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Word: luchino (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...creates a network of conflicting spatial relationships from the many people in his best-seller-based sagas, and his films work on a level far transcending the dramatic material. From this specialized, perhaps perverse, point-of-view, Hurry Sundown is close to Preminger's best film. Luchino Visconti. Like Rosselini, Visconti (director of Rocco and His Brothers and The Leopard) has all but abandoned the moving camera in favor of the zoom lens. On one end of the spectrum we have Rosselini, whose integrity and genius is such that he can use the zoom simply because...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: The Ten Best Film of 1967 | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

...Stranger, perhaps still the best modern novel of alienation and despair. Though Camus steadfastly refused to allow it, or any of his other books, to be made into a movie, his widow finally sold the film rights to Italian Producer Dino De Laurentiis on condition that the director be Luchino Visconti (The Leopard, Rocco and His Brothers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Stranger | 12/29/1967 | See Source »

Sandra. "These shadows . . . the sifting of ashes of a dead past." Thus whisper the winds of melancholy around a decaying palazzo in the Tuscan town of Volterra, where Director Luchino Visconti (Rocco and His Brothers, The Leopard) installs Claudia Cardinale as resident tragedienne. In Visconti's modern variations on the Electra theme, Claudia struggles with a role that requires her, at times, to slip off the mantle of Greek tragedy and slip into something like a bath towel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Electro in Tuscany | 2/11/1966 | See Source »

...guys, there are carabinieri and mafiosi. Instead of Hollywood moviemakers there are Italian moviemakers who scuttle about the landscape manufacturing folklore. Most of them produce ludicrously crude goat operas, but once in a while somebody really gets Sicily on acetate. Pietro Germi did it once (Divorce-Italian Style); Luchino Visconti did it twice (La Terra Trema, The Leopard); and now Alberto Lattuada serves up ten or a dozen small but gloriously garlicky slices of Sicilian village life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Sicily with Garlic | 7/3/1964 | See Source »

...LEOPARD. Burt Lancaster gives the finest performance of his career in Luchino Visconti's noble, ironic and richly mournful lament for the death of feudalism in Sicily...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Nov. 15, 1963 | 11/15/1963 | See Source »

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