Pietro Scalia
Pietro Scalia © Giovanni Mecati@acmesign

Locarno Film Festival will honor film editor and two-time Oscar winner Pietro Scalia with the Vision Award Ticinomoda, the prize “dedicated to creatives whose work has extended the horizons of the filmic image”.

The award will be presented in a ceremony on August 3rd in Piazza Grande, followed by a panel conversation with the audience, plus screenings of films from Scalia’s career: Good Will Hunting (1997) and Black Hawk Down (2001).

Giona A. Nazzaro, artistic director of the Locarno Film Festival commented, “In the beginning there was the editing, as Eisenstein taught us. And as Hollywood formally defined it. In the tradition of the great film editors of Hollywood who shaped the image of classic cinema and its subsequent transformations, Pietro Scalia has revolutionized our way of thinking about how each image is joined to the next. In his collaborations with Bernardo Bertolucci, Ridley Scott, Sam Raimi, Michael Bay and Gus Van Sant (among many, many others), Scalia has proved able to both adhere to and reinvent the poetics and formal research of these auteurs. Scalia’s editing work has influenced whole generations of young filmmakers, he brought in a decisive new gaze in determining the rhythmic intervals and timing required for linking images to each other. Pietro Scalia: an experimental genius of the gaze and the musicality of editing.”

Pietro Scalia was born in Sicily, but left Italy at a young age when his family emigrated to Switzerland. He completed his education there before moving again, this time to the U.S. to train for a career in the movies. He got a Master’s in Film and Theatre Arts at UCLA before starting out on a career that first found him working as assistant editor to Oliver Stone on Wall Street (1987) and Talk Radio (1988). In subsequent years he was associate editor on Born on the Fourth of July (1989) and additional editor on The Doors (1991). In 1992, aged 31, he received his first nomination for Best Editing and went on to win the statuette itself, for Stone’s JFK (1991). During the same period, he was also laureled with A.C.E. (American Cinema Editors) and BAFTA awards. 1998 brought his second Oscar nomination, for Good Will Hunting by Gus Van Sant. He then embarked on a collaboration that lasted for 15 years with Ridley Scott, working with him on G.I. JANE (1997), Gladiator (2000), Hannibal (2001), Black Hawk Down (2001), and American Gangster (2007). The fruitful partnership with Scott brought him an Academy Award nomination for Gladiator, and then his second Best Editing Oscar for Black Hawk Down. After the success of Ridley Scott’s 2015 The Martian, which brought his fifth A.C.E. and BAFTA nominations, Scalia went on to edit Alien: Covenant (2017), again by Scott, and Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018) by Ron Howard. Scalia’s most recent editing credits include Ambulance (2022) by Michael Bay and The Gray Man (2022) by the Russo brothers. He has just finished cutting Michael Mann’s eagerly awaited Ferrari (2023), due in theaters later this year. Earlier films which he edited include The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) and The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014) by Marc Webb, Little Buddha (1993) and Stealing Beauty (1996) by Bernardo Bertolucci, The Quick and the Dead (1995) by Sam Raimi, Memoirs of a Geisha (2005) by Rob Marshall and Kick-Ass (2010) by Matthew Vaughn. Scalia was also involved as a music producer, with composer Hans Zimmer, on three of Ridley Scott’s films, and served on the jury at the 2004 Venice Film Festival.

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