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Director:

Gillo Pontecorvo

  • Born: Nov 19, 1919 in Pisa, Italy
  • Died: Oct 12, 2006
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Actor
  • Active: '50s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Drama, War
  • Career Highlights: The Battle of Algiers, Kapo, Queimada!
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Wide Blue Road (1956)

Biography

The controversial yet brilliant Italian-born director Gillo Pontecorvo is perhaps best known for authoring The Battle of Algiers (1966). This ingenious film -- with its use of docudrama techniques and stark black-and-white photography to capture the French-Algerian conflict -- instantly became the toast of the Venice Film Festival and a seminal classic. A militant leftist and lifelong member of the Communist Party, Pontecorvo stirred up controversy and indignation for years with his extremist sociopolitical views. Cinematically, the extreme infrequency with which Pontecorvo crafted motion pictures (with years of inactivity between projects) renders him one of the least prolific international directors of five-star caliber in modern history, placing him in the same camp as Terrence Malick.

Born in Pisa, Italy, on November 19, 1919, to a Jewish family (with nine brothers and sisters and an industrialist father), young Gillo cut against the grain of familial tradition; the rest of the children followed the prompting of their parents, who sought an education in the sciences for their sons and a literary education for their daughters. Initially, Gillo followed suit, attending the University of Pisa as a chemistry student, but inner dissatisfaction reigned. In the long term, he felt this ennui tempered somewhat by two factors: the technical insights gained from scientific studies, which became indispensable to his filmmaking activities later on, and the university environment, where Pontecorvo's professors and fellow students engendered in him a staunch anti-Fascist stance. Pontecorvo planned to build a career in journalism after graduation and moved to Paris, where he served as a correspondent for the Paese Sera and Repubblica newspapers, but during an assignment reporting on a mining strike, he suddenly understood that images delivered greater emotional impact than words ever could, and drifted in the direction of photojournalism.

By this time, the war was afoot. An intense barrage of military and political activities followed in Pontecorvo's life, including official "party" enlistment in 1941, contributions to the Garibaldi Brigade, and extensive resistance operations in Northern Italy, under the pseudonym "Barnaba." He ultimately became a full-time member of the Communist Party, working heavily in its newsreel archives. With the concurrent rise of neorealism at the hands of such directors as De Sica, Visconti, and Rossellini (despite that movement's commonly misunderstood political moderation and its soft-shoeing of left-wing issues), Pontecorvo began to grasp the political possibilities of filmmaking and accepted a position as third assistant director on Aldo Vergano's Il Sole Sorge Ancora (aka Outcry, 1947), doubling up as an actor with a bit part in the film. Numerous assistantships followed, for such directors as Yves Allégret, Mario Monicelli, Gian Carlo Menotti, and others. Pontecorvo imbibed many of his aesthetic tendencies through extensive reading of the theorists Georg Lukacs and Umberto Barbaro, and acquired the preponderance of his technical know-how from Monicelli.

Starting in his early thirties (1950-1955), Pontecorvo purchased a 16 mm camera and began shooting documentaries aggressively and tirelessly, cranking out one after another, the social concerns and aesthetic principles of neorealism evident throughout. These include Missione Timiriazev (The Timiriazev Mission, 1953), about a flood in the Polesine region of Italy; Cani Dietro le Sbarre (Dogs Behind Bars), about a municipal dog pound; Uomini del Marmo (Men of Marble, 1955), about the workers on the Alpi Apuane; and between 12 and 17 others (the exact number is undocumented). He debuted as a fiction director in 1956, with the film-a-sketch The Windrose. Made under the aegis of Joris Ivens and financially backed by the Women's International Democratic Federation, this film depicts the social problems that women experience in multiple cultures. Pontecorvo's episode, "Giovanna," dramatizes the plight of a young female textile worker torn in half between her desire to strike in her factory, and loyalty to her husband, who discourages her from participation. French journalists at the 1956 Venice Film Festival hailed "Giovanna" as one of the more unadulterated examples of neorealist theory and technique.

Pontecorvo followed it up with The Wide Blue Road (aka La Grande Strada Azzurra, 1957). Adapted from Franco Solinas' novel Squarcio, the picture dramatizes the burgeoning political awareness of a bunch of fishermen from Sardinia. Unfortunately, the production was laden with one compromise after another, from the externally imposed requirement of shooting in color to the studio's insistence of using the glossy celebrity actors Yves Montand and Alida Valli. Pontecorvo understandably all but dismissed the final product, but he won Best Director at Karlovy Vary for it.

The internationally co-produced feature Kapo followed three years later, which Pontecorvo scripted with Solinas -- the belletrist who would become his lifelong collaborator. The picture stars Susan Strasberg (daughter of Lee and Paula) as Nicole, a Jew imprisoned in the Nazi concentration camps who sells herself out by denying her own Jewish heritage, feigning an identity as a political prisoner, and -- ultimately -- torturing her fellow prisoners. She falls in love with a Soviet prisoner, then finds redemption (limited redemption) by assisting with a Russian prisoner escape, and is promptly shot by the SS. Pontecorvo's finest contribution to this work was undoubtedly the use of patchy, grainy, newsreel-like black-and-white to create a unique aesthetic. Critics espoused mixed reactions, many complaining of the romance as an added contrivance, but it swept awards and received an Oscar nod for Best Foreign Film (losing to The Virgin Spring).

After Kapo, Pontecorvo spent one of his typically long periods of inactivity, looking into the option of doing at least 33 different projects but ultimately settling on The Battle of Algiers, again co-scripted with Solinas. The project began with Yacef Saadi, the head producer of Casbah Films, who had served as commander in the Algerian War and traveled to Italy around 1964 to recruit a director to helm a picture about his experiences. Pontecorvo accepted, but only with the stipulation of limitless artistic freedom, including black-and-white filming and location shoots; Saadi complied. A half-year of research into the Algerian War followed; what emerged was one of cinema's undisputed masterpieces and the crowning achievement of Pontecorvo's career.

Burn! (Queimada!, 1969) followed. Produced by United Artists and co-scripted by Solinas and Giorgio Arlorio, and starring screen giant Marlon Brando, the picture tells the story of Sir William Walker, pro-colonial agent with Machiavellian tendencies who manipulatively incites a slave uprising on an island in the Antilles to defeat the Portuguese, then sets up a British puppet government. Studio interference more or less sank this film when the Spanish government put massive pressure on United Artists to recut it drastically. Perhaps as a result, it opened to uneven reviews but has since been hailed by many, in retrospect, as a classic, even in its truncated form (if not one on par with Algiers). Pauline Kael rhapsodized, "As Pontecorvo demonstrated in The Battle of Algiers, he has a true gift for epic filmmaking: he can keep masses of people in movement so we care about them. And here [in Burn!], in his feeling for crowds and battles, for color and images, and for visual rhythms, he's a sensuous, intoxicating director."

Brando -- who teamed with Pontecorvo on the set of Burn! -- had an impossible relationship with the director, once swearing an oath that he would kill Pontecorvo if he ever saw him again, and citing Pontecorvo's alleged vile abuse of African actors as justification. (Typical for Brando, however, he did an about-face several years later and unsuccessfully attempted to recruit Pontecorvo to helm a film on the plight of the American Indian, reminding Playboy interviewer Lawrence Grobel that one must separate an artist's talent from his or her personality, no matter how despicable.)

Pontecorvo only produced one additional film during his lifetime, the 1979 Operazione Ogro (The Tunnel). This Spanish-French-Italian joint production was scripted by Giorgio Arlorio and Ugo Pirro, and dramatizes Spanish prime minister Carrero Blano's 1973 assassination at the hands of ETA Basque separatists. The sensitive nature of the material for a time suggested that it would never be seen publicly, but it was indeed issued (albeit in limited distribution) to mixed reviews. Pontecorvo reputedly tried to develop a number of projects throughout his final two decades that never came to fruition. These included a picture called I Tempi Della Fine (Time of the World's End), that works out the story of Jesus Christ as a Marxist revolutionary, and a drama about the Nicaraguan sociopolitical conflicts.

After years of inactivity, Gillo Pontecorvo died of unspecified causes, in Rome, on October 12, 2006. He was survived by his musicologist wife, Picci Pontecorvo, and their three children. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Gillo Pontecorvo

Gillo Pontecorvo (November 19 1919October 12 2006) was an Italian filmmaker, best known for La battaglia di Algeri (The Battle of Algiers) although he directed several movies before its release in 1966, such as the drama Kapò (1960), which takes place in a World War II concentration camp.

He was nominated for the Best Director Oscar in 1969 and in that same year won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, both for The Battle of Algiers. In 2000, he received the Pietro Bianchi Award at the Venice Film Festival.

He was also a screenwriter and composer of film scores.

Life and work

Pontecorvo was born in Pisa, the son of a wealthy Jewish businessman. He was the younger brother of Bruno Pontecorvo, the internationally known scientist.

He studied science in school and attended the University of Pisa, earning a degree in chemistry. It was there that he first became of opposing political forces, coming into contact with leftist students and professors for the first time. In 1938, shortly after his graduation and faced with growing anti-Semitism, he fled to France, where he was able to find work in journalism as a correspondent for the Italian newspapers La Repubblica and Paese Sera, and as a tennis instructor.

In Paris in 1933, Pontecorvo immediately involved himself in the film world, where he made a few short documentaries. He became an assistant to Joris Ivens, whose films include Regen and The Bridge, and also to a Dutch communist documentarian as well as Yves Allegret, a French director known for his work in the film noir genre whose films include Une Si Jolie Petite Plage and Les Orgueilleux. In addition to these influences, Pontecorvo began meeting people who broadened his perspectives, among them Pablo Picasso, Igor Stravinsky and Jean-Paul Sartre. It was during this time that Pontecorvo truly developed his political ideals. He was particularly affected when many of his friends in Paris packed up to go fight in the Spanish Civil War.

Pontecorvo joined the Italian Communist Party in 1941. He traveled to northern Italy to help organize anti-Fascist partisans and going by the pseudonym Barnaba, becoming a leader of the Resistance in Milan from 1943 until 1945. Pontecorvo broke ties with the party in 1956 after the Soviet intervention in Hungary. He didn't, however, renounce his dedication to Marxism and has said, “I am not an out-and-out revolutionary. I am merely a man of the Left, like a lot of Italian Jews.”

After World War II and his return to Italy, Pontecorvo made the decision to leave journalism for filmmaking, a move that seems to have been in the making for some time, but was set in motion after he saw Roberto Rossellini's Paisà. He bought a 16mm camera and shot several documentaries, mostly funded on his own, beginning with Missione Timiriazev in 1953. He then directed Giovanna, which was one episode of La rosa dei venti (1956), a film made with several directors. In 1957 he directed his first full length film, La grande strada azzurra (The Wide Blue Road), which foreshadowed his mature style of later films. It deals with a fisherman and his family on the small island off the Dalmatian coast of Italy. Because of the scarcity of fish in nearby waters, the fisherman, Squarciò, is forced to sail out to the open sea to fish illegally with bombs. The film won a prize at the Karlovy Vary Festival. Pontecorvo spent months, and sometimes years, researching the material for his films in order to accurately represent the actual social situations he commented on. In the next two years, Pontecorvo directed Kapò, a drama set in a Nazi death camp. The plot of the film is about an escape attempt from a concentration camp by a young Jewish girl. In 1961 the film was nominated by the Academy Awards for an Oscar for best foreign-language film. Also in this same year the film won two awards: the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists awarded Didi Perego a Silver Ribbon for best supporting actress, and the Mar del Plata Film Festival awarded Susan Strasberg for best actress.

The Battle of Algiers, a portrayal of the Algerian resistance during the Algerian War, follows in the footsteps of neorealist pioneers such as de Santis and Rossellini, employing the use of newsreel-style footage and non-professional actors and focusing primarily on the disenfranchised population that seldom receives attention from the general media. Pontecorvo was clearly reading Frantz Fanon while making The Battle of Algiers, as many of Fanon's notions are echoed in the film, though often simplified. When the film achieved mass screening in the United States, Pontecorvo received a number of awards, and was also nominated for two Academy Awards for direction and co-writing. The film has been used as a training video by government strategists as well as revolutionary groups. It has been and remains extremely popular in Algeria, providing a popular memory of the struggle for liberation.

Pontecorvo's next major work, Queimada! (Burn!, 1969), starring Marlon Brando, is another anti-colonial film, this time set in the Antilles. This film also depicts an attempted revolution of the oppressed, with strong anti-colonial message

Pontecorvo continued his series of highly political films with Ogro (1979), which addresses the occurrence of terrorism at the end of Francisco Franco's dwindling regime in Spain. He continued making short films into the early 1990s and directed a follow-up documentary to The Battle of Algiers entitled Ritorno ad Algeri (Return to Algiers, 1992). In 1992, Pontecorvo replaced Guglielmo Biraghi as the director of the Venice Film Festival and directed the festival in 1992, 1993 and 1994.

In 2006, he died from congestive heart failure in Rome at age 86.

Trivia

Selected bibliography

  • Bignardi, Irene (1999). Memorie estorte a uno smemorato. Vita di Gillo Pontecorvo. Feltrinelli. 
  • Celli, Carlo (2005). Gillo Pontecorvo: From Resistance to Terrorism. Scarecrow Press. 
  • Fanon, Frantz (2001). Pour la revolution africaine: Essais politiques. La Decouverte. 
  • Mellen, Joan (Autumn 1972). "An Interview with Gillo Pontecorvo". Film Quarterly 26 (1): 2-10. 
  • Mellen, Joan (1973). Filmguide to The Battle of Algiers'. Indiana University Publications. 
  • Said, Edward W. (2000). "The Quest for Gillo Pontecorvo", Reflections on Exile and Other Essays. Harvard University Press, 282-292. 
  • Solinas, Franco (1973). Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle of Algiers'. Scribner’s. 

Filmography as director

  • Firenze, il nostro domani (2003, documentary)
  • Un altro mondo è possibile (Another World is Possible, 2001)
  • I corti italiani (1997, segment “Nostalgia di protezione”)
  • Nostalgia di protezione (1997)
  • Danza della fata confetto (1996, short)
  • 12 registi per 12 città (1989, segment “Udine”), documentary
  • Addio a Enrico Berliguer (1984, documentary)
  • Ogro (Operación Ogro, 1979)
  • Queimada (Burn!, 1969)
  • La Battaglia di Algeri (The Battle of Algiers, 1965)
  • Paras (1963)
  • Kapò (1959)
  • Pane e zolfo (1959, documentary)
  • La grande strada azzurra (The Wide Blue Road, 1957)
  • Cani dietro le sbarre (1955)
  • La rosa dei venti(1955, segment "Giovanna")
  • Festa a Castelluccio (1954, documentary)
  • Porta Portese (1954, documentary)
  • Missione Timiriazev (1953, documentary)

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