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・ Alberto Carrillo Armenta
・ Alberto Casado Cerviño
・ Alberto Casañal Shakery
・ Alberto Cassano
・ Alberto Castagna
・ Alberto Castagnetti
・ Alberto Castelvecchi
・ Alberto Castilla
・ Alberto Castillo
・ Alberto Castillo (catcher)
・ Alberto Castillo (performer)
・ Alberto Castillo (pitcher)
・ Alberto Cavalcanti
・ Alberto Cavallari
・ Alberto Cavallero
Alberto Cavallone
・ Alberto Cavasin
・ Alberto Cavos
・ Alberto Cañas Escalante
・ Alberto Cecchin
・ Alberto Celli
・ Alberto Cerioni
・ Alberto Cerqui
・ Alberto Cerri
・ Alberto Chaíça
・ Alberto Chedrani
・ Alberto Chicote
・ Alberto Chillon
・ Alberto Chimal
・ Alberto Chipande


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Alberto Cavallone : ウィキペディア英語版
Alberto Cavallone

Alberto Cavallone (28 August 1938 – 12 November 1997) was an Italian film director and screenwriter. He was born in Milan, Italy.
==Career==

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. The following year, Cavallone directed the feature ''Dal nostro inviato a Copenaghen (From Our Copenhagen Correspondent)''. That film was a story of two U.S. servicemen fresh from Vietnam who go A.W.O.L. from an American base in Germany. They travel to Copenhagen, where both remain haunted by their experiences in Vietnam. One drifts into acting in pornographic films while the other loses his ability to distinguish reality from fantasy and succumbs to violent impulses. Hot on the heels of that picture, Cavallone began directing a musical-comedy that he was forced to abandon in mid-production due to budgetary constraints.
In 1971, Cavallone directed ''Quickly, spari e baci a colazione'', a low-budget affair that utilized discarded sets from bigger pictures and incorporated footage from the uncompleted musical. In 1973, he directed Afrika (film), set in Ethiopia, a tale of two Italian expatriates, a sexually-conflicted painter and his young male lover. The story is embedded in the police procedural staple, the murder investigation, in this case by an Ethiopian chief of police. In 1974, Cavallone directed ''Zelda'', an erotic thriller. The following year, he directed in Turkey and Italy ''Maldoror'', inspired by Comte de Lautréamont's poem Les Chants de Maldoror. The picture failed to secure a distributor and remains unseen by the public.
In 1977, Cavallone released the surreal Spell – Dolce mattatoio, known in the English-speaking world as ''Man, Woman and Beast''. The film is generally regarded as Cavallone's masterpiece and remains his most-exhibited work. Cavallone followed this success with ''Blue Movie'' in 1978. This film, too, was a modest success, something that bewildered its director. In 1980, Cavallone directed the surrealist erotic-mystery ''Blow Job – Soffio erotico'' and later that year ''La gemella erotica – Due gocce d’acqua'', a project along similar lines. The latter film failed to reach theaters due to the bankruptcy of its distributor.
In 1981, Cavallone directed two surrealist erotic-thrillers, each featuring an achondroplastic dwarf in the lead role: ''Baby Sitter'' and ''Pat''. His work after this time devolved into journeyman efforts in various "porns with plots". In 1983, he contributed the story to Umberto Lenzi's fantasy film Iron Master – La guerra del ferro. The early 1990s saw him directing commercials and contributing revisions to screenplays by other screenwriters and storyboards for at least one animated feature. At the time of his death, Cavallone was attempting to helm a comeback feature he called ''Internet Story''.

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