The next year, he was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film at the
63rd Academy Awards for his AFI thesis short,
Bronx Cheers. Later in 1991, he was awarded a
Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting for his screenplay "Begin The Beguine". In 1995 he wrote and directed
Cafe Society starring
Frank Whaley,
Peter Gallagher and
Lara Flynn Boyle. The film premiered in Director' Fortnight (Quinzaine des Réalisateurs) section of the 1995
Cannes Film Festival and was shown on the Showtime Network in 1996. It was released theatrically in 1997. In 2000 De Felitta directed the
indie film Two Family House which won the Audience Award at the
Sundance Film Festival along with an
Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Screenplay. In 2003 he directed
Paul Reiser's
The Thing About My Folks which received the Audience Award at the
Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The film was released in 2005 by
Picture House. In 2006 De Felitta directed his first documentary '
Tis Autumn: The Search for Jackie Paris, which won the Best Jazz Documentary at the Kansas City Filmmakers Jubilee. The film was released in 2007 by Outsider Pictures. In 2009, De Felitta wrote and directed the independent film
City Island, which received the First Place Audience Award at the
Tribeca Film Festival. The film opened in theaters 19 March 2010 and had a long theatrical run. In 2012, De Felitta directed ''
Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story''. The documentary was inspired by a previous documentary that De Felitta's father, Frank De Felitta, made for NBC News in 1966 titled "Mississippi: A Self Portrait". The earlier film contained a frank and shocking interview with an African-American waiter, Booker Wright, who told the cameras what it was like working in a whites-only restaurant in the south. The resulting fallout for the waiter and his family was the subject of the second documentary. "Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story" was the subject of a full one-hour episode of "Dateline NBC". In 2014, De Felitta directed
Rob the Mob, which starred Michael Pitt, Nina Arianda, Andy Garcia and Ray Romano. It marked De Felitta's second collaboration with Garcia, who had starred in and co-produced "City Island". In 2016, De Felitta directed
Madoff, a four-hour mini-series for ABC television based on the rise and fall of the notorious financier Bernard L. Madoff. The film starred Richard Dreyfuss and Blythe Danner. De Felitta was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Movies for Television and Mini-Series. In 2018, De Felitta directed the baseball-themed drama
Bottom of the 9th, starring Sofia Vergara and Joe Manganiello =='Movies Til Dawn' Blog and Podcast==