

Ermanno Olmi
Directing
July 24, 1931
Treviglio, Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy
May 7, 2018
Ermanno Olmi (born July 24, 1931 in Bergamo, Lombardy) was a renowned Italian film director. Olmi's films have been described as "humanistic and reflective, portraying everyday people in particular landscapes and locations, while at the same time being charged with social comment and poetic flashes." His films fit into the artistic mold of Italian neorealism, though Olmi argued, in an interview found on the Criterion Edition DVD of his 1961 film, Il Posto, that this was the artistic tradition he was responding against because he used non-actors in authentic locations whereas neorealism, he claimed, used professional actors. However, many neorealist directors also used non-professional actors for secondary and sometimes even primary roles. His films, like most of those considered to be products of the neorealist movement, are shot in long, slow takes, and generally contain some sort of social commentary.
The Filmography


The Cardboard Village

One Hundred Nails

Tickets

Singing Behind Screens

The Profession of Arms

Genesis: The Creation and the Flood

The Secret of the Old Woods

La valle di pietra

12 Directors for 12 Cities

The Legend of the Holy Drinker

Long Live the Lady!

Walking, Walking

The Circumstance

One Fine Day

The Fiancés
