Gualtiero Jacopetti
Gualtiero Jacopetti | |
---|---|
Born |
Barga, Tuscany, Italy | 4 September 1919
Died |
17 August 2011 91) Rome, Italy | (aged
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1962–1975 |
Gualtiero Jacopetti (4 September 1919 – 17 August 2011) was an Italian director of documentary films. With Paolo Cavara and Franco Prosperi, he is considered the originator of Mondo films, also called shockumentaries.[1]
Early life
Gualtiero Jacopetti was born in Barga, in Northern Tuscany, in 1919. During World War II, he served in the Italian Resistance to fascist dictator Benito Mussolini.[2] After the war, on the advice of his friend and mentor Indro Montanelli, he began to work as a journalist.[3] He co-founded the influential liberal newsweekly Cronache (considered to be a direct predecessor to l'Espresso[4]) in 1953, only to be forced to shut down production after publishing risque photographs of actress Sophia Loren which caused the paper to be charged with manufacturing and trading pornographic material (a charge which also earned Jacopetti a year-long prison sentence).[3] He subsequently worked as a journalist, editor, newsreel writer, actor and short-subject film maker.[2] He also worked on screenplays for René Clément (The Joy of Living, 1961) and Alessandro Blasetti (Europa Di Notte, 1959) before undertaking his own career as a director.
Film career
In 1960, he approached his colleagues Franco Prosperi and Paolo Cavara with the unusual idea of making an "anti-documentary".[2] The result, which premiered in 1962, was Mondo Cane (which roughly translates to "A Dog's World," a minor curse in Italian), a non-narrative compilation of shocking and unusual footage from around the world. It premiered at the 1962 Cannes Film Festival, where it was well-received and even nominated for the Palme d'Or.[5] The theme song, More (Theme from Mondo Cane) by Italian composer Riz Ortolani was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Song in 1963, the year of its premier in the United States.
The success of Mondo Cane inspired an entire genre of documentaries featuring lurid or shocking subjects, which came to be known as Mondo film. Jacopetti and Prosperi (who would become film-making partners for the remainder of Jacopetti's directorial career) went on to make several more entries into this genre, including La donna nel mondo (Women of the World), Mondo Cane 2, Africa Addio and the faux-documentary Addio zio Tom. In the 2003 documentary The Godfathers of Mondo, Jacopetti describes the style they used to make these films: “Slip in, ask, never pay, never reenact.” [2]
During the filming of Africa Addio, which includes footage of intense fighting and mass death in the Mau Mau uprising, the Zanzibar revolution, the Simba Rebellion, and other post-colonial Africa conflicts, the crew was interrogated in Congo, and arrested and nearly executed in Tanzania, before an army official intervened on their behalf, shouting “Stop — they’re not whites, they’re Italians.”[2] A scene depicting the execution of a Simba rebel during the Congolese Simba Rebellion resulted in Jacopetti being charged with murder in Italy; he was acquitted after producing documents demonstrating the footage had not been staged for the cameras.[2]
Following the critical and commercial failure of the faux-documentary Addio Zio Tom (which reviewer Roger Ebert called "...the most disgusting, contemptuous insult to decency ever to masquerade as a documentary,"[6] Jacopetti and Prosperi attempted a fictional film, 1975's Mondo Candido (a modern version of Candide by French Philosopher Voltaire). Jacopetti went on to write (but not direct) one further documentary, 1981's Fangio: Una vita a 300 all'ora (which follows the career of Formula One driver Juan Manuel Fangio) before returning to print media for the remainder of his career.[2]
Death
Jacopetti died August 17, 2011 at the age of 91. Italian press articles reported that he had wished to be buried next to one-time girlfriend Belinda Lee, who died in 1961 in a car accident in which Jacopetti was also hurt.[4]
Criticism
Despite their early success with Mondo Cane, controversy followed Jacopetti and Prosperi's careers. New York Times reviewer Pauline Kael dismissed Mondo Cane, claiming that its advocates were, “too restless and apathetic to pay attention to motivations and complications, cause and effect.”[1] Criticism became even more pronounced with Affrica Addio, which Roger Ebert called "brutal, dishonest, and racist" and claims that it "slanders a continent".[7]. Charges of racism and claims that elements of their film were staged or manufactured by the directors plagued them over the years, though they strongly denied both charges.Jacopetti claimed his intent was to create films that “...would play on the big screen whose subject was reality.”[1] In the 2003 documentary The Godfathers of Mondo, Prosperi went on to claim criticism of their work was due to the fact that, "The public was not ready for this kind of truth." Both directors denied staging anything for their films,[8] with the exception of Mondo Cane 2 which they acknowledge does contain some staged or recreated footage.[9]
Filmography (director)
- Mondo Cane, 1962
- La donna nel mondo (Women of the World), 1963
- Mondo Cane 2, 1963
- Africa Addio (Africa Blood and Guts or Farewell Africa), 1966
- Addio zio Tom (Goodbye Uncle Tom), 1971
- Mondo candido, 1975
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Gualtiero Jacopetti, Maker of ‘Mondo Cane,’ Dies at 91" Douglas Martin, THE NEW YORK TIMES, August 19, 2011
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Provocateur Gualtiero Jacopetti Dead at 91: Honoring the Man Behind the Mondo Movies. Richard Corliss, August 21, 2011.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Addio a Jacopetti,autore di "Mondo cane" Gordiano Lupi, August 18, 2011
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Gualtiero Jacopetti obituary: Italian creator of the satirical film Mondo Cane and its 'shockumentary' successors Mark Goodall The Guardian, Monday 22 August 2011
- ↑ "Festival de Cannes". Festival de Cannes. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
- ↑ Farewell Uncle Tom Roger Ebert, 1972
- ↑ Africa Addio review, Roger Ebert, April 25, 1967
- ↑ See the interview with Jacopetti from 1988, reprinted Amok Journal: Sensurround Edition, edited by S. Swezey (Los Angeles: AMOK, 1995), pp. 140-171
- ↑ 'A Dog's World: The Mondo Cane Collection, Bill Gibron, December 1, 2003
External links
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