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  1. Behind the White Glasses. Documentary20171 hr 52 minAMC+. Available on Sundance Now, Prime Video, AMC+, iTunes. A deep dive into the groundbreaking life and career of Lina Wertmüller, the first woman ever nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director. The documentary spans decades, revealing the artistic and human universe of a woman who ...

  2. by Darragh O’Donoghue. Lina Wetmüller during the height of her popularity in the Seventies. Some way through Seven Beauties (1975), Lina Wertmüller’s most celebrated film, a petty Neapolitan crook conscripted into the Italian army during WWII escapes from a bombed train, and flees through forest and countryside in the middle of nowhere.

  3. Behind the White Glasses is a film that shines a spotlight on the creative, visionary and groundbreaking filmmaker and writer, Lina Wertmuller. It is a gripping and musical portrait of a maestro of the Italian cinema, a journey into the soul of the director. Unknown aspects of this artistic talent will be humorously revealed through the memories and testimonies of colleagues, actors and ...

  4. 20. Apr. 2017 · It would be hard to think of a European filmmaker who attained the degree of international heat that Lina Wertmüller enjoyed in the mid-1970s, and then — poof! — just like that, her moment ...

  5. BEHIND THE WHITE GLASSES offers a deep dive into the ground breaking life and career of Lina Wertmüller, the first woman ever nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director for her masterpiece Seven Beauties. The documentary spans decades, from the unpublished pictures taken in Cinecitta, when she was Federico Fellini’s assistant director on 8 1⁄2, to the places where her most famous ...

  6. 9. Dez. 2021 · Wertmüller, known for films like “Seven Beauties” and “Swept Away,” died this week. In 1977, she became the first woman to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best DIrector.

  7. MUBI's take. In 1977, Lina Wertmüller became the first woman to receive an Oscar® nomination for Best Director. This playful documentary—titled after its subject’s 5,000-strong collection of eyewear—takes to the road for a journey through five decades of Italian cinema with one of its greatest practitioners.