Il prefetto di ferro (1977) Poster

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8/10
The Untouchable
petra_ste27 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Based on a book by Arrigo Petacco, the movie focuses on the historical figure of Cesare Mori (Giuliano Gemma), prefect sent to Sicily during Fascism to fight the Mafia.

Mori, we learn, is not a Fascist himself (he had previously opposed the regime), but a stern man of law determined to see justice prevail.

After the brutal murder of a family, Mori resorts to direct, extreme methods - more a war than a police operation (he was granted complete freedom of action). When the prefect and his men besiege a town which has become a bandits' stronghold, they leave everyone without water, including women and children, until the surrender.

Gemma, lead of many spaghetti westerns, gives a tight performance, probably the best of his career. He plays Mori as a steely man with much righteous anger boiling under his cold facade. Stefano Satta Flores gives a vivid portrayal of his right-hand man. Claudia Cardinale has a largely unnecessary role as a minor character - the subplot is not terrible, but it feels shoehorned in to give Cardinale something to do. Prolific Ennio Morricone composed the soundtrack.

Mori's methods give effective results against low, violent crime. However, when he attempts to tackle the higher spheres of the Mafia, he discovers their ties with key political figures. In the bitter epilogue, Mori tries to open the can of worms nonetheless, only to be stopped by the same people who had initially given him his task.

7,5/10
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7/10
A very rare masterpiece
Manfred-724 November 2001
It's difficult to find this movie but it's the only one that talk about the fight of the new italian kingdom against the "briganti" (street criminals) at the end of 19° century.

Pasquale Squitieri used a little ancient town to realize a very difficult movie about a strange period of italian history.
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10/10
Perfect Movie!
luttens21 January 2002
This is not a movie depicting the new Italian kingdom in the 19th century , it`s an absolutely true story about the struggle against the Sicilian Mafia. In 1925 Mussolini, who came to power 3 years ago, sent Cesare Mori/1872-1942/ to Sicily, as a police prefect, with the task of whiping the Mafia out.The Fascist regime was concerned about its power and influence, so the following 4 years entered the history as the time of the "Iron Prefect", who arrested and convicted over 2 000 mafiosi. His brave struggle ended in 1929, when he was dismissed and appointed senator in Rome, mainly because he attacked high-ranking Fascist officials, who were deeply involved with the Mafia. They proved to be too powerful to struggle against and Mori lost the war after winning so many battles /including the conviction of don Vito Cascio Ferro, the first known Capo di tutti Cappi/
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10/10
Over the top mafia story
searchanddestroy-111 October 2022
As I have already said and I will continue to say, again and again, who, better than Italians, can speak, about Mafia? Who? As for WW2 in Europe - not the Pacific , who better than the Germans can speak about it? In the most accurate, authentic, realistic way I mean? And who besides Pasquale Squietieri, Damiano Damiani and Francesco Rosi, are able to show how Mafia actually worked, inflitrated the Italian society, contaminated it. No one, except those three, were able to do it. Other Italian flicks belonging to the polizziotesco genre were not mafia movies, because too violent, too superficial, with far too much gratuitous violence, too much bloody and misogynistic lines. Not enough credible for me, because destined to saturday evenings audiences, not intellectual. But directors of such movies, polizziotesco such as Fernando Di Leo or Enzo Castellari, were great directors, very efficient, but only in their own genre, not the pure Mafia one. So this one, I comment now, is a pure masterpiece, it tells a very unusual story about Mafia in Italy history, and the decision that Mussolini made to eradicate the Octopuss once and for all. This is an awesome film, powerful, gritty, with terrific scenes such as this one where a Mafia leader smashes his own skull on his cell wall, to be sure not to talk to the police. Outstanding sequence that summarizes the whote film.
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5/10
Iron Prefect
BandSAboutMovies8 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Prefect Cesare Mori (Giuliano Gemma, A Pistol for Ringo) has been given special legal powers thanks to Mussolini to fight organized crime in Palermo. Working with Officer Francesco Spanò (Stefano Satta Flores), he walks right into the home of boss Antonio Capecelatro (Rik Battaglia) and shoots him in the head before going so far as to cause the suicide of Don Calogero Albanese (Francisco Rabal), a man who escaped the police for four decades.

Based on the true story of Cesare Mori, a man whose attacks on organized crime found it moving to America and back to Sicily after the end of World War II. He arrested and convicted thousands of criminals before he was made a senator. Some say because he went after highly-ranked government officials and they needed him to leave town before they were implicated. Mori spoke up against Mussolini working with Hitler and found himself removed from power afterward.

Directed by Pasquale Squitieri, who wrote this with Arrigo Petacco and Ugo Pirro, this film also boasts an appearance by Claudia Cardinale and a soundtrack by Ennio Morricone. It has the alternate title I Am the Law, which seems like it inspired a certain judge from Mega City One.
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