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Dario Argento

 
Writer: Dario Argento
  • Born: Sep 07, 1940 in Rome, Italy
  • Occupation: Writer, Director, Actor
  • Active: '60s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Horror, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: Once Upon a Time in the West, Suspiria, Tenebre
  • First Major Screen Credit: Probabilita Zero (1961)

Biography

Although, to the uninitiated, the frequently used analogy "the Italian Hitchcock" may offer a quick and tidy summation of director Dario Argento's enduring career, this overused comparison ultimately fails to give Argento due credit for his undeniable originality and natural talent as a filmmaker. His often disturbing and horrific films possess a transcendent visual beauty that, in addition to carrying the flame for such Italian cinematic legends as Mario Bava, combines with his talent for weaving supremely menacing mysteries to create waking celluloid nightmares that burn themselves into the audience's psyche.

Born in Rome to prolific Italian film producer Salvatore Argento and fashion model Elda Luxardo, it was obvious from the beginning that young Dario was meant for a career in the film industry. Though, by all accounts, he led a relatively normal childhood, it was his early years that found the future director developing a marked fascination with dark fantasy. Inspired by the works of the Brothers Grimm and Edgar Allan Poe, it wasn't long before young Argento's vivid imagination began to run wild. Argento became a critic for Rome's Paese Sera while still a Catholic high school student, and, feeling restricted by having to critique the films of others, he decided to put his knowledge to good use by writing a screenplay. After gaining his initial writing credits with a handful of Westerns and crime dramas in the mid- to late '60s, a collaboration with Bernardo Bertolucci and Sergio Leone resulted in the classic Once Upon a Time in the West and began to open many doors for the ambitious young screenwriter.

Argento penned numerous screenplays in the following few years, and eventually his writing would catch the attention of Titanus head Goffredo Lombardo. When Argento hit the typewriter to pound out his interpretation of the Frederick Brown novel The Screaming Mimi, he grew so attached to his screenplay that he insisted on taking directorial duties. Backed by Titanus and father Salvatore, who served as producer, The Bird With the Crystal Plumage proved a highly stylized mystery that scored a box-office hit on both sides of the Atlantic. That film and Argento's follow-ups, The Cat O' Nine Tails (1971) and Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1972), were dubbed the "Animal Trilogy" by fans and critics. Though neither of the latter two proved the box-office draw of his debut, they nevertheless showed an impressive talent emerging. Accompanied by the hauntingly melodic strains of Ennio Morricone, the collaboration between director and musician provided a trio of memorably effective scores that highlighted the Animal Trilogy's haunting tone. Those films continued Argento's association with stylish mysteries inspired by the Italian giallos (a series of lurid mystery paperbacks) made popular by such directors as Mario Bava (Blood and Black Lace), though the director was eager to try his hand at something else, lest he become pigeonholed as the result of his early success.

Taking a break from the giallo to direct the Italian-centric comedy Western The Five Days in Milan (1973), as well as some television work, it wasn't long before Argento was back to his old bag of tricks -- this time finding more success than ever. Released in 1975, Profondo Rosso (aka Deep Red) combined all of the most effective traits of his early efforts into a visually flamboyant and audacious thriller that would set the international standard for decades to come. Additionally, it found the director eschewing the melodic scores of Morricone for the all-out aural assault of Goblin. Having originally heard the progressive rock group performing under the moniker Cherry Five, Argento collaborated with the band under the name Goblin to create one of the most memorable movie scores of the 1970s. Both unconventional and severely unsettling, Goblin's music would continue to accompany many of Argento's subsequent films, not the least of which was his subsequent film, Suspiria.

Scored before filming even began, it is rumored that Argento blasted the terrifying Suspiria soundtrack as actors played out their scenes in order to create an unmistakable air of discomfort. (As was usual for Italian films of this period, no synch sound film was used, making it easier to dub films for international audiences.) Essentially combining the giallo with supernatural horror, Suspiria was inspired by the writing of Thomas DeQuincey and offered Argento the chance to collaborate on a screenplay with then-girlfriend Daria Nicolodi (who had previously starred in Profondo Rosso). A nightmarish visual and auditory assault, Suspiria terrified audiences worldwide and stood alongside Profondo Rosso as the apex of Argento's career. It was soon announced that Suspiria would be the first installment of a planned trilogy, often referred to as the "Three Mothers" films.

Following duties as producer on director George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead (Argento also held rights to edit a markedly different cut of the film for European audiences), Argento returned to the director's chair with Inferno (1980), the second chapter in the Three Mothers series. The film proved Argento's first and only collaboration with Bava, and though it failed to live up to the stratospheric expectations bestowed upon it in terms of box-office dollars, Inferno proved a worthy successor in the eyes of many fans. Although the title of his next film, Tenebre (1982), may have initially lead fans to anticipate the final chapter in the Three Mothers saga, the effective thriller found Argento returning to his roots in giallo. The visually stark film proved semi-autobiographical in that it was inspired by a Suspiria fan who had threatened Argento's life after being profoundly affected by the film, and it proved that the director still retained the ability to make reality as frightening as fantasy.

It was during this period in his career that Argento began to assist the development of such up-and-coming directors as Lamberto Bava (Demons and Demons 2) and Michele Soavi (The Church and The Sect) by offering his abilities as producer of their early films, but it wasn't long before he was stepping back in the director's chair for Phenomena (1985). Starring future Oscar-winner Jennifer Connelly as a troubled teen who attempts to solve a string of murders by telepathically communicating with insects, the film proved a modest success with international audiences (Argento often cites it as his personal favorite) with its bizarre combination of heavy metal mayhem and menacing monkeys.

Following the success of Opera (1987), the early '90s marked a notable decline in the quality of the director's work. In addition to marking the beginning of a troubled period in the director's professional career, Argento's personal life would also suffer during this time due to both the loss of his father and the breakup of his relationship with longtime girlfriend Nicolodi. A collaboration with Romero for the Poe-inspired Two Evil Eyes was soon to follow, and Argento's Trauma (1993) was often touted as the director's "return to the giallo." Trauma ultimately proved a noble but failed attempt to recapture the magic of Argento's early efforts, but it did provide the director his first collaboration with his daughter, emerging actress Asia Argento. The cinematic duo would once again re-team for the decidedly more effective The Stendhal Syndrome (1996), a tale of a young police officer (Asia) who falls prey to a viscous rapist, which left many viewers labeling the director a misogynist (certainly not a new accusation against the director noted for donning black gloves to portray the killer in his films) and questioning how a father would be able to film his daughter in such horrific circumstances. Accompanied by an eerie Morricone score, the film seemed to bear the mark of a director who was returning to form, a fact that made the utter mess of his subsequent Phantom of the Opera (1998) all the more tragic.

Without question the nadir of his cinematic career, the unmitigated international flop of Phantom of the Opera left many fans wondering if Argento still had what it took to make a seriously effective fright film. Argento's subsequent Non Ho Sonno (aka Sleepless, 2001) -- once again touted as Argento's "return to giallo" -- seemed to play as more of an Argento rip-off than an actual Argento film, sparking heated debate among fans as to whether he had truly returned to form. Penned as a semi-sequel to The Stendhal Syndrome, Argento's next effort, entitled The Card Player, told the story of a female detective forced into a deadly game with a brutal killer who boldly murders his victims via online webcam. A tantalizing concept that served to bring Argento's traditional thrillers into the 21st century, his fans waited in eager anticipation until the release of the film in late 2003. As to be expected at this point in Argento's career, critical response to The Card Player was mixed at best, with some die-hard fans touting it as one of the director's worst films.

In 2005, Argento joined a whole host of genre heavyweights including John Carpenter, John Landis, and Stuart Gordon for the Showtime horror series Masters of Horror. The concept was simple: each filmmaker would direct a screenplay of their choosing, and exercise complete creative control of their own one hour film. Given that the series aired on pay-cable, the filmmakers were free to let their imaginations run wild without fear of seeing their work censored. Of course this was quite a coup for Argento due to the fact that a substantial number of his films received extensive cuts before being released stateside, though ironically it was his addition to the series - a twisted tale of monstrous obsession entitled enifer - that was singled out for two cuts before it went to air (though both of the deleted scenes were ultimately included on the DVD release of Argento's episode). The only other director to push the envelope this far in the Masters of Horror series was controversial Japanese filmmaker Takashi Miike, whose Imprint was deemed so offensive that it was actually banned from broadcast on Showtime. The following year Argento returned for Masters of Horror: Season 2 with an episode entitled Pelts, a gore-soaked tale of a sleazy fur trader featuring singer-cum-actor Meat Loaf and Argento veteran John Saxon.

In the past it had often felt like it would take years for the latest Argento effort to make its way stateside, though these days it seemed as if the director was busier than ever, and turning out more work than ever. In the 1990s Argento only directed four features (including Two Evil Eyes with George A. Romero), but by the time 2006 rolled around the ageing director seemed to have caught something of a second wind, releasing no less than five projects over the course of just six years. Even if his newer films weren't all feature length, Argento always seemed to be working on something new during this phase in his career, his energy and enthusiasm for filmmaking not seeming to wane with age. In 2005 Argento solidified the comparisons to Hitchcock in no uncertain terms by crafting the throwback giallo Do You Like Hitchcock? for Italian television. It was around this time, while Argento was editing Pelts, that he had fateful run in with upcoming horror screenwriters Adam Gierasch and Jace Anderson, who had recently penned the script for director Tobe Hooper's Toolbox Murders redux. As luck would have it the director and the two young writers made an immediate creative connection, and before long it was announced that the trio would be collaborating on the final chapter of the Three Mothers trilogy.

Released into Italian theaters on October 31, 2007, La Terza Madre found the director's daughter cast as an American art student forced to do battle with Mater Lacrimarum - the most beautiful and cruel of the Three Mothers. Though the critical response to La Terza Madre was mixed and fans debated the film endlessly on internet film forums, few would deny that Argento pulled out all the stops to ensure that the final installment of the trilogy was also the most outrageous. While some dismissed it as utter trash, others praised it as high camp and even others yet enthusiastically suggested that it was a return to the days of "anything goes" Italian horror. Shortly thereafter, it was announced that Argento would soon begin work on the throwback thriller Giallo. A stylish homage to the films that helped launch Argento's career, Giallo told the story of an American flight attendant who teams with an Italian investigator to catch the serial killer believed to be responsible for murdering the flight attendant's sister.

~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Dario Argento
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Dario Argento

Dario Argento answers questions at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival in 2007.
Born Dario Argento
September 7, 1940 (1940-09-07) (age 69)
Rome, Italy
Other name(s) Sirio Bernadotte[1] [2]
Occupation Film director, producer and screenwriter
Spouse(s) Marisa Casale (1968 -1972) (divorced)[3]
Domestic partner(s) Daria Nicolodi (1974-1985)

Dario Argento (born September 7, 1940) is an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter. He is best known for his work in the horror film genre, particularly in the subgenre known as giallo, and for his influence on modern horror and slasher movies.

Contents

Early career

Argento was born in Rome, the son of film producer/executive Salvatore Argento and Brazilian-born photographer Elda Luxardo. He started his career in film as a critic, writing for various magazines while still attending high school.

Argento did not attend college, electing rather to take a job as a columnist at the newspaper Paese Sera. While working at the newspaper, Argento also began to work as a screenwriter. His most notable work was for Sergio Leone; he and Bernardo Bertolucci collaborated on the story for the spaghetti western classic Once Upon a Time in the West. Soon after that film's release in 1969, Argento began work on his directorial debut, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, which was released in 1970 and was a major hit in Italy. His directing style was influenced by Mario Bava, Riccardo Freda, Sergio Leone, Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, F.W. Murnau, Walt Disney, Michelangelo Antonioni, Ingmar Bergman, and Federico Fellini.[citation needed]

Giallo years

Early in his directing career, he continued to concentrate largely on the giallo genre (more precisely known as "thriller" in Italy, as the word "giallo"--Italian for yellow-- usually refers to generic mystery works). The films, like the lurid yellow-covered murder-mystery novels they were inspired by, followed the suspense tradition of hardboiled American detective fiction while incorporating baroque scenes of violence and excess. Director Mario Bava is credited with inventing the giallo film; Argento's passion in developing the genre has earned him widespread recognition as the key influence in popularising giallo cinema outside of Italy.[citation needed]

Argento directed two further successful thrillers, The Cat o' Nine Tails (1971) and Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1972). Alongside The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, these initial three films are frequently referred to as Argento's "animal trilogy". The director then turned his attention away from giallo movies, filming two Italian TV dramas and a period comedy (Five Days in Milan) in 1973 before returning to thrillers with 1975's Deep Red, frequently cited by many critics as the best giallo ever made. The film made Argento famous internationally, and inspired a number of other directors to work in the genre (John Carpenter has frequently referred to the influence Argento's early work had on Halloween). It also marked the start of Argento's long creative relationship with composer Claudio Simonetti and his Italian progressive rock group Goblin which was highly influenced by the mythical cult french band Magma.

In all of Argento's giallo films, Argento casts himself as the killers' gloved hands. However, in recent releases, he has stopped this practice.

Supernatural years

Argento's next movie, Suspiria (1977), an extremely violent supernatural thriller, is considered by many fans to be his best work, alongside Deep Red. Freed from the constraints of the more conventional giallo format, Suspiria is a semi-surreal work of art, where plot and character become secondary to sound and vision. Argento planned for Suspiria to be the first of a trilogy about "The Three Mothers", three ancient witches residing in three different modern cities. The second movie of the trilogy was 1980's Inferno. The Mother of Tears concludes the trilogy.

In between the two "mothers", in 1978 Argento collaborated with George Romero on Dawn of the Dead, earning a producer credit on the zombie classic. Argento oversaw the European release of the film (where it was titled Zombi) which was much shorter and featured much more of the score written and performed by Goblin.

After Inferno, Argento returned to more conventional giallo with Tenebrae (1982). He then attempted to combine giallo and supernatural fantasy in Phenomena, also known as Creepers (1985), which was one of Jennifer Connelly's earliest movies. Phenomena also showed Argento's predilection for using new technology, with its many prowling Steadicam shots. Both of these movies received a lukewarm reception upon release (although each has been re-appraised retrospectively).

Argento subsequently took a break from directing to write two screenplays for Mario Bava's son Lamberto Bava, Dèmoni (1985) and Dèmoni 2 (1986).

From the late 1980s and through the 1990s

Dario Argento interviewed by Martin Sauvageau during the Festival International du Cinéma Fantastique de Montréal in 1994.

Opera followed in 1987, and was, according to Argento, a "very unpleasant experience". Set in Parma's Regio Theatre during a production of Verdi's Macbeth, the movie was beset in real life by misfortunes that Argento suspected were caused by the traditional "curse" on Macbeth. Argento's father died during the production, Vanessa Redgrave dropped out of the project before filming began, he had problems working with his former long-time girlfriend and collaborator Daria Nicolodi on-set, and the cast and crew were plagued by minor accidents and mishaps. The movie was again not particularly well received by fans or critics, despite showcasing Argento's skill with color and composition, and featuring some technically impressive camera movements (the ravens' descent in the Parma opera house is considered to be one of the director's most famous set pieces).

It is widely accepted that his 1990s career and onwards has failed to live up to his golden period between Deep Red and Opera[citation needed]. A collaboration with George A. Romero on an Edgar Allan Poe anthology titled Two Evil Eyes (1990), a stab at a mainstream Hollywood production (Trauma of 1993) and a version of Phantom of the Opera (1998) lost him many fans[citation needed], but he continued to innovate. For example, his 1996 The Stendhal Syndrome, in which a policewoman (played by Argento's daughter, Asia) who suffers from a dramatized version of the illness is trapped by a serial killer in an abandoned warehouse, was the first Italian film to use computer-generated imagery (CGI). Furthermore, the opening of The Stendhal Syndrome was shot in Florence, at Italy's famed Uffizi Gallery. Argento is the only director ever granted permission to shoot there. The Stendhal Syndrome was distributed in the U.S. by cult B-movie distribution company Troma Entertainment.

In the 21st century

Dario Argento discusses his film Pelts at the Torino Film Festival in 2006.

Many saw 2001's Sleepless, deliberately designed as a "comeback movie" with its strong giallo theme and numerous references to his earlier work, as a step back in the right direction.[citation needed] However, Argento's follow-up, 2004's The Card Player, a giallo about a killer whose murders are conducted during Internet poker matches with the Rome police, earned a mixed reception: some fans appreciated the techno music score composed by ex-Goblin member Claudio Simonetti, but felt the film was too mainstream, with little of Argento's usual flourish.

2005 saw the TV broadcast of Argento's Do You Like Hitchcock?, in which the Italian horror-meister paid homage to Alfred Hitchcock after decades of being compared to him by critics. Later that year, he directed a segment of Masters of Horror, a Showtime television series. The story, "Jenifer", based on an old Eerie comics tale by Bruce Jones, was a departure for Argento, but provided him with some of his best critical notices in several years. Soon afterwards, Argento directed an adaptation of the F. Paul Wilson short story "Pelts" for season 2 of the series.

Concluding his trilogy

Argento finished the conclusion of his Three Mothers trilogy, The Mother of Tears. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6 2007.

The film is set in Rome and centers around the titular third mother, Mater Lacrimorum. Argento and Jace Anderson share writing credits for this movie. A joint effort between the Italian Studio, Medusa, and the American Studio, Myriad Pictures (which made Jeepers Creepers) financed the production of the film, allowing Argento one of the largest, if not the largest, budgets he has ever worked with.[citation needed]

Argento's daughter Asia was cast in the lead, along with Daria Nicolodi in a supporting role. Udo Kier, who appeared in Argento's Suspiria, and Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni, who appeared in three of his previous films, both have pivotal roles in the final Mothers chapter.

The Return of 'Giallo'

On 26 June 2009, Argento's newest movie Giallo premiered at the Edinburgh Film Festival.

As of July 2009, Argento announced that working on the 3D remake of Profondo Rosso.[4]

Works and criticism on Argento

Maitland McDonagh [5] wrote about Argento in Broken Mirrors/Broken Minds: The Dark Dreams of Dario Argento (1991). He is also mentioned in Art of Darkness, a collection of promotional stills, poster art and critical essays edited by Chris Gallant. British journalist Alan Jones published Profondo Argento, a compendium of set reports, interviews and biographical detail. A forthcoming book on the films of Argento, written by James Gracey, is to be published by Kamera Books in 2010. [6]

In the documentary Dario Argento: An Eye For Horror, Argento described himself as a natural loner who often doesn't enjoy the production process because of the hours of social interaction that is required to make a film.[citation needed]

The director has acquired a cult fan base throughout the world.[citation needed]

Other work

He is involved in a horror memorabilia store located at Via dei Gracchi 260 in Rome named Profondo Rosso, after his classic giallo movie. In the cellar is a collection from his movies. The store is managed by his long time collaborator and friend Luigi Cozzi.

Filmography

As director

As writer (not director)

  • Scusi, Lei è favorevole o contrario? (1967)
  • Every Man Is My Enemy (Qualcuno ha tradito) (1967)
  • Heroes Never Die (Les Héros ne Meurent Jamais) (1968)
  • Once Upon a Time in the West (C'era una volta il West) (1968) (Story)
  • Today It's Me... Tomorrow It's You! (Oggi a me... domani a te!) (1968)
  • Comandamenti per un Gangster (1968)
  • Commandos (1968)
  • La Rivoluzione sessuale (The Sexual Revolution) (1968)
  • Cemetery Without Crosses (Une Corde, un Colt) (1969)
  • Love Circle (Metti una sera a cena) (aka One Night at Dinner) (1969)
  • Probabilità Zero (1969)
  • Legion of the Damned (La legione dei dannati) (aka Battle of the Commandos) (1969)
  • The Five Man Army (Un esercito di cinque uomini) (1969)
  • Season of the Senses (La stagione dei sensi') (1969)
  • Man Called Amen (Così sia) (1972)
  • Demons (Dèmoni) (1985) (Also Producer)
  • Demons 2 (Demoni 2) (1986) (Also Producer)
  • The Church (La Chiesa) (aka Demons 3) (1989) (Also Producer)
  • The Sect (La setta) (aka Demons 4) (1991) (Also Producer)
  • The Wax Mask (M.D.C. - Maschera di cera) (1997) (Story) (Also Producer)

As producer (neither writer nor director)

Footnotes

External links



 
 

 

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