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Luca Guadagnino

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Italian filmmaker (born 1971)

Luca Guadagnino
Guadagnino in 2024
Born (1971-08-10)10 August 1971 (age 54)
Palermo, Italy
Alma materSapienza University of Rome
Occupations
  • Film director
  • film producer
  • screenwriter
Years active1997–present
PartnerFerdinando Cito Filomarino (2009–2020)

Luca Guadagnino (Italian:[ˈluːkaɡwadaɲˈɲiːno]; born 10 August 1971) is an Italian film director and producer.[1] His films are characterized by their emotional complexity,eroticism, and lavish visuals. Guadagnino has received numerous accolades, including aSilver Lion and anIndependent Spirit Award, alongside nominations for an Academy Award, twoGolden Globes, and threeBAFTAs.

Born inPalermo from an Algerian mother and a Sicilian father, Guadagnino spent part of his childhood in Ethiopia, but the family moved back to Italy to escape theEthiopian Civil War. Guadagnino began his career directing short films and documentaries. He made his feature-film debut withThe Protagonists (1999), the first of his many collaborations with actressTilda Swinton. His follow-upMelissa P. (2005) was a commercial success in Italy but was met with mixed critical reception.

Guadagnino gained further acclaim with his Desire trilogy, which consists of the films I Am Love (2009),A Bigger Splash (2015), andCall Me by Your Name (2017). The latter brought him international recognition.Suspiria (2018), a remake of the1977 film, was Guadagnino's first foray into the horror genre. It was a box office failure and polarized critics. Guadagnino's next projects wereWe Are Who We Are (2020), a coming-of-age miniseries forHBO, the romantic horror filmBones and All (2022), the romantic sports filmChallengers (2024), and the period romantic dramaQueer (2024).

Guadagnino directed several documentaries includingBertolucci on Bertolucci (2013) andSalvatore: The Shoemaker of Dreams (2020). Aside from filmmaking, he has been involved in the world of fashion, directing advertisements for brands likeFendi andSalvatore Ferragamo. In 2012, Guadagnino founded the production companyFrenesy Film Company. He also producedBelluscone: A Sicilian Story (2014),The Truffle Hunters (2020),Salvatore: The Shoemaker of Dreams (2020),Holiday, andEnea (2023).

Early life and education

[edit]

Guadagnino was born on 10 August 1971 inPalermo.[2] HisAlgerian mother grew up inCasablanca,Morocco, and his Italian father was fromCanicattì,Sicily.[3][4][5][6] Guadagnino spent his early childhood inEthiopia, where his father taught history and Italian literature at a technical school inAddis Ababa.[4][7] The family left Ethiopia for Italy in 1977 to escape theEthiopian Civil War and settled in Palermo.[6]

Guadagnino became interested in film making from around the age of nine, and started making amateur films after receiving aSuper 8 camera from his mother.[6] He developed a passion for cinema in earnest during adolescence and programmed VHS recordings of films shown on television.[6] Some of the films cited as his early influences includePsycho (1960),Suspiria (1977) andStarman (1984).[6] He also developed a particular fondness for the films ofIngmar Bergman.[7] As a teenager, Guadagnino was a registered member of theItalian Communist Party, and wrote for the Palermo youth wing newspaper. He resigned his membership after a dispute with the newspaper editor, over the content of one of his interviews.[6]

Guadagnino studied literature at theUniversity of Palermo.[7] He then transferred to theSapienza University of Rome and completed his degree in literature and cinema history,[7] with a thesis on the American filmmakerJonathan Demme.[8] At Sapienza he met actressLaura Betti and would often attend her parties and cook for guests, such asBernardo Bertolucci andValerio Adami. Guadagnino would later describe that experience as his "film school".[7][6]

Career

[edit]

Early work (1999–2008)

[edit]

Guadagnino made his directorial debut with the feature filmThe Protagonists (1999), which was presented at the Venice Film Festival. The film also marks his first collaboration with actresses Tilda Swinton,Fabrizia Sacchi, and editorWalter Fasano.[9][10] In 2002, he directedMundo Civilizado, a musical documentary, presented at the Locarno Film Festival in 2003.[11] His 2004 documentary filmCuoco Contadino, which follows Italian chef Paolo Masieri, was presented at theVenice Film Festival.[12] His second feature film, erotic dramaMelissa P. starringSpanish actressMaría Valverde, made a successful debut the following year.[13]

Desire trilogy and other work (2009–2017)

[edit]

In 2009, he directed, wrote, and produced the cult hitI Am Love. The first installment in Guadagnino's self-described Desire trilogy,[14] was co-produced, and developed by Tilda Swinton—who also stars in the film—over a 7-year period.[15] Presented at a number of international festivals, the film was an immediate success with critics and audiences alike. In 2010, it was nominated for theAcademy Award for Best Costume Design, theGolden Globe for Best Foreign Film, and theBAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language.[16][17][18]

Guadagnino andAndré Aciman at a screening ofCall Me by Your Name, at the2017 Berlin International Film Festival

In 2011, Guadagnino directedInconscio Italiano, a feature-length documentary film presented at theLocarno Film Festival.[19] He also worked on the documentaryBertolucci on Bertolucci (2013), which was shown at the Venice Film Festival, the London Film Festival and Paris Cinemathèque, and 50 other festivals in 2013 and 2014. Co-directed with Walter Fasano, the documentary was made from archival material and received top international accolades.[20][21]

Guadagnino was a producer on the well-received short filmDiarchia (2010), directed by Ferdinando Cito Filomarino and starring Guadagnino collaboratorAlba Rohrwacher, the short won the Pianifica prize at the Locarno Film Festival, received a special mention at theSundance Film Festival in 2011, was nominated for Best Short Film at the European Film Awards, and won the prize for Best Director of a Short Film at the Nastri d'Argento.[22][23] Two years later he producedEdoardo Gabbriellini's feature filmThe Landlords, presented at theLocarno Film Festival. In 2015, Guadagnino produced Filomarino's debut feature filmAntonia, abiopic about Italian poetAntonia Pozzi. Filomarino was inspired by Guadagnino's love of Pozzi's poetry to make the film.[24]

In 2015, Guadagnino directed the second installment of the Desire Trilogy, erotic thrillerA Bigger Splash, withTilda Swinton,Matthias Schoenaerts,Ralph Fiennes andDakota Johnson. The film is loosely based on the 1969 Jacques Deray filmLa Piscine.[25] It had its premiere at the72nd Venice Film Festival where it competed for theGolden Lion.[26][27]

Guadagnino's next film wasCall Me by Your Name, an adaptation of André Aciman's novel of the same name, starringTimothée Chalamet,Armie Hammer, andMichael Stuhlbarg. Filming took place inCrema, Italy, in May and June 2016, and the film debuted at the2017 Sundance Film Festival.[28] It was theatrically released in the United Kingdom on 27 October 2017, and in the United States on 24 November.[29]

International recognition (2017–present)

[edit]

In September 2015, Guadagnino announced at the72nd Venice Film Festival[30] his plans to direct a remake ofDario Argento'sSuspiria. Guadagnino sethis version in Berlin circa 1977—the year in which the original film was released—and aimed to focus on "the concept [and...] uncompromising force of motherhood."[31][32][33] Tilda Swinton and Dakota Johnson starred in the film, reuniting from Guadagnino'sA Bigger Splash.[34] Shooting began in Italy in October 2016, and concluded on 10 March 2017, in Berlin.[35][36][37]Suspiria premiered at the75th Venice Film Festival and polarized critics.[38]

In January 2019, it was announced Guadagnino had directedThe Staggering Girl, a short film starringJulianne Moore,Kyle MacLachlan,Marthe Keller,KiKi Layne,Mia Goth andAlba Rohrwacher.[39] The 35-minute short premiered during the 2019CannesDirectors' Fortnight section.[40] The following year, Guadagnino served as an executive producer onThe Truffle Hunters, a documentary film directed byMichael Dweck and Gregory Kirshaw, which had its world premiere at theSundance Film Festival.[41][42] and directedSalvatore Ferragamo: The Shoemaker of Dreams a documentary film revolving aroundSalvatore Ferragamo.[43] The film had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival on 5 September 2020.

He also wrote and directedWe Are Who We Are an 8-episode limited series forHBO, starringChloë Sevigny,Kid Cudi,Alice Braga,Jack Dylan Grazer,Spence Moore II, Jordan Kristine Seamon, Faith Alabi, Corey Knight, Tom Mercier,Francesca Scorsese, Ben Taylor andSebastiano Pigazzi. It premiered on 14 September 2020.[44][45] In 2021, Guadagnino served as a producer onBeckett—previously titledBorn to Be Murdered—directed byFerdinando Cito Filomarino starringAlicia Vikander andJohn David Washington.[46]

Guadagnino and the cast ofQueer at the81st Venice International Film Festival.

On 28 January 2021, it was reported that Guadagnino was going to direct an adaptation ofCamille DeAngelis's 2015 novel about teenage cannibalsBones & All, withTimothée Chalamet andTaylor Russell in talks to star.[47][48] The film,Bones and All, had its world premiere at the79th Venice International Film Festival on 2 September 2022, where it wonSilver Lion for best direction.[49][50] In 2023, he co-produced two Italian films and one short film, under his production companyFrenesy Film Company, Margherita Giusti'sThe Meatseller,Pietro Castellitto'sEnea andEdoardo Gabbriellini'sHoliday. The three projects premiered at the80th Venice International Film Festival and2023 TIFF, respectively.[51][52][53]

On 11 February 2022, he signed on to direct the sports drama filmChallengers, starringZendaya,Josh O'Connor andMike Faist.[54] It was filmed in Boston in 2022 and was released in the United States on April 26, 2024, being acclaimed by critics and grossing over $90 million worldwide.[55][56][57][58] That same year he produced Giovanni Tortorici'sDiciannove[59][60] andDea Kulumbegashvili'sApril.[52]April premiered at the81st Venice International Film Festival, where it competed for theGolden Lion.[61] Tortorici's film also premiered at Venice in theOrizzonti section.[62][63][64] Guadagnino's second film of the year wasan adaptation ofWilliam S. Burroughs novelQueer, withDaniel Craig in the lead.[65][66] Filming was completed atCinecittà studios in Rome in June 2023.[51] The film premiered at the81st Venice International Film Festival, where it competed for theGolden Lion.[67] It received generally positive reviews.[68][69]

Guadagnino's thriller filmAfter the Hunt, written by Nora Garrett and starringJulia Roberts andAndrew Garfield, forAmazon MGM Studios andImagine Entertainment.[70]Principal photography took place between July and August 2024 inLondon andCambridge University.[71][72] The film premiered out of competition in the82nd Venice International Film Festival, and received mixed reviews.[73][74] He also served as producer onHailey Gates' directorial feature debutAtropia, which finished shooting in July 2023, under his Frenesy banner.[52]

Luca Guadagnino at the 2025 New York Film Festival for After the Hunt

By early 2025, Guadagnino was confirmed as the director ofArtificial, based on the briefdismissal ofSam Altman as CEO ofOpenAI, a move led byIlya Sutskever. Written bySimon Rich and produced by Amazon MGM Studios, which also producedChallengers andAfter the Hunt. Principal photography took place between July and October 2025 in Italy, with a theatrical release planned for 2026.[75][76][77][78] It will starAndrew Garfield,Yura Borisov,Cooper Koch,Ike Barinholtz,Cooper Hoffman,Jason Schwartzman andMonica Barbaro.[79][80][81][82][83]

Prospective projects

[edit]
Main article:Luca Guadagnino's unrealized projects

Guadagnino was attached to direct multiple projects including abiographical film about Hollywood hustlerScotty Bowers,[84] and an adaption ofLord of the Flies, withPatrick Ness adapting the book forWarner Bros.[85][86] In March 2024, Guadagnino toldla Repubblica his next project would beSeparate Rooms, a film adaptation ofPier Vittorio Tondelli's 1989's novel,Camere separate.[87]Variety reportedJosh O'Connor was in talks to star.[88] By early 2025, O'Connor announced he was no long attached to star it.[89]

In October 2024, Guadagnino was entering final negotiations to direct a "new interpretation" ofBret Easton Ellis's 1991 novel,American Psycho, withScott Z. Burns adapting for Lionsgate.[90][91] In December of the same year,Variety reported thatAustin Butler was in discussions to star asPatrick Bateman.[92]

Other activities

[edit]

Guadagnino has served twice on the jury of theTorino Film Festival: in 2003 for the short flm section and in 2006 for the official jury. In 2010, he was a member of the Venice Film Festival.[93] In 2011, he served as president of the Beirut Film Festival,[94] and on the jury of the Locarno Film Festival.[95]

Outside of film, he began working with the Italian fashion houseFendi in 2005.[96] In 2012, he created Frenesy, a creative agency and production company that conceives and implements communications for luxury brands and produces fashion films, video and print advertising, and high-profile creative events.[97]

Guadagnino headed the jury forLouis Vuitton's Journey Awards in 2012, an international competition dedicated to young filmmakers.[98] He also participated as a jury member in the first edition ofFashion Film Festival Milano in 2014, chaired byFranca Sozzani, chief editor ofVogue Italia.[99] In December 2011, he made his debut as an opera director withFalstaff byGiuseppe Verdi at theTeatro Filarmonico in Verona, Italy.[100]

Luca Guadagnino will preside over the jury of the upcomingMarrakech International Film Festival, replacingThomas Vinterberg, who had previously been appointed president of the fest’s jury but “had to excuse himself for family reasons,” according to a festival statement.[101][102][103]

Influences and style

[edit]

Guadagnino cited seeing the desert in the filmLawrence of Arabia at age five, as his "first impression of a screen, which had nothing to do with the actual film." Despite being influenced byItalian filmmakers such asBernardo Bertolucci,Roberto Rossellini,Luchino Visconti,Dario Argento,Pier Paolo Pasolini andFederico Fellini, Guadagnino considers himself to be an international rather than Italian filmmaker, and has expressed a wish to be seen asAlgerian one (given the nationality of his mother), saying: "[...] I grew up in Ethiopia. I came to Italy when I was seven. In my mind, deep emotions and visual landscapes are from Ethiopia and not Palermo or any place in Italy. I arrived in Italy as an outsider."[104][105] He has also said during his youth he was an “isolated” person who was “healing” himself with cinema and “finding a lot of solace” in horror movies.[106] Other directors Guadagnino cites as influences includeAlfred Hitchcock,Jean-Luc Godard,Nagisa Oshima,Rainer Werner Fassbinder, andDouglas Sirk.[5][107][108] For the 2012Sight & Sound directors' poll, Guadagnino listed,The Blue Gardenia,Come and Go,Fanny and Alexander,The Fury,Goodbye South, Goodbye,Histoire(s) du cinéma,In the Realm of the Senses,Journey to Italy,Psycho andVeronika Voss as his favourite films.[109]

Frequent collaborators

[edit]

Guadagnino usually has a long-standing group of actors and crew who participate in most of his work. Actors who usually appear in his films includeTilda Swinton,Fabrizia Sacchi,Alba Rohrwacher,Chloë Sevigny,Timothée Chalamet,Dakota Johnson, andMichael Stuhlbarg. Swinton has appeared in four of his films and was the subject of the documentary shortTilda Swinton: The Love Factory.[110][111][112] Sacchi has appeared in three of his features and various other projects, such as the short filmsL'uommo risacca andThe Staggering Girl, as well as in the documentaryMundo Civilizado. Rohrwacher has also appeared inThe Staggering Girl as well as in the Guadagnino produced shortDiarchia. Aside from starring inCall Me By Your Name andBones and All, Chalamet also had a small cameo inWe Are Who We Are.[113][114]

Yorick Le Saux andSayombhu Mukdeeprom are Guadagnino's most frequent cinematographers. Le Saux has worked inI Am Love,A Bigger Splash, three episodes ofWe Are Who We Are, and several of Guadagnino's fashion films.[15] Mukdeeprom shot his two most recent films,Antonia andBeckett, as well as the short filmThe Staggering Girl.[115]

Walter Fasano has been Guadagnino's main editor since 1997, having worked in every project of his until Suspiria.[116][117] Guadagnino regularly works with producers, Francesco Melzi d'Eril,Marco Morabito, and screenwriterDavid Kajganich.

CollaboratorRoleThe ProtagonistsMelissa P.I Am LoveA Bigger SplashCall Me By Your NameSuspiriaWe Are Who We AreBones and AllChallengersQueerAfter the HuntTotal
Walter Fasano[a]EditorYesYYesYYesYYesYYesYYesY6
Marco MorabitoProducerYesYYesYYesYYesYYesYYesY6
Francesco Melzi d'ErilProducerYesYYesYYesYYesYYesY5
Giulia PiersantiCostume designerYesYYesYYesYYesYYesYYesY6
Marco CostaEditorYesYYesYYesYYesYYesY5
Sayombhu MukdeepromCinematographyYesYYesYYesYYesY4
Tilda SwintonActressYesYYesYYesYYesY4
Trent Reznor andAtticus RossComposersYesYYesYYesYYesY4
Fabrizia SacchiActressYesYYesYYesY3
Yorick Le SauxCinematographyYesYYesYYesY3
David KajganichScreenwriterYesYYesYYesY3
Lorenzo MieliProducerYesYYesYYesY3
Chloë SevignyActressYesYYesYYesY3
Michael StuhlbargActorYesYYesYYesY3
Jessica HarperActressYesYYesY2
Barbara AlbertiScreenwriterYesYYesY2
Jonathan AndersonCostume designerYesYYesY2
Justin KuritzkesScreenwriterYesYYesY2
Alba RohrwacherActressYesYYesY2
Dakota JohnsonActressYesYYesY2
Elena BucciActressYesYYesY2
Timothée Chalamet[b]ActorYesYYesY2
  1. ^Also screenwriter forI Am Love.
  2. ^Also co-producer forBones and All.

Personal life

[edit]

Guadagnino lived and worked in a 17th-century palazzo inCrema.[118] He no longer lives in Crema, citing a lack of privacy due to the success ofCall Me By Your Name. As of 2024, he lives inMilan.[87] From 2009 to 2020, he was in a relationship withFerdinando Cito Filomarino.[119][120]

Filmography

[edit]

Feature film

[edit]
YearTitleDirectorProducerWriter
1999The ProtagonistsYesNoYes
2005Melissa P.YesNoYes
2009I Am LoveYesYesYes
2015A Bigger SplashYesYesNo
2017Call Me by Your NameYesYesNo
2018SuspiriaYesYesNo
2022Bones and AllYesYesNo
2024ChallengersYesYesNo
QueerYesYesNo
2025After the HuntYesYesNo
TBAArtificialYesYesNo

Producer only

Main article:Frenesy Film Company

Documentary film

[edit]
YearTitleDirectorWriterProducerNotes
2003Mundo civilizadoYesNoNo
The Making of LotusYesNoNo
2004Cuoco contadinoYesYesNo
2008The Love Factory No. 3
Pippo Delbono – Bisogna morire
YesYesYes
2011Inconscio italianoYesNoNo
2013Bertolucci on BertolucciYesNoYesco-directed withWalter Fasano
2020Salvatore: Shoemaker of DreamsYesNoNo[43]

Documentary short

  • Tilda Swinton: The Love Factory (2002)
  • Arto Lindsay Perdoa a Beleza (The Love Factory Series) (2004)

Short film

[edit]
YearTitleDirectorWriterProducer
1997QuiYesNoNo
2000L'uomo risaccaYesNoNo
2001Au RevoirYesYesNo
2002RossoNoNoYes
2007Part DeuxYesNoNo
DelfinasiaNoNoYes
2010DiarchiaNoNoYes
ChronologyYesYesNo
2019The Staggering GirlYesNoYes
2020Fiori, Fiori, FioriYesYesYes
2021O Night DivineYesNoYes
2023The MeatsellerNoNoYes

Television

[edit]
YearTitleDirectorWriterProducerNotes
2020We Are Who We AreYesYesYesMiniseries

Music videos

[edit]
YearTitleArtistRef
2021"Tell Me You Love Me"Sufjan Stevens[121]
"Toy Boy"Colapesce
Dimartino
Ornella Vanoni
[122]

Lyricist

[edit]
YearTitleMovieNotes
2024"Compress / Repress"Challengersco-writer credit on the song

Advertising

[edit]
YearTitleDirectorWriterProducerBrandRef.
2012DestinéeYesNoNoCartier[123]
HereYesConcept byNoStarwood[124]
One Plus OneYesNoNoGiorgio Armani[125]
The SwitchNoNoYesTod's[126]
2013Adele's DreamNoNoYesFendi[127]
Walking StoriesYesNoYesSalvatore Ferragamo[128]
2014A Rose RebornNoNoYesErmenegildo Zegna[129]
2021SS21YesConcept byYesSalvatore Ferragamo[130]
2024See You at 5YesConcept byYesChanel[131]

Awards and nominations

[edit]
YearAwardCategoryNominated workResultRef.
1999Venice Film FestivalFEDIC Award - Special MentionThe ProtagonistsWon
2008Turin Film FestivalBest Italian Documentary FilmThe Love Factory No. 3Won
2009Venice Film FestivalQueer LionI Am LoveNominated[132]
2010Berlin Film FestivalBest Feature FilmNominated[133]
Boulder International Film FestivalBest Feature FilmWon[134]
Nastro D'Argento AwardsBest Original StoryNominated
Santa Barbara International Film FestivalBest International FilmNominated[135]
2011Alliance of Women Film Journalists AwardsBest Non-English Language FilmNominated[136]
British Academy Film AwardsBest Film Not in the English LanguageNominated[137]
Broadcast Film Critics Association AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated[138]
Golden Globe AwardsBest Foreign Language FilmNominated[139]
2014Nastro D'Argento AwardsBest Documentary About CinemaBertolucci on BertolucciNominated
2015Venice Film FestivalGolden LionA Bigger SplashNominated[140]
Soundtrack Stars AwardWon
Best Innovative Budget AwardWon
2017The Advocate's Person of the YearFinalist[141]
Adelaide Film FestivalBest FeatureCall Me by Your NameNominated[142]
Berlin International Film FestivalBest Feature FilmNominated[143]
Chéries-Chéris Film FestivalBest Feature FilmWon[144]
Chicago Film Critics Association AwardsBest FilmNominated[145]
Best DirectorNominated
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association AwardsBest Film4th place[146]
Florida Film Critics Circle AwardsBest FilmNominated[147]
Ghent International Film FestivalBest FilmNominated[148]
Gotham Independent Film AwardsBest FeatureWon[149]
Audience AwardNominated
IndieWire Critics PollBest Film7th place[150]
Best Director2nd place
Lisbon & Estoril Film FestivalBest FilmWon[151]
Audience AwardNominated
Ljubljana International Film FestivalBest FeatureWon[152]
Los Angeles Film Critics Association AwardsBest FilmWon[153]
Best DirectorWon
National Board of Review AwardsTop Ten Films of the YearWon[154]
Melbourne International Film FestivalBest Narrative FeatureWon[155]
Miskolc International Film FestivalEmeric Pressburger AwardWon[156]
Online Film Critics Society AwardsBest PictureNominated[157]
San Diego Film Critics Society AwardsBest FilmNominated[158]
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics CircleBest FilmNominated[159]
San Sebastián International Film FestivalBest FilmNominated[160]
St. Louis International Film FestivalAudience Choice AwardWon[161]
Sydney Film FestivalAudience Award2nd place[162]
Toronto International Film FestivalPeople's Choice Award3rd place[163]
Village Voice Film PollBest Director4th place[164]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association AwardsBest FilmNominated[165]
2018AACTA International AwardsBest DirectionNominated[166]
Academy AwardsBest PictureNominated[167]
American Film Institute AwardsTop Ten Films of the YearWon[168]
Amanda AwardsBest Foreign Feature FilmNominated[169]
Austin Film Critics Association AwardsBest FilmNominated[170]
British Academy Film AwardsBest FilmNominated[171]
Best DirectionNominated
Capri Hollywood International Film FestivalFilmmaker of the YearWon[172]
Critics' Choice Movie AwardsBest DirectorNominated[173]
Dorian AwardsFilm of the YearWon[174]
Director of the Year (Film and Television)Nominated
LGBTQ Film of the YearWon
Empire AwardsBest FilmNominated[175]
European Film AwardsPeople's Choice Award for Best European FilmWon[176]
Georgia Film Critics Association AwardsBest PictureNominated[177]
Golden Ciak AwardsBest FilmWon[178]
Best ProducerNominated
Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture – DramaNominated[179]
Houston Film Critics Society AwardsBest PictureNominated[180]
Independent Spirit AwardsBest FilmNominated[181]
Best DirectorNominated
International Cinephile Society AwardsBest PictureWon[182]
Best DirectorRunner-up
London Film Critics' Circle AwardsFilm of the YearNominated[183]
Director of the YearNominated
Los Angeles Italia Film FestivalExcellence AwardWon[184]
Nastro d'Argento AwardsBest FilmNominated[185]
Best DirectorNominated
Producers Guild of America AwardsBest Theatrical Motion PictureNominated[186]
Satellite AwardsBest FilmNominated[187]
Venice Film FestivalGolden LionSuspiriaNominated[188]
[189]
Queer LionNominated
2019Independent Spirit AwardsRobert Altman AwardWon[190]
2022Gothenburg Film FestivalHonorary Dragon AwardWon[191]
Provincetown International Film FestivalFilmmaker on the Edge AwardWon[192]
Venice Film FestivalSilver LionBones and AllWon[50]
Golden LionNominated
Zurich Film FestivalA Tribute to... AwardWon[193]
Independent Spirit AwardsBest FeatureBones and AllNominated[194]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Toto, Christian (1 July 2010)."Interview: 'I Am Love' director Luca Guadagnino".The Washington Times.Archived from the original on 12 April 2012. Retrieved25 October 2010.
  2. ^Antonelli, Carlo (3 November 2016)."Luca Guadagnino talks to Carlo Antonelli".Dapper Dan Magazine. Archived fromthe original on 1 November 2018.
  3. ^d'Annunzio, Grazia (30 August 2010)."Mi piace essere un outsider naturale" [I like to be a natural outsider].Vogue Italia (in Italian). Milan:Condé Nast.Archived from the original on 28 January 2018. Retrieved17 October 2018.
  4. ^abPiacenza, Paola (23 July 2011)."Luca Guadagnino: 'Racconto il lato inconfessabile dell'Italia'" [Luca Guadagnino: 'I'm telling the most unspeakable side of Italy'].IO Donna (in Italian). Milan.Archived from the original on 19 April 2018. Retrieved17 October 2018.
  5. ^abMinthe, Caterina (23 May 2017)."Interview: Italian-Algerian Film Director Luca Guadagnino".Vogue Arabia.Condé Nast.Archived from the original on 27 December 2017. Retrieved26 December 2017.
  6. ^abcdefgHeller, Nathan (15 October 2018)."Luca Guadagnino's Cinema of Desire".The New Yorker.Archived from the original on 2 November 2018. Retrieved25 November 2018.
  7. ^abcdeDana Thomas (1 August 2016),One Italian Filmmaker's Ultimate Set — His Own HomeArchived 16 March 2021 at theWayback MachineT: The New York Times Style Magazine.
  8. ^"Luca Guadagnino".Göteborg Film Festival. Archived fromthe original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved30 April 2017.
  9. ^Tch."The Protagonists 1999, directed by Luca Guadagnino - Film Review".TimeOut.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  10. ^Pulver, Andrew (4 February 2016)."A Bigger Splash director: 'Italian cinema is mostly a bureau for tourism'".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 28 April 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  11. ^"Mundo Civilizado di Luca Guadagnino".Sentieri Selvaggi (in Italian). 7 June 2005.Archived from the original on 30 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  12. ^"Il cuoco contadino: i segreti della cucina di Paolo Masieri".Food Lifestyle (in Italian). 24 July 2020.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  13. ^Young, Deborah (4 December 2005)."Melissa P."Variety.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  14. ^Leonelli, Lisa (22 November 2017)."Luca Guadagnino on desire".Cultural Daily.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  15. ^ab"Cinematographer Yorick Le Saux creates artful images for the sensous Italian melodrama I Am Love".The American Society of Cinematographers. 1 July 2010.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  16. ^"2011 Oscars".Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 7 October 2014.Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  17. ^"2011 Golden Globes".Golden Globes.Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  18. ^"Baftas nominations 2011: full list".The Guardian. 18 January 2011.Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  19. ^"Guadagnino indaga nell'Inconscio italiano".swissinfo (in Italian). 9 August 2011.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
  20. ^"Bertolucci on Bertolucci".Documenta Madrid.Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved29 December 2021.
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