Umberto Lenzi
Umberto Lenzi | |
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![]() Umberto Lenzi at the Festival de Cine de Sitges in October 2008. | |
Born |
Massa Marittima, Italy | 6 August 1931
Occupation | Film director and screenwriter |
Umberto Lenzi (born 6 August 1931), is an Italian film director who was very active in Italian international co-production peplums, Eurospy films, spaghetti westerns, Macaroni Combat movies, Poliziotteschi films, cannibal films and giallo murder mysteries (in addition to writing many of the screenplays himself).
Life and career
Lenzi was born in Massa Marittima, Grosseto, southern Tuscany. He is the writer/director of two highly controversial exploitation films: Eaten Alive! (1980) and Cannibal Ferox (1981) as well as the director of the film adaptation of the Italian comic book Kriminal (1966). He was one of the first Italian directors to get involved in the giallo film craze (along with Mario Bava and Dario Argento), and his jungle adventure Man From Deep River is credited as being the film that started the Italian cannibal film genre later popularized by Ruggero Deodato, Jess Franco and others. Lenzi has claimed in interviews however that he was never too enamored of the cannibal films he made, being much prouder of his war films, his police crime films and his westerns. Lenzi has said in interviews that Man From Deep River was his best cannibal film (he said he only did the other two to make a quick buck), and his favorite gialli were Orgasmo and Seven Bloodstained Orchids (while he absolutely detested Spasmo). He said his Black Demons was another of his all-time favorites, a "potential masterpiece" marred only by the poor acting of the unattractive female lead he was forced to work with.
Two Lenzi movies called Paranoia
Umberto Lenzi's Orgasmo (1969) was retitled Paranoia when it was released in the USA, and it was so successful under that title, the Italian producers asked Lenzi to make another giallo called Paranoia (1970) to be distributed in Italy. This second film was later retitled A Quiet Place to Kill in the USA (since Orgasmo had already been released there under the title Paranoia).
There really was a Harry Kirkpatrick
While preparing to film the 1988 slasher flick Nightmare Beach in Florida, Umberto Lenzi had a falling out with the producer just as production started and wanted to be taken off the film, but the film's co-writer Harry Kirkpatrick (who wound up receiving sole directing credit) convinced Lenzi to remain on the set in an uncredited advisory capacity throughout the entire production. Thus Lenzi co-directed the film with Kirkpatrick. For years, many horror film fans thought Harry Kirkpatrick was an alias for Lenzi, but Lenzi has stated in interviews that there really was a Harry Kirkpatrick who co-wrote & co-directed that film with him. In fact, Lenzi stated in interviews that he really liked Kirkpatrick and got along well with him (ref: Lenzi interview in "Spaghetti Nightmares", a book.)
The Italian La Casa horror film series
Umberto Lenzi directed Ghosthouse in 1988 (known as La Casa 3 in Italy), but many of his fans do not know why it was released as La Casa 3 in Italy. The American films The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II were released in Italy as La Casa and La Casa 2 respectively. Lenzi's film Ghosthouse was designed as a sort of sequel to these two high-grossing fan favorites, and thus was released in theatres there as La Casa 3.
The same year, Fabrizio Laurenti directed Witchery (starring Linda Blair) which was released in Italy as La Casa 4 and was followed several years later by Claudio Fragasso's La Casa 5: Beyond Darkness (not to be confused with Joe D'Amato's Beyond The Darkness / Buio Omega). The 1987 American movie House 2: The Second Story strangely wound up on video as La Casa 6, while the 1989 Lance Henrikson film The Horror Show was also known as La Casa 7.
Filmography
- The Adventure of the Mary Reade (1961) aka Queen of the Seas; aka Hell Below Deck, aka Mary la Rousse, Femme Pirate
- Catherine of Russia (1962)
- The Triumph of Robin Hood (1962) starring Samson Burke
- Duel of Fire (1962) aka Duello nella sila
- Terror of the Black Mask (1962) aka The Invincible Masked Rider/ L'invincibile cavaliere mascherato
- Samson and the Slave Queen (1963) aka Zorro vs Maciste
- Sandokan the Great (1963) aka Sandokan, The Tiger of Mompracem, starring Steve Reeves
- Sandokan, the Pirate of Malaysia (1964) aka Pirates of the Seven Seas, starring Steve Reeves once again portraying Sandokan the Great
- Temple of the White Elephants (1964) aka Sandok, the Maciste of the Jungle
- Adventures of the Bengal Lancers (1964) aka I tre sergenti del Bengala, aka The Three Sergeants of Fort Bengal, starring Richard Harrison
- Messalina Against the Son of Hercules (1964) aka The Last Gladiator
- Temple of a Thousand Lights (1965) aka Jungle Adventurer, aka The Mountain of Light, caper film starring Richard Harrison
- Super Seven Calling Cairo (1965)
- 008 Operation Exterminate (1965)
- The Spy Who Loves Flowers (1966)
- A Million Dollars For Seven Killers (1966)
- Kriminal (1966) based on the famous Italian comic strip
- Desert Commandos (1967) aka Attentato ai tre grandi
- Copperface (1967)
- A Pistol for a Hundred Coffins (1968)
- Tutto Per Tutto (1968) aka All Out, starred John Ireland
- Legion of the Damned (1969) aka Battle of the Commandos, written by Dario Argento, starring Jack Palance
- Orgasmo (1969) (released in USA as Paranoia)
- So Sweet... So Perverse (1969)
- An Ideal Place To Kill (1969) released in the USA as Oasis of Fear, aka Dirty Pictures
- Paranoia (1970) released in USA as A Quiet Place To Kill (since Orgasmo had already been released in the USA as Pananoia)
- The Man From Deep River (1972) aka Il paese del sesso selvaggio / The Country of Savage Sex, aka Sacrifice, aka Deep River Savages
- Seven Bloodstained Orchids (1972) aka Puzzle of the Silver Half Moons, aka Sette orchidee macchiate di rosso
- Knife of Ice (1972) aka Il coltello di ghiaccio, Silent Horror, Vertigine, and Detrás del Silencio / After the Silence[1]
- Gang War in Milan (1973) aka Milano Rovente, aka Burning City
- Spasmo (1974)
- Almost Human (1974) aka Milano odia: la polizia non può sparare, aka The Kidnapping of Mary Lou
- Eyeball (1975) aka Wide-Eyed in the Dark, aka Red Cats in a Glass Maze / Gatti rossi in un labirinto di vetro
- Syndicate Sadists (1975) aka The Avenger Challenges the City
- Violent Naples (1976) aka Napoli violenta
- Rome Armed to the Teeth (1976) aka Brutal Justice, aka Roma a Mano Armata
- Free Hand for a Tough Cop (1976) aka Il trucido e lo sbirro
- Brothers Till We Die (1977)
- The Cynic, the Rat and the Fist (1977) written by Ernesto Gastaldi
- The Greatest Battle (1978) aka Il grande attacco (The Great Attack)
- From Hell to Victory (1979)
- From Corleone to Brooklyn (1979)
- The Sicilian Boss (1979)
- Nightmare City (1980) aka City of the Walking Dead, aka Nightmare in the Contaminated City / Incubo sulla cittá contaminata
- Eaten Alive! (1980) aka Mangiati vivi, aka The Emerald Jungle, aka Doomed To Die
- Cannibal Ferox (1981) aka Make Them Die Slowly
- Daughter of the Jungle (1982) aka Encounter in the Last Paradise / Incontro nell'ultimo paradiso
- Ironmaster (1982) aka The War of Iron / La guerra di ferro
- I cinque del Condor / The Five of the Condor (1985) aka The Wild Team aka Thunder Squad
- Tempi di guerra / Times of War (1987) aka Wartime
- Nightmare Beach (1988) aka Welcome to Spring Break (Lenzi was an uncredited co-director)
- Black Cobra (Lenzi was a co-director on this 4-film series) (released 1987, 1988, 1989 & 1990 respectively)
- Ghosthouse (1988) aka La Casa 3
- Hell's Gate (1989) aka The Door To Hell
- Hitcher in the Dark (1989) aka Fear in the Dark
- The House of Witchcraft (1989) Made for Italian TV, aka Ghosthouse 4
- The House of Lost Souls (1989) Made for Italian TV
- Black Demons (1991) erroneously distributed on video as Demons 3
- Cop Target (1991) stars Robert Ginty
- Detective Malone (1991) stars Fred Williamson
- The Hunt for the Golden Scorpion (1991)
- Mean Tricks (1993)
- Sarayevo inferno di fuoco / Sarayevo, Hell of Fire (1996)
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ "BFI | Film & TV Database | Il coltello di ghiaccio (1970)". British Film Institute. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
External links
- Umberto Lenzi at the Internet Movie Database
- Interview with Umberto Lenzion, 'Cultfilms en Kutfilms' (April 4th 2008)
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