June 17, 1927
On this day in Horror History, Lucio Fulci was born. Considered to be
one of the Godfathers of Gore, Fulci is by far one of the most
influential and celebrated Italian film makers of all time, having given
the world cult classics such as the Zombi franchise, and City of the
Living Dead. Truly a visionary in his implementation of gore and the
elegance of fear, something he preyed upon
as he would rapidly zoom in on victims eyes as they were being
eviscerated. Fulci’s brilliance as a director has been widely
celebrated, he lived to see his films achieve cult fame and rightfully
so. After living a life suffering from diabetes, it was during
production of The Wax Mask (1997) with Dario Argento, that Fulci had
supposedly forgotten to take his insulin before bed and passed away in
his sleep. Widely considered to be a suicide, Fulci’s life ended
tragically but not without giving horror fans a legacy of monumental
proportion, and some of the most amazingly poetic films of all time.
“I am not a criminal because I make horror films. A lot of Italian
genre directors are animal lovers. Mario Bava loved cats, Riccardo Freda
loves horses, and Dario Argento loves himself.” –Lucio Fulci
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