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Bruno Mattei

 
Director: Bruno Mattei
  • Born: 1931
  • Died: May 21, 2007
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '70s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Horror, Action
  • Career Highlights: White Apache, La Vera Storia Della Monaca Di Monza, Hell of the Living Dead
  • First Major Screen Credit: El Conde Dracula (1969)

Biography

A prolific auteur of horror and exploitation whose list of pseudonyms is rivaled only by his extensive filmography, prolific schlock director Bruno Mattei rose from editing the films of Joe D'Amato and Jess Franco to helming his own low budget, gore-drenched efforts. Though B-movie lovers can argue his importance in the realm of film until the world ends, few will deny that his films rarely fail to entertain on terms of sleaze and gratuitous violence alone -- if that's your kind of thing. A native of Rome who grew up surrounded by celluloid thanks to his father's modest but successful film editing studio, it was around age 20 that Mattei began working odd jobs around the studio, eventually making his way up to the status of editor. Following his directorial debut with the 1970 drama Armida, Il Drama di una Sposa, a brief return to editing proceeded a few more minor efforts before he helmed the film that many consider to be his finest cinematic effort, 1976's Women's Camp 119. A downbeat exploitation effort concerning a prisoner forced to witness numerous atrocities and medical experiments against her will, the film proved Mattei's calling card to the world of exploitation and the same year's SS Girls found him churning out more of the same.

Soon moving into softcore with such efforts as 1978's Emmanuelle and the Erotic Nights, a partnering with writer/director Claudio Fragasso resulted in the "nunsploitation" classics The True Story of the Nun of Monza and The Other Hell (both 1980). Though the partnership would serve both parties well, many fans frown upon Fragasso's frequent claims to have served as the driving creative force behind many of Mattei's most successful efforts (while placing the blame for the less successful ones squarely on Mattei's shoulders). Mattei's 1981 effort Virus (aka Hell of the Living Dead) managed to churn stomachs worldwide while it continued the tradition of George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead, and he continued throughout the decade with such films as Porno Holocaust (also 1981), Rats (1984), Robowar (1988), and Terminator II (1989 -- no, not that Terminator II!). Though his output would slow somewhat in the 1990s, Mattei continued on with such efforts as the gruesome thriller Eyes Without a Face (1994) and the blatant Jaws rip-off Cruel Jaws (which lifted scenes directly from the classic Spielberg movie, in addition to listing author Peter Benchley with screenwriter credit!). ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Bruno Mattei
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Bruno Mattei
Born Bruno Mattei
July 30, 1931
Rome, Italy
Died May 21, 2007[1]
Ostia City, Italy (aged 76)
Other name(s) Vincent Dawn, Pierre Le Blanc, David Hunt, Martin Miller
Years active 1962-2006

Bruno Mattei (30 July 193121 May 2007) was an Italian film director and editor who gained a cult following for his bizarre and sleazy exploitation films. He used many pseudonyms, predominantly Vincent Dawn (choosing that surname as a nod to George Romero's Dawn of the Dead).

Contents

Biography

Mattei got his start in Italian cinema by editing more than 100 films between the 1960s and the early 70s. In 1974, he earned his first directorial credit, directing 20 minutes of additional hardcore footage for the french release of Jess Franco's 1969 film 99 Women. In early 1975, he wrote the script for the Joe D'Amato film Demon Rage and edited D'Amato's Black Eva. He became a full-time director in 1977 when he made several erotic Nazi death camp films, which he followed up with some porno documentaries such as Sexy Night Report starring Laura Gemser and The Nun of Monza. Next he directed two of his most infamous horror shockers, The Other Hell and Virus: Hell of the Living Dead (which has since become his most infamous film).

After directing two Caligula-inspired rip-offs and two Emanuelle Women-in-Prison films starring Laura Gemser, he made the delirious Rats: Night of Terror (a low budget science fiction film), and the ultra-gory Zombie 3 (which he co-directed with Lucio Fulci in the Philippines). He didn't turn out much work in the 1990's (although during this period he directed the infamous made-for-TV film Cruel Jaws, a rip-off of Steven Spielberg's Jaws). Later in 2001, Mattei returned to filmmaking, this time unleashing his brilliance on the direct to video market. He directed several erotic thrillers before returning once more to the Philippines, where he shot two more cannibal films, a women-in-prison film and two final zombie movies.

In all, he made around 50 films (many of them very low budget) and over the years they have attracted a huge cult following. Although he could never claim to be a great director, his films are loved for their cheesy dialogue, low budgets and over-the-top gore effects. He was sometimes referred to as the "Ed Wood of Italian filmmaking". On an interview segment contained on Anchor Bay's DVD release for Hell of the Living Dead and Rats: Night of Terror, Mattei claimed that he would like to reshoot all of his films, as he finds them ugly.

Death

Mattei was hospitalized in early May 2007 due to complications from a brain tumor operation, and lapsed into a coma shortly after. He died on May 21, 2007 at age 76.

Selected filmography as director

  • SS Girls (1977) aka Private House for the SS
  • SS Extermination Love Camp (1977)
  • Emanuelle's Erotic Nights (1977)
  • Emanuelle and the Porno Nights (1977)
  • Sexy Night Report (1977) aka Mondo Erotico
  • The Other Hell (1980) aka The Presence, aka Guardian of Hell
  • The True Story of the Nun of Monza (1980)
  • Virus: Hell of the Living Dead (1980) aka Night of the Zombies, aka Zombie Creeping Flesh
  • Porno Holocaust (1981) Mattei co-directed this with Joe D'Amato (uncredited)
  • Nero and Poppea: An Orgy of Power (1982)
  • Caligula and Messalina (1982) aka Caligula's Perversions
  • Violence in a Women's Prison (1982) aka Caged Women
  • Emanuelle Escapes from Hell (1983) aka Women's Prison Massacre
  • Seven Magnificent Gladiators (1983, starring Lou Ferrigno) Mattei co-directed this with Claudio Fragasso
  • Rats: Night Of Terror (1983, sci-fi thriller) written by Claudio Fragasso
  • Monster Shark (1984) second-unit director only
  • White Apache (1986, Spaghetti western)
  • Scalps (1986, Spaghetti western)
  • Double Target (1987) starring Bo Svensson & Donald Pleasence
  • Strike Commando (1987) starring Reb Brown & Christopher Connelley
  • Born to Fight (1987, War movie)
  • Cop Game (1988, Crime drama)
  • Robowar (1988, Sci-fi film) starring Reb Brown
  • Strike Commando II (1988) aka The Diabolical Trap, starring Richard Harris
  • Zombi 3 (1988) co-directed with Lucio Fulci
  • Zombi 4: After Death (1988) Mattei only co-produced this film
  • Shocking Dark (1989) aka Terminator 2
  • Desire (1990)
  • Dangerous Attraction (1994)
  • Eyes without a Face (1994) aka Madness
  • Cruel Jaws (1995) aka The Beast, aka Jaws 5
  • Ljuba (1996) aka Body and Soul
  • Belle Da Morire (2001) aka Killing Striptease
  • Snuff Killer-La Morta in diretta (2003) aka Snuff Trap
  • Nella Terra dei Cannibali/ In the Land of The Cannibals (2003) aka Cannibal Ferox 3: Land of Death
  • Mondo Cannibal/ Cannibal World (2003) aka Cannibal Holocaust 2
  • Belle Da Morire 2 (2005) aka Killing Striptease 2
  • The Jail: A Woman's Hell (2006) aka Lost Soul
  • Island of the Living Dead (2006)
  • Zombies: The Beginning (2007) sequel to Island of the Living Dead

References

  1. ^ "E' morto Bruno Mattei" (Italian)

External links


 
 
Learn More
Land of Death (2003 Action Film)
Violence in a Women's Prison (1982 Adult Film)
El Conde Dracula (1969 Horror Film)

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Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bruno Mattei" Read more