Pupi Avati
Pupi (Giuseppe) Avati was born in Bologna in 1938. After attending school and studying Political Science at the University of Florence, he started working at a frozen food company. At the same time, he developed a passion for jazz, becoming a proficient clarinetist. In the second half of the 1950s, he formed and played in the Doctor Dixie Jazz Band, of which Lucio Dalla was also a member.[3] Although he initially intended to be a professional musician, Avati felt he lacked the necessary talent. In the mid-1960s, he decided to dedicate himself to cinema after seeing Federico Fellini's 8½ and its portrait of the role of a director.[4] Avati's passion for music, as well as his love for his hometown, which was the setting of many of his films, were to become recurrent themes found in his productions.
Welcome Mr. President!
as Potere ForteIn a small mountain village lives a man with a challenging name, Giuseppe Garibaldi (one of...
Movie pagePaolo Conte, Come Away with Me
as uncreditedDocumentary follows the life and work of Italian singer and composer Paolo Conte.
Movie pageItaly Possessed: A Brief History of Exorcist Rip-Offs
as HimselfFeature length documentary including interviews with Sergio Martino, Alberto de Martino, Ovidio...
Movie pageBoia, maschere e segreti: l’horror italiano degli anni sessanta
as Sé stessoPortrait Of My Father
as SelfA labor of love documentary, in which a daughter, with the help of various talking heads, looks...
Movie pageBava Puzzle
as HimselfThrough the anecdotes and stories of actors, directors, critics and experts, this documentary...
Movie page27 aprile Racconto di un evento
as SelfThe documentary starts from the sanctification of Pope Giovanni XXIII and Pope Giovanni Paolo II...
Movie pageC'era una volta il prossimamente
as SelfA passionate cavalcade through decades of "coming attractions"
Movie pageVorrei sparire senza morire
as Sé stessoAbout love and death: starting from the small cemetery in San Leo, where many of his loved ones...
Movie pageThe Day of the Two Holy Popes
as uncredited"History is not just what you read in books, history often reveals itself with its extraordinary...
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