|
Cani arrabbiati (1995)
Character: Paymaster (uncredited)
Following a bungled robbery, three violent criminals take a young woman, a middle-aged man, and a child hostage and force them to drive them outside Rome to help them make a clean getaway.
|
|
|
Il secondo tragico Fantozzi (1976)
Character: Casinò Guest (uncredited)
The frustrating adventures of a humble employee who all the time has to fullfill the wishes and desires of his bosses.
|
|
|
|
|
Le pillole di Ercole (1960)
Character: Tramontana
A doctor unwittingly drinks an aphrodisiac fluid and thus has relationships with an acquaintance's wife.
|
|
|
Indagine su un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto (1970)
Character: Policeman (uncredited)
Rome, Italy. After committing a heinous crime, a senior police officer exposes evidence incriminating him because his moral commitment prevents him from circumventing the law and the social order it protects.
|
|
|
Febbre da cavallo (1976)
Character: Associate Judge (uncredited)
Bruno Fioretti, known as "Mandrake", is an inveterate gambler who never misses a day at the horse racing track in Rome. He is doubly unlucky: he bets too much on one horse, and his wife is sleeping with his best friend because Mandrake is always at the track. Penniless and cuckolded, Mandrake decides to make one last bet.
|
|
|
Salon Kitty (1976)
Character: Salon Kitty Patron (uncredited)
In Nazi Germany, Kitty runs a brothel where the soldiers come to 'relax'. Recording devices have been installed by a power-hungry official who plans to use the information to blackmail and usurp Hitler. One of the girls discovers the ploy and, with the madam's help, takes on the dangerous task of exposing the conspiracy.
|
|
|
Camille 2000 (1969)
Character: Party Guest (uncredited)
Marguerite, a beautiful woman of affairs, falls for the young and promising Armand, but sacrifices her love for him for the sake of his future and reputation.
|
|
|
Il boss (1973)
Character: Medical Examiner (uncredited)
A hitman finds himself embroiled in the middle of a Mafia war between the Sicilians and the Calabrians.
|
|
|
Faccia di spia (1975)
Character: John McCone (uncredited)
Faccia di spia tries to tell the story of the CIA and other government intelligence agencies with lots of re-creations and dramatizations and points out some of the more brutal aspects of the intelligence community from around the world. Wars are started, all facets of everyday life are controlled, innocent people are tortured needlessly and subjected to extreme violence.
|
|
|
Diabolik (1968)
Character: Journalist at Press Conference (uncredited)
International man of mystery Diabolik and his sensuous lover Eva Kant pull off heist after heist, all while European cops led by Inspector Ginko and envious mobsters led by Ralph Valmont are closing in on them.
|
|
|
Fantozzi (1975)
Character: Megaditta Executive (uncredited)
A good-natured but unlucky Italian is constantly going on a difficult situations, but never lose his mood.
|
|
|
Todo modo (1976)
Character: Spiritual Practitioner (uncredited)
Set during a retreat of Christian Democrat politicians who practice spiritual exercises together, it is an allegory of corrupted power. Disturbing, claustrophobic settings are the background to a series of mysterious crimes.
|
|
|
Profondo rosso (1975)
Character: Library Caretaker (uncredited)
An English pianist living in Rome witnesses the brutal murder of his psychic neighbor. With the help of a tenacious young reporter, he tries to discover the killer using very unconventional methods. The two are soon drawn into a shocking web of dementia and violence.
|
|
|
Umberto D. (1952)
Character: Young Doctor (uncredited)
When elderly pensioner Umberto Domenico Ferrari returns to his boarding house from a protest calling for a hike in old-age pensions, his landlady demands her 15,000-lire rent by the end of the month or he and his small dog will be turned out onto the street. Unable to get the money in time, Umberto fakes illness to get sent to a hospital, giving his beloved dog to the landlady's pregnant and abandoned maid for temporary safekeeping.
|
|
|
Il prefetto di ferro (1977)
Character: Train Conductor (uncredited)
Sicily, Fascist Italy, 1925. Dictator Benito Mussolini appoints Cesare Mori, a man as tough as he is honest, as the new police prefect of Palermo and entrusts him with the arduous task of putting an end to the Mafia, a sinister criminal organization that has sown terror on the island for centuries.
|
|