Alberto Cavallone
Alberto Cavallone (28 August 1938 – 12 November 1997) was an Italian film director and screenwriter. He was born in Milan, Italy. Cavallone's films are anti-conventional and often contain a mixture of graphic violence, surrealism and eroticism.
When Cavallone was 17 years old, he traveled to Algeria, then in the throes of a war of independence, with a 16mm Paillard motion picture camera. The footage he gathered there formed the structure of his first film effort, La sporca guerra (The Bloody War), intended as a non-aligned political documentary. The film featured an early score by Pino Donaggio. The film, released in 1959, is now lost. His feature debut, Lontano dagli occhi (Out of Sight), the story of an Italian reporter's coverage of a trial in Frankfurt of former Nazi officers for crimes against humanity, was never completed and remains unseen.
After a five-year period of apprenticeship, assisting direction on a score of Italian pictures, Cavallone returned to directing in 1969 with the feature Le salamandre, a story of an interracial ménage-à-trois between a Swedish-American fashion photographer, her lover, a black model, and a French psychologist. It was shot in Tunisia. The film was well-received and Cavallone's profile increased tremendously.
Crew
Movie
The Red Tent
Additional Writing
1969
Movie
Ironmaster
Screenplay
1983
Movie
Blue Movie
Director
1978
Movie
Man, Woman and Beast
Editor
1977
Movie
Blow Job
Writer
1980
Movie
The Erotic Twin
Screenplay
1980
Movie
Master of the World
Director
1983
Movie
Afrika
Director
1973
Movie
Zelda
Editor
1974
Movie
Le salamandre
Director
1969
Movie
Baby Sitter
Director
1982
Movie
Quickly, Shootings and Kisses for Breakfast
Director
1971