L’Uomo delle Stelle
The Star Maker movie storyline. In 1953, Joe Morelli is traveling rural Sicily, offering to take screen tests of wannabe actors, for a fee. He claims to work for big Roman film studios, but he’s a fraud. He meets several people who express their deepest feelings and secrets in front of the camera. In one of his stops he meets a young girl, Beata, who is a convent girl, she attaches to him, despite his protestation.
Their relation is evolving into a romantic one, when he’s exposed, beaten and arrested. When, after serving his term, he comes back to seek Beata, he finds her mentally retarded assuming Joe’s dead. Pretending as Joe’s friend, he conveys her a message that she was the love of his life and promises he shall come back for her with money and shall take care of her.
The Star Maker (Italian: L’Uomo delle Stelle) is a 1995 Italian film. It was produced by Rita Cecchi Gori, Vittorio Cecchi Gori, directed by Giuseppe Tornatore, while the title role was played by Sergio Castellitto. Ithir sterrunfu eri Tiziana Lodato, Franco Scaldati, Leopoldo Trieste, Clelia Rondinella, Nicola Di Pinto, Jane Alexander and Luigi Maria BurruanoLuigi. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
Many of Tornatore’s films reflect the strong influence of Fellini. Indeed, L’Uomo delle Stelle contains elements of Fellini’s 1955 Il Bidone (another film about despicable con men preying on the innocent southern peasantry) as well as Fellini’s 1952 film Lo Sceicco Bianco (also about a desperate, impressionable young woman who becomes romantically infatuated with the figure of a male celebrity, and who is eventually driven insane by the inevitable shock of disillusionment).
The Star Maker – L’Uomo delle Stelle (1995)
Directed by: Giuseppe Tornatore
Starring: Sergio Castellitto, Tiziana Lodato, Franco Scaldati, Leopoldo Trieste, Clelia Rondinella, Nicola Di Pinto, Jane Alexander, Luigi Maria BurruanoLuigi
Screenplay by: Fabio Rinaudo, Giuseppe Tornatore
Production Design by: Francesco Bronzi
Cinematography by: Dante Spinotti
Film Editing by: Massimo Quaglia
Costume Design by: Beatrice Bordone
Set Decoration by: Nello Giorgetti, Salvatore Saito
Music by: Ennio Morricone
MPAA Rating: R for some strong sexuality, language and a brutal beating.
Distributed by: Miramax Films
Release Date: March 8, 1996
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