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“My life, my reading, everything about me revolves around the cinema. So for me, cinema is life, and vice-versa.” Maestro Sergio Leone was an Italian film director famous for pioneering the spaghetti western genre during the 1960s, made in Italy but set in the 19th century American West. Coming from a cinematic lineage, Leone started out as an assistant to famous directors began directing in 1961. His iconic debut with "For a Fistful of Dollars" in 1964 from his "Dollar Trilogy" catapulted him to fame, also including "For a Few Dollars More" (1965) and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" (1966). Sergio Leone's cinematic approach weaves together iconic elements that have left an enduring mark: from his memorable opening sequences to his extreme close-ups, lingering shots and Ennio Morricone's legendary, melancholic scores, his films are characterized by expansive, desolate landscapes, slowly building tension and minimalist dialogue. His portrayal of a dangerous world inhabited by anonymous outlaws, usually embodied by Clint Eastwood, turns the "Wild West" into simply "the West". Leone's works remain cinematic treasures and timeless classics, although his later works had commercial difficulties, his masterpiece "Once Upon a Time in America" is known as a true masterpiece. His influence on European Westerns and the cinematic landscape endures, and his distinctive style and imagery have become ingrained in the fabric of 20th-century cinema.
Best Director - Motion Picture