Uberto Pasolini | |
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Pasolini at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, July 2014
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Born |
Uberto Pasolini Dall'Onda 1 May 1957 Rome, Italy |
Residence | London, England |
Nationality | Italian |
Other names | Count Uberto Pasolini Dall'Onda |
Occupation | Film producer Film director Former investment banker |
Known for |
The Full Monty (1997) Machan (2008) |
Spouse(s) | Rachel Portman |
Uberto Pasolini Dall'Onda (born 1 May 1957 in Rome, Italy) is an Italian film producer, director, and former investment banker known for producing the 1997 film The Full Monty and directing and producing the 2008 film Machan.
Pasolini, an Italian count and a nephew of Luchino Visconti, worked as an investment banker in England for 12 years. He wished to work on the film The Killing Fields, was interviewed by David Puttnam, and was rejected. When Puttnam went to Bangkok to shoot the film, Pasolini bought his own ticket and presented himself on set seeking work. Puttnam was impressed by this persistence and brought him on board the project. Pasolini subsequently acted as location scout for such films as Roland Joffé's The Killing Fields (1984), The Frog Prince, and The Mission (1986). He served as an assistant director with producer's duties on The Frog Prince (for which he also assisted in translations while shooting in Paris), and The Mission.
Pasolini moved to Los Angeles when Puttnam was appointed as head of Columbia Pictures, and served as vice president of production, and in 1988 oversaw production of both David Mamet's Things Change and Emir Kusturica's Time of the Gypsies. Later in 1988, Pasolini returned to London and rejoined Enigma Films to serve as associate producer on Meeting Venus (1991), and as producer on A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia for an episode of the TV series Great Performances. In 1994 Pasolini left Enigma and founded Redwave Films as a production company to produce the film Palookaville for which he chose David Epstein to write the screenplay and Alan Taylor to direct,