The Sicilian Connection
The Sicilian Connection
| 01 September 1985 (USA)
The Sicilian Connection Trailers

Mario (Placido), an Italian American who manages a pizzeria in NYC, is charged with an assassination of a judge in Palermo. He leaves the States, comes back to Sicily and recruit Michele, his younger brother, for some help. Michele is a good guy not involved with the Mafia, that is trying to build his life on honesty and hard-working. Michele needs some money to give freedom to a prostitute he is in love, and Mario promise his help in change of an hands to set up his trap for the judge. Anyway Michele isn't made with the same "pasta" of Mario, he couldn't never be a real Mafioso and this causes many between the two brother and the Mafia. There is only a way for Mario to save his brother. A way that Mafia could like.

Reviews
GUENOT PHILIPPE

First, let me say that I am surprised that no one has commented it yet, especially a movie starring Michele Placido who has an outstanding role, as a mafia lead assassin. Very difficult to believe for those who loved him in THE OCTOPUSS series, where he played an untouchable attorney fighting against mafia, I know, but that's damn true. In this movie, that I watched in the three hours TV length copy, you have plenty sub characters and plots, but that's easy to follow. A pure Italian story about mafia but also family and social realistic way of life in Italy. I would have perfectly imagined this as a mini series, not a movie, which it originally was. Placido plays a pizza restaurant owner from America who is a killer for the mafia. When he returns home in Sicily, he finds back his young brother who doesn't want to follow his elder's path, but who is in love with a fifteen years old girl whose own family forces to be a prostitute. So, Placido's young bro will asks his elder to interfere for the sake of the poor teen girl. And, guess what, Placido will help his brother by bringing him up to kill an attorney, the exact same role Placido had in THE OCTOPUSS series that made him a star all over the world, and not only in Italy. The rest is predictable but terrific, although we have already seen this before.

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