‘Borsalino and Co.‘ (the English title is ‘Blood on the Streets‘) is a good case study of the risks of ‘sequel’ films. Film director Jacques Deray and producer Alain Delon tried in 1974 to repeat the success of ‘Borsalino‘ released on screen in 1970, which featured Delon and Jean-Paul Belmondo, in an elegant and well choreographed production, in which the two mega-stars almost mathematically divided their time and space on the screen, being extremely careful not to shadow each other. Francois Capella, the hero played by Belmondo, dies in a spray of bullets at the end of the first film, and ‘Borsalino and Co.‘ begins with his funeral. Roch Siffredi (Alain Delon) will spend the sequel looking for the assassins of his friend, taking revenge upon them in a cruel and spectacular way and fighting with his rivals for the control of Marseilles in the mid-1930s. The task will not be easy.
Although it is happening at the same period and in the same locations, the story of ‘Borsalino and Co.‘ has a tone different from the one of the original movie. If there is a moral motivation in ‘Borsalino‘ that balances the character and deeds of the heroes this was friendship. Friendship remains in the second film only a pretext mentioned in the first scenes, revenge takes its place as a feeling that guides the actions of Roch Siffredi. ‘Borsalino‘ was more like a mobsters movie inspired by successful similar American films. ‘Borsalino and Co.‘ slips much further into the ‘film noir’ genre. Less successful are the political or historical nuances, the introduction of the fascist association of Roch’s enemies seems forced. From the light atmosphere, the local color, the humor and the fun of the original film, there is nothing left, even Claude Bolling‘s music is less inspired this time.
‘Borsalino and Co.‘o and Co.’ it’s not a bad movie. It is a cursive action film, and the story has something from ‘Count de Monte Cristo’, if we are already in Marseilles. Delivered by the need to be careful about the pharmaceutical partition of the screen with Belmondo, Delon dominates the film and creates a role closer to that he had other gangster films in which he played the role of the bad guy with an angelic face. However, the rest of the casting is much less inspired than the first movie in the series, and none of the supporting roles provide the opportunity for an acting creation to remember more than five minutes after the screening ends. ‘Borsalino‘ was a special film, a piece of entertainment with the chance to be remembered long after watching it. ‘Borsalino and Co.‘ it’s just a reasonable vintage action movie. It ends with a ‘to be followed’ sign that never happened, and I believe that the producer and the director were inspired not to continue the series.