L'uomo Di Alcatraz 1962 -

Burt Lancaster (Robert Stroud), Karl Malden (Warden Harvey Shoemaker), and Thelma Ritter (Elizabeth Stroud).

L'uomo di Alcatraz remains a landmark of 1960s cinema for its stark black-and-white cinematography and its serious exploration of themes like human redemption, the ethics of the death penalty, and the psychological impact of isolation. It is often cited as one of the greatest prison dramas ever made. L'UOMO DI ALCATRAZ 1962

Burt Lancaster received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, and the film earned three other Oscar nominations. Fact vs. Fiction Burt Lancaster (Robert Stroud), Karl Malden (Warden Harvey

L'Uomo Di Alcatraz (1962) : Lancaster,Malden,Ritter: Amazon.se Burt Lancaster received an Academy Award nomination for

The film portrays Stroud as a quiet, redeemed intellectual. Historical records and prison psychiatrists, however, often described the real Stroud as a dangerous and unrepentant sociopath with an I.Q. of 112.

In reality, Stroud was only allowed to keep birds while he was at Leavenworth Prison. By the time he was transferred to Alcatraz in 1942, he was forbidden from keeping any pets.