Due occhi per uccidere (1968) Poster

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5/10
Don't give Jack no Flack
Bezenby3 February 2018
Remarkably obscure mix of giallo and Euro-crime that doesn't exhibit much of either, with what looks like a bit of Euro-spy elements thrown in for good measure.

The film opens with Fabio Testi being condemned to death for a crime he didn't commit, but at least they let him play a little trumpet before they execute him. You see, Fabio was a trumpet player at a nightclub, and the nightclub owner, Jack Taylor, framed Fabio for the murder of his business partner. Now someone is out to get revenge - and Jack isn't happy!

Jack's a busy man. He's trying to get some diamonds off some petty criminals on the cheap and they aren't having it. He's also having to check on some new girls that he can pimp out. It's stressful being a gangster - especially when someone rats to the cops about the diamond heist and he's interrupted trying to rape a fifteen year old girl. Can't a sleazy mobster get some peace and quiet?

It seems that some friends of Fabio are out to get Jack and are using some hi-tech equipment to carry out their plans, using hidden cameras and microphones from some control room within Jack's club. One of them also wears a ridiculous pair of glasses that 'helps her hear better'. Can these folk get revenge on Jack without any innocent people getting hurt?

It's about this point where I was thinking "Wait, wasn't this supposed to a giallo?" because to be honest there's not much of that stuff going on, although the twist at the end kinds of falls into that daft territory, and although it involves gangsters, there's not too much of that going on either, save for one gun battle. I suppose it was a mystery to Jack what was going on, but the audience are clued in from the start. The film never really goes to far in either of those directions. Jack Taylor was more animated than usual though, so fans of him might want to see it out.
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5/10
Like Fabio Testi's trumpet, this movie blows
melvelvit-118 October 2014
A ruthless racketeer (Jack Taylor) who uses his nightclub as a front for all kinds of crime suffers a drastic reversal of fortune after sending an innocent man to the guillotine for a crime he himself committed. The executed man donated his eyes after he died and now the club is being watched ...coincidence?

Closer to film noir than giallo, TWO EYES definitely had potential but the lack of suspense, scares, kills, or coherence pretty much made it a missed opportunity. Be that as it may, the movie was just weird enough to keep me watching. In a pre-credit sequence, the prisoner (an uncredited Fabio Testi) takes his trumpet with him to the guillotine which, of course, is why we're forced to hear it in the jazzy score for the rest of the film. There's also an adagio dance at the club featuring a belly dancer getting whipped by a man in a cat mask and later on, Taylor himself falls under the lash. TWO EYES TO KILL isn't inept, exactly, but, like Fabio, it still blows.
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5/10
Two Eyes to Kill
BandSAboutMovies12 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Renato Borraccetti, who wrote the script with Fernando Luciani, Two Eyes to Kill disappeared after playing theaters and never was released on video. It was sold on eBay in 2014 and was restored as part of a crowd funding mission. The reason why the version online is so short is that one of the reels is missing.

Jean (Fabio Testi) is sentenced to death but keeps his trumpet, playing jazz on the night before he's taken to the guillotine. He claims he's innocent until his head comes off his shoulders. The real story, however, is about nightclub owner Max (Jack Taylor), who is being sold out by one of his girls, Rosy (Gia Sandri) and her friend Pierre (Barth Warren). She's recording everything that happens in the club using her gigantic glasses, which is pretty crazy. They're playing a game to destroy him, even cluing his girlfriend Nadia (Aichè Nanà) into the fact that he's assaulting young women.

Why? Well, they were friends with Jean, so we didn't meet him for no reason. They're trying to drive Max insane by tormenting him with the sad trumpet song Jean played before he died.

This movie has Eurospy gadgets that may be made from thick paper, lunatic women dancing on stage - Aichè Nanà has a shirtless man appear and start whipping her! - and a jazzy soundtrack by Piero Umiliano and trumpet player Nini Rosso. I wonder if we will ever see a completed cut of this or this is the best we get. Regardless, it's pretty interesting to check out. I mean, the entire movie seems to be set in a few rooms and curtains take the place of walls.
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