Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
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Marco Bellocchio (Italian: [ˈmarko belˈlɔkkjo]; born 9 November 1939; Bobbio) is an Italian film director, screenwriter, and actor.
Born in Bobbio, near Piacenza, Marco Bellocchio had a strict Catholic upbringing – his father was a lawyer, his mother a schoolteacher. He began studying philosophy in Milan but then decided to enter film school, making his first film, Fists in the Pocket, (I pugni in tasca, winner of the Silver Sail at the 1965 Festival del film Locarno), funded by family members and shot on family property, in 1965.
Bellocchio's films include China Is Near (1967), Sbatti il mostro in prima pagina (Slap the Monster on Page One) (1972), Nel Nome del Padre (In the name of the Father – a satire on a Catholic boarding school that shares affinities with Lindsay Anderson's If....) (1972), Victory March (1976), A Leap in the Dark (1980), Henry IV (1984), Devil in the Flesh (1986), and My Mother's Smile (2002), which told the story of a wealthy Italian artist, a 'default-Marxist and atheist', who suddenly discovers that the Vatican is proposing to make his detested mother a saint. In 1991 he won the Silver Bear – Special Jury Prize at the 41st Berlin International Film Festival for his film The Conviction. In 1995 he directed a documentary about the Red Brigades and the kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro, titled Broken Dreams. In 2003, he directed a feature film on the same theme, Good Morning, Night. In 2006 his film The Wedding Director was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. In 1999, he was awarded with an Honorable Prize for the contribution to cinema at the 21st Moscow International Film Festival. In 2009 he directed Vincere, which was in the main competition at the Cannes Film Festival. He finished Sorelle Mai, an experimental film that was shot over ten years with the students of six separate workshops playing themselves. He was awarded with the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 68th Venice International Film Festival in September 2011. His 2012 film Dormant Beauty was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 69th Venice International Film Festival.[6] On 6 September 2012, Bellocchio condemned the Catholic Church's interference in politics after the premiere of his controversial film about a high-profile euthanasia case. The film approaches the topic of euthanasia and the difficulty with legislation on end of life in Italy, which has Vatican City within its borders. The subject is inspired by Eluana Englaro's case. Following the decision of the jury of the Venice Film Festival, which excluded the film from the Golden Lion, Bellocchio has expressed strong criticism against President Michael Mann.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Marco Bellocchio
A talk show presented by Michel Drucker
A portrait of Ennio Morricone, the most popular and prolific film composer of the 20th century, the one most lo...
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In 1968, young people from Berkeley to Paris and from Prague to Tokyo rose up against the world they were being...
After shooting to fame with Federico Fellini’s “La Dolce Vita” (1960), actor Marcello Mastroianni (1924-1996) s...
Five short stories with contemporary settings. In New York, people are indifferent to derelicts sleeping on sid...
A critique of cineastes and cinephiles, including a once famous actress reduced to poverty and a man who fails...
A 1966 biopic of Francis of Assisi presents him as a troubled rebel and champion of radical brotherhood, reflec...
A young writer is trapped between his awful actress mother and the knowledge that he has only a mediocre talent...
This documentary was distilled from a 3 1/2-hour television film Nessuno o Tutti, to make the point that many i...
"Marx can wait" was something Camillo Bellocchio said to his twin Marco the last time they met before the forme...
An account of the life and artistic career of Raffaella Carrà (1943-2021), Italian pop star and television pers...
A celebrated painter receives a visit from a cardinal's assistant, who informs him that his mother could become...
Matteo is a communist intellectual, the son of a wealthy bourgeois, who found himself blind from an eye after t...
How the cinema industry does not respect the author's work as it was conceived, how manipulates the motion pict...
Until the 1970s, Italian cinema dominated the international scene, even competing with Hollywood. Then, in just...
A deep dive into Glauber Rocha's years exiled in Italy in the 70s. Through a collection of interviews and archi...
Documentary about the anthology film Love and Anger (1969) with interviews with Carlo Lizzani (director of the...
Traces the life of Anna Magnani, her creations, her successes, her triumphs, her boycotted career, her nonconfo...
A documentary exploring the life and legacy of renowned Italian actor Gian Maria Volonté, featuring insights fr...
An engineer invents a revolutionary machine capable of automating all industrial production, thereby eliminatin...
Director Marco Bellocchio returns with his family to his homeland, in the province of Piacenza. The journey is...
In this documentary, giants of italian cinema such as Rossellini, De Sica, Fellini and Zavattini talk about the...
Directed by a group of avant-garde filmmakers, the film is an investigation of the less edifying aspects of fil...
A documentary about the making of "Buongiorno, notte" and the films and politics of director Marco Bellocchio.
Opera Prima is a tribute and a journey through the evolution that cinema has had in Italy. Tayu Vlietstra, a pu...
Documentary about Italian cinema.
Drawing on archives and interviews, including one with Italian director Marco Bellocchio, this is a fascinating...
Various generations of filmmakers talk about what cinema means for them.