A colorful and flamboyant Hollywood player for decades,
producer Dino De Laurentiis spent what seemed like eons
producing a remarkable mix of motion pictures, ranging from
art-house fare like Fellini's "La Strada" (1954) to camp
classics like "Barbarella" (1968) to overblown spectacles
like "King Kong" (1976) and "Tai Pan" (1986), as well as
popular entertainment like "Hannibal" (2001). Ever since he
began his producing career with the international hit "Riso
Amaro" ("Bitter Rice") (1948), De Laurentiis financed,
produced or distributed hundreds of movies, including some
of the most significant ever made in cinema history, like
"Serpico" (1973), "Death Wish" (1974) and "Conan the
Barbarian" (1982). With great success often comes great
failure, and De Laurentiis was no stranger to the latter.
Over the years, he went through several production
companies, some of which crumbled under the weight of
expensive box office failures, most notably the dismal
adaptation of Frank Herbert's "Dune" (1984). Toward the end
of the 20th century, De Laurentiis - who had missed out on
the massive success of "Silence of the Lambs (1991) after
declining the rights following the failure of "Manhunter"
(1986) - had a bit of redemption with the box office hit,
"Hannibal" (2001), which spawned another successful sequel,
"Red Dragon" (2002), and cemented his place as one of
cinema's most prolific, long-term producers.
Born on Aug. 8, 1918 in Torre Annunciata, Italy, a small
city in the province of Naples, De Laurentiis was raised by
his father, Rosario, a pasta maker, and his mother,
Giusppina. Though he entered his father's pasta business
while still a teenager, De Laurentiis found the idea of
selling spaghetti unappealing and instead moved to Rome,
where he enrolled in the Centro Sperimentale di
Cinematografia. De Laurentiis supported himself with acting
roles and behind the scenes work until he decided to become
a producer in 1939, making his producing debut with "Troppo
tardi t'ho conosciuta." But it took another nine years
before he enjoyed a real international success with the
neo-realistic "Riso Amaro" ("Bitter Rice") (1948), one of
the landmark films in the Italian neorealist movement that
emerged after World War II. The film starred a buxom
Silvana Mangano, whom De Laurentiis married in July 1949,
as a rice field worker wooed by two men; one respectable
(Raf Vallone) and the other a fugitive (Vittorio Gassman).
The couple collaborated in several more ensuing films,
including "Il Lupo della Sila" ("The Lure of Sila") (1949),
"Il Brigante Musolino" ("Outlaw Girl") (1950) and "Anna"
(1951).
In the 1950s, De Laurentiis joined with Sophia Loren's
husband Carlo Ponti to form a production company that
oversaw several prestigious Italian films, including
Federico Fellini's Oscar-winning melodrama set in the seedy
world of a travelling carnival, "La Strada" (1954). They
went on to make "Attila" (1955), "The Miller's Wife" (1955)
and "Guendalina" (1957) before dissolving their
partnership. By that time, De Laurentiis had branched out
on his own, overseeing the epic "War and Peace" (1956),
directed by King Vidor and starring Audrey Hepburn and
Henry Fonda, while reuniting with Fellini on the
Oscar-winning "The Nights of Cabiria" (1957). In 1959, De
Laurentiis oversaw his third Academy Award nominated
foreign-language motion picture, "The Great War."
Meanwhile, as the 1960s unfolded, De Laurentiis built his
own studio, Dino Citta, and began teaming with some of the
European cinema's finest filmmakers like Vittorio De Sica
on "The Last Judgment" (1962), Jean-Luc Godard on "Pierre
le fou" (1965) and Claude Chabrol on "An Orchid for the
Tiger" (1965). He also worked the Hollywood scene with
films like the religious-themed dramas "Barrabas" (1962)
and the John Huston-directed "The Bible" (1966). This
combination of art-house and commercial fare reached absurd
heights in 1968 with the odd combination of Francois
Truffaut's "The Bride Wore Black" and Roger Vadim's
"Barbarella."
When Dino Citta failed, De Laurentiis relocated to the
United States in the early 1970s and initiated a run of
films that proved popular at the box office. He was
producer of "The Valachi Papers" (1972), which was based on
fact and purported to tell the real story of the Italian
Mafia that a film like "The Godfather" was unable to do.
Meanwhile, "Serpico" (1973) garnered praise for its
true-life tale of police corruption as well as for Al
Pacino's magnificent portrayal as an idealistic young cop
in jeopardy for not taking bribes. He followed with "Death
Wish" (1974), which perhaps tapped most into the zeitgeist,
serving up a revenge tale that spawned several sequels
starring Charles Bronson and countless imitations. While
the spy thriller "Three Days of the Condor" (1975) combined
the elements of pulp entertainment with highbrow
aspirations embodied in star Robert Redford and director
Sydney Pollack, De Laurentiis waded in the muck with
lowbrow entertainment like the dreadful "Mandingo" (1975)
and the more noisome sequel "Drum" (1976).
Perhaps the producer's greatest act of hubris was
undertaking the remake of the 1933 classic "King Kong"
(1976), which he hoped would rival "Jaws" (1975) in terms
of box office take. Famously declaring that "When Jaws
dies, nobody cries. When Kong dies, they all cry," De
Laurentiis instead delivered a campy, low-brow effort full
off cheesy dialogue and over-the-top performances from
Jessica Lange, Jeff Bridges and Charles Grodin. Not losing
his flair for the high-brow, De Laurentiis reteamed with
Fellini one last time for "Fellini's Casanova" (1976), the
director's ill-fated biopic of the great lover (Donald
Sutherland). After producing Ingmar Bergman's venture into
English-language filmmaking, "The Serpent's Egg" (1978), he
produced "The Great Train Robbery" (1979) and "Flash
Gordon" (1980) while delivering an intriguing adaptation of
E.L. Doctorow's historical novel, "Ragtime" (1981),
directed by Milos Forman. Meanwhile, he helped introduce
the world to Arnold Schwarzenegger by producing "Conan the
Barbarian" (1982), which later spawned a sequel "Conant the
Destroyer" (1984) and an off-shoot, "Red Sonja"
(1985).
Amid much fanfare in 1983, De Laurentiis announced the
formation of the De Laurentiis Entertainment Group (DEG),
which included a state-of-the-art film studio in
Wilmington, NC. Serving as chairman and CEO, he oversaw an
ambitious slate of films, most of which proved to be
box-office disappointments. Despite the presence of stars
Anthony Hopkins and Mel Gibson, "The Bounty" (1984), a
retelling of the famous mutiny, failed to find an audience.
Most disappointing of all was "Dune" (1984), director David
Lynch's wildly ambitious and overly muddled distillation of
Frank Herbert's classic sci-fi novel, which proved to be
both an expensive failure and a frustrating mess for
audiences. After the failures of projects like "Year of the
Dragon" (1985) and "Tai Pan" (1986), De Laurentiis ceded
defeat and resigned from DEG in 1988, while the following
year, he lost his wife, Silvana Mangano, to lung cancer.
Perhaps a lesser figure would have been driven from the
industry, but the formidable De Laurentiis formed Dino De
Laurentiis Communications and produced the remake of "The
Desperate Hours" (1990). Following his first foray into
American television, "Stephen King's 'Sometime They Come
Back'" (CBS, 1991), he returned to features as the
executive producer of "Kuffs" (1992) while signing Madonna
to star in "Body of Evidence" (1993), a "Basic
Instinct"-inspired knockoff.
Returning to the small screen, De Laurentiis returned to
the biblically-inspired films of the 1960s and oversaw a
remake of "Solomon and Sheba" (Showtime, 1995) which
starred Jimmy Smits as the biblical ruler of Israel and
Halle Berry as the Queen of Sheba. Also that year, he
steered the television movie depicting the biblical Joseph
(Adrian Pasdar) and his rise out of slavery to become the
chief minister to the Pharaoh of Egypt (Orso Maria
Guerrini) in the oddly-titled "Slave of Dreams" (Showtime,
1995). Although the Ray Liotta thriller "Unforgettable"
(1996) was anything but, De Laurentiis enjoyed a critical
hit with "Breakdown" (1997), a taut thriller starring Kurt
Russell as a husband looking for his wife's kidnapper after
a breakdown in the middle of Nowhere, New Mexico. As the
years piled on, De Laurentiis slowed down his output,
though he did remain active while receiving the Irving G.
Thalberg Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences in 2001.
Following the underwhelming World War II yarn "U-571"
(2000), De Laurentiis brought "Hannibal" (2001) - the
long-awaited sequel to "The Silence of the Lambs" (1991) -
to the screen. Previously, his company held the rights to
Thomas Harris' novels and was behind the Michael
Mann-helmed "Manhunter" (1986). But the financial wreckage
left behind from that box office failure forced the company
to pass on "Lambs," only to see Orion Pictures make a huge
hit that won multiple Oscars. Determined to not let such an
opportunity pass him by again, De Laurentiis at long last
managed to convince Anthony Hopkins to reprise Dr. Hannibal
Lecter despite "Lambs" star Jodie Foster and director
Jonathan Demme declining to participate. With Julianne
Moore as Clarice Starling and Ridley Scott in the
director's chair, De Laurentiis finally brought the picture
to screen. Though a huge box office hit - the film earned
$58 million its opening weekend - "Hannibal" received mix
reviews at best and zero Oscar nominations. De Laurentiis
went back to the well with "Red Dragon" (2002), a remake of
"Manhunter" starring Hopkins and Edward Norton. Several
years later, he produced "Hannibal Rising" (2007), a
prequel that saw the rise of Hannibal Lecter (Gaspard
Ulliel) as a notorious serial killer. The film was savaged
by critics on its way to becoming a box office dud.
Biographical data provided by TCMdb
Dino de Laurentiis, 1919-2010 - TCM Remembers DINO DE LAURENTIIS, 1919-2010
November 11, 2010
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