La banda Casaroli | |
Director: | Florestano Vancini |
Music: | Mario Nascimbene |
Cinematography: | Alessandro D'Eva |
Country: | Italy |
Language: | Italian |
La banda Casaroli is a 1962 Italian crime-drama film directed by Florestano Vancini. The film is based on real life events of criminal group led by Paolo Casaroli.[1] [2]
In a fog-shrouded square in Bologna, a young man named Gabriele Ingenis roams among onlookers under the arcades, visibly dazed after a recent bloody shootout. Gabriele, an Istrian refugee, had crossed paths with his old friend Corrado Minguzzi and Paolo Casaroli a few months earlier at a Bologna Luna Park.
Together, the trio embarks on a shared destiny, obtaining weapons and forming a gang of bank robbers with occasional accomplices. Their first robbery, almost impromptu, takes place in a Lombardy agricultural center against a small bank. As the gang becomes more organized, they stage a heist in Genoa, targeting a bank full of employees and customers, successfully emptying the safe.
Flush with cash, the three move from Bologna to Venice, living the good life by enjoying the company of easy-going women and trying their luck at the casino. Running low on funds, they decide to make a big score in Rome. However, the plan goes awry when a cashier tries to disarm Casaroli during the heist. Ingenis intervenes, shooting the cashier, and as they flee, Minguzzi fires at a pursuer, triggering an alarm.
Their attempt to evade the police in Rome results in more casualties. Believing his friends are dead, the uninvolved Ingenis commits suicide in a cinema with a gunshot. Casaroli, severely injured but still alive, is hospitalized. A journalist manages to talk to him, and upon leaving, hears the outlaw singing the chorus of "Paquito lindo," a song from the movie Fear and Sand.
Paolo Casaroli
Corrado Minguzzi
Gabriele Ingenis
Agent Spinelli