Detective Belli


Detective Belli is a 1969 Italian poliziotteschi directed by Romolo Guerrieri and starring Franco Nero. It is based on the novel Macchie di belletto by Ludovico Dentice.

Plot

The rude Commissioner Belli is entrusted with the investigation into the death of a record producer, this Mr. Romanis. The man, shot dead in his apartment, not far from the centre of Rome, is found a few hours after his death. The gunshots shattered the window of the apartment, but no one seems to have noticed anything. In a whirlwind of events, the commissioner comes into contact with a series of characters: from the model Sandy to the pop singer Emanuelle, from the lawyer Fontana to his beautiful wife, Mrs. Vera. These characters revolve around the story, revealing uncomfortable details of Roma well. After the death of Mino and Sandy, Commissioner Belli will find himself faced with the truth, unmasking the unsuspected murderess.

Cast

Film critic and historian Roberto Curti identifies Detective Belli and Days of Fire as examples of Italian crime films influenced by the themes of film noir. In a similar manner to his earlier giallo film The Sweet Body of Deborah, Guerrieri's film also employs tropes of the "sexy thriller" subgenre.

Release

Detective Belli was released in Italy by Interfilm on September 6, 1969, where it grossed 616.63 million Italian lira. At the height of the popularity of the 1970s poliziotteschi cycle, the film was re-released under the title Tracce di rossetto e di droga per un detective. Nero would later play another character with the surname Belli in 1973's High Crime; the character in that film differs from the corrupt protagonist of Guerrieri's film.

Reception

Critic Giovanni Buttafava praised the film's ending, describing it as "nocturnal, stylized, à la Jean-Pierre Melville, with the cold yet emotionally charged confrontation between the half-rotten-half-clean cop Franco Nero and Florinda Bolkan, with stylistic traits of film noir mythologizing which were rare in Italy, and rather remarkable as well". Curti praised Guerrieri's work on the film, stating that it "amply shows that he's an accomplished director in his own right".