About the Author:
Harvey Fenton is Managing Director of FAB Press. The company was established in 1993 with the publication of the first issue of Flesh & Blood magazine, which was issued for five years, after which FAB Press concentrated on producing books for cult connoisseurs. In addition to this volume, he has co-authored and edited the following FAB Press books: Flesh & Blood Book One, Ten Years of Terror: British Horror Films of the Seventies, Flesh & Blood Compendium and Shock! Horror! Astounding Artwork from the Video Nasty Era.
Gian Luca Castoldi is a film journalist based in Firenze, Italy. His work regular appears in the Italian genre magazine Nocturno. His books include Il cinema splatter e horror di fine millennio (1997), La guida definitiva al cinema splatter, volume 3 (2004), Il pelo nel mondo: I film peplum, le suore erotiche e le commedie sexy (2004), Donne in prigione, Nazisti, Horror e fantascienza, Thriller, Decameroni e film esotici (2006) and Erotismo d'autore: film tra rivoluzione e melodrama. Tinto Brass, Salvatore Samperi e Joe D'Amato (2006).
Julian Grainger is a writer, researcher and film historian whose first assignment was for Shock Xpress magazine. He was employed for many years at The British Film Institute in London where he was in charge of the Filmographic Unit, was Credits Supervisor for Sight & Sound magazine and Programme Notes editor for the many thousands of films screened at The National Film Theatre. He is currently trying to discover just how many films Bob Clark really made before The Emperor's New Clothes and She Man.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
Ruggero Deodato has the dubious honour of being the man who created one of the most infamous horror movies ever made. Cannibal Holocaust is Deodato's most celebrated movie, and he is fully aware of this fact; during the course of the interview featured in this book, he says, "The best one for me is Cannibal Holocaust. It is impossible to equal that film...” Deodato will never live down the legacy of this stunning film, and one gets the impression that he is content with this state of affairs, hence this book rightfully devotes a large proportion of its pages to documenting every aspect of Deodato's brutal, distressing masterpiece. However we are also here to thoroughly document the entire career of one of the busiest men in the film-making industry. He has survived in this most turbulent of environments for over forty years by being ever-adaptable, willing to try his hand at any genre: along with two further jungle-adventures - Last Cannibal World and Cut and Run - his filmography includes cop thriller Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man, claustrophobic slasher House on the Edge of the Park, apocalyptic adventure movie The Atlantis Interceptors, costume fantasy film The Barbarians, plus an impressive array of comedies, erotic thrillers and prime-time Italian TV serials. This book is the most comprehensive analysis of Deodato's work ever published. It is our intention that the career-spanning interview and detailed filmography printed in these pages will serve as a valuable, lasting source of reference for everyone who takes an interest in this increasingly important figure in the world of cinema. Ruggero Deodato was born on 7 May 1939 in Potenza, Italy. He grew up in the Parioli region of Rome, which happened to be home to many of the prime movers in the vibrant 1950's Italian movie industry. Due to this cultural background, Deodato was naturally drawn to the world of cinema, becoming good friends with the son of the great neo-realist director Roberto Rossellini at an early age. This friendship opened the door to Deodato's film-making career when, in 1958, Rossellini asked him to undertake third assistant director work on the French / Italian co-production Il generale della rovere (released 1959). Deodato's work on this film was uncredited, but he very quickly became one of the most sought-after assistant directors in Italy, amassing an impressive total of more than forty credits in the eight year period up to 1967.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.