|
Welcome to Online Film Home! The place for all film lovers. |
|
|
 |
Bernardo Bertolucci Oscar Winner and ‘Last Tango in Paris’ Director, Dead at 77
indiewire.com & screendaily.com Nov 26, 27 2018
The Italian director's historical epic "The Last Emperor" won the Oscar for Best Picture at the 60th Academy Awards.
“I don't film messages. I let the post office take care of those.” --Bertolucci
Bernardo Bertolucci, the legendary Italian director behind classics such as “Last Tango in Paris” and “The Last Emperor,” has died at age 77.
Bertolucci’s publicist, Flavia Shiavi, confirmed the director’s passing on the morning of Monday, November 26. The filmmaker, who had been suffering from cancer, died at his home in Rome, Italy.
 Bernardo Bertolucci photocall, Rome Film Festival, Italy - 15 Oct 2016 Lullaby Pictures/REX/Shutterstock
Bertolucci was widely considered one of Italy’s greatest auteurs throughout his five decades making films in both Hollywood and Italy. The filmmaker got his start working with another giant of Italian cinema, Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Bertolucci was an assistant on Pasolini’s first feature, “Accattone,” before he made his own directorial debut at age 21 with “The Grim Reaper” in 1962. The drama centered around the murder of a Roman prostitute and premiered at the Venice Film Festival.
Bertolucci gained recognition in Hollywood following the release of “The Conformist,” which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Among Bertolucci’s best known works is the controversial 1972 erotic drama “Last Tango in Paris,” starring Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider. The film was rated X for its graphic sex scenes, the most infamous of which depicts a rape using butter as a lubricant. Bertolucci acknowledged the scene was a surprise for the 19-year-old Schneider, who came forward in 2011 to say she felt humiliated by the action.
Bertolucci bounced back in 1987 with the release of “The Last Emperor,” an epic historical drama about Chinese emperor Puyi. The film starred John Lone in the title role and co-starred Joan Chen, Peter O’Toole, Ruocheng Ying, and Victor Wong. “The Last Emperor” won all nine Oscars it was nominated for at the 60th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Cinematography for Vittorio Storaro, and Best Adapted Screenplay.
Other works directed by Bertolucci include “The Dreamers,” a 2003 romantic drama staring Eva Green and Michael Pitt, and “Stealing Beauty,” a 1996 drama starring Liv Tyler. Bertolucci’s last feature, “Me and You,” premiered in 2012.
***
Martin Scorsese pays tribute to 'magical' Bernardo Bertolucci
Martin Scorsese has paid tribute to Bernardo Bertolucci, who died earlier on Monday (26) aged 77.
“In 1964, I went up to Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center for the 2nd New York Film Festival to see a new film from Italy. It was called Before the Revolution and it was by a young director named Bernardo Bertolucci,” said Scorsese.

”I came out of the theater in a daze, speechless. I was truly stunned and moved by the level of sheer artistry and talent up there on the screen, I was shocked by the freedom of the picture, I was somewhat mystified by so many of the cultural references and cross-references, and, as someone who wanted to make films, I was inspired.
“Before the Revolution opened many doors for me, and for many other young filmmakers as well. And Bertolucci kept on opening doors – with The Conformist, which had a profound influence on Hollywood moviemaking; with Last Tango In Paris, an explosive cultural event; with The Last Emperor and The Sheltering Sky, which reinvented the historical epic.
“When I think of Bertolucci – the man, the artist – the word that comes to mind is refinement. Yes, he was flamboyant and provocative, but it was the mellifluousness and the grace with which he expressed himself, and his deep understanding of his own history and culture, that made his filmmaking and his presence so special, so magical.
“Bernardo was in a wheelchair for the last years of his life, and it was extremely difficult for him to get around. It saddened all of us who knew him, because he had so much more that he wanted to do, and probably so many more films to make. When I think of him, I will always see an eternally young man.”
Delicious
|
|
|
|
Choose an item to go there!
|
| |
|
|