Giovanni Narzisi (born 2 February 1929) is an Italian cinematographer, director and screenwriter.
Born in Palermo, Narzisi started his career in the 1950s as cameraman and assistant cinematographer of Mario Bava and Massimo Dallamano. [1] He debuted as cinematographer in 1962, with the war film Oggi a Berlino; [1] after working to films such as The Grim Reaper (1962), Love Factory (1964) and The Subversives (1967), [2] he wrote and directed two films, the Spaghetti Western Djurado (1966) [3] and the commedia sexy all'italiana Maschio latino cercasi (1977), [4] which were both panned by critics and unsuccessful at the box office. [1] [5] [6]
Giovanni Narzisi (born 2 February 1929) is an Italian cinematographer, director and screenwriter.
Born in Palermo, Narzisi started his career in the 1950s as cameraman and assistant cinematographer of Mario Bava and Massimo Dallamano. [1] He debuted as cinematographer in 1962, with the war film Oggi a Berlino; [1] after working to films such as The Grim Reaper (1962), Love Factory (1964) and The Subversives (1967), [2] he wrote and directed two films, the Spaghetti Western Djurado (1966) [3] and the commedia sexy all'italiana Maschio latino cercasi (1977), [4] which were both panned by critics and unsuccessful at the box office. [1] [5] [6]