Gastone Moschin
7 titles
Filmography
7 results

Caliber 9
(1972)In the first film of the Fernando Di Leo triology, small-time gangster Ugo Piazza has just been released from prison. He tries to convince the police, the mafia, and his one-time associate Rocco, a sadistic hoodlum who enjoys sick violence and torture, that he wants to go straight, but everyone believes he has $300,000 of stolen money hidden somewhere. Caliber 9’s stylized violence, fast-paced action sequences, tight editing and plot twists prefigure the work of Quentin Tarantino and John Woo. The film also features a notable score by Luis Bacalov and the stunning Barbara Bouchet as Ugo’s go-go dancing girlfriend.

Emergency Squad
(1974)A cop is consumed with the desire to get revenge on the crook who shot his wife to death during a robbery. The crook in question is trying to assemble funds for his own retirement.

The Conformist
(1971)Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Conformist returns in a dazzling new restoration supervised by the director and cinematographer Vittorio Storaro! One of the enduring masterpieces of the 1970s, Bertolucci’s breakthrough film The Conformist is an elegant portrait of the death throes of Italian Fascism and a triumph of pure style. Adapted by Bertolucci (an Oscar-nominated screenplay) from Alberto Moravia’s 1951 novel, it chronicles the life of secret police functionary Marcello Clerici (Jean-Louis Trintignant), who is sent on a mission to assassinate his former teacher, Professor Quadri (Enzo Tarascio), a leftist activist in exile in Paris. Clerici uses his honeymoon with new wife Giulia (Stefania Sandrelli) as a cover for the job. But he soon becomes entranced by Quadri’s sensuous, haunted wife Anna (Dominique Sanda), and the Fascist tenets he once accepted without question begin to waver in his mind. Legendary cinematographer Storaro (Apocalypse now) and production designer Fernando Scarfiotti (Scarface, American Gigolo) make spectacular use of the Fascist-era brutalist architecture, its blandly symmetrical structures acting as another form of control. with a gorgeous score by Georges Delerue and incandescent performances by a star-studded cast, The Conformist is a towering accomplishment that for the past four decades has enraptured audiences and influenced filmmakers around the world.

Seven Golden Men Strike Again
(1966)After being arrested, a gang of thieves agrees to kidnap a dictator in exchange for their freedom. But it's not the only thing they have in mind.

Mr. Superinvisible
(1970)He's just about the nicest man you never saw! A scientist who lives alone with his shaggy dog, becomes invisible after he swallows a potion with supernatural properties. Starring Dean Jones (The Love Bug, The Ugly Dachshund).
The Oldest Profession
(1967)Six of Europe’s finest directors trace the evolution of prostitution from the Stone Age to the Space Age in a saucy, star-studded omnibus film made up of: Franco Indovina’s The Prehistoric Era, Mauro Bolognini’s Roman Nights, Philippe de Broca’s Mademoiselle Mimi, Michael Pfleghar’s The Gay Nineties, Claude Autant-Lara’s Paris Today, and Jean-Luc Godard’s Anticipation.

Magnum Cop
(1978)The investigation of a missing girl leads a private detective to Austria's underworld and a prostitution racket run by a sleazy femme fatale.