
Fernando Di Leo
Directing
🎂 1932-01-11
Fernando Di Leo (11 January 1932 – 2 December 2003) was an Italian film director and script writer. He made 17 films as a director and about 50 scripts from 1964 to 1985. Fernando Di Leo was born on 11 January 1932 in San Ferdinando di Puglia. After briefly working in Rome's film school Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, di Leo made his debut as a director as part of the omnibus comedy Gli eroi di ieri, oggi, domani with his episode titled Un posto in paradiso (transl. A Place in Heaven). Following this Di Leo wrote several scripts for Westerns, often uncredited. This included work on A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More. Some of his Westerns had uncredited literary sources, such as Days of Vengeance which is loosely based on Alexandre Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo. Di Leo was a fan of film noir and wanted to make an Italian version of these films. Among his first efforts was the script for Mino Guerrini's Date for a Murder based on Franco Enna's novel Tempo di massacro written in 1955. In Di Leo's version, the setting is moved to a contemporary Rome and has elements of contemporary spy films. Di Leo worked with Guerrini again on the film Gangsters '70 which did not do well at the box office. Di Leo began directing more of his own films at the time including the war film Red Roses for the Fuhrer and a few erotic films: A Woman on Fire, A Wrong Way to Love and Seduction. From 1969 to 1976, di Leo was able to produce many of his own works with his production company Duania cineproduzioni 70. He followed this with a return to noir with Naked Violence, a film adapting a novel by Giorgio Scerbanenco, a writer who Di Leo would adapt for several future film productions. Di Leo would make a giallo film with Slaughter Hotel starring Klaus Kinski and Margaret Lee. Following this Di Leo worked on Caliber 9 and The Italian Connection which were both inspired by the writing of Scerbanenco. He followed up this film Il Boss, a film which got Di Leo in trouble with politicians and authorities due to the film's display of connections between the mafia and Italy's major party Democrazia Cristiana. Di Leo followed this up with Shoot First, Die Later in 1974. Di Leo worked through the latter half of the 1970s directing Mister Scarface, Kidnap Syndicate, and Nick the Sting. He also wrote scripts for other directors such as Romolo Guerrieri's Young, Violent, Dangerous, and Ruggero Deodato's Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man. Di Leo's last film produced by his company Duania cineproduzioni 70 was Rulers of the City in 1976. He continued with a few more films after with the film noir Blood and Diamonds, the erotic drama To Be Twenty - both in 1978, and Madness in 1980. Di Leo worked in television in the 1980s, starting with the television series L'assassino ha le ore contate, which involved six one-hour-long made-for-TV films produced by RAI Uno which as of 2013 are unreleased. Di Leo also made The Violent Breed and his last film Killer vs. Killers in the mid-1980s. Killer vs. Killers wasn't released theatrically in Italy and only surfaced 20 years later on DVD. Di Leo died in December 2003.
Cast credits(15)

Cigar Smoking Card Player (uncredited)
1965

Man Giving Directions
1978

Fuentes Henchman
1965

giornalista TV (uncredited)
1974

Cocchi's Henchman (uncredited)
1973

Film Director in Front of Police Station (uncredited)
1976

Self
2008

Self - Filmmaker
2001

Man at House of Prostitution
1969

Self
2013

Self
2004

1986
Self
2004
Himself
2004

1979
Writing (59)

Screenplay
1964

Screenplay
1980

Screenplay
1978

Story
1978

Screenplay
1965

Screenplay
1967

Story
1966

Screenplay
1966

Original Film Writer
2023

Story
1972

Screenplay
1972

Writer
1973

Screenplay
1968

Screenplay
1966

Screenplay
1976

Story
1976

Screenplay
1967

Story
1972

Screenplay
1972

Dialogue
1972

Story
1976

Screenplay
1976

Screenplay
1966

Story
1973

Screenplay
1973

Screenplay
1971

Story
1971

Writer
1968

Screenplay
1966

Screenplay
1975

Screenplay
1975

Story
1966

Screenplay
1966

Screenplay
1974

Writer
1985

Screenplay
1985

Story
1976

Screenplay
1976

Writer
1967

Screenplay
1967

Story
1978

Screenplay
1978

Writer
1968

Screenplay
1969

Screenplay
1984

Writer
1967

Screenplay
1967

Screenplay
1968

Writer
1969

Writer
1969

Screenplay
1967

Story
1968

Screenplay
1968

Writer
1967

Story
1967

Screenplay
1967

Screenplay
1967

Story
1968

Screenplay
1968