Sergio Sollima, director and screenwriter, Died at 94

  Actor

Sergio Sollima was born on April 17, 1921, and died on July 1, 2015.

He was an Italian film director and script writer.

Like many Italian cult directors, Sergio started his career as a screenwriter in the 1950s and wrote many peplum films in the 1960s.

Sergio made his directing debut doing one of the four sequences in the anthology film of Wayward Love.

Sergio filmed three Eurospy films, then moved to spaghetti westerns.

The Big Gundown (starring Lee Van Cleef and Tomas Milian) was released in 1966 with big success, despite the fact that it had to compete with Sergio Leone’s The Good, the Bad and the Ugly and Sergio Corbucci’s Django.

Sergio soon filmed two more westerns. Face to Face (Milian and Gian Maria Volonté) was released in 1967 and Run, Man, Run! (Milian) in 1968.

Although Sergio directed only three westerns and they never reached the level of popularity as the ones by the other Sergios (Leone and Corbucci), each of them is highly regarded among genre enthusiasts.

In 1970, Sergio switched genres again and directed the Charles Bronson and Telly Savalas starred Violent City, which was one of the first violent and fast-paced Italian crime films often known as poliziotteschi.

Like for all of his westerns, the soundtrack was provided by Ennio Morricone.

Sergio last well-known film is Revolver, a poliziotteschi film starring Oliver Reed and Fabio Testi.

He directed an Italian miniseries of Sandokan starring Kabir Bedi with several feature films spun off the series.

Sergio Sollima passed away at age 94 in July 2015.