Historical dictionary of Italian cinema

FREDA, RICCARDO

(1909-1999)
Screenwriter and director. Born in Alexandria, Egypt, of Neapolitan parents, Freda joined the film industry in 1934, working originally as a screenwriter. He made his directorial debut withDon Cesare di Bazan(1942), a swashbuckling costume drama set in 17th-century Spain, cowritten withSergio AmideiandCesare Zavattiniand starringGino Cervi.
In the immediate postwar period Freda began to specialize in the adventure genre, beginning withAquila nera(Return of the Black Eagle, 1946), an exotic costume drama set in czarist Russia, and thenI miserabili(1948), an adaptation of Victor Hugo's novelLes miserables, which was released in two parts,Caccia all'uomo(Man Hunt) andTempesta su Parigi(Storm over Paris).This was followed byII cavaliere misterioso(The Mysterious Rider, 1948), a Casanova adventure thriller that starredVittorio Gassmanin one of his first lead roles, andIl conte Ugolino(Count Ugolino, 1949), a gothic rendering of one of the most famous episodes from Dante'sInferno.
In the 1950s Freda made a number of low-budget historical epics before laying down what is regarded as the cornerstone of the revival of the Italianhorrorgenre withI vampiri(The Devil's Commandment, 1957, made under the pseudonym Robert Hampton), which was photographed byMario Bava. He subsequently worked with some success in most of the popular genres, from more sword-and-sandal films such asMaciste alla corte del Gran Khan(Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World) andMaciste all'inferno(Maciste in Hell, 1962, as Robert Hampton), to Westerns such asLa morte non conta i dollari(No Death without Dollars, 1967, credited as George Lincoln). However, he achieved his greatest renown internationally for his stylish exercises in gothic horror, such asL'orribile segreto del dottor Hichcock(The Horrible Secret of Dr.Hichcock, 1962) andEstratto dagli archivi segreti della polizia di una capitale europea(Tragic Ceremony, 1972). In the early 1980s he made a final horror thriller,L'ossessione che uccide(Murder Syndrome, 1981) before retiring from filmmaking altogether. He returned briefly to the industry in the early 1990s to directLa fille de d'Artagnan(The Daughter of D'Artagnan, 1994), but the film was eventually finished by Bernand Tavernier and Freda's name was removed from the credits.

  1. freda, riccardoScreenwriter and director. Born in Alexandria Egypt of Neapolitan parents Freda joined the film industry in working originally as a screenwriter. He made his directorial...Guide to cinema