Maurizio Merli(1940-1989)
- Actor
- Producer
Though it can be said that he only gained fame as an actor because he
bore such a heavy resemblance to Italian actor
Franco Nero, Maurizio Merli was a very
versatile and charismatic leading man in Italian cinema throughout the
1970's. His first appearance was in the
Luchino Visconti
film The Leopard (1963) as an
uncredited extra. Throughout the
60's and early 70's, the young Merli
kept a low profile and remained a fairly minor player in the Italian
films. His major breakthrough came with director Tonino Ricci,
who was to direct an unofficial sequel to
Lucio Fulci's
White Fang (1973) without the
benefit of its star, Franco Nero. Ricci
realized that casting Merli in the lead would fool the viewing audience
into thinking they were seeing Nero and hence an authentic White Fang
adventure. The subsequent film
Zanna Bianca alla riscossa (1975)
worked well enough for Marino Girolami
and Fabrizio De Angelis to cast
Merli as the lead in the crime drama
Violent Rome (1975) a year later.
Much like before, Merli was cast because the film vaguely resembled the
Franco Nero Film
High Crime (1973)
("High Crime").
Violent Rome (1975) turned out to
be a huge success both in Italy and abroad and Merli found himself
inexplicably catapulted to international stardom. Very similar to how
Terence Hill found his niche in
comedies after being discovered out of the crowd of Nero stand-ins,
Maurizio Merli established himself as the leading man in the Italian
crime film genre of the period. Over the brief span from 1975-1979,
Merli starred in no less than a dozen crime films from the likes of
noted Italian directors Umberto Lenzi,
Stelvio Massi, and
Fernando Di Leo including such classics
as Violent Naples (1976),
A Special Cop in Action (1976),
and
_Da Corleone a Brooklyn
(1978)_. Merli also followed Nero's footsteps once again in the
Keoma-inspired A Man Called Blade (1977).
Merli's brief busy period saw him hopelessly typecast in the same role
as the hard-nosed detective in practically every film he starred in.
Merli was said to get so into these roles that he would frequently go
overboard during the fight scenes and hurt the stuntmen. In both
_Roma a mano armata (1976)_ and
The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist (1977),
Merli was cast opposite Cuban actor
Tomas Milian, with whom he did not get
along in real life. The tension between the two made for some very good
on-screen chemistry for the few scenes they had together. Merli's
"tough cop" performances ranged from so-so to nearly brilliant at times
with him angrily shaking his fists and grinding his teeth when the
script would rarely call for such things. However, it was this
type-casting which led to the demise of his career when Italian
filmmakers began to focus less on crime films and more on fantastic
films in the early
80's such
as horror, action, and post apocalyptic films in which Merli simply had
no place. He had a brief role in Giorgio Bontempi's
spy thriller Notturno (1983) but by then
his level of work was but a fraction of what it once was. A devout
health-nut in his later years, Merli collapsed after overexerting
himself in a tennis match and died of Myocardial Infarction at the age
of 49.