Ennio De Concini
Known for: Writing
Born: December 8, 1923 in Rome, Lazio, Italy - Died: November 16, 2008
Ennio De Concini (9 December 1923, Rome – 17 November 2008) was an Italian screenwriter and film director, winning the Academy Award in 1962 for the "Best Original Screenplay" for Divorce Italian Style. He was the co-screenwriter of The Red Tent a 1969 film starring Sean Connery which was based on Umberto Nobile's disastrous 1928 expedition to the North Pole in the airship Italia. Among the 60 films to his credit are The Twist (1976), Four of the Apocalypse (1975), Hitler: The Last Ten Days (1973), Battle of the Worlds (1961), Black Sunday (1960), Long Night in 1943 (1960), Il Grido (1957), War and Peace (1956), and Mambo (1954). Description above from the Wikipedia article Ennio de Concini, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for
Showing 24 of 147 titles
Kino kolossal - Herkules, Maciste & Co
Self
The Man with the Cigar in His Mouth
Self
The Wide Blue Road
Screenplay
I tre corsari
Screenplay
China 9, Liberty 37
Story
War and Peace
Screenplay
Just a Gigolo
Writer
Russia sotto inchiesta
Writer
Assignment: Outer Space
Writer
There Was a Castle with Forty Dogs
Screenplay
Hercules Unchained
Screenplay
Hitler: The Last Ten Days
Director
Guns for San Sebastian
Writer
Four of the Apocalypse
Screenplay
Copkiller
Screenplay
Operation San Pietro
Story
Attila
Screenplay
Human Torpedoes
Screenplay
A Place for Lovers
Screenplay
The Twist
Adaptation
Attack and Retreat
Screenplay
The Red Tent
Screenplay
The Mask
Writer
Romulus and Remus
Screenplay