Baciamo le mani (1973) Poster

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6/10
Kiss my arse
Bezenby5 September 2018
Another lengthy journey into the world of the Mafia here, and you've got to wonder why they even bother getting out of bed in the morning. Someone's just going to shoot them anyway.

In Palermo, Agnostina Belli is worried about her husband going out in the middle of the night. Her husband, Stefano, is an old school Sicilian so he tells her to shut up and mind her own business, shortly before being gunned down in a field by a very aggressive John Saxon.

Saxon plays a guy called Gaspare, a very ambitious Mafioso who is rising up the ranks and is seeking to secure Stefano's land for building. Ownership of the land has now gone to Agnostina and now she has some very sinister people vying for her attention. Meanwhile, the film goes a bit Godfather when we meet Stefano's father Arthur Kennedy, who plays by the old rules and cannot put a hit on Stefano as he works for Arthur's also-old-school Capo, Don...I can't remember his name. This guy is very ill and Saxon knows fine well he's in a position to take over the whole operation.

We also meet all of Arthur's sons and the sons of his Counsellor, one of which falls in love and knocks up Agnostina, which complicates things further. Luckily for the viewer, this vast cast of mobsters starts to get whittled down as they all go from shouting insults at each other to blowing each others brains out, drowning each other, or randomly getting stabbed by a beggar. This isn't a comedy.

This is Vittoria Schiraldi's only film and it looks like he's got quite a bit to say about the Mafia, including how they are all bound by honour, something not adhered to by the younger members of the Mob. The straight man in all this is Arthur's son Massimo, who wants nothing to do with the Mafia and is quick to point out that good Mafia, bad Mafia, both are still criminals and killers.

I think there might be some sort of comment in there about the way women are treated by the Mafia too. Agnostina's husband makes a show of 'who wears the trousers' and although she fares a bit better with the next guy, he still wants to bail the moment he discovers she's pregnant. Apart from a few hookers here and there, we are pretty much informed that we are in the world of men.

As usual, we have that great Italian Cinematography to fall back on too, plus appropriately sad music to add to the 'no wonder people immigrated to America' vibe of the film.
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4/10
Up your ass with a telephone pole
JohnSeal28 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Agiostini Belli stars as Mariuccia, the widow of a a gangster shot down in the prime of his gun-for-hire life, in this so-so poliziotteschi written and directed by Vittorio Schiraldi. She vows revenge on the responsible parties and gets the enthusiastic assistance of her father-in-law, clan godfather Don Angelino (Arthur Kennedy). Rival Gaspare Ardizzone (John Saxon) shouts a lot, and trouble rapidly escalates from fist fights to all out war. Meanwhile, second son Luca (Spiro Focas) disappoints dear old dad by displaying no interest in continuing the family business, but comes to a sticky end on the mean streets of New York City. There's absolutely nothing original about this film (released in English as I Kiss the Hand), but Kennedy and Saxon do their best. There's a decent letterboxed copy with Japanese subtitles out there if you're interested.
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4/10
Character-focused drama
Leofwine_draca11 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I KISS THE HAND is a mafia story from Italy that takes a deadly serious approach to the material. It's an action-free story about the rivalry between various gangsters and the women caught up in their battles. John Saxon plays an ice-cold rival to the family headed by old-timer Arthur Kennedy, with the usual killings and betrayals thrown in. This is a mature, lucid piece of filmmaking, one with a greater depth of characterisation than normal, albeit with less of a focus on story telling and action.
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4/10
Family Killer
BandSAboutMovies18 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Directed and written by Vittorio Schiraldi (who also wrote Watch Me When I Kill), this was based on a novel that Schiraldi wrote.

Stefano (Joshua Sinclair), the son of Don Angelino Ferrante (Arthur Kennedy) has been shot in the back by the brutal Gaspare Ardizzone (John Saxon) - who is the start of a more violent and ruthless breed of criminal - for refusing to sell him land. Ferrante sends for a killer from America hoping for revenge.

The death of Stefano leaves behind a widow, Mariuccia (Agostina Belli), who is both protected and impregnated by a bodyguard named Massimo (Pino Colizzi). Meanwhile, Ardizzone goes to America and starts wiping out the New York bosses too and Don Ferrante still refuses to put a hit on him. Will his family and way of life survive?

Pretty much The Godfather with a different cast and some subtle changes, Family Killer still boasts an amazing Saxon performance as a total psychopath.
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