Giuliano Montaldo: Difference between revisions

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While he was still a young student, Montaldo was recruited by the director [[Carlo Lizzani]] for the role of leading actor in the film ''[[Achtung! Banditi!]]'' (1951). Following this experience he began an apprenticeship as an assistant director of Lizzani and [[Gillo Pontecorvo]], as well as appearing in the 1955 ''[[The Abandoned (1955 film)|Gli Sbandati]]''.
 
In 1960 he made his debut as a director with ''Tiro al piccione'', a film about the [[Partisan (military)|partisan]] resistance, which entered for a competition in [[Venice Film Festival]] in 1961. In 1965 he wrote and directed ''[[The Reckless|Una bella grinta]]'', a cynical representation of the economic boom of Italy, winning the Special Prize of the Jury at [[15th Berlin International Film Festival]]. He then directed the production ''[[Grand slam (1967 movie)|Grand Slam]]'' ([[1967 in film|1967]]) which starred an international cast including [[Edward G. Robinson]], [[Klaus Kinski]], and [[Janet Leigh]].<ref>{{cite web|work=[[The New York Times]]|title=Movie Review|first1=Renata|last1=Adler|first2=Howard|last2=Thompson|author1-link=Renata Adler|date=February 21, 1968|url=httphttps://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D00E6D61031E034BC4951DFB4668383679EDE}}</ref> His cinema career continued with ''Gott mit uns'' (1969), ''[[Sacco and Vanzetti]]'' (1971), ''Giordano Bruno'' (1973), a trilogy about the abuses of the military, judicial and religious power; ''[[Tempo di uccidere]]'' (1989–1991), with actor [[Nicolas Cage]] [httphttps://movies.nytimes.com/movie/50050/Tempo-Di-Uccidere/overview].
In 1982 he directed the television [[miniseries]] ''[[Marco Polo (mini-series)|Marco Polo]]'', which won the [[Emmy Award]] for [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries|Outstanding Miniseries]].