This Spain-Italy co-production displays action enough , plot twists , and several villain roles ; being pretty entertaining from start to finish . It has rhythm , violence with tremendous sequence of murders , the action never falters , the performances are quite good, the issues raised are interesting , the direction is compelling , along with an attractive musical score from composer Adolfo Waitzman , as well as colorful outdoors showing spectacular beaches and atmospheric cinematography shot in Santo Domingo island . Stars Helmut Berger giving a nice acting as a hit man who's assigned a dangerous mission joining three brave men to participate in an deadly assault at an enemy fortress , being filmed in Macaroni Combat sub-genre style . His female partner results to be the really gorgeous Sydne Rome who surprisingly provides the best acting as an emotionally messed up woman . Helmut Berger and Sydne Rome are nicely accompanied by a national and international cast , as the Americans Jose Ferrer , Kevin McCarthy and fine Spanish/Italian support actors very reminiscent of a certain Spanish genre films : Terror , Euro-spy , Paella Western from the 1970s , with names like Juan Luis Galiardo , Howard Ross , Jose Maria Caffarel, Romano Puppo , Manuel Zarzo, Álvaro de Luna and Frank Braña.

It displays a moving musical score in the Seventies style by Adolfo Waitzman . As well as evocative cinematography by cameraman Alace Parolin shot on location in Santo Domingo , Dominican Republic and Estudios Roma, Madrid, Spain . This Spanish "thriller" to rediscover and claim was compellingly directed and in his own personal style by José Gutiérrez Maesso . He was an important writer , producer and director . He made a few films as Sucedio en Sevilla , El gran crucero and Clan de inmorales. His essential labour was as a producer and writer . He created a powerful production company : Tecisa . As he made several coproductions as Scherezade, America rugiente , El diablo se lleva muertos , Sumario sangriento para Estefania , Coartada en disco rojo , Mayra and notorious Spaghetti Westerns as Django, Minessota Clay Tierra Brutal , los despiadados , El precio de un hombre , Zarabanda, and Pistoleros de casa grande . This action movie is titled : El clan de los inmorales (1975) or Orden de matar (Spain) or La testa del serpente (Italy) or Order to Kill rating : 6.5/10 . Well worth watching , specially appointed to Spain/Italian coproductions enthusiasts .
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