Enzo Monteleone

Enzo Monteleone
Born (1954-04-13) 13 April 1954
Padova, Italy

Enzo Monteleone (born 13 April 1954 in Padova, Italy) is an Italian film director and screenwriter.

Career

Having performed various film-related activities during and shortly after his university studies, Enzo Monteleone made his real professional debut by writing the screenplay of an Italian-American co-production called Hotel Colonial starring Robert Duvall, John Savage, Rachel Ward and Massimo Troisi and directed by Cinzia TH Torrini. Then he started to work with Gabriele Salvatores, for whom he wrote four screenplays, i.e. Kamikazen, Marrakech Express, Mediterraneo, which won an Oscar 1992 as best foreign film, and Puerto Escondido. As a scenarist he collaborated with several directors of his generation such as Carlo Mazzacurati, Giuseppe Piccioni, Alessandro D'Alatri, Maurizio Sciarra and Carlos Saura (film ¡Dispara!), starring Antonio Banderas and Francesca Neri.[1]

The first film directed by Monteleone was a biography of the actor Alessandro Haber called La vera vita di Antonio H., presented at the Venice Film Festival and winner of a Nastro d'Argento award for the best actor.

Ormai è fatta! (1999) was the second film directed by Monteleone, starring Stefano Accorsi. The film was presented in competition at the 21st Moscow International Film Festival,[2] it received an award at the Annecy film festival (France) and was nominated for the David di Donatello 2000.[3]

El Alamein - La linea del fuoco was a World War II film realized in 2002. The film won three David di Donatello Awards (for best cinematography, for best editing, for best sound), and one Nastro d'Argento for best sound.[4]

In 2004, he made a television film for the channel Canale 5 entitled Il tunnel della libertà (The tunnel of freedom), starring Kim Rossi Stuart, the adaptation of a true story in which two Italian students dig a tunnel under the Berlin wall and manage to exfiltrate thirty East German people, in 1962. Again for Canale 5 he made in 2007 the six part TV miniseries Il Capo dei Capi.

In 2009, he made the adaptation of the comedy Due partite written by Cristina Comencini, starring Margherita Buy, Isabella Ferrari, Paola Cortellesi and Marina Massironi.

In summer 2011, he realized for the channel Rai Uno the TV movie in two episodes Walter Chiari - Fino all'ultima risata, starring Alessio Boni and based on the adventurous life of the famous Italian actor Walter Chiari.

Awards

Locarno Film Festival

Fice Award

De Sica Award

Filmography

Screenwriter

Director

References

External links

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