Heads Up, Ears Down

This blog accurately identifies depictions of violence and cruelty toward animals in films. The purpose is to provide viewers with a reliable guide so that such depictions do not come as unwelcome surprises. Films will be accurately notated, providing a time cue for each incident along with a concise description of the scene and perhaps relevant context surrounding the incident. In order to serve as a useful reference tool, films having no depictions of violence to animals will be included, with an indication that there are no such scenes. This is confirmation that the films have been watched with the stated purpose in mind.


Note that the word depictions figures prominently in the objective. It is a travesty that discussions about cruelty in film usually are derailed by the largely unrelated assertion that no animals really were hurt (true only in some films, dependent upon many factors), and that all this concern is just over a simulation. Not the point, whether true or false. We do not smugly dismiss depictions of five-year-olds being raped because those scenes are only simulations. No, we are appalled that such images are even staged, and we are appropriately horrified that the notion now has been planted into the minds of the weak and cruel.


Depictions of violence or harm to animals are assessed in keeping with our dominant culture, with physical abuse, harmful neglect, and similar mistreatment serving as a base line. This blog does not address extended issues of animal welfare, and as such does not identify scenes of people eating meat or mules pulling plows. The goal is to itemize images that might cause a disturbance in a compassionate household.


These notes provide a heads-up but do not necessarily discourage watching a film because of depicted cruelty. Consuming a piece of art does not make you a supporter of the ideas presented. Your ethical self is created by your public rhetoric and your private actions, not by your willingness to sit through a filmed act of violence.

Sátántangó

Sátántangó. Béla Tarr, 1994.

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Edition screened: Arbelos Blu-ray, released 2020. Hungarian language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 439 minutes.


Summary: Realtime death of a cat by poisoning.


The seven-hour and twenty-minute film is presented on two Blu-ray discs.

Disc 1 presents Part I (137 minutes) and Part II (125 minutes). Disc 2 presents Part III (178 minutes).


The famous 16-minute cat-killing scene takes place in Disc 1, Part II.  It begins with mild inappropriate handling by the young girl at 45:00 (shaking, rough handling) then accelerates into a long scene of the girl rolling aggressively on the floor with the cat as though they are struggling. The cat actor does not dig this, growling and ears flat. The cat then is retained in a suspended net while rat poison is added to milk, which the girl makes the cat drink by forcing its mouth into the bowl. We see the cat near death, barely moving, with her head in her bowl concluding at 1:01:17. The girl lugs the dead cat around through her remaining scenes in Part II (concluding at 1:18:59). Part III begins with the girl’s funeral.


There is much discussion about whether this cruelty in fact resulted in the cat’s death or if an on-set veterinarian revived the animal off-screen at the last minute. As always, my position is that even presenting these images, these ideas, to our cruel society is reprehensible. The game of Lie Or Truth allows some people unacceptable smug justification if the depiction turns out to be a Lie. And in any case the girl carries around a clearly-dead real cat for twenty minutes.


This scene is long and excruciating but is not as upsetting or graphic as many of the murdered-pet scenes common in pop-style movies of the late 20th-century. There is no blood, no shocking closeup, no horrifying moment of discovery. The scene consists mostly of the one-sided wrestling match of the girl holding the cat roughly while rolling around on the floor. Viewers of pop movies typically take animal murder in stride, understanding it as a plot device inevitably intended to warn or threaten some straying spouse or unwanted neighbor that he or she could be next. And these scenes usually are fast: a one-second shot of a grimacing strangled cat and we're done. Béla Tarr satisfies neither of these criteria, offers no release valve. No easily summarized aspect of plot is advanced, and viewers unfamiliar with films like Sátántangó do not know that opening a can of beans or walking from one room to the next also often requires ten or twenty minutes film time.


Cat-killing scene aside, every moment of this movie is beautiful. Just skip the 16 minutes as outlined above, thus removing ethical stress and a little screening time in one fell swoop, especially if you share my interest in swoops, fell or otherwise. Why is the cat killed?  Because destroying the single nice thing in her world is the only influence the depressed young girl can exert in her bleak life. It is a desperate and misguided expression of self in an oppressive environment. Feel free to skip this section of Part II and enjoy the rest of this otherwise bright and cheery film.


**Please note, if you’re watching this film as a single file instead of across two discs on the blu-ray release, then the animal cruelty commences around 2 hrs 56 mins.


Three Classic Films by Claude Chabrol

Three Classic Films by Claude Chabrol. Claude Chabrol, 1992-1997.

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Edition screened: Cohen Media Blu-ray, released 2016. French language with English subtitles. Cumulative runtime approximately 310 minutes.


Summary: A dog is kicked for no reason in The Swindle.


The Cohen 3-BD set includes

Betty (1992)

Torment (L’enfer) (1994)

The Swindle (1997)


Andromina: The Pleasure Planet

Andromina: The Pleasure Planet. Darren Moloney, 1999.

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Edition screened: Full Moon DVD, released 2013. English language. Runtime approximately 71 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 0.5/5


This Full Moon DVD is not the unedited version of the film. Not that it matters. Staring at the hideous box for a minute or so is recommended over viewing the completely unrelated contents.


Antichrist

Antichrist. Lars von Trier, 2009.

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Edition screened: Criterion Blu-ray #542, released 2010. English language. Runtime approximately 101 minutes.


Summary: Surreal images of injured and dead animals.


Details:

1) A deer appears normal from the front, but a dead half-born fawn hangs from her body as she runs away, 37:21-37:43.

2) A nestling chick, eyes only partially open, falls from its nest to the ground and is attacked by ants before a hawk begins to eat it, 47:09-47:26.

3) A red fox appears to be lying dead, but then tears at its own bloody abdomen to expose and spill internal organs (1:00:29-1:00:40), before declaring “Chaos Reigns”.

4) While trying to hide in a tiny cave (called the fox hole in the film), Willem Dafoe finds a crow buried alive. The bird is uncovered and begins to caw, possibly disclosing Defoe’s hiding place. He beats it to death with a rock, 1:24:24-1:24:28. We return to the crow at 1:24:50. It is not dead and now is even more threatening. More cawing and beating through 1:25:10.

5) Another encounter with the deer and the dead-born fawn, 1:35:21-1:35:24.


The Apartment

The Apartment. Billy Wilder, 1960.

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Edition screened: Arrow Blu-ray, released 2017. English language. Runtime approximately 125 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Betty

Betty. Claude Chabrol, 1992.

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Edition screened: Included in Cohen Blu-ray set Three Classic Films by Claude Chabrol, released 2016. French language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 103 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


The Big Boss

The Big Boss (Tang shan da xiong). Lo Wei and Wu Chia-Hsiang, 1971.

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Edition screened: Included in Criterion Blu-ray set #1036 Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits, released 2020. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 100 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Border

Border (Gräns). Ali Abbasi, 2018.

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Edition screened: Universal Blu-ray, released 2019. Swedish language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 110 minutes.


Summary: Several instances of the main character eating a few maggots, and once a worm. This eating is done in a calm, natural way, as a gentle animal would eat, not like an asinine collegiate stunt.


The Boxer from Shantung

The Boxer from Shantung (Ma Yong Zhen). Chang Cheh, 1972.

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Edition screened: Included in Arrow Blu-ray box set Shawscope: Volume 1, released 2021. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 134 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits

Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits. Various directors, 1971-2019.

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Edition screened: Criterion Blu-ray set #1036, released 2020. English language. Cumulative runtime of feature films approximately 602 minutes.


Summary: Enter the Dragon and Game of Death have comparatively very mild images of animal violence.


The Criterion set includes the feature films:


The Big Boss (1971, Lo Wei & Chia-Hsiang Wu)

Fist of Fury (1972, Lo Wei)

The Way of the Dragon (1972, Bruce Lee)

Enter the Dragon (1973, Robert Clouse)

Game of Death (1978, Robert Clouse and Bruce Lee)

Game of Death Redux (2019, Robert Clouse, Bruce Lee, and Alan Canvan)

Game of Death II (1981, Ng See-Yuen, Corey Yuen, and Hung Kam-Bo Sammo)

Butthole Surfers: Blind Eye Sees All

Butthole Surfers: Blind Eye Sees All: Live in Detroit 1985.

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Edition screened: MVD DVD, released 2006. English language with sousaphone and Gibbytronix. Runtime approximately 80 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Crazy Nights

Crazy Nights (Follie di notte). Joe D’Amato, 1978.

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Edition screened: Full Moon Blu-ray, released 2021. English dub is the only audio option, no subtitles or original Italian available. Runtime approximately 100 minutes.


Summary: No real depictions of violence or harm to animals, although a monologue is staged at a display of morbid safari trophies 1:15:05-1:15:48. 2/5


Death Mills

Death Mills. Billy Wilder, 1945.

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Edition screened: Included on Oscilloscope DVD A Film Unfinished, released 2011. English language. Runtime approximately 22 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Don’t Panic

Don’t Panic (Dimensiones ocultas). Rubén Galindo, Jr., 1987.

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Edition screened: Vinegar Syndrome Blu-ray  #341, released 2020. English dub. Runtime approximately 90 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Enter the Dragon

Enter the Dragon. Robert Clouse, 1973.

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Edition screened: Included in Criterion Blu-ray set #1036 Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits, released 2020. English language. Runtime approximately 99 minutes.


Summary: Insect death and rough handling of a snake.


Details:

1) Beginning at 27: 32, we see two praying mantises grappling in a small cage while men bet on which will win. The victory/death scene occurs 28:15-28:51. 

2) Bruce Lee handles a poisonous snake a little harshly but without harming the animal, beginning at 1:16:40. Later, 1:17:12-1:17:15, Lee gingerly puts his foot on the snake’s neck to restrain it. No implicit or apparent harm to the snake. 



Femalien

Femalien. Cybil Richards, 1996.

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Edition screened: Full Moon DVD, released 2012. English language. Runtime approximately 89 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 3/5


A Film Unfinished

A Film Unfinished. Yael Hersonski, 2010.

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Edition screened: Oscilloscope DVD #025, released 2011. German language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 90 minutes.


Summary: A rabbi slaughters a chicken, 1:01:48 - 1:02:19.  This is depicted in a calm, antique way without gore.


This important release also includes Billy Wilder’s famous Death Mills, a short film made for the U.S. government as a document of Nazi atrocities. 


Fist of Fury

Fist of Fury (Jing wu men). Lo Wei, 1972.

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Edition screened: Included in Criterion Blu-ray set #1036 Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits, released 2020. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 107 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Five Shaolin Masters

Five Shaolin Masters (5 Masters of Death/Shao Lin wu zu). Chang Cheh, 1972.

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Edition screened: Included in Arrow Blu-ray box set Shawscope: Volume 1, released 2021. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 110 minutes.


Summary: Rabbit torture.


Details: A peasant carries two rabbits by their ears, presumably dead and the proceeds of a hunting expedition. But no, 1:17:58-1:18:25, the peasant is waylaid and the rabbits laid down alongside the road, where they struggle with tied feet probably causing additional injuries. Again I am reminded that the whole point of hunting and of the meat industries is to cause animals as much pain and distress as possible.

Highway Racer

Highway Racer (Poliziotto sprint). Stelvio Massi, 1977.
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Edition screened: Included on Arrow Blu-ray box set Years of Lead: Five Classic Italian Crime Thrillers 1973-1977, released 2021. Italian language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 101 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


House of Cruel Dolls

House of Cruel Dolls (The House of the Lost Dolls / La maison des filles perdues). Pierre Chevalier, 1974.

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Edition screened: Full Moon Blu-ray, released 2021. English dub. Runtime approximately 90 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 2.5/5


I Stand Alone

I Stand Alone (Seul contre tous). Gaspar Noé, 1998.

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Edition screened: Strand DVD, released 2001. French language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 93 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals. Numerous references to butchering horses are not detailed or explicit.


The Idiots (von Trier)

The Idiots (Idioterne). Lars von Trier, 1998.

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Edition screened: Tartan DVD, released 2000. Danish language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 109 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Is Paris Burning?

Is Paris Burning? (Paris brûle-t-il?). René Clément, 1966.

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Edition screened: Paramount DVD, released 2003. English and other languages with English subtitle. Runtime approximately 172 minutes.


Summary: No depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Judy!

Judy! David W. Hanson and George Meadows, 1969.

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Edition screened: Included in Vinegar Syndrome DVD #028 Drive-In Collection: Judy!/The Night Hustlers, released 2014. English mumbling. Runtime approximately 75 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 0.5/5


The quality of this film perhaps is best summarized by the concluding line of the opening credits: Copywrite (sic) 1969 Cine-Art Productions.


King Boxer (Five Fingers of Death)

King Boxer (Five Fingers of Death/Tian xia di yi quan). Jeong Chang-hwa (as Chang Ho Cheng), 1972.

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Edition screened: Included in Arrow Blu-ray box set Shawscope: Volume 1, released 2021. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 106 minutes.


Summary: A small pushcart containing crates of chickens is overturned, but not in a disastrous way to imply that the chickens were killed or harmed.


Let the Corpses Tan

Let the Corpses Tan (Laissez bronzer les cadavres). Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, 2017.

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Edition screened: Kino Lorber Blu-ray, released 2019. French language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 92 minutes.


Summary: Images of dead animals.


Details:

1) Ants crawling on the body of a rotting hawk, 4:24-4:35.

2) Pig carcasses in a meat locker, followed by a small amount of final-pass butchering, 9:52-10:44. These images are not nearly as bloody or gruesome as most similar scenes in other films.


Shaolin Temple

Shaolin Temple (Shao Lin si). Chang Cheh, 1976.

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Edition screened: Included in Arrow Blu-ray box set Shawscope: Volume 1Shawscope: Volume 1, released 2021. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 120 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.

The Neon Demon

The Neon Demon. Nicolas Winding Refn, 2016.

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Edition screened: Broad Green Blu-ray, released 2016. English language. Runtime approximately 117 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


The Night Hustlers

The Night Hustlers. Bobby O’Donald, 1968.

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Edition screened: Included in Vinegar Syndrome DVD #028 Drive-In Collection: Judy!/The Night Hustlers, released 2014. English language. Runtime approximately 57 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 1/5


No, the Case Is Happily Resolved

No, the Case Is Happily Resolved (No il caso è felicemente risolto). Vittorio Salerno, 1973.

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Edition screened: Included on Arrow Blu-ray box set Years of Lead: Five Classic Italian Crime Thrillers 1973-1977, released 2021. Italian language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 98 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Ode to the Dawn of Man

Ode to the Dawn of Man. Werner Herzog, 2011.

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Edition screened: Included on IFC Blu-ray Cave of Forgotten Dreams, released 2011. English language. Runtime approximately 39 minutes.


Summary: No depictions of violence or harm to animals.


A Scream in the Streets

A Scream in the Streets. Carl Monson and Dwayne Avery, 1972.

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Edition screened: Severin DVD, released 2021. English language. Runtime approximately 90 minutes.


Summary: No animals or references to animals in the film. 2/5


Seeking a Friend for the End of the World

Seeking a Friend for the End of the World. Lorene Scafaria, 2012.

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Edition screened: Universal Blu-ray, released 2012. English language. Runtime approximately 101 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Appropriate caretaking of a dog during stressful times, and Steve Carell realizes in End Days that spiders should not be pointlessly killed.



The Seven Year Itch

The Seven Year Itch. Billy Wilder, 1955.

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Edition screened: 20th Century Fox Blu-ray, released 2012. English language. Runtime approximately 104 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.




Shock (Beyond the Door II)

Shock (Beyond the Door II). Mario Bava and Lamberto Bava, 1977.

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Edition screened: Arrow Blu-ray, released 2021. Original Italian with subtitles or English language. Runtime approximately 95 minutes.


Summary: No depictions of violence or harm to animals.


If you are determined to watch this film, the original Italian language version is the way to go. The child actor is unappealing even in the Italian version, but the English overdub is unbearable as the voice actor screams everything in a high pitched monotone just as real American children teach each other to talk. Switching to the subtitled Italian to hear people conversing in normal tones was a relief.


I enjoyed seeing an unremarkably attractive woman sitting at a dressing table, combing her long red hair with a toothbrush as though that were normal procedure. 


Some Like It Hot

Some Like It Hot. Billy Wilder, 1959.

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Edition screened: MGM/UA Blu-ray, released 2011. English language. Runtime approximately 122 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Sorcerer (Friedkin)

Sorcerer. William Friedkin, 1977.

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Edition screened: Universal Blu-ray, released 2014. English language. Runtime approximately 121 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


Around the 25:00 mark there is a brief long-shot of pig carcasses being carried through a village, followed by the suggestion that we will see a chicken slaughtered, which we do not.


Stalag 17

Stalag 17. Billy Wilder, 1953.

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Edition screened: Paramount DVD, released 1999. English language. Runtime approximately 120 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.


The Swindle

The Swindle (Rien ne va plus). Claude Chabrol, 1997.

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Edition screened: Included in Cohen Blu-ray set Three Classic Films by Claude Chabrol, released 2016. French language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 105 minutes.


Summary: A small dog on a leash yelps when he is lightly kicked, 31:32.


Sylvia (A Saint … A Woman … A Devil)

Sylvia (A Saint … A Woman … A Devil). Peter Savage (as Armand Peters), 1976.

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Edition screened: Vinegar Syndrome DVD #030, released 2014. English language. Runtime approximately 108 minutes.


Summary: No animals in the film. 3/5



Threshold

Threshold. Powell Robinson and Patrick R. Young, 2020.

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Edition screened: Arrow Blu-ray, released 2021. English language. Runtime approximately 78 minutes.


Summary: No animals in the film.


Versus

Versus: Ultimate Edition. Ryûhei Kitamura, 2004.

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Edition screened: Arrow Blu-ray, released 2020. Japanese language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 130 minutes.


Summary: No particular depictions of violence or harm to animals.



The Arrow release also includes the 120-minute theatrical cut of Versus.


The Way of the Dragon

The Way of the Dragon (Meng long guo jiang). Bruce Lee, 1972.

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Edition screened: Included in Criterion Blu-ray set #1036 Bruce Lee: His Greatest Hits, released 2020. Mandarin language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 99 minutes.


Summary: Disrespectful treatment of a walk-on actor.


Domestic cats living in the Colosseum are a well-known and protected colony. As Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris circle and taunt one another in the aisles of the Colosseum, preparing for their big showdown, a cat clearly is shoved or lightly tossed down a few stairs into the scene. He is insulted but uninjured, turns, and goes back up the stairs. The fight then is witnessed by a kitten perched safely above kicking height.



Years of Lead: Five Classic Italian Crime Thrillers 1973-1977

Years of Lead: Five Classic Italian Crime Thrillers 1973-1977. Various directors, 1973-1977.

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Edition screened: Arrow Blu-ray set, released 2021. Italian language with English subtitles. Cumulative runtime approximately 475 minutes.


Summary: Savage Three includes gratuitous violence to animals falsely justified by science and sport.


The Arrow box set includes:


Savage Three (Vittorio Salerno, 1975)

Like Rabid Dogs (Mario Imperoli, 1976)

Colt 38 Special Squad (Massimo Dallamano, 1976)

Highway Racer (Stelvio Massi, 1977)

No, the Case Is Happily Resolved (Vittorio Salerno, 1973)