Corrado D'Errico
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- Director
- screenwriter
Corrado D'Errico | |
|---|---|
D'Errico in 1937 | |
| Born | 19 May 1902 Rome, Kingdom of Italy |
| Died | 3 September 1941 (aged 39) Rome, Italy |
| Occupations |
|
| Years active | 1928–1941 |
Corrado D'Errico (1902–1941) was an Italian screenwriter and film director. D'Errico was one of a number of directors in the Fascist era to graduate from the Istituto Luce.[1]
Corrando D’Errico came into the public eye at the end of the 1920s as a creator of experimental plays and city symphonies that employ a futurist and fascist mentality.[2] Throughout his career, D'Errico directed 11 feature-length films across the adventure, comedy, and neorealist drama genres.[2] His work is a testament to the intersectionality of propaganda, spectacle, and entertainment.[2] Beyond his work as a filmmaker, D’Errico was a journalist for a fascist newspaper and was well connected with many of the party's high profile officials.[2] His party connections allowed him take a role within the State secretary of Press and Propaganda as a member of Mussolini’s press office.[2]
Director
- Stramilano (1929), short
- Ritmi di stazione (1933), short[3]
- Golden Arrow (1935)
- La Gazza Ladra (1934), short[3]
- The Castiglioni Brothers (1937)
- All of Life in One Night (1938)
- Star of the Sea (1938)
- Diamonds (1939)
- Trial and Death of Socrates (1939)
- Captain Tempest (1942)
- The Lion of Damascus (1942)
Screenwriter
- Rails (1929)
- Aldebaran (1937)
- The Faceless Voice (1939)