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Marcello Gatti

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Name
  
Marcello Gatti


Role
  
Cinematographer

Marcello Gatti wwwarticolo21orgwpcontentuploads201311marc

Died
  
November 26, 2013, Rome, Italy

Movies
  
The Battle of Algiers, Burn!, The Anonymous Venetian, The Four Days of Naples, Massacre in Rome

Similar People
  
Franco Solinas, Brahim Haggiag, Gillo Pontecorvo, Saadi Yacef, Jean Martin

Interview marcello gatti il mestiere del cinema 1


Marcello Gatti (9 February 1924 – 26 November 2013) was an Italian cinematographer.

Contents

Marcello Gatti Marcello Gatti AIC YouTube

Born in Rome, Gatti started as film operator in early 1940s, then debuted as cinematographer in 1953. In 1943 he was sentenced to five years in prison, then turned into exile, for having defaced a portrait of Benito Mussolini hung on the walls of Cinecittà.

He is probably best known for his collaboration with director Gillo Pontecorvo, especially for the experimental cinematography of The Battle of Algiers, that was inspired by the cinéma vérité theory. He won five Silver Ribbon for Best Cinematography. He also worked, among others, with Roman Polanski, Nanni Loy, Damiano Damiani, Eriprando Visconti, Luigi Zampa, George P. Cosmatos and Sergio Corbucci. Gatti has long been the president of the Italian Association of cinematographers (Aic).

Interview marcello gatti il mestiere del cinema 2


References

Marcello Gatti Wikipedia