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Death in Venice (Italian: Morte a Venezia) is a 1971 historical drama film directed and produced by Italian filmmaker Luchino Visconti, and adapted by Visconti and Nicola Badalucco from the 1912 novella of the same name by German author Thomas Mann.
A film adaptation of Death in Venice starring Dirk Bogarde was made by Luchino Visconti in 1971. Benjamin Britten transformed Death in Venice into an opera, his last, in 1973. The novella was dramatised by Peter Wolf for BBC Radio 3 in 1997. [15] John Neumeier adapted it for a ballet for his Hamburg Ballet company in December 2003. [16]
Death in Venice (Morte a Venezia) Luchino Visconti: Dirk Bogarde, Silvana Mangano, Björn Andrésen, Romolo Valli: Drama: Cannes Award. Gay interest. 4 BAFTA. 4 Nastro d'Argento. Il Decameron: Pier Paolo Pasolini: Franco Citti, Ninetto Davoli, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Silvana Mangano: Erotic: Based on the novel Decamerone by Giovanni Boccaccio.
Luchino Visconti, Sergio Garfagnoli and Björn Andrésen during the filming of Death in Venice in 1971. Björn Johan Andrésen (born 26 January 1955) is a Swedish actor and musician. He is best known for playing the 14-year-old Tadzio in Luchino Visconti's 1971 film adaptation of the 1912 Thomas Mann novella Death in Venice.
Thanks to his unique blend of aristocratic and upper-class origins, political communist convictions and brilliant social analysis, he created masterpieces of film history in The Leopard (1963), The Damned (1969), Death in Venice (1971) and Ludwig (1972).
“Bad karma doesn’t wait for the next life,” states a trauma-raddled Khmer Rouge survivor toward the end of Rithy Panh’s “Graves Without a Name.” He says it in a tone of numb assurance ...
Death in Venice, a 1912 novella (Der Tod in Venedig) by German author Thomas Mann; Death in Venice, a 1971 film (Morte a Venezia) by Luchino Visconti starring Dirk Bogarde; Death In Venice, an opera by Benjamin Britten, first performed in 1973; Death in Venice, as made into a ballet by John Neumeier, for his Hamburg Ballet company, in December 2003
Nicole Kidman won the best actress prize at Venice Film Festival for her performance in “Babygirl” on Saturday night, but was not on hand to accept the prize because of some devastating news ...