Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci dies at 77
He was not on the list.
Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci has died after a long
illness, Italian media reported on Monday.
His publicist, Flavia Schiavi, told Variety magazine that
the director passed away at his home in Rome at 7 a.m. local time (600 UTC) from
cancer.
Famous for films like "Last Tango in Paris" and
"The Sky over the Desert," Bertolucci had won numerous prizes at film
festivals around the world, including the Venice Film Festival and Cannes.
His 1987 film "The Last Emperor" was awarded nine
Oscars, including for best director and best adapted screenplay.
Bertolucci was considered one of the last living giants of
Italian cinema.
Marlon Brando starred in 'Last Tango in Paris'
Born in 1941 in Parma, central Italy, he was a close friend
of Italy's most renowned intellectuals of the 20th century, like writer and
director Pier Paolo Pasolini and writer Dacia Maraini.
For his controversial 1972 movie "Last Tango in
Paris," starring Maria Schneider and Marlon Brando, he was sentenced to
four months in jail for obscenity, but was also awarded an Italian Silver
Ribbon award and was nominated for an Oscar.
The debate surrounding "Last Tango in Paris,"
continued for Bertolucci well after the fact. Years later, Schneider said that
he and Brando had lied to her about the inclusion and production of a violent
rape scene, surprising her with it to get a more genuine reaction. She
confessed to being traumatized by the event. After she died in 2011, Bertolucci
confirmed Schneider's story. He also courted controversy with his professed
support for Roman Polanski.
No comments:
Post a Comment