Claudio Fragasso | |
---|---|
Born | 2 October 1951 |
Other names | Clyde Anderson [1] Drake Floyd |
Years active | 1974–present |
Spouse | Rossella Drudi |
Claudio Fragasso (born 2 October 1951) is a film director and screenwriter. Fragasso first attempted to make art films in the early 1970s, then became a screenwriter in the Italian film industry in the mid-1970s. Fragasso met director Bruno Mattei, which led to a ten-year partnership from 1980 to 1990 [2] during which the two worked together closely on films, with Fragasso's contributions often going uncredited. Fragasso's wife Rossella Drudi was also a screenwriter and collaborated with him on a number of projects. [3] Fragasso would later go on to write and direct his own films in the 1980s, including Monster Dog with rock musician Alice Cooper and After Death . Fragasso directed Troll 2 in 1989, which was later the topic of Best Worst Movie , a documentary film that discussed Troll 2's fandom.
Claudio Fragasso was born on 2 October 1951. [4] Prior to directing, Claudio Fragasso worked as a screenwriter beginning in the mid-1970s. [5] Fragasso had originally planned to make art films, and initially shot his films on Super8 such as Passaggi (1977) and its follow-up Difendimi dalla Notte, with Fragasso noting "In Italy, to be considered important, you must shoot something like that." [1] [5] According to Fragasso, the screenplay for Il Medium was done specifically for director Silvio Amadio in 1975. [6] The film however did not start production until 1979. [6] Fragasso worked on the screenplays on several Italian crime thrillers in the 1970s. [7] [8]
Fragasso met director Bruno Mattei when Mattei was still an assistant editor and they immediately got along well with one another as they both enjoyed genre films. [9] In 1980, Mattei began a close collaboration with screenwriter Fragasso, beginning with The True Story of the Nun of Monza (1980) and ending with a comedy called Three For One (1990). [2] The two worked closely together for that ten-year period (collaborating on 15 films) [2] with Fragasso occasionally assuming the role of second unit, or assistant, director. [2] [2] Fragasso has stated he is a fan of splatter films, noting that they were "very important to me. The Italian spirit compels us to exaggerate." [10]
Fragasso stated his first films with Mattei were The True Story of the Nun of Monza and The Other Hell , which were filmed simultaneously to save money. [9] The two co-directed the films in a real convent and exchanged actors to allow them to shoot the two films simultaneously. [9] While the films were being processed, Mattei and Fragasso were hired to finish the film Perverse Sex, Violent World which was completed in two weeks using stock footage. [9] [3] Their next film Hell of the Living Dead was written by Fragasso and his wife Rosella Drudi. [3] Fragasso also assisted in directing the film. [11] Mattei however maintained that on all the films Fragasso claims to have co-directed, he was really just Mattei's assistant director. [11]
Following Hell of the Living Dead, producers suggested another two-film deal which led to Women's Prison Massacre and Violence in a Women's Prison , both starring Laura Gemser. [10] Violence in a Women's Prison was written by Fragasso and Drudi. [10] Fragasso spoke positively on working with Gemser, stating that "compared to the starlets of today, she was virtually a nun, the absolute opposite of a porn star". [10] Gemser would years later work for producer Aristide Massaccesi's Filmirage team, as a costume designer on Fragasso's film Troll 2 . [10] Producer Roberto Di Girolamo requested a post-apocalyptic film from Fragasso and Mattei, called Rats: Night of Terror . [12] Fragasso would also collaborate on the two Westerns Mattei directed in the 1980s: Scalps and White Apache . [11] Fragasso also appeared in small roles in some of his films, such as Robowar and Cop Game. [4]
In 1986, [1] Fragasso made a film on his own without Mattei titled Monster Dog for producer Eduard Sarlui, starring musician Alice Cooper. [12] Fragasso and Drudi also co-wrote the sequel to Lucio Fulci's Zombi 2 , called Zombi 3 . [12] Director Fulci had to leave the Philippines set before completing the film, leading to Drudi and Fragasso having to re-write and expand the script in one day, the film's directing chores being completed by Bruno Mattei who was working in the Philippines at the time. [13] Fragasso flew there the next day to assist Mattei with the filming. [13]
While working on Zombi 3, Fragasso simultaneously directed another zombie film called After Death , written by himself and Drudi, which he described as "a small movie I did with half the budget of the "official" movie, which was shot in the same location in the Philippines" for Filmirage. [13] [14] After Death was shot at night since during the day, Fragasso was shooting Zombi 3 with Mattei. [13] Fragasso also directed Beyond Darkness (La Casa 5) for Filmirage. [14]
Fragasso has claimed that he and Drudi wrote the original story for Filmirage's Killing Birds which they wrote under the title Artigli, a claim dismissed by Italian film critic and historian Roberto Curti, who noted that the treatment for Killing Birds, that was written by Claudio Lattanzi and Bruna Antonucci, was much closer to the finished film. [15]
Fragasso would later make Troll 2 for Massaccesi who wanted to make a horror film without any blood in it. [13] The film was shot in mid-1989 in Morgan, Utah. [16] Rosella met the producer Sarlui and he had a mask from the film Troll which Fragasso had not seen. [13] Fragasso stated their film was originally to be titled Goblins and was written with Drudi as a more family-oriented horror film with humor about goblins who hated carnivorous humans as the goblins were vegetarians. [13] Fragasso is credited as Drako Floyd, a pen name created by Drudi from the Dragon sign in the Chinese zodiac and for the band Pink Floyd. [14]
In the mid-1990s, critics suggested there was a resurgence of crime films in Italy going on after the release of The Escort . [17] This new wave included Fragasso's Palermo - Milan One Way , the box office success of which led to others such as Coppia omicida and the television film Operazione Odissea . [18] Fragasso continued to make several films for both theatrical and television release, culminating in his 2007 sequel to Palermo - Milan One Way which was called Milano Palermo - il ritorno. [18]
Title | Year | Credited as | Notes | Ref(s) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Director | Screenwriter | Screen story writer | Other | ||||
Mania | 1974 | Yes | Assistant director | [19] [20] | |||
Meet Him and Die | 1976 | Yes | Yes | [21] | |||
Gangbuster | 1977 | Yes | [22] | ||||
La banda Vallanzasca | 1977 | Yes | Dialogue collaboration | [23] | |||
Don't Trust the Mafia | 1979 | Yes | Yes | Assistant director | [24] | ||
Il medium | 1980 | Yes | [25] [26] | ||||
The True Story of the Nun of Monza | 1980 | Yes | [27] [28] [29] | ||||
Hell of the Living Dead | 1980 | Yes | Yes | Yes | assistant director | [11] [30] [31] | |
The Other Hell | 1981 | Yes | Yes | Yes | assistant director | [32] [11] [33] | |
The Seven Magnificent Gladiators | 1983 | Yes | [34] | ||||
Rats: Night of Terror | 1984 | Yes | [35] [36] | ||||
Il piacere | 1985 | Yes | Yes | [37] | |||
Monster Dog | 1986 | Yes | Yes | Yes | [1] [14] | ||
White Apache | 1986 | Yes | Assistant director | [11] [38] | |||
Scalps | 1986 | Yes | Assistant director | [11] [38] | |||
Double Target | 1987 | Yes | Yes | [39] [40] | |||
Strike Commando | 1987 | Yes | Yes | [41] | |||
Zombi 3 | 1988 | Yes | Yes | [42] [43] [44] | |||
Robowar | 1988 | Yes | Yes | [45] [46] | |||
After Death | 1989 | Yes | [47] | ||||
Night Killer | 1990 | Yes | Yes | Yes | [48] [49] [50] | ||
Troll 2 | 1990 | Yes | Yes | Yes | [51] | ||
Beyond Darkness | 1990 | Yes | Yes | Yes | aka "La casa 5" | [52] | |
Teste Rasate | 1993 | Yes | [53] | ||||
Palermo — Milan No Return | 1995 | Yes | Yes | [54] | |||
Best Worst Movie | 2009 | Yes | himself | [55] | |||
Three for One | — | Yes | [56] | ||||
Laurette Marcia Gemser is an Indonesian-Dutch retired actress, model and costume designer. She is primarily known for her work in Italian erotic cinema, most notably the Emanuelle series. Many of her films were collaborations with directors Joe D'Amato and Bruno Mattei.
Lucio Fulci was an Italian film director, screenwriter, and actor. Although he worked in a wide array of genres through a career spanning nearly five decades, including comedies and spaghetti Westerns, he garnered an international cult following for his giallo and horror films.
Aristide Massaccesi, known professionally as Joe D'Amato, was an Italian film director, producer, cinematographer, and screenwriter who worked in many genres but is best known for his horror, erotic and adult films.
Ernesto Gastaldi is an Italian screenwriter. Film historian and critic Tim Lucas described Gastaldi as the first Italian screenwriter to specialize in horror and thriller films. Gastaldi worked within several popular genres including pepla, Western and spy films.
Troll 2 is a 1990 independent dark fantasy horror film written and directed by Claudio Fragasso under the pseudonym Drake Floyd. It stars Michael Stephenson, George Hardy, Connie McFarland, and Jason Wright. The plot follows Joshua Waits as he tries to save his family after the spirit of his deceased grandfather warns him that the town of Nilbog, where the family are spending their vacation, is inhabited by goblins who turn people into plant matter to eat them. It is the second installment of the Troll film series.
Bruno Mattei was an Italian film director, screenwriter, and editor who directed exploitation films in many genres, including women in prison, nunsploitation, zombie, mondo, cannibal, and Nazisploitation films. Mattei's films often followed popular genre trends of the era. Mattei continued work as a director primarily in the Philippines until his death in 2007, just before he was to enter production on his fifth Zombie film.
Hell of the Living Dead is a 1980 horror film directed by Bruno Mattei. The film is set in a laboratory in Papua New Guinea that releases a dangerous chemical, turning the technicians and locals into zombies. A French news reporter and her crew land on the island to investigate.
Zombi 3 is a 1988 Italian horror film directed by Lucio Fulci and Bruno Mattei and starring Deran Sarafian, Beatrice Ring, and Ottaviano Dell'acqua. The film is an in-name-only sequel to Fulci's Zombi 2. The film is about a group of scientists at a top-secret research facility who are working on a biological weapon called Death One, which mutates and kills the living creatures and reanimates the dead. The weapon is leaked out of the facility, which leads to a spread of infection among soldiers and touring people in the area.
Beyond Darkness is an Italian horror film written and directed by Claudio Fragasso.
Killing Birds is a 1988 Italian horror film starring Lara Wendel and Robert Vaughn. The film is set in Louisiana where Fred Brown returns from the Vietnam War to find his wife in bed with her lover and slaughters the whole family sparing the newborn son. After the massacre, he is attacked and blinded by a falcon. Twenty years later a group of students led by Steve and Anne meet Brown, and begin their search for a nearly extinct breed of woodpecker and come across grisly occurrences including boys being killed by vengeful zombies.
Stelvio Massi, sometimes credited "Max Steel", was an Italian director, screenwriter and cinematographer, best known for his "poliziotteschi" films.
Duccio Tessari was an Italian film director, screenwriter and actor, considered one of the fathers of Spaghetti Westerns.
Robowar is a 1989 Italian science fiction action film directed by Bruno Mattei. The film features a group of military commandos going through a jungle and being stalked by a robot called Omega-1.
Fabrizio De Angelis is an Italian director, screenwriter and producer.
The Other Hell is a 1981 Italian horror film written and directed by Bruno Mattei and Claudio Fragasso and starring Franca Stoppi and Carlo De Mejo.
White Apache is a 1986 Western film directed by Bruno Mattei. The film was an Italian and Spanish co-production between Beatrice Films and Multivideo.
Madness is a 1994 Italian giallo film directed by Bruno Mattei. The film is about Giovanna Dei who is the creator of the comic series Doctor Dark, a character with a split personality. After a series of murders begin to happen in a similar fashion to how Doctor Dark's fictional murders. Dei defends herself against any criticism of the violence in her comics and later finds that the murderer is leaving the eyeballs of her victims in her apartment.
The Seven Magnificent Gladiators is an Italian peplum film directed by Bruno Mattei.