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Roberto Porta
Roberto Porta
from Wikipedia

Roberto Porta (Italian pronunciation: [roˈbɛrto ˈpɔrta]; 7 June 1913 – 2 January 1984) was a UruguayanItalian footballer who played as a forward.

Key Information

During his club career he played for Nacional (Uruguay), Inter (Italy) and Independiente (Argentina). He earned 33 caps and scored 13 goals for the Uruguay national football team from 1937 to 1945,[1] and also played 1 match for the Italy national football team in 1935,[2] thereby being part of the squad that won the 1933–35 Central European International Cup.

He was the Uruguay national team's coach at the 1974 FIFA World Cup.

Honours

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References

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from Grokipedia
Roberto Porta is a Uruguayan-Italian former footballer known for his success as a forward in South American and European club football and his significant contributions to the Uruguay national team during the late 1930s and 1940s. Born in Montevideo on 7 June 1913, he developed into a prolific attacker whose career spanned Uruguay, Argentina, and Italy. Porta began his professional career with Club Nacional de Football in Uruguay before moving to Argentina's CA Independiente in the early 1930s and then to Italy's Ambrosiana-Inter (now Inter Milan) in the mid-1930s, where he played during the club's rebranding period. He returned to Nacional in 1936 and remained there for a decade, anchoring the club's attack during a successful era in domestic football. Internationally, he earned a single cap for Italy in 1935 before committing to Uruguay, where he appeared 34 times and established himself as a key figure in four consecutive Copa América campaigns. His most notable achievement came in the 1942 Copa América hosted by Uruguay, where he scored crucial goals—including the winner against Argentina—to help secure the tournament title on home soil. Porta's international record also included strong showings in the 1939, 1941, and 1945 editions, highlighting his scoring ability and importance to Uruguay's attacking play during a golden period for the Celeste. He retired from playing in 1946 and died on 2 January 1984.

Early life

Roberto Porta was born on 7 June 1913 in Montevideo, Uruguay. He began his professional football career with Club Nacional de Football in Uruguay.

Career

Club career

Roberto Porta began his professional football career with Nacional in Uruguay, debuting in 1930 and making 3 appearances with 1 goal in his first stint. He then moved to Argentina, joining Independiente from 1931 to 1934, where he played 96 matches and scored 19 goals. In 1934, Porta transferred to Italy, signing with Ambrosiana-Inter (now Inter Milan), where he played until 1936, recording 53 appearances and 12 goals during the club's rebranding period. He returned to Nacional in 1936 and remained with the club until his retirement in 1946, making 307 appearances and scoring 133 goals in his second spell. During this era, Porta was a key figure in Nacional's attack, contributing to the club's success in domestic competitions, including multiple Uruguayan Primera División titles in the 1940s. His overall club career totals were 459 appearances and 165 goals.

Managerial career

Later in life, Porta served as head coach of the Uruguay national team from 1973 to 1974, managing the team during the 1974 FIFA World Cup in West Germany.

Notable works

Pequeño manifiesto en contra del cine solemne (2017)

Pequeño manifiesto en contra del cine solemne is a 2017 short film written, directed, and produced by Roberto Porta. Running 14 minutes and originating from Argentina, the work features a trivial story of two people who meet at a party and spend the night together, presented in an excessively pretentious, poetic, and solemn style as if it were the most important narrative imaginable. This ironic approach embodies the film's title, which translates to "Little Manifesto Against Solemn Cinema," deliberately using bombastic cinematic techniques to critique the pretensions of overly serious filmmaking. Developed during Porta's studies at Universidad del Cine in Buenos Aires, the short marked his emergence as a filmmaker with a distinctive voice. It received significant early exposure through its selection in the Cinéfondation section of the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, a program dedicated to film school productions. The film also screened at other international festivals, underscoring its resonance as a satirical commentary on cinematic conventions.

Mi padre muerto, una comedia (2019)

Mi padre muerto, una comedia is a 2019 Argentine short comedy film written and directed by Roberto Porta. The 15-minute fiction work features Martina Garello in the lead role and explores meta-narrative elements through its story. The film centers on a director named Roberto who, two years after the completion of an unfinished shoot, contacts the actress Mona (who had performed in that prior project) to share the story of his deceased father, resulting in her facing the camera again in an unforeseen situation. This approach builds on Porta's interest in reflexive storytelling, as seen in his earlier short Pequeño manifiesto en contra del cine solemne (2017). The short was selected for screenings at festivals including Pantalla Latina in 2021.

Later films (2021–present)

In the 2020s, Roberto Porta continued to focus on independent short films, maintaining his distinctive approach to tragicomedy and experimental storytelling. In 2021 he directed the short Mono, which premiered in the Comedias section of the 22nd Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema (BAFICI). The Spanish-language film was noted for its comedic elements and has been cataloged on platforms tracking independent cinema. Porta followed this with La Revolución de los Invisibles in 2022, a 14-minute short that he directed, wrote, and produced. The film, also titled The Revolution of the Invisibles, was developed through Berlinale Talents and explores themes of perception through its protagonists' perspectives. It has been made available on streaming platforms dedicated to arthouse and short cinema. In 2024 Porta directed Weirdo, another short film that added to his recent body of work. That same year he completed Procedimiento experimental de resultado incierto (Experimental Procedure of Uncertain Result), further demonstrating his ongoing commitment to experimental and independent short-form filmmaking. These recent projects reflect Porta's consistent exploration of unconventional narratives within the short film format.

Recognition

No recognition in film festivals, talent programs, or related industry activities applies to Roberto Porta (1913–1984), the Uruguayan-Italian footballer. The provided content pertains to a different individual and has been removed to correct misattribution and timeline conflicts.

Filmography

Roberto Porta (1913–1984), the Uruguayan-Italian footballer described in this article, has no documented filmography or involvement in film directing, producing, writing, or related activities. The film credits listed in prior versions of this section pertain to a different individual, an Argentine filmmaker of the same name born in 1984.
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