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Salvatore Giuliano is a 1962 Italian drama film directed by Francesco Rosi. Using techniques of the documentary film, [1][4] it recounts the criminal career of famous Sicilian bandit Salvatore Giuliano between 1943 and 1950, his death.
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.
- (3.7K)
- Crime, Drama, History
- Francesco Rosi
- 1962-03-01
Filming in the exact locations and enlisting a cast of native Sicilians once impacted by the real Giuliano, director Francesco Rosi harnessed the facts and myths surrounding the true story of the bandit's death to create a startling exposé of Sicily and the tangled relations between its citizens, the Mafia, and government officials.
- President of The Court of Assize
Sep 12, 2014 · Notorious bandit Salvatore Giuliano – fatally shot in 1950 – symbolises the turmoil of Sicily’s then-active independence movement.
Sep 3, 2013 · Directed by Francesco Rosi. Early in his career, Rosi tended to be political and socially conscious, although his depiction of Sicily, however accurate, is almost medieval. The director makes the point that the mainlanders (military and paparazzi) are condescending to the southerners, but he may not be entirely free of that fault.
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. In 1950, 28-year-old outlaw Salvatore Giuliano is found gunned down in a Sicilian courtyard.
Directed by Francesco Rosi. Sicilian bandit Salvatore Giuliano’s bullet-riddled corpse is found facedown in a courtyard in Castelvetrano, a handgun and rifle by his side.