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  1. Jun 3, 2017 · Giuliano, as the last ‘good outlaw’ the world has ever seen, was quickly mythologised in popular culture: the film Salvatore Giuliano was released in 1961; Mario Puzo, the author of the Godfather, has written a novel entitled The Sicilian (1984), which was made into a film a few years later in 1987, starring Christopher Lambert as Giuliano ...

  2. Salvatore Giuliano (Italian: [salvaˈtoːre dʒuˈljaːno]; Sicilian: Turiddu or Sarvaturi Giulianu; 16 November 1922 – 5 July 1950) was an Italian bandit, who rose to prominence in the disorder that followed the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943.

  3. Excerpt of an Italian newsreel from July 12, 1950, reporting the shocking death of the infamous and charismatic bandit Salvatore Giuliano. Original theatrical trailer. New and improved English subtitle translation.

    • President of The Court of Assize
  4. Jan 11, 2022 · Francesco Rosi’s 1962 opus Salvatore Giuliano transcended those definitions of neorealism by establishing a dialectical approach which oscillated between drama and documentary in its journalistic efforts.

  5. Sep 3, 2013 · Salvatore Giuliano was his third and most famous picture. He had assisted Luchino Visconti on La Terra Trema, one of the great classics of Neorealism, and Rosi retained a strong sense of the authenticity of actuality that went with the territory.

  6. Feb 23, 2004 · Salvatore Giuliano, the Sicilian bandit whose name was to become the final title of the film, is present only as a corpse in a courtyard in Castelvetrano, or on a slab in a morgue, or even as a figure in a white shirt running up and down the rocky slopes of the Sicilian mountains.

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  8. Salvatore Giuliano: Directed by Francesco Rosi. With Salvo Randone, Frank Wolff, Pippo Agusta, Sennuccio Benelli. The unclear and complicated twists between governal powers, independentist party and Mafia in the Sicily of the '40s culminate with the death of Salvatore Giuliano.