Guido Zurli was born
on January 9, 1929 in Foiano, Della Chiara Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy.After some experience as an assistant
director, in 1962 he had the opportunity to direct a film initially entrusted
to Sergio Leone, “Le verdi bandiere di Allah”. As a result, even using the
pseudonyms (among others, Albert Moore, GZ Reds, Jean Loret and Frank Sanders)
he directed several genre films, westerns, espionage, adventure and horror, all
characterized by a thin vein of humor. Guido directed five Euro-westerns, one
of which was never completed. He began with “Thompson 1880” (1966) starring
Gordon Mitchell, followed by “A Man Called Amen” (also screenwriter) and “Zorro
the Fox” both in 1968
In 1971 he went to
Turkey to direct a thriller, the resulting film was commercially successful and
Zurli made more moives with Turkish production companies including the last of
his Euro-westerns “Cowboy Kid in 1972 for which he also wrote the screenplay. Meanwhile in Italy
during the second half of the 1970s the film industry was in crisis and he was
only offered sex and pornographic film. He decided to return to Turkey for a
period of time, where in 1979 he made police film “Bersaglio altezza
uomo”. In Italian films he
appeared as a writer (under the pseudonym Guider Zurlen) in the film by Raniero
Di Giovanbattista “Valentina, ragazza in calore” featuring the film debut of
Moana Pozzi, but in reality his contribution to the film is minimal.
In the 1980s he
worked as a television director for the RAI before returning in the early 1990s
to directing the film “Kickboxing” shot in the United States and Yugoslavia. Guido died in Rome
on October 23, 2009. Today we remember
Guido Zurli on what would have been his 85th birthday.
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