VM14
2023    1h 48minAction, Crime
6.876%94%7.3
Da quando ha abbandonato la sua vita di assassino governativo, Robert McCall (Denzel Washington) ha lottato per rimediare alle orribili azioni compiute in passato e trova una strana consolazione nel perseguire la giustizia in favore degli oppressi. Sentendosi inaspettatamente a casa nel Sud Italia, scopre che i suoi nuovi amici sono sotto il controllo dei boss della criminalità locale. Quando gli eventi precipitano, McCall sa cosa dovrà fare: difendere i suoi amici e sfidare la mafia.
Diretto da Antoine Fuqua
  • Denzel WashingtonRobert McCall / Produttore
  • Dakota FanningEmma Collins
  • Eugenio MastrandreaGio Bonucci
  • David DenmanFrank Conroy
  • Gaia ScodellaroAminah
  • Remo GironeEnzo Arisio
  • Andrea ScarduzioVincent Quaranta
  • Andrea DoderoMarco Quaranta
  • Daniele PerroneAngelo
  • Zakaria HamzaKhalid
  • Manuela TasciottiCarmela
  • Dea LanzaroGabriella Bonucci
  • Sonia AmmarChiara Bonucci
  • Alessandro PressViking
  • Niccolò FavaMarco's Thug
  • Alessandro Xavier De SilvaMarco's Thug
  • Adolfo MargiottaChief Barella
  • Niccolò SenniStefano
  • Bruno BilottaLorenzo Vitale
  • Adriano SabrieVitale's Grandson
  • zayaha15 maggio 2026
    Wow what a great movie - truly enjoyed this one and all three in the series but liked #3 most of all
  • Luis Morales13 maggio 2026
    Okay movie. It's run it's course. There was a need to be in another country. Didn't make a lot of sense or plausible for an old man to be in another country who barely spoke the language to defeat a mob and his minions with little to no support.
  • ben stevenson24 marzo 2025
    Good end to a great trilogy
  • Zokkiie17 aprile 2026
    Hmm yeah, this one lands somewhere in the middle. It’s got a solid vibe and a few moments that hit just right, but it never fully kicks into something memorable. The pacing drags a bit, and it feels like it’s holding back when it should be going all in. Tiny bit better than the second one, though, mostly because the atmosphere is stronger and it feels a bit more focused. Amazing to see Denzel Washington and Dakota Fanning reunite after Man on Fire, but we really needed more of them together. Their chemistry is still there—it just isn’t used enough. Overall, decent watch, just not one I’d rush to revisit.
  • egospurs10 novembre 2025
    Great movie with a great storyline that is believable. Solid acting & Denzil as always is superb
  • Karen Nakamura19 luglio 2025
    Perfectly good popcorn movie. Don't think too hard and just sit back and watch the mayhem. Everything by the numbers. No real suspense. That's ok. Papa Denzel is setting this movie up for retirement in a quiet Italian fishing village.
  • Ted Malone12 aprile 2026
    Maybe the best of the three. Denzel is perfect in this role. Some of the fight scenes are pretty incredible and the climax is about as good as it gets. Definitely recommend this one.
  • jfall608 febbraio 2026
    Great plot great cast
  • Shaydeknight1 gennaio 2026
    Of the three Equalizer films, The Equalizer 3 is, in my view, the weakest. Antoine Fuqua's direction has actually improved. The film is cleanly shot, well paced on a scene-to-scene level, and visually confident, so that's not the problem. Nor is Denzel Washington the issue. He remains an immensely credible screen presence, and it is frankly remarkable that he carried this film at roughly sixty-nine years old during production. His physical authority and emotional control are still there, and nothing about his performance feels lazy. The film falters elsewhere. The plot is astonishingly simple, to the point that it feels deliberately dumbed down. What once felt like a morally driven thriller with layers of restraint, obligation, and reluctant violence has been reduced to something almost schematic. There is very little narrative complexity, very little mystery, and almost no sense that events could unfold in an unexpected way. The story proceeds exactly as you assume it will, and that predictability drains tension rather than building it. Visually, the film is gorgeous. The Italian setting (primarily the coastal town of Atrani which is called "Altamonte" in the film) is undeniably beautiful. Fuqua makes good use of the location with strong establishing shots, patient camera work, and a real appreciation for the geography of the place. The film knows how to let the town breathe, and for stretches it almost convinces you that this quieter, more contemplative setting might lead to a more reflective story. Unfortunately, this is where another major problem emerges: the film is not interested in how Europe actually is, only in how Hollywood imagines Europe to be for American audiences. It leans heavily into a postcard version of southern Italy that feels curated, simplified, and vaguely patronizing. The rhythms of daily life, social dynamics, and cultural boundaries are smoothed over in favour of an almost touristic fantasy of instant belonging and uncomplicated warmth. There are two moments (handled here obliquely, to avoid spoilers) that exemplify this. In one, the film suggests that a newcomer can be absorbed into a small European village with surprising speed, accepted as "one of us" after what feels like a matter of days. Anyone who has lived in, or even closely observed, small communities anywhere in the world knows how implausible that is, whether in Italy or the USA. Insularity is not cruelty; it is simply how human groups work, and acceptance is earned over years, not bestowed by narrative convenience. In another scene, meant to convey cultural generosity, one character decides to show McCall the local cuisine. Now, Italians are famously uncompromising about their food, and the idea that a local would proudly introduce a visitor to "authentic" regional food only to serve him a kebab (a Turkish dish) strains credibility past the breaking point. No Italian that I know would ever do that. These moments may seem minor, but together they reveal a fundamental lack of cultural specificity. The setting becomes merely decorative rather than realistic which can be alienating. The treatment of Robert McCall himself is another significant downgrade. In the first two films, he was portrayed as a disciplined professional: a man with violent skills who enters conflict reluctantly, driven by a moral code and a sense of responsibility toward the vulnerable. Here, that view of the character is largely gone. Without sufficient justification or introspection, he comes across less as a reluctant guardian and more as a man who simply enjoys the work, with a nigh-psychopathic air to him. The difference is subtle but crucial, and it shifts the character from morally complex to uncomfortably unhinged. The central criminal storyline suffers from the same oversimplification. The antagonists are thinly sketched, almost cartoonish, and lack any meaningful interiority. Their goals are generic, their menace abstract, and their connection to the town feels imposed rather than organic. The film attempts to personalize this threat through individual victims and relationships, but those efforts never quite compensate for how hollow the overarching conflict feels. There is nothing especially personal at stake, and without that, the violence loses its emotional charge. Compounding this is a parallel subplot involving Dakota Fanning whose narrative thread is clearly intended to add thematic depth and institutional context. In practice, it does very little. The connection between this storyline and McCall's experience in Italy is tenuous, and when the two threads intersect, there is no meaningful payoff. Fanning does a fair job, her character is competently performed, but the role itself feels like padding, an attempt to suggest a larger world without actually enriching the story we are watching. In the end, The Equalizer 3 is a film that looks better than it is. It benefits from a beautiful location, solid direction, and a lead actor who remains compelling well into his late sixties. But it is undone by a simplistic plot, a shallow understanding of its setting, a weakened conception of its protagonist, and narrative threads that promise depth without delivering it. What was once a tense, morally driven franchise has drifted into something flatter, easier, and far less engaging.
  • maub1728 dicembre 2025
    Great movie!
  • mickerdoo7 novembre 2025
    Denzel is still a bad dude. Just thought the situation was a little underwhelming in respect to the first. Needed more challenge.
  • Vandyt25 ottobre 2025
    The worst of the saga, where Denzel’s age shows in the lack of fight scenes. Despite everything, the story still packs the same punch
  • ben.s4028 settembre 2025
    Surprisingly effective. Can’t go wrong with action Denzel. Bonus seeing him with Dakota Fanning again!
  • TonyFecteau28 luglio 2025
    Very enjoyable. Good action and great characters.
  • tyecam57 luglio 2025
    W4 22 minutes

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