Giuseppe Petitto

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Giuseppe Petitto (11 July 1969 – 2 September 2015) was an Italian film director.[1]

Career

Born in Catanzaro, Petitto was a graduate of the National Film School in Rome, Italy (Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia), also holding a bachelor's degree in Law, he has served as a director, producer, and editor on several short and feature-length films both documentary and fiction, some of which have gained critical International acclaim. Mostly active in human-rights related filmmaking, his former works have focused on children's rights abuse, civilian war victims, mental disorders, international politics, corruption and were produced in collaboration with European and American broadcasters such as BBC, ZDF, RAI, PBS, TVO, YLE, CANAL+. Among other International Awards, he received in New York City the Human Rights Watch Nestor Almendros Award for courage and commitment in human rights filmmaking. He currently lives and works in Rome, Italy.

File:HRW Nestor Almendros Award - Giuseppe Petitto - Arthur Penn.jpg
Arthur Penn (left) presents to Giuseppe Petitto (right) the Human Rights Watch Nestor Almendros Award for courage and commitment in human rights filmmaking. Lincoln Center, New York

Facts

On June 13, 2001 at the Alice Tully Hall of the Lincoln Centre in New York, he received the Human Rights Watch Nestor Almendros Award for courage and commitment in human rights filmmaking. Presenting the award to the filmmaker was venerable U.S. director Arthur Penn, who praised the documentary, saying, "Making a documentary like this, takes another kind of courage. It takes the courage to say that this story is not known widely enough... This story needs to be told. This is a film that never flinches; I promise you." Source: Human Rights Watch

File:Petitto-Wenders-1a.jpg
Giuseppe Petitto at work with Wim Wenders

He received a public endorsement by Martin Scorsese that read: "This is a brave, intelligent, tough movie that must be seen, now more than ever. Much more than just a piece of reporting, it is a very human portrait of the people of Afghanistan, and the horror of living in a state of never-ending war." Source: Human Rights Watch

Awards

Nestor Almendros Award (Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, New York 2001), Phoenix Award for best documentary (Cologne Conference 2001), Special mention of the jury, and Audience Award at the One World Film Festival (Prague 2001), Best Feature length Documentary Award at the Vancouver film festival 2001, Columbine Award for Best Documentary at the Moondance International Film Festival (Colorado, USA), 2001 Freedom of Expression Honor by The U.S. National Board of Review, Silver Wolf Award (IDFA International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam 2000), Actual Award Barcelona 2000, Daunbailò Award at the Genova Film Festival 2002, UNICEF Award at the R.I.F.F. Rome Independent Film Festival 2002, Cipputi Award at the Torino Film Festival - DOC 2002 competition, Special Mention of the jury at the Festival Internaciònal de cine e derechos umanos 2003 (Barcelona), Golden Spike Award at the Social World Film Festival 2011.

Sources

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The New York Times (June 15, 2001; November 18, 2001; November 23, 2001), The Guardian (August 27, 2002), The Los Angeles Times (October 3, 2001), Volkskrant (November 2002), Der Spiegel (November 2001), The New Yorker (November 27, 2001), San Francisco Examiner (March 15, 2002), San Francisco Chronicle (March 15, 2002), San Francisco Bay Guardian (March 2002), Variety (November 30, 2001), Indiewire (June 15, 2001), The Hollywood Reporter (January 7, 2002), La vanguardia (Barcelona, November 12, 2003).

External links