Bruno Bozzetto

Bruno Bozzetto was born in Milan on March 3, 1938. In the 1960s he founded Studio Bozzetto. With a career behind him of more than 60 years he is considered one of the most eclectic and influential Cartoonists of yesterday and today.
From the 1960s to the present, he has more than 300 films that have earned him 130 awards including the celebrated Winsor McCay Award, five Silver Ribbons, an Honorary Degree, 15 Lifetime Achievement Awards, an Oscar nomination for "Grasshoppers," and the Berlin Golden Bear for "Mr. Tao."
Tra i più noti di propria produzione e co-produzione: “West&Soda” (1965), “Vip mio fratello Superuomo” (1968), “Allegro non troppo” (1976), “Sotto il ristorate cinese” (1987), tre lungometraggi con il Signor Rossi per la TV, circa 100 cortometraggi per “Quark” e “Superquark” (rubrica divulgativa del giornalista scientifico Piero Angela) e una ventina di cortometraggi, tra cui “Europa & Italia”.
Also with the characters VIP and Supervip, he wrote "the Mystery of the Viavai," a Graphic Novel illustrated by Gregory Panaccione, and, again with him, he wrote a second one, titled "Tugéin."
On his person, director Marco Bonfanti made a documentary entitled "Bozzetto, not too much."
Today Bozzetto continues to work in the industry, creating subjects, animating and illustrating, but also collaborating on larger projects through the Bozzetto Production Studio. He also continues to attend festival events, conferences, and university lectures in Italy and around the world.

For Fallani Venezia participated in the project Cronache da una città sommersa.

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