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  1. The Designated Victim (Italian: La vittima designata, also known as Slam Out) is a 1971 Italian giallo film directed by Maurizio Lucidi.

  2. Apr 22, 1971 · The Designated Victim: Directed by Maurizio Lucidi. With Tomas Milian, Pierre Clémenti, Katia Christine, Luigi Casellato. Seeking an escape from his unhappy marriage, a disillusioned advertising executive is lured by a sociopathic Count into a bizarre plot to kill each other's relatives.

    • (867)
    • Crime, Drama, Thriller
    • Maurizio Lucidi
    • 1971-04-22
  3. Nov 9, 2021 · A disillusioned advertising executive is lured by a decadent Count into a bizarre plot to kill each other's unsavoury relatives. Stefano, a partner in a company that makes high-end commercials, wants to sell his share of the business and move to South America with his girlfriend, Fabienne.

    • (53)
    • Tomas Milian
    • $28.49
    • NTSC, Anamorphic, Widescreen, Subtitled
  4. Seeking an escape from his unhappy marriage, a disillusioned advertising executive is lured by a sociopathic Count into a bizarre plot to kill each other's relatives. A wealthy, decadent count convinces a disillusioned playboy that they shall murder one another's relatives, to get away with the perfect crime.

  5. Stefano Augenti, an ambitious advertising executive, meets a curious hippie named Count Mateo Tiepolo and they form a strange bond. Seeking an escape from his unhappy marriage, Augenti is lured by the Count into a bizarre plot to kill each other's relatives.

    • (843)
    • Produzioni Cinematografiche Europee (P.C.E.)
    • Maurizio Lucidi
  6. Feb 28, 2022 · The Designated Victim was a great film to finish out my Mondo Macabro marathon. The acting in this one is absolutely fantastic. Milian and Clementi are fucking fantastic together. I really enjoyed how different their characters are and how well they work together to make the story what it is.

  7. Jun 16, 2012 · The Designated Victim. 1971. ★★★★. 16 Jun 2012. The early 1970s in Italy saw the rise in a series of increasingly sexually violent thrillers known as “giallo”, named after the yellowing paperbacks that often featured lurid tales of sex murder and associated criminality.