In the pantheon of Golden Era European adult cinema (roughly 1985–2005), few names carry as much weight as , Nicky Ranieri , and the production label Pentax . While American studios like Vivid and Wicked Pictures dominated the English-speaking market, the Italian scene—fueled by lavish budgets, cinematic lighting, and a distinct giallo influence—was a world unto itself. At the center of that universe stood a volatile, creative triad: the visionary director Mario Salieri, his muse-turned-director Nicky Ranieri, and the Pentax brand that distributed and produced some of the era's most controversial work. Part 1: The Patriarch – Mario Salieri Born in Salerno, Italy, in 1957, Mario Salieri (real name: Mario Guarino) began his career in the legitimate film industry, working as an assistant director for genre masters like Lucio Fulci and Joe D’Amato. By the late 1980s, Salieri pivoted to adult entertainment, bringing a distinctly dark, narrative-heavy approach. Unlike the plotless "loops" of the 1970s, Salieri’s films featured three-act structures, neo-noir dialogue, and a cynical European aesthetic.
Ranieri was not a passive performer. She possessed a keen directorial eye, a skill she honed while acting in Salieri’s notoriously long shoots. Her breakout non-sex role was actually behind the scenes: she began script supervising and casting for Salieri’s later films. By the mid-90s, she had earned the rare distinction of being both a top-billed actress and a co-plot consultant on sets like L’insegnante di violoncello (1996). Pentax -Nicky Ranieri- Mario Salieri Entertainm...
Hard to Be Soft: A History of Italian Adult Cinema (2020, Bologna Press); Mario Salieri’s autobiography, Il Regista Scomodo (The Inconvenient Director, 2016, out of print). In the pantheon of Golden Era European adult