Bruno Mattei Biography

This article contains dynamic lists that may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.

Bruno Mattei (30 July 1931 – 21 May 2007) was an Italian film director, screenwriter, and editor who directed exploitation films in many genres, including women in prison, nunsploitation, zombie, mondo, cannibal, and National Socialist German Workers' Partysploitation films. Mattei's films often followed popular genre trends of the era. Mattei continued work as a director primarily in the Philippines until his death in 2007, just before he was to enter production on his fifth Zombie film.

Biography

Bruno Mattei was born on 30 July 1931 in Rome, Italy. Mattei grew up around films as his father owned a film editing studio. He studied at the Centro Sperimentale Centrale, the national film school, and graduated in 1951. Mattei initially worked as a screenwriter and claimed to have worked on over 100 films as an editor, a claim that film historian Louis Paul stated was "difficult to verify". Some of the earliest films Mattei worked on included Lulu and Tua per la vita. Early film work started in 1956 on Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, after which Mattei worked on several peplum and Eurospy films.

His first film as a director was Armida, il Dramma di Una Sposa (1970), after which he directed Cuginetta...Amore Mio!, an exploitation film starring Rita De Simone. Then followed his National Socialist German Workers' Party-themed exploitation films such as SS Girls and KZ9 Lager di Sterminio, some mondo do*entary films starring Laura Gemser, Le Notti adult movieo nel Mondo and Emanuelle le adult movieo Notti del Mondo N. 2, and nunsploitation films such as The True Story of the Nun of Monza and The Other Hell.

Mattei continued working in various other exploitation-themed genres in the 1980s such as zombie films, sex films, peplums, and Vietnam War-themed productions. In 1982, Mattei filmed two "women in prison" films, Women's Prison M*acre and Violence in a Women's Prison. The liner notes for the Women's Prison M*acre DVD release state "Mattei, using the moniker Gilbert Roussel, shot Women's Prison M*acre back-to-back with his Violence in a Women's Prison. It has basically the same cast, but both films are completely different."

In 1980, Mattei began collaborating with screenwriter Claudio Frag*o, beginning with The True Story of the Nun of Monza (1980) and ending with a comedy called Three For One (1990). The two worked closely together for that ten-year period (collaborating on 15 films), with Frag*o occasionally *uming the role of second unit director.

Mattei was initially attached to direct an adaptation of Hercules from a screenplay by Ricardo Ghione. Principal photography was scheduled to begin May 1982 in Rome, Italy while The Hollywood Reporter naming Frag*o as screenwriter, and Ennio Morricone as music composer and conductor. Neither Mattei, Frag*o, or Morricone appear in onscreen credits. The Hollywood Reporter later stated that principal photography on Hercules began in August 1982 in Italy under the direction of Luigi Cozzi. Mattei later directed Lou Ferrigno in The Seven Magnificent Gladiators.)

Mattei replaced Lucio Fulci as the director of Zombi 3 in the Philippines after Fulci left the project unfinished, then co-produced Zombie 4: After Death immediately afterwards with Frag*o in the director's chair, using the same sets and some of the same cast members. Mattei's other late-1980s films included Robowar and Shocking Dark - Terminator II (which incorporated elements of other popular science fiction films of the time such as The Terminator and Alien). As the 1980s ended, most of Mattei's work was released direct to video or to Italian television such as his Appuntamento a Trieste, a 1987 6-hour-long Italian TV mini-series. Many of Mattei's films from the 1990s became harder to find as export releases or home video releases.

From 1993 onward, Mattei worked as a director almost exclusively for Italian producer Giovanni Paolucci, a working arrangement that jump-started Mattei's career after he and Frag*o had gone their own ways in 1990. Paolucci produced most of Mattei's later films, beginning with Dangerous Attraction and ending with Mattei's final film, Zombies: The Beginning. Mattei continued directing films right up until his death. Mattei died in Rome, Italy in a hospital after complications from brain tumour surgery on May 21, 2007, at age 75.

He is survived by a son Dario Mattei.

Style

Jason Buchanan described Bruno Mattei's films as "low budget, gore-drenched efforts" and that "B-movie lovers can argue his importance in the realm of film until the world ends, few will deny that his films rarely fail to entertain on terms of sleaze and gratuitous violence alone -- if that's your kind of thing".

Louis Paul, in his *ysis of Italian horror film directors, stated that Mattei's career consisted of him being a "director of copy-cat movies. Whenever a film or a genre became popular, he directed his own (unsanctioned) remake or unofficial sequel." Daniel Budnik, an author of a book on 1980s action films, described Mattei as "no stranger to simply ripping stuff off", noting his use of Goblin's music for Hell of the Living Dead, stock footage from do*entaries on South African tribes, and shark attack footage for his Cruel Jaws, ultimately describing him as "the best of all possible rip-off artists Bruno just really did his own thing and went his own way" which involved "ripping everyone off, but you can't have everything".

Mattei used several aliases throughout his career, including Jordan B. Matthews, Jimmy Matheus, Gilbert Roussel, Axel Berger, Michael Cardoso, David Hunt, Werner Knox, Pierre Le Blanc, Stefan Oblowsky and most famously Vincent Dawn.

Selected filmography

Note: The films listed as N/A are not necessarily chronological.

References

    Bibliography

    • Budnik, Daniel R. (2017). '80s Action Movies on the Cheap. McFarland. ISBN:978-0786497416.
    • Curti, Roberto (2019). Italian Gothic Horror Films, 1980-1989. McFarland. ISBN:978-1476672434.
    • Curti, Roberto (2013). Italian Crime Filmography, 1968-1980. McFarland. ISBN:978-0786469765.
    • Curti, Roberto (2016). Diabolika: Supercriminals, Superheroes and the Comic Book Universe in Italian Cinema. Midnight Marquee Press. ISBN:978-1-936168-60-6.
    • Curti, Roberto (2022). Italian Giallo in Film and Television. McFarland. ISBN:978-1-4766-8248-8.
    • Grant, Kevin (2011). Any Gun Can Play. Fab Press. ISBN:9781903254615.
    • Hayward, Anthony (1988). "Video Releases". Film Review 1988-9. Columbus Books Limited. ISBN:0-86287-939-6.
    • Howarth, Troy (2015a). So Deadly, So Perverse. Vol.:1. Midnight Marquee Press. ISBN:978-1936168507.
    • Howarth, Troy (2015b). So Deadly, So Perverse. Vol.:2. Midnight Marquee Press. ISBN:978-1936168583.
    • Kinnard, Roy; Crnkovich, Tony (2017). Italian Sword and Sandal Films, 1908-1990. McFarland. ISBN:978-1476662916.
    • Lentz III, Harris M. (2008). Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2007. McFarland. ISBN:978-0786451913.
    • Lupi, Gordiano; Gazzarrini, Ivo (2013). Bruno Mattei: L'ultimo artigiano (in Italian). Il foglio. ISBN:978-8876064609.
    • Cortini, Mario; Nutman, Philip (January 1989). "Pastaland Splatter Roundup". Gorezone. No.:5. O'Quinn Studios, Inc.
    • Paul, Louis (2005). Italian Horror Film Directors. McFarland. ISBN:978-0-7864-8749-3.
    • Shipka, Danny (2011). Perverse *illation: The Exploitation Cinema of Italy, Spain and France, 1960–1980. McFarland. ISBN:978-0-7864-4888-3.
    • Smith, Gary Allen (2009). Epic Films. McFarland. ISBN:978-1476604183.

    External links

    • Bruno Mattei at IMDb
    • Bruno Mattei at AllMovie
    Bruno Mattei