'Gillo Pontecorvo' (
November 19 1919 –
October 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
★ He was a close friend of the Italian President
Giorgio Napolitano.
★ Pontecorvo played a cameo role in
John Landis's movie
''The Stupids''.
Selected bibliography
★
Memorie estorte a uno smemorato. Vita di Gillo Pontecorvo, , Irene, Bignardi, Feltrinelli, 1999,
★
Gillo Pontecorvo: From Resistance to Terrorism, , Carlo, Celli, Scarecrow Press, 2005,
★
Pour la revolution africaine: Essais politiques, , Frantz, Fanon, La Decouverte, 2001,
★
An Interview with Gillo Pontecorvo, , Joan, Mellen, Film Quarterly,
★
Filmguide to ''The Battle of Algiers', , Joan, Mellen, Bloomington, 1973,
★
Reflections on Exile and Other Essays, , Edward W., Said, Harvard University Press, 2000,
★
Gillo Pontecorvo’s ''The Battle of Algiers', , Franco, Solinas, PierNico Solinas, 1973,
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)
External links
★
★
Interview with Gillo Pontecorvo at the World Socialist Web Site