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FILE - In this Thursday, Feb. 14, 2008 file photo, Italian director Francesco Rosi poses during a photo call at the International Film Festival Berlinale in Berlin, Germany. Rosi died at the age of 92, in Rome, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2015. Rosi's longtime friend, Franco Zeffirelli, said in a statement that Rosi was for him " a friend, a lifetime companion," and that the loss was "like experiencing a mutilation." Zeffirelli, 92, and Rosi started out together as assistants to Luchino Visconti, becoming collaborators and life-long friends. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File) Image Credit: AP

Italian cinema buffs were fuming on Monday after celebrated director Francesco Rosi was left out of the Oscars “in memoriam” tribute to movie figures who died in the past year.

The omission triggered indignant comment in the media and on social networks.

“Oscars Shame,” said a headline on the website of public broadcaster Rai.

“The usual Hollywood provincialism, they forgot to remember the maestro,” wrote Antonella Fiori, in one of many tweets about the perceived snub to a director considered one of the giants of 20th Century Italian cinema.

Rosi, whose work influenced Martin Scorsese among others, died in January at the age of 92.

He won the Grand Prix at Cannes in 1972 for The Mattei Affair and a 1983 British Academy award (Bafta) for best foreign film for Christ stopped at Eboli.

His 1981 film Three Brothers was nominated for best film in a foreign language at the Oscars.

Rosi was not the only significant name to be overlooked by the producers of the commemorative montage broadcast during the Oscars ceremony.

A similar row erupted on the other side of the Atlantic over the exclusion of comedian Joan Rivers.

However, both Rivers and Rosi were commemorated in a photo gallery of 129 notable figures to have died in the past year that was posted on the official Oscars website.