Sardinia Kidnapped

{{Short description|1967 film by Gianfranco Mingozzi}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Sardinia Kidnapped

| image = Sardinia_Kidnapped_poster.png

| caption = Italian film poster

| director = Gianfranco Mingozzi

| producer = Silvio Clementelli

| screenplay = Gianfranco Mingozzi
Ugo Pirro

| starring = Franco Nero
Charlotte Rampling
Frank Wolff
Ennio Balbo
Pierluigi Aprà
Steffen Zacharias

| music = Riz Ortolani

| cinematography = Ugo Piccone

| editing = Ruggero Mastroianni

| studio = Clesi Cinematographica

| distributor = Euro International Films

| released = {{Film date|1968|03|14|df=yes}}

| runtime = 95 minutes

| country = Italy

| language = Italian
English

| budget =

}}

Sardinia Kidnapped ({{langx|it|Sequestro di persona}}, {{lit}} "Kidnapping"), also known as Ransom in Sardinia, Island of Crime and Unlawful Restraint, is a 1968 Italian poliziottesco film directed by Gianfranco Mingozzi and starring Franco Nero, Charlotte Rampling and Frank Wolff.{{cite video

| title = The Mercenary (How to make a Revolution)

| medium = DVD

| publisher = Koch Media, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

| location = Planegg, Germany

| date = 1970

}}

Plot

University student Francesco is kidnapped by bandits in Sardinia. His English tourist friend, Christina, a powerless witness to the kidnapping, rushes off to warn the family. Gavino, a childhood friend of Francesco's, advises Christina against talking to the police, but she does and the police begin searching for the kidnappers. In a firefight between gangsters and police, Francesco is killed, but the bandits hide his body. Meanwhile, Francesco's father offers to sell his lands to Osilio, a wealthy landowner, to get the money needed to pay the ransom for his son. Later, Gavino lets himself be seized by the bandits, and he convinces them that their leader is betraying and exploiting them. The bandits deliver their leader to Gavino, who recognizes him as Osilio. For Osilio there is no way out: the two men, together with Gavino, make their own justice.

Cast

References

{{reflist}}