In the 1972 The Valachi Papers, directed by Terence Young, a (real-life) gangster, Joe Valachi, informs the authorities about the Mafia and mob boss Vito Genovese in exchange for vital protection from Genovese. (Both men are in the same prison.) The flick is never boring, but it is a tad too pushy and overwrought to be quite as realistic as it ought to be. What really vitiates it, though, is Charles Bronson‘s self-conscious acting as Valachi, although there are failed performances from other actors, such as Jill Ireland, as well. On the other hand, Lino Ventura (Genovese), Gerald O’Loughlin and a few others, mostly Italians, succeed. But they don’t render this a worthwhile film.

Valachi was rated PG in ’72 despite its brutality and brief nudity. Ain’t for children.