Sergio Corbucci
Birthday:
6 December 1926, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Sergio Corbucci was born on December 6, 1927, in Rome, Italy. He entered grade school with thoughts of becoming a businessman, but after earning a college degree in economics he took an abrupt detour into the world of cinema. Corbucci began his career as a film critic, first for the Italian film journal magazine "Schermi del Mondo" and la...
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Sergio Corbucci was born on December 6, 1927, in Rome, Italy. He entered grade school with thoughts of becoming a businessman, but after earning a college degree in economics he took an abrupt detour into the world of cinema. Corbucci began his career as a film critic, first for the Italian film journal magazine "Schermi del Mondo" and later for the US Army newspaper "Stars and Stripes" during World War II.Corbucci made his directorial debut with Salvate mia figlia (1951) and quickly made a name for himself as a capable and efficient filmmaker. His ability to make large-scale action sequences with a minimal budget kept him in demand as as assistant director as well. It was on one such assignment, while filming with a second unit in Spain for friend and director Sergio Leone on Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1959), that Corbucci claims that the idea for the so-called "spaghetti western" was born. Seeing the landscape of Spain with its wild horses, extraordinary canyons and semi-desert landscapes--which looked a lot like Mexico or Texas--Corbucci suggested making an American Wild West-themed film in Spain. He then directed his first western in Spain just before Leone completed the ground-breaking Per un pugno di dollari (1964).Corbucci found early success in Italy by directing films in a number of different genres, as disparate as Totò, Peppino e... la dolce vita (1961)--a slapstick comedy spoof of Federico Fellini's box-office hit La dolce vita (1960)--as well as Romolo e Remo (1961) (aka "Duel of the Titans") and Maciste contro il vampiro (1961). He also wrote screenplays for a few seminal horror films, such as Danza macabra (1964) starring Barbara Steele, which he also co-directed. However, it was his Massacro al Grande Canyon (1964) that began a new path to his career to direct more spaghetti westerns. "Massacre at Grand Canyon"--which Corbucci co-directed, under the pseudonym Stanley Corbett. with Albert Band--differed little from the American westerns of that time, but his subsequent films would set a new and bold standard for on-screen violence and establish him as one of the most influential Italian directors of the Spaghetti Western.Minnesota Clay (1964), starring Cameron Mitchell, was Corbucci's next film in the genre and and his first Spaghetti Western to be distributed in the US under the director's own name. It was a moderate success, but Corbucci's next Spaghetti Western would break box-office records worldwide and brand his name in Western history alongside Sergio Leone. "A Fistful of Dollars' may have sparked the international popularity of the Spaghetti Western, but Corbucci's Django (1966) brought an entirely new level of stylization to the genre. The ultra-violent masterpiece not only signaled a move toward an even grittier and more nihilistic brand of Western, but it picture established a lasting relationship between Corbucci and the film's star, Franco Nero.After the success of "Django", Corbucci embarked on a trail of directing more Western films and quickly became one of the more prolific filmmakers in the genre. His subsequent Spaghetti Westerns, Johnny Oro (1966), I crudeli (1967) and Navajo Joe (1966) were filmed and released in quick succession to great success in Italy. His next Western was Il grande silenzio (1968) ("The Great Silence"), which referred to Django as an "anti-Western" with the hero moving through cold rather then heat and fighting in the mud and snow rather then sweat and dust. It starred Jean-Louis Trintignant as a mute gunslinger and Klaus Kinski as a sadistic bounty hunter. The innovative script, which was co-written by Corbucci, makes great use of mountain locations (it was filmed in northern Italy in the snow-covered area of Cortina), and showed Corbucci edging close to the new type of political Westerns he is best known for.His next Western film was Il mercenario (1968), which would began his semi-genre with what he called the "Zapata-Spaghetti Westerns" or proletarian fables, where the bad guys are on the right and the good guys are on the left. By setting the story in Mexico and fleshing out his characters with political awareness, Corbucci's intent became more clear and his political statements became more explicit. After directing the semi-successful Gli specialisti (1969), Corbucci re-teamed up with Franco Nero again with Vamos a matar, compañeros (1970), which was his last box-office success and stands as one of the most accomplished Spaghetti Westerns, with a combination of humor, pathos, comic book-style action, and political commentary.During the 1970s Corbucci made three more Westerns, but the popularity of the genre began to die out. Of the three, only La banda J. & S. - Cronaca criminale del Far West (1972) stands out as one of the best late series genre Westerns. Che c'entriamo noi con la rivoluzione? (1972) is almost a parody of his Zapata-Spaghetti Westerns, while Il bianco il giallo il nero (1975) is married by racial stereotypes and was not well received.By the late 1970s, with the era of Spaghetti Westerns over, Corbucci turned his filmmaking career to comedy and found some success with, Bluff storia di truffe e di imbroglioni (1976) and Poliziotto superpiù (1980). He continued to work off and on during the 1980s with comedies, until his death from a sudden heart attack on December 2, 1990. His last film was the made-for-Italian-TV-movie Donne armate (1990), which was completed a few months before his death as his health was starting to fail. Sergio Corbucci is remembered for revolutionizing the Spaghetti Western genre which was popularized by his friend Sergio Leone, who passed away a little over a year before Corbucci. Show less «
[John Ford] had John Wayne, [Sergio Leone] had Clint Eastwood, I have Franco Nero.
[John Ford] had John Wayne, [Sergio Leone] had Clint Eastwood, I have Franco Nero.
[to film producers] For God's sake, if the Germans can make Westerns, why the hell can't we?
[to film producers] For God's sake, if the Germans can make Westerns, why the hell can't we?
I saw that in Spain there were these magnificent horses, these extraordinary canyons, this desert landscape which looked a lot like Mexico, ...Show more »
I saw that in Spain there were these magnificent horses, these extraordinary canyons, this desert landscape which looked a lot like Mexico, or Texas, or rather like we imagined them to be. So when [Sergio Leone] and I were shooting [Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1959)], we often said to each other, "Hang on a minute, we could make an amazing Western here, couldn't we?" Show less «
[on the violence seen in Il grande silenzio (1968)] Yes, I am killing a lot of people. I have killed more people than Nero and Caligula. But...Show more »
[on the violence seen in Il grande silenzio (1968)] Yes, I am killing a lot of people. I have killed more people than Nero and Caligula. But each time, it's more difficult to find a matter of murder . . . that could be used in each film. I have used revolvers and Winchesters, I have killed with dynamite, with gas, with fire, with . . . I cut many things. I have cut ears and made my characters eat their own ears. In this film, I cut thumbs. I don't make my actors eat them, because . . . because they refuse. Show less «
[on what his next film would be after Il grande silenzio (1968)] A Western, naturally!
[on what his next film would be after Il grande silenzio (1968)] A Western, naturally!
[on the commercial success of "spaghetti westerns"] Success? Ah, the Westerns . . . the main reason, I believe, is that, well, we assume, or...Show more »
[on the commercial success of "spaghetti westerns"] Success? Ah, the Westerns . . . the main reason, I believe, is that, well, we assume, or recreate the atmosphere of our time--a time of violence. Violence without reason, and often just for the sake of violence. It's the same reason, I believe, the main reason for the success of the films of James Bond. Show less «
People don't go to the cinema to see love scenes. [Luis Buñuel] was right when he said the most embarrassing thing, for a filmmaker, is to ...Show more »
People don't go to the cinema to see love scenes. [Luis Buñuel] was right when he said the most embarrassing thing, for a filmmaker, is to point a camera at a couple kissing. Nothing is more banal than a kiss. Generally you can't have love scenes in stories which are action-based - though in Il grande silenzio (1968) I shot quite a beautiful love scene between a black woman and a mute. There was something very beautiful and very morbid about it. This was the only love scene I ever included in a film of this genre, where the women are generally bizarre. Show less «
Speech, usually in Westerns of mine, aren't of importance because we use every nationality - French, Mexican, American. It is often better f...Show more »
Speech, usually in Westerns of mine, aren't of importance because we use every nationality - French, Mexican, American. It is often better for the actors to count... than to speak. For example, the Frenchman would say "Un, deux, trois," the American says "Er, one." That means "Yes," but it could mean anything. It's unimportant. That's why I hate Westerns. Show less «
[on what inspired him to make Gli specialisti (1969)] The idea was to show that I was against the hippies. Listen, at this time the Manson b...Show more »
[on what inspired him to make Gli specialisti (1969)] The idea was to show that I was against the hippies. Listen, at this time the Manson business hadn't happened... but there are too many real problems in the world for me to accept the disinterested passivity of these people. Yesterday, Jimi Hendrix died shooting up in London. I am against drugs and hippies. I wanted to denounce them in The Specialist... I'm really violently against their attitude, and I hate Easy Rider (1969). Show less «