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Ghost Canyon

Convoy Buster: Special Edition [Blu-ray]
(Olga Karlatos, Maurizio Merli, et al / Blu-ray / NR / (1978) 2023 / Cauldron Films - MVD Visual)

Overview: After brandishing his gun and badge too many times in front of powerful people, Maurizio Merli (Violent Naples and The Cynic, The Rat, and The Fist) is busted down from Homicide to Emergency Squad.

Despite his demotion, he is not content with letting Rome’s criminal element run rampant and his violent nature soon finds him the target of both the press and the local mob.

After a bloody attempt on his life, he is transferred to a quiet coastal town to run a local department but, never one to leave things alone, he quickly finds a dangerous smuggling ring is using the cover of the sea and darkness to run their operations in his sleepy district.

Blu-ray Verdict: In truth, and in my own humble opinion, whilst this film isn’t quite as lackluster as FEARLESS FUZZ (which must have spent almost its entire budget coaxing Joan Collins to guest star), CONVOY BUSTERS still feels too sloppy to really compete with the other, much better work Maurizio Merli did for Umberto Lenzi and Marino Girolami.

Stelvio Massi’s films always felt like cut-rate Umberto Lenzi, though with a much higher emphasis on creative camera angles and slow motion, so with a little Antonio Margheriti and Enzo Castellari mixed in. However his films certainly suffered from lack of money, and this film is no exception.

Maurizio Merli starts the movie on the tail of a ruthless killer and diamond smuggler who frustratingly slips out of his grasp. Oddly enough, the movie completely switches gears and spends its second half in a sleepy seaside community when Merli gets transferred to get away from it all. This sort of thing would never be green-lit today as the nervous studio execs would demand that the villain find his comeuppance or at least have something tie in from the first half later on. No such luck.

The strangeness of this film is really what sets it the most apart from Merli’s other more routine late-70’s police outings. There’s a couple great scenes in there like when Merli (albeit unrealistically) hunts down several crooks with a helicopter armed only with a revolver with what must be criminal-seeking bullets. Things get muddled when he meets a girl (the stunning Olga Karlatos) and it turns into an awkward romance as everyone (you, me, and both of them) can tell he’s way more into his work than her.

Another memorable goofy scene highlights some miscast 30-somethings as teenagers terrorizing a stadium and shooting at the whimpering owner who looks like either a bloated Sean Penn or a late-career Zalman King. Merli shows up and administers more of his productive signature beatings, but to the teens and not the owner.

The main gang at the end really lacks much of a sense of menace, even when they take hostages. This film really could have used better actors as henchmen but unfortunately plays its cards too soon as Nello Pazzafini and Riccardo Petrazzi only get one short scene as a pair of robbers shacked up with a sleepy hippy chick who gets delightfully shot through the wrist. More beatings ensue.

In closing, the film is definitely a hit-and-miss affair, but more of a hit overall, me thinks. So set your expectations low and you’ll most definitely have a lot more fun than THE REBEL or FEARLESS FUZZ. In fact, the most memorable aspect of the film is the scene where Maurizio Merli fatally shoots some innocent bystander and promptly just forgets about the whole thing! [A.A.]

Special Features:
2K restoration from the negative / 1080p presentation
English audio
Optional English SDH subtitles
Italian audio w/ English subtitles
Maurizio Merli: A Lethal Hunter of Subtle Variation with tough-guy film expert Mike Malloy
My Father, the Cop: Interview with Maurizio Matteo Merli
The Massi Touch: Interview with Danilo Massi
Stelvio Massi video tribute by Danilo Massi
Stelvio Massi Image Gallery
Commentary by Mike Malloy & Mike Martinez
Alternate “Convoy Busters” title sequence
A Star Was Born - A conversation with journalist Eolo Capacci
Bullet in the Closet - A conversation with director Ruggero Deodato
ER Prota - A conversation with director Enzo G. Castellari
Merli on Merli - a conversation with actor Maurizio Matteo Merli
My Good Fella Maurizio - A conversation with actor Enio Girolami
Maurizio Merli Image Gallery
Trailer - Italian
Trailer - English
Poster (folded) - Limited Edition Only
High quality slipcase w/ artwork by Haunt Love - Limited Edition Only
Limited to 1500 copies

Official Trailer

www.cauldron-films.com

www.MVDvisual.com





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