An interview with Sergio Leone from the pages of the June 1984 issue of American Film written by Pete Hamill. Throughout the candid interview, it’s clear filmmaking is a sacred belief to Leone who hails from a family steeped in the tradition of filmmaking. Often attributed with perfecting the spaghetti western genre with A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS (1964), THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY (1966) and ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1968), Leone developed an artistic voice with a precise knack for uncovering the raw realities of the often cartoonish and glamorized American Wild West conceived by Hollywood during the 1950s. Leone confides to us about the arduous and lonely process of filmmaking throughout the 10-year process on what would be his last and arguably greatest film. Here he speaks to the sacraments of technical filmmaking and his devoted belief in the idealized American dream with the sentiment, “America is the determined negation of the Old World, the Adult World.” —American Film Institute
Get Cinephilia & Beyond in your inbox by signing in
[newsletter]April 11, 2024 By Graham S. Clarke and Ross Clarke The combination…
Interstellar poster art by Zero March 13, 2024 By Tim Pelan I…
Applause Books on Film (Rowman/Littlefield Publishing) February 23, 2024 By Donald Brackett …
Mulholland Drive poster art by Kevin Tong January 4, 2024 By Koraljka Suton…
The Wicker Man poster art by Dan Mumford, https://www.dan-mumford.com/ November 6, 2023 By…
RoboCop poster art by Grzegorz Domaradzki (Gabz), https://iamgabz.com/ August 21, 2023 By Tim…