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  1. Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia

    Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia

    Italian film director

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  1. Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia (8 July 1894 – 4 January 1998) was an Italian film director whose career spanned from the 1930s to the mid-1960s. He mainly directed adventure pictures and popular comedies, including some starring Totò.

  2. Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia è stato un regista, sceneggiatore e fotografo italiano. Regista prolifico, Bragaglia portò nel cinema italiano l'amore per il nonsense e il surreale e moduli di lavoro di tipo efficientista, già comuni negli altri paesi ma ancora sconosciuti in Italia, dove il cinema continuava ad avere connotazioni artigianali.

  3. Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia was born on 8 July 1894 in Frosinone, Lazio, Italy. He was a director and writer, known for Amore (1935), Barbablù (1941) and La vita è bella (1943). He died on 3 January 1998 in Rome, Lazio, Italy.

    • Director, Writer, Actor
    • July 8, 1894
    • Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia
    • January 3, 1998
  4. Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, né à Frosinone le 8 juillet 1894 et mort à Rome le 3 janvier 1998, est un réalisateur et scénariste italien.

    • 3 janvier 1998 (à 103 ans)Rome, LatiumItalie
    • Italien
    • 8 juillet 1894Frosinone, LatiumItalie
    • Cimetière de Campo Verano
  5. Hannibal: Directed by Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, Edgar G. Ulmer. With Victor Mature, Gabriele Ferzetti, Rita Gam, Milly Vitale. During the Second Punic War in 218 BC, Carthaginian general Hannibal attacks the Roman Republic by crossing the Pyrenees and the Alps with his vast army.

    • (1.1K)
    • Action, Adventure, Biography
    • Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, Edgar G. Ulmer
    • 1960-06-18
  6. Over his over 40-year-long career as a filmmaker, Carlo Lucovico Bragaglia is most fondly remembered in his native Italy for a string of popular comedies starring Toto, including Toto le Moko (1949) and Le Sei Mogli di Barbalu (1950), but he also directed films of other genres including dramas, melodramas, and sword and sandal adventures.

  7. In 1918, with Carlo Ludovico, he founded La Casa dArte Bragaglia, the first Italian example of a private gallery where the great artists of the 1900’s could exhibit their works. In 1930, the brothers separated and each set out on his own career, following his own interests.

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