Annie Mall wrote:Am I the only one who thinks that Elio Petri is seriously misrepresented in R1 land? I mean, all his major works are MIA and having recently rewatched his Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion, I for one am craving that someone releases it on DVD with the red carpet treatment.
The Museum of Modern Art in New York showed
Investigation this past weekend, along with a new Italian doc about Petri:
Elio Petri Revisited
May 7–10, 2006
To celebrate the arrival of a well-researched and entertaining documentary on the prolific Italian filmmaker Elio Petri, one of the preeminent political and social satirists of 1960s and early 1970s Italian cinema, the Department of Film and Media reconnects with its 2001 retrospective of the director by presenting his masterpiece,
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (1970), a so-called stiletto satire.
Organized by Jytte Jensen, Curator, Department of Film and Media; and Antonio Monda, Professor, New York University. With grateful thanks to The Italian Cultural Institute, New York.
Elio Petri. Appunti su un Autore (Elio Petri. Notes on a Filmmaker). 2005. Italy. Directed by Federico Bacci, Stefano Leone, Nicola Guarneri. The film career of Elio Petri, who died in 1982 at fifty-three, is explored through interviews with directors, actors, collaborators, and other admirers of “Capoccioneâ€