if you told me that Frank Nero and Terence Hill were related i would 100000% believe you, just little Italian actor meowmeows

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if you told me that Frank Nero and Terence Hill were related i would 100000% believe you, just little Italian actor meowmeows
Uk Based Ghanaian Artiste Danny Lampo Hangs Out With Baba Rahman And Frank Naro
Uk Based Ghanaian Artiste Danny Lampo Hangs Out With Baba Rahman And Frank Naro
Danny Lampo who is a Uk based Ghanaian International artiste was seen over the weekend with Baba Rahman who is also a Ghanaian International footballer and actor/musician Frank Nero in London. Danny has been in the news in recent times after gaining nomination in the Ghana music awards UK and also going on BBC Radio Introducing live. Danny Lampo happens to be the second Ghanaian artiste to make…
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Frank Nero - My God Dey (Feat Flowking Stone & Atumpan Drumz)
Frank Nero – My God Dey (Feat Flowking Stone & Atumpan Drumz)
Frank Nero – My God Dey (Feat Flowking Stone & Atumpan Drumz) (GhanaNdwom.net)
Fank Nero finally outdoors the much anticipated single with Flowking Stone of Bradez fame.
The amazing singer serves us with this inspiring masterpiece dubbed ‘My God Dey’. The song also featuring UK based Ghanaian musician, Atumpan Drumz.
CHECK OUT: Stonebwoy – Sobolo (Prod. by UndaBeatz)
Frank Nero – My God Dey (Feat…
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Frank Nero - Do Me (feat Fameye)
Frank Nero – Do Me (feat Fameye)
Frank Nero – Do Me (feat Fameye) (GhanaNdwom.net)
Kumawood actor turned singer, Frank Nero is out with a groovy Highlife classic. He features the man of the moment, Fameye on what he calls ‘Do Me’. Production credit to Kin Dee.
CHECK OUT: Kofi Kinaata – Obi Ne Ba (Prod. By OilCity Vybez)
Frank Nero – Do Me (feat Fameye) [DOWNLOAD]
https://ghanandwom.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Frank-Nero-Do-M…
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The 10 Best Italian Director and Actor Teams of All-Time
Who were the best Italian director and actor duos in movie history? The recent success of Paolo Sorrentino and Toni Servillo’s The Great Beauty, which marks their fourth collaboration, got me thinking about some of the other Italian directors and actors who have teamed up successfully at least three times.
Coming up with a Top 10 list was no easy task given the rich history of Italian cinema. To make matters easier, I limited the list to Italian-born directors and actors only. That eliminated legendary Italian-American duos such as Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, as well as some memorable Italian-U.S. director-actor collaborations (Sergio Leone and Clint Eastwood; Roberto Rosselini and Ingrid Bergman).
With those parameters in place, here’s a look at the 10 best Italian director and actor teams of all-time:
10) Sergio Corbucci and Frank Nero
Number of Movies Together: 3
Key Film Collaborations: Django (1966), Companeros (1970), A Professional Gun (1968)
Leone had Eastwood, and Corbucci had Nero. While the “Man with No Name” trilogy stands as the genre’s defining high point, Corbucci and Nero’s trio of films also rides tall in the saddle. Django is easily the best-known movie of the partnership, thanks to Quentin Tarantino, but the duo’s other two collaborations rank among the best spaghetti westerns.
9) Paolo Sorrentino and Toni Servillo
Number of Movies Together: 4
Key Film Collaborations: The Great Beauty (2013), Il Divo (2008), The Consequences of Love (2004)
In the last 25 years, no Italian director-actor partnership can touch Sorrentino and Servillo, who have won countless awards for their collaborations. Even with their comparatively late start – Servillo was 42 years old when their first film together hit theaters – it’s easy to see this twosome moving into the top five if they continue working together for a few more movies.
8) Pier Paolo Pasolini and Franco Citti
Number of Movies Together: 8
Key Film Collaborations: Accatone (1961), Mamma Roma (1962), The Decameron (1971)
Before he took a small role in The Godfather as Michael Corleone’s bodyguard Calo – the one who doesn’t betray Michael – Citti acted in numerous Pasolini films, most notably playing a pimp in the lead role in Pasolini’s directing debut Accatone, and then in numerous juicy supporting roles in the director’s increasingly controversial works.
7) Mario Monicelli and Alberto Sordi
Number of Movies Together: 5
Key Film Collaborations: The Great War (1959), An Average Little Man (1977), Il Marchese del Grillo (1981)
Italy’s most renowned commedia all’italiana director and one of its most beloved comedic actors took the genre to new heights, teaming twice in the late ‘50s and then reuniting for a trio of movies 20 years later. Many of their movies, such as the classic The Great War, delivered both laughs and thoughtful social commentary.
6) Mario Monicelli and Vittorio Gassman
Number of Movies Together: 4
Key Film Collaborations: The Great War (1959), Big Deal on Madonna Street (1958), For Love and Gold (1966)
Italy’s best cinematic comedy duo? A strong case can be made for Monicelli and Gassman, who collaborated on two of the best Italian comedies ever – in back-to-back years, no less – with the caper romp Big Deal on Madonna Street and the military dramedy The Great War.
5) Dino Risi and Vittorio Gassman
Number of Movies Together: 15
Key Film Collaborations: The Easy Life (1962), Scent of a Woman (1977), I mostri (1962)
In the ‘60s and ’70, Risi and Gassman saw a LOT of each other, mostly collaborating on comedies with an occasional drama or thriller thrown in for good measure. Some of their films were excellent, most were good, and a few were mediocre. Depending on how heavily you weigh quality versus quantity, you could slide these two up or down a few notches.
4) Vittorio De Sica and Sophia Loren
Number of Movies Together: 8
Key Film Collaborations: Two Women (1960), Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1963), Marriage, Italian Style (1964)
Six of Loren’s top 10 movies as rated by IMDB users came in collaborations with De Sica, including her wrenching, Oscar-winning turn in the World War II drama Two Women. Whether shooting dramas, comedies or romance, the De Sica-Loren partnership delivered a string of strong films in the ‘60s and ‘70s, and an easy case can be made for the duo being further up the list.
3) Michelangelo Antonioni and Monica Vitti
Number of Movies Together: 5
Key Film Collaborations: L’avventura (1960), La Notte (1963), L’eclisse (1964)
Together Antonioni and Vitti shook up the cinematic world in the early ‘60s, epitomizing art-house cool. But while the European movie scene may have been glamorous, their collaborations leaned toward the grim, with Antonioni’s detached, groundbreaking style finding its perfect compatriot in Vitti’s vivid portrayals of alienation and isolation.
2) Federico Fellini and Giulietta Masina
Number of Movies Together: 7
Key Film Collaborations: La Strada (1954), Nights of Cabiria (1957), Juliet of the Spirits (1965)
Husband and wife off the screen, incredible artistic collaborators on it. While some may be tempted to dismiss Masina as riding on Fellini’s coattails, she left an indelible mark on several of his biggest films, scoring BAFTA nominations for La Strada and Nights of Cabiria. Depending on which era of Fellini you prefer, this twosome might rank No. 1.
1) Federico Fellini and Marcello Mastroianni
Number of Movies Together: 5
Key Film Collaborations: La Dolce Vita (1960), 8-1/2 (1963), Ginger and Fred (1986)
Mastroianni barely missed this list for his trio of films with De Sica. But there’s no debating his presence when it comes to his unforgettable collaborations with Fellini. You can argue endlessly whether La Dolce Vita or 8-1/2 is Fellini’s greatest film of the ‘60s, but most place one of these works – if not both – in the Top 5 Italian movies ever. Two decades later, as the duo hit their 60s, they collaborated on three more memorable films.
Did I miss anyone? And who are your picks for the best Italian director and actor combos of all-time? Please share your thoughts in the comments section.
Related Articles:
1) “Classic Italian Movie Scenes: Franco Nero’s great escape in Django”
2) “Movie Review: The Great Beauty”
3) “Classic Italian Movie Scenes: The Opening Dream Sequence in 8-1/2”
Sergio Corbucci's Django (1966)
"I would speak to Vanessa's [Vanessa Redgrave] father [Sir Michael Redgrave], or Laurence Olivier or John Gielgud, and they told me that, at a certain point, I had to make a choice. I could be a star and maybe make lots of money, or I could change roles all the time and have a more interesting--and longer--career. People will criticize you, they said, but if you keep changing, you'll win in the end." - Frank Nero
Theme song from the 1966 Spaghetti Western 'Django' directed by Sergio Corbucci.
This is still my favourite Spaghetti Western got a massive soft spot for it still incredibly shattered the DVD i got of it is totally dodgy and has Italian audio without english subtitles and I'm stuck watching the dodgy English dubbing.