Black Humor

2.0

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A unique black comedy consisting of three episodes on the same theme: death. In a circus, trapeze artist Wilma is going to get rid of a rival during a "magic act" performed by an amateur. A strange widow comes to inquire about the services of a new marriage agency. A peasant woman tormented by a bug in her ear barges into a healer's house.

$0

Budget

$0

Revenue

12-04-1965

Release Date

FRITES

Country

2

Rating

1

Votes

-

Age Rating

112 min

Runtime

Released

Status

Spanish, French, Italian

Language

Popular actors
Media

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Director
Giancarlo Zagni

Giancarlo Zagni

Giancarlo Zagni was an Italian director and screenwriter. Born in Bologna, he attended the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Bologna, then collaborated with L'avvenire d'Italia and other newspapers and magazines. From 1951 to 1954, he was assistant director to Luchino Visconti in several stage works and in the film Senso; on the film set, he met actress Alida Valli, with whom he started a sixteen-year-long relationship. During this period, he left Italy, first moving to New York, where he attended the Actors Studio, and then to Mexico, where he directed some stage plays and became the founder and a professor of the School of Autonomous Cinema National at the University of Mexico. Returning to Italy in 1961, Zagni made his directorial debut with the film La bellezza di Ippolita, an adaptation of the novel of the same name written by Elio Bartolini, with which he represented Italy at the 12th Berlin International Film Festival. In 1966, he entered the Venice Film Festival with the comedy film Blockhead, which won the "Leone di San Marco Plate." With this film, he retired from filmmaking but not from the cinema industry, embarking on a new career as a producer and distributor as a manager of the company Italnoleggio.
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