DIRECTOR: Bernardo Bertolucci
BOTTOM LINE: One of the most influential films ever made, “The Conformist” tells the story of a sexually repressed gay man who, because of his relationship with a household servant in his youth, desperately wants to conform in society to the point of working for Mussolini’s Fascist secret police.
The film left an indelible impression on the young directors of the New Hollywood of the early 1970s, particularly Francis Coppola’s “Godfather” Trilogy and Paul Schrader’s “American Gigolo” and Mishima.” Cinematographer Vittorio Storaro’s visuals were immensely influential on Gordon Willis and John Bailey, and Schrader used Bertolucci’s production designer, Ferdinando Scarfiotti, as his visual consultant on all his early movies. Using Art Deco, the dominant architecture of the day, as a backdrop to this film’s narrative, the partnership of Bertolucci, Storaro and Scarfiotti changed the look of Cinema forever.

























