Gian Carlo Petraccaro
Gian Carlo Petraccaro | |
---|---|
GianCarloPetraccaro2010.jpg | |
Born | 22 November 1962 Adelaide, South Australia, Australia |
Other names | Gian Carlo, Carlo Petraccaro |
💼 Occupation | |
📆 Years active | 1995 - present |
Gian Carlo Petraccaro (born 22 November 1962)[1] is a film director from South Australia.[2] He is usually called "Carlo Petraccaro", though he has received film credits as "Gian Carlo". He is best known as the screenwriter and director of the independent film Offside.[3]
Early life[edit]
Carlo Petraccaro was born in Adelaide, the son of production line workers at GMH and Clipsal.[1] He attended Thebarton High School, before graduating from Flinders University in 1988 with a Bachelor of Economics and a post-graduate Diploma in Accounting.[1]
After early employment with Bridgestone Australia, he went on to work for the Treasury Department of the Government of South Australia as the Management Accountant. During this time, the State Bank of South Australia suffered an irreversible financial setback, which led to its collapse.[4][5] Carlo arrived at work early one morning during the 1991 crisis and, as a registered signatory, was required to sign thirteen individual cheques of AUD 99,000,000[1] (for a total of $1.287 billion) as part of the Bank bailout.
He inherited a love of movies from his mother and frequently watched them on TV with her. He was a ten-year-old boy, engrossed in movie fantasies about "fighting villains for a beautiful woman in a foreign country" when he first saw The Godfather, which became his greatest influence as a director.
His mother loved actors, so Carlo decided to become an actor. During his participation in a now-forgotten comedy/farce with the Tea Tree Players at Tea Tree Gully,[1] he was thrust into the role of director and found that it came naturally. He has since developed an approach which is a mixture of careful story-boarding and free-flowing improvisations during rehearsal.
Career[edit]
Carlo started making short films in 1995. He made Misplaced in 1995, Search for the AntiChrist in 1997, Angst in 1998, Connections in 1999,[6] Arts Around Adelaide in 1999, and Venice in 2000.
He was a member of the Board of the South Australian Media Resource Centre[7] from 1997 to 1999.
In 2001, he acted as a consultant on Creamy Love, directed by Dick Dale.
In September 2009 he received funding[8] from the South Australian Film Corporation[9] to attend the 2009 SPAA Conference[10]
After a dozen years spent making his own short films,[1] or helping others with theirs, Carlo made his first feature film.[11] Offside was shot in 2008[12] and released in 2009.[13] It was also the first feature[14] produced by Urtext Film Productions,[15] an independent film company based in Adelaide, South Australia, which functions as a filmmakers co-op.[16] The film was independently financed[17][18] and shot in less than 30 days,[19][20] with limited access to locations.
In 2010, Petraccaro appeared in 15/Love, directed by Stephanie Mountzouris,[21][22] and acted as a consultant on Snapshots, directed by Chloe Gardner[23] and I Rot, directed by Josef Weber.[24]
In 2014, he assisted surrealist painter Andrew Baines produce the short fim Escape of the Corporate Battery Hen.[25][26]
Filmography[edit]
Director[edit]
- Escape of the Corporate Battery Hen 2014
- Offside 2009
- Venice 2000
- Arts Around Adelaide 1999
- Connections 1999
- Angst 1998
- Search for the AntiChrist 1997
- Misplaced 1995
Actor[edit]
- 15/Love 2010
Consultant[edit]
- Snapshots - Chloe Gardner (director) 2010
- I Rot - Josef Weber (director) 2010
- The Decayed - Josef Weber (director) 2009
- Creamy Love - Dick Dale (director) 2001
See also[edit]
- List of Australian films
- Australian films of 2009
- List of films set in Australia
- List of people from Adelaide
- List of films shot in Adelaide
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 An interview with Carlo Petraccaro - Adelaide Screenwriter
- ↑ IMDb - Gian Carlo Petraccaro
- ↑ IMDb - Offside
- ↑ Top 10 Financial Moments That Shaped SA, Greg Mccarthy, (Politics Lecturer with the University of Adelaide), ABC online, 29 May 2008
- ↑ 'Report of the Auditor-General on an Investigation into The State Bank of South Australia, Chapter 16', Auditor General of South Australia, Adelaide. Retrieved 10 July 2007.
- ↑ Connections - 2000 St Kilda Film Festival.
- ↑ Media Resource Centre
- ↑ SAFC funding to attend SPAA 2009
- ↑ South Australian Film Corporation.
- ↑ SPAA Fringe Conference, Sydney 2009.
- ↑ 2009 SASA Awards Archived 28 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Coverage of the premiere of Offside by SBS One
- ↑ Offside website
- ↑ dB Magazine - The first feature for Urtext Studios
- ↑ Urtext Film Productions - business registration
- ↑ dB Magazine - Urtext "a filmmakers co-op"
- ↑ Film Without Rules - SAFC feeling pressure to keep up with independent film makers
- ↑ dB Magazine - Speedy decision for Urtext to make Offside
- ↑ dB Magazine - Shot in 25 days
- ↑ Filmink - Shot in 27 days
- ↑ 15/Love - IMDb article
- ↑ 15/Love - Studio wrap-up and thanks
- ↑ Snapshots - IMDb
- ↑ IMDb - I Rot
- ↑ Weekend Notes, Free Screening: Escape of the Corporate Battery Hen
- ↑ YouTube, Descent into Existentialism
External links[edit]
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