“Cara Anna, non è la prima volta che mi rivolgo a te in questo modo”. È con queste parole che inizia l’ultimo film di Bertrand Bonello, una lettera aperta piena di amore e sensibilità rivolta alla figlia adolescente. Il regista aveva già cercato di comunicare con la ragazza attraverso il suo cinema con Nocturama (2016), di cui compaiono alcune immagini all’inizio del film in un montaggio così confuso da trasformarne i fotogrammi in pura astrazione. Se lo sforzo di entrare in contatto con la figlia non era allora riuscito dato che lei non ha visto il film, Bonello ci riprova, realizzando un’opera più intima, personale e al contempo universale che si rivolge alla figlia ma anche alle nuove generazioni.
Continua la lettura di “COMA” DI BERTRAND BONELLOArchivi categoria: Torino Film Festival
“COMA” BY BERTRAND BONELLO
Article by: Fabio Bertolotto
Translated by: Laura Todeschini
‘Dear Anna, this is not the first time I have addressed you in this way’. It is with these words that Bertrand Bonello’s latest film begins. Words which pave the way to an open letter full of love and sensitivity addressed to his teenage daughter. The director had already tried to communicate with the girl through the cinema with Nocturama (2016). Some images of this film appear at the beginning of Coma in a confused montage that turns the frames into pure abstraction. The previous effort to get in touch with his daughter had been unsuccessful, since she had not seen the film. For this reason, Bonello tries again, making a more intimate, personal and, at the same time, universal work that addresses his daughter and also new generations.
Read more“FALCON LAKE” DI CHARLOTTE LE BON
Sono sulla riva del loro lago, quando Chloé (Sara Montpetit) chiede a Bastien (Joseph Engel) quale sia la sua più grande paura: il ragazzo sorride, scrolla le spalle e risponde che è masturbarsi di fronte a mamma e papà. Quando Chloé si confessa a sua volta, sta piangendo: «Credo che la mia più grande paura sia di sentirmi sola tutta la vita».
Leggi tutto: “FALCON LAKE” DI CHARLOTTE LE BONCharlotte Le Bon, al suo esordio alla regia, scandaglia l’adolescenza mostrandola durante una parentesi estiva al lago. Per farlo, attinge a piene mani dalla graphic novel Una sorella (Bao Publishing, 2018) del francese Bastien Vivès, in cui vengono trattate le ambivalenze del desiderio giovanile al suo nascere. Falcon Lake si concentra sull’attrazione reciproca tra i due protagonisti. Lei, Chloé, è una sedicenne che si sforza di comportarsi da adulta anche quando vorrebbe solo darsi il tempo di cui ha bisogno. È forse proprio questo che la spinge a ricercare Bastien, di due anni più giovane di lei, apertamente inesperto e soggiogato dal fascino della ostentata e costruita sicurezza di lei. I due ragazzi sono immortalati nella loro più pura ingenuità, mentre scoprono, impacciati, uno il corpo dell’altra. Sullo sfondo del loro rapporto ci sono gli adulti veri e propri, i genitori. In Una sorella, Vivès non disegna mai i volti, perché quella non è la loro storia. Le Bon ripropone questa scelta nel suo linguaggio, quello cinematografico: i genitori sono relegati fuori campo, i visi non si vedono e rimangono soltanto le voci.
Nel finale, Le Bon, anche autrice della sceneggiatura, si discosta dall’opera su cui è basato il suo lungometraggio. La conclusione che ha scelto per il protagonista maschile è l’emblema dell’adolescenza in sé, rappresentata come un periodo della vita al confine tra la vita e la morte. «Ci sono fantasmi che non sanno di essere morti» e sono questi fantasmi, con i loro desideri, a popolare la giovinezza. I protagonisti vivono le loro esperienze in maniera assoluta e fatalista, senza l’elaborazione emotiva tipica di chi l’adolescenza l’ha già superata e ne è uscito indenne.
Falcon Lake non si allontana molto dai cliché narrativi del coming of age. Nonostante questo limite, la regista crea uno spazio di rigorosa rappresentazione in cui si alternano inquietudini e scoperte dell’adolescenza, dentro le quali lo spettatore può ritrovare se stesso e il proprio vissuto.
Marta Faggi
TORINO FILM FESTIVAL. THE 40TH EDITION
Article by: Davide Troncossi
Translated by: Benedetta Francesca De Rossi
With the presentation to the press of the Casa Torino Film Festival, the run-up to TFF40 came to an end. It will begin (screenings, events, masterclasses) on November 25th with the opening ceremony at the Teatro Regio in Turin, for the first time also broadcast live on radio as part of Hollywood Party on Rai Radio3, dedicated to «a tale through music and images on the relationship between the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and cinema».
Last week, the opening press conference of the event took place at the Cinema Quattro Fontane in Rome, celebrating the important milestone of its fortieth edition, coinciding with the long-awaited emergence from the devastating pandemic nightmare.
The promoters unveiled an ambitious, varied and richly innovative program, both in terms of the films on offer and the spaces for interaction between artists and the public, laying the foundations for an edition full of expectations.
In terms of logistics, the first novelty is the Casa Torino Film Festival, which will be located in the Cavallerizza Reale, also the festival’s Media Centre, thanks to the collaboration with our University. The centre aims to become «the nerve centre of the festival where most of the meetings and events will take place», as the new artistic director Steve Della Casa presented it (in fact a veteran already at the helm of the TFF between 1999 and 2002, and one of its founders in 1982 under the impetus of Gianni Rondolino and Ansano Giannarelli). Moreover, as summarised by the president of the National Museum of Cinema in Turin, the TFF’s promoting body, Enzo Ghigo, the entire city will be involved through a «look of the city that will go beyond the usual festival spaces to dress up the squares and streets of Turin with real works of art, created by the brilliant graphic trait of Ugo Nespolo, who also signed the guiding image». A sort of urban mapping that has long been in vogue in large metropolises and is likely to appeal to visitors of all ages.
Many guests will arrive in Turin during the festival, well-known faces from show business, music, cinema and beyond. The legendary protagonist of A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm McDowell (who will receive the Star of the Mole, will be honoured with a retrospective and will hold a masterclass), Paola Cortellesi, Toni Servillo, Mario Martone, Paolo Sorrentino, but also Vittorio Sgarbi, the singer Noemi, the producer Marina Cicogna, Michele Placido, Sergio Castellitto, the former goal twins Vialli and Mancini, Simona Ventura and many others will be among the guests.
As far as the program is concerned, in addition to a competition of national and international previews divided into the feature, documentary and short film sections, a rich out-of-competition section stands out (for a total of 173 works, 81 of which are world premieres) ranging from the solo show of the young Spanish director Carlos Vermut to the Portraits and Landscapes category, from the more “committed” section (Of Conflicts and Ideas) to the New Worlds of Auteur, up to Crazies, an anthology of films on what is new in horror production worldwide, destined to send the multitude of fans of the genre into raptures.
Not forgetting Back to life (the restored films), High Noon (the misunderstood classic American westerns), the homage to documentary filmmaker/collector Mike Kaplan, and the unfailing Masterclasses, what stands out is the strongly heterogeneous character of a program aimed at highlighting first works as well as average genre cinema (plus the so-called B-series production but with cult-movie potential), trying to be «a festival that remembers the past but thinks of the future, a festival that is cultured but popular, research but fun. A festival that wants to be a party».
With a keen eye on contemporary issues such as environmental sustainability, gender violence, which will also be remembered by the event’s patroness Pilar Fogliati with the anniversary of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, the many guests who will meet the public «telling their ideas and their point of view» and the varied schedule, the director emphasizes the festival’s desire to combine high and low culture, aiming to involve professionals from the sector, the event’s loyal audience and those who, intrigued by the novelties, will be able to approach the event.
TORINO FILM FESTIVAL. LA 40ma EDIZIONE
Con la presentazione alla stampa della Casa Torino Film Festival si è conclusa la fase di avvicinamento al TFF40 che aprirà (proiezioni, eventi, masterclass) il 25 novembre con la cerimonia di apertura al Teatro Regio di Torino, per la prima volta anche in diretta radiofonica all’interno di Hollywood Party su Rai Radio3, dedicata a “un racconto per musica e immagini sul rapporto tra i Beatles, i Rolling Stones e il cinema”.
Continua la lettura di TORINO FILM FESTIVAL. LA 40ma EDIZIONEJOANNA HADJITHOMAS E KHALIL JOREIGE
Article by Elio Sacchi
Translated by Federica Maria Briglia and Mattia Prelle
The cinema of Joanna Hadjithomas and Kalil Joreige – to whom the thirty-ninth edition of the Turin Film Festival dedicated a solo show and a masterclass, both curated by Massimo Causo – may lie between the beginning and the end of their artistic and cinematographic career. That means it is between the postcards of the opening credits of their first feature film, Around the Pink House (Al Bayt Al Zaher, 1999), and the box, the audiovisual archive of memory and remembrance that, like a very personal and foreign body, opens Memory Box (2021). Between these two extremes, within the more general framework of the history of Lebanon, of its destruction and of its reconstruction, there is a long and complex reflection on cinema, on the status of the image and, in particular, of the memory-image. When the past passes, the construction of a collective and shared memory becomes a difficult operation, which leaves enough room for memories and handy images that preclude the possibility of a complex narrative in favour of a superficial, conciliatory and pacifying narrative. This is what often happens after internal or fratricidal wars, which are followed by a reconstruction so fast that the past cannot be processed. This is also the case of Lebanon, considered the Switzerland of the Middle East in the 1960s: it was turned upside down first by a civil war and then by the conflict with Israel. The whole artistic parable of Hadjithomas and Joreige refers to this reality, and, in addition to cinema, crosses over into photography, performance arts and plastic arts. Their artistic parable contains its own moment of reflection and self-reflection. It is particularly evident in the performance Aida Sauve Moi, which makes explicit the questions that drive the expressive and creative urgency and necessity of the two directors: this is an indefinite and permeable border between reality and fiction, between personal experience and history. Their parable also contains the concept of latency, which is not only the physical, chemical and material concept of the negative impressed and never developed, but it also represents all the individual and particular latent stories, existing and never revealed, of the kidnapped and murdered Lebanese citizens, and of all the corpses that have never been found. Other elements included in their artistic parable include: the materiality of the image and of the testimonial object itself; the crossing and the attempt to take back public and collective spaces; and, finally, a boundless love for cinema. The last of these elements should be interpreted above all as an instrument of resistance and political commitment (in this regard, see Open the Door, Please [2006], a passionate and cinephile homage to the cinema of Jacques Tati). Joanna Hadjithomas and Kalil Joreige’s one is a self-reflexive cinema that also reflects on the status of the images it represents. This cinema has its genesis precisely in the overexposure to stereotyped images, whether they concern the civil war or the 1960s, as witnessed during the masterclass entitled Memory Work – Resistant Aesthetics in Hadjithomas & Joreige’s works (Rosita Di Peri also attended the event).
Actually, Around the Pink House has its origin in an earlier photographic project called Wonder Beirut. Hadjitomas and Joreige invented the figure of a Lebanese photographer, who immortalised Beirut in the 1960s and 1970s, before the civil war; the photographer then literally and materially burnt the buildings depicted on his postcards as they were bombed until the images were completely transfigured. The film does not tell the story of the Lebanese civil war, but rather the reconstruction of the capital in the 1990s, a period in which “the sound of bombs has given way to that of bulldozers” and in which the rubble shown in the background, physical and painful traces of a recent past, enters into a profound dialectic with the story of reconstruction and rebirth, which nonetheless involves the destruction of entire buildings. The maison rose itself is an archive of memory, of Lebanon’s history, a physical place that bears the marks of war, the memories of people who disappeared and the presence of refugees who were forced to leave their villages.
The maison rose is also an attempt done by a community to take its space back. This is the same public and collective space that Catherine Deneuve, the spirit of European cinema invoked in Lebanon as a foreign and empathetic body and led by Rabih Mrué (a recurring actor in the filmography of Hadjithomas and Joreige, he is a face that embodies the generational drama), wants to see but is prevented from doing so.
Je veux voir (2008) is a journey through a country devastated by the conflict with Israel. It stems from the need to show unconventional images (i.e. different from those broadcast by the various television stations) and to investigate new places, in a sort of palingenesis of the gaze and images of war. While in Rounds (2001), the wandering around the city – a Beirut that uses the rubble of buildings to build new roads by the sea – programmatically precludes the vision of public and city space, which is relegated to an off-screen that is always overexposed. Kiam 2000 – 2007, which began in 1999 and ended in 2008, is also the ideal counter-field to Je veux voir, since the detention camp described in it is an absolute off-screen narration, which can be only imagined by the human testimonies of the internees who invite us to reconstruct it in absentia. The film opens, once again, to an explicit reflection on memory. In 2006, in fact, the camp was turned into a museum and, still in 2006, was bombed by the Israeli army. Made almost entirely with rigorous close-ups and extreme close-ups, these vicissitudes gave rise to the need for Kiam: the urgency of the testimony necessarily refers to the camp, to its presence, it summons it and ultimately affirms its existence.
Their cinema is constantly in communication with the absence and the missing pictures, both personal, as in The Lost Film (Al Film Al Mafkoud, 2003), and collective (The Lebanese Rocket Society, 2012). And the ghost – as the directors admitted more than once – is a recurring figure in Lebanese culture and in its people’s daily life. A Perfect Day (Yawmoun Akhar, 2005) deals with ghost stories: piled up corpses in mass graves that no one discovered during the reconstruction of Beirut liven up and expand the story, claiming through a deafening silence their existence and death. This is a matter of faith and persistence of memory, because who believes in the ghost’s survival will be able to see it and reunite with it, whereas who tries to forget is forced to roam along the streets of a city that cannot be owned and cannot be seen (the contact lens do not adjust the sight, they rather produce a twisted and hallucinated vision of Beirut). Moreover, the film is based on the story of Joreige’s uncle, kidnapped during the war and still “missing”; one day, after many years, the directors found an undeveloped photo negative, a latent and phantasmal picture. The decision of transforming the negative-in-power into image-in-act corresponds to the desire of bringing back to light a unique and universal story, both personal and collective, through different concrete manipulations of the film. This story carries the marks of history, of the flow of time. Similarly, the city of Smirne is, in its reconstruction, a physical trace of the history passage: in Ysmirna (2016) the comparison between the early 1900s city map and the modern one shows the temporal distance of a mythical city, told by Joanna’s family and the one of the poet Etel Adnan (both of them have never been in the city of, respectively, their grandparents and parents), through an oral storytelling that intends to be a reenactment of a past in which one can find their roots.
Hadjithomas and Joreige’s more than twenty years of artistic activities and personal experiences break into a Lebanese family migrated to Canada, in the form of a big cardboard box. The package from Lebanon is an archive containing letters, photographs, notebooks, recordings of radio broadcastings and undeveloped films (Memory Box is freely inspired by the mailing correspondence that Joanna had with a friend of hers who migrated to Paris, suddenly interrupted after six years). This is an archive that causes the explosion of the underlying conflicts between the three different generations and, at the same time, it’s responsible for the deflagration of the film. Even if most of the films by Hadjithomas and Joreige have a material essence (and most of the films shown during the retrospective were projected in 35mm), Memory Box has a digital concept. Alex, the daughter, edits and manipulates the civil war testimonies according to her own grammar, which includes smartphones, instant communication, digital post-production and immateriality. The distance in space and time, and the reconstruction of the 1980s through their icons are not nostalgic at all, they are just needed to testimony and transfer the story. The intergenerational confrontation (the grandmother, Maia; the mother, who represents the directors’ generation; and the daughter) is about approaching the story of Lebanon, and thus becomes a matter of identity and belonging, that is opening up several possibilities of the storytelling for those generations that never experienced the conflict and whose memory may be lost.
The one of Joanna Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige is an artistically and conceptually coherent career that finds its raison d’être in the moral duty of making concretely, materially and visibly collective and public what the passage of the story of Lebanon has discolored, as if the past were an unimpressed and undeveloped film. An idea of political and civic cinema, a product of more than twenty years of activity that displays in the intergenerational confrontation of Memory Box the need to narrate the past in order to live the present and to imagine the future once again.
ITALIANA.CORTI
Article by Michelangelo Morello
Translated by Gianluca Zogno
Formation tales, foundfootage operations, a revisitation of fairy tales and ancient myths, metaphysical journeys through chaos’ shapeless masses; these are the themes around which Italian.Corti’s selection at the 39th Torino Film Festival is centered.
Continua la lettura di ITALIANA.CORTI“INMERSIÓN” BY NICOLÁS POSTIGLIONE
Article by Sara Longo
Translated by Giulia Baldo
The boat trip of a father with his two daughters will soon become a nightmare. This is the simple premise on which is built Inmersión, the debut feature film of Chilean director Nicolás Postiglione that investigates what’s underneath its characters. «It’s a shame that no one comes here anymore» comments the father, while observing with nostalgia the places where he grew up, now apparently deserted. And yet, the unstable balance of the three protagonists is definitely destroyed by the encounter with some castaways who, after being welcomed aboard, start to make the father seriously fear for his and his daughters’ lives.
Continua la lettura di “INMERSIÓN” BY NICOLÁS POSTIGLIONE“LE MONDE APRÈS NOUS” DI LOUDA BEN SALAH-CAZANAS
Labidi deve consegnare il suo manoscritto a una casa editrice entro sei mesi, e l’unica cosa che riesce a scrivere, però, è il suo numero di telefono sulla sigaretta di una ragazza di cui si innamora a prima vista, Elisa. La storia d’amore che nasce tra loro riempie la vita del giovane protagonista ma non è affatto fonte di ispirazione letteraria. In effetti la concentrazione per scrivere un romanzo sulla guerra d’Algeria, paese d’origine della madre, sembra essere un obiettivo impossibile da raggiungere nelle condizioni in cui si trova.
È difficile vivere a Parigi e riuscire a trovare lo spazio e il tempo per dedicarsi all’espressione creativa se provieni da una famiglia della classe lavoratrice, nonostante i tuoi genitori facciano il possibile per supportare il tuo sogno. Dormire a terra su un tappetino da fitness, e convivere in pochissimi metri quadri ti priva di qualsiasi comfort e intimità (l’interno della doccia è visibile dal letto). Fare il rider per un colosso del food delivery non offre alcuna soluzione, al massimo può garantire l’umiliazione di ritrovarsi faccia a faccia con un conoscente che può permettersi di dedicarsi full-time alla propria passione e che non vuole sforzarsi troppo per il pranzo. È possibile vivere una vita normale, in un bell’appartamento di Parigi, con la persona che ami, senza poterti permettere tutto ciò? Labidi ci prova con tutta la sfrontatezza del mondo, e in qualche modo ci riesce.
La passione per la letteratura e il suo estro creativo diventano “ottime skills” per vendere occhiali ai ricchi intellettuali parigini in un negozio alla moda. Qui però la frustrazione e l’infelicità dovute all’impossibilità di conciliare il lavoro, le relazioni e l’attività personale raggiungono livelli troppo alti.
Salah-Cazanas riesce a comporre un’opera fortemente coinvolgente, che parla ai giovani cuori in crisi senza essere mai scontata. Grazie al carisma di Aurélien Gabrielli, incredibilmente autentico, è difficile non empatizzare e identificarsi nell’euforia sentimentale o nei momenti di totale apatia e disillusione che il film presenta. Non manca mai l’ironia che attraverso lo sguardo malinconico e ai gesti di Gabrielli si amplifica e arriva dritta al punto. Il picco emotivo del film, che coincide con la rinascita creativa dell’aspirante autore, contiene riflessioni non banali sul ruolo della famiglia e sui sogni e le ambizioni. Un film che trascende il conflitto tra boomers e millennials, che parla di classe disagiata e di seconde generazioni europee. Un film capace di dare speranza.
Francesco Caruso
“MLUNGU WAM” DI JENNA CATO BASS
Tsidi si trasferisce insieme a sua figlia nella villa dove vive e lavora la madre Mavis, che lavora da tempo immemore come domestica per la ricca proprietaria bianca. Le regole della villa sono semplici: bisogna essere invisibili e non fare alcun rumore. Ovviamente è vietato (anche allo spettatore) entrare nella camera dell’anziana good madam, perennemente a letto per la malattia che l’ha immobilizzata ma sempre “presente” in ogni angolo della casa.
Continua la lettura di “MLUNGU WAM” DI JENNA CATO BASS“BETWEEN TWO DAWNS” BY SELMAN NACAR
Article by Luca Delpiano
Translated by Alexandra Oancea
In competition at the TFF39, the first feature film of the Turkish director Selman Nacar is an ethical and psychological drama that focuses on the process of change, fixing each of its smallest steps.
Continua la lettura di “BETWEEN TWO DAWNS” BY SELMAN NACAR“THE EDGE OF DAYBREAK” BY TAIKI SAKPISIT
Article by Davide Gravina
Translated by Rebeca Tirgovetu
The Incubator section of the TFF39 presents the first feature film by the Thailandese film director Taiki Sakpisit. Starting from a birthmark on the neck, moving on to the body of a half dead little girl, until arriving to a candid white dress, the director creates the gelid portrait of a deep inquietude transforming it in pure poetry.
Continua la lettura di “THE EDGE OF DAYBREAK” BY TAIKI SAKPISITGIUSEPPE PICCIONI, PREMIO MARIA ADRIANA PROLO 2021
Il riconoscimento intitolato a Maria Adriana Prolo, fondatrice del Museo Nazionale del Cinema, quest’anno è stato assegnato a Giuseppe Piccioni. Un premio alla carriera, alla memoria dei suoi film, alle battaglie silenziose che questi hanno saputo raccontare.
Continua la lettura di GIUSEPPE PICCIONI, PREMIO MARIA ADRIANA PROLO 2021JOANNA HADJITHOMAS e KHALIL JOREIGE
Il cinema di Joanna Hadjithomas e Kalil Joreige – a cui la trentanovesima edizione del Torino Film Festival dedica una personale e una masterclass entrambe curate da Massimo Causo – può essere compreso tra l’inizio e la fine del loro percorso artistico e cinematografico, ovvero tra le cartoline dei titoli di testa del loro primo lungometraggio, Around the Pink House (Al Bayt Al Zaher, 1999), e la scatola, archivio audio-visivo del ricordo e della memoria che, corpo estraneo e così personale, apre Memory Box (2021). Tra questi due estremi, all’interno della cornice più generale della storia del Libano, della sua distruzione e della sua ricostruzione, si apre una lunga e complessa riflessione sul cinema, sullo statuto dell’immagine e, in particolare, dell’immagine-memoria.
Continua la lettura di JOANNA HADJITHOMAS e KHALIL JOREIGE“LOS PLEBES” BY EDUARDO GIRALT ED EMMANUEL MASSU’
Article by Luca Delpiano
Translated by Lorenzo Papa
Los plebes, the documentary presented in TFF’s “The rooms of Rol” section, dives into the intimacy of young millennial sicarios who roam Sinaloa, Mexico, at the service of drug traffickers, showing their passions and hopes for the future. And, by dwelling on these budding assassins’ use of social media to recount their double lives, the story tries to question the media and offers a profound reflection on death.
Continua la lettura di “LOS PLEBES” BY EDUARDO GIRALT ED EMMANUEL MASSU’“ANOTHER BRICK ON THE WALL” DI ZHANG NAN
Nel 1977 in Cina, pochi mesi dopo la caduta di Mao Tse-tung e il successivo riassemblamento del Partito Comunista Cinese, una valle poco distante dalla città-prefettura di Tangshan, nella provincia dello Hebei, viene sommersa per creare una diga artificiale che possa rifornire d’acqua la vicina grande città. Sott’acqua, però, non finiscono solo le case e i negozi sgomberati, ma anche un intero tratto della Grande Muraglia, il monumento che più di ogni altro, forse, caratterizza la Cina agli occhi del mondo. Quarant’anni dopo la costruzione della diga, alcuni abitanti locali, constatando la miseria delle condizioni di una porzione della Muraglia sulle alture circostanti, decidono di mettere su un’operazione di restauro atta a donare nuovo lustro al millenario monumento.
Continua la lettura di “ANOTHER BRICK ON THE WALL” DI ZHANG NANITALIANA.CORTI
Racconti di formazione, operazioni di foundfootage, ripresa della fiaba e del mito antico, viaggi metafisici attraverso le masse informi del caos: sono questi i temi attorno cui si muove la selezione di Italiana.Corti della 39esima edizione del Torino Film Festival.
Continua la lettura di ITALIANA.CORTI“PIANO LESSONS” BY ANTONGIULIO PANIZZI
Article by Sara Longo
Translated by Alexandra Oancea
Piano Lessons is a moving experience, a whirling swirl of emotion, which finds in the documentary cinema its preferred medium to blow out. It is about the almost unknown story of German Diez Nieto, musician and virtuoso concert pianist, who abandoned the stage to devote himself exclusively to teaching music.
Continua la lettura di “PIANO LESSONS” BY ANTONGIULIO PANIZZI“JANE PAR CHARLOTTE” BY CHARLOTTE GAINSBOURG
Article by Lisa Cortopassi
Translated by Federica Maria Briglia
«Filming you with the camera is just an excuse to watch you», says Gainsbourg Birkin, with a sweet and quiet tone, during one of the first scenes of Jane Par Charlotte. The movie premiered at the 74th edition of Cannes Film Festival and was proposed again at the TFF39 in the “Surprise” section. It immediately crosses the cold boundaries of the biographic documentary, taking the form of an intimate and very lively conversation between mother and daughter. There lies the hiatus between these two identities which, like the hiatus between biography and autobiography, becomes more and more ephemeral, until it involves also Joe, Charlotte’s youngest daughter.
Continua la lettura di “JANE PAR CHARLOTTE” BY CHARLOTTE GAINSBOURG“ITALIA, IL FUOCO E LA CENERE” BY OLIVIER BOHLER AND CÉLINE GAILLEURD
Article by Alice Ferro
Translated by Mirko Giumentaro
Italia, il fuoco e la cenere is a poetic and oneiric journey through the divas, ghosts, lights, and shadows of Italian silent cinema. It explores its most material essence, it brings its lantern closer to the flesh, the bodies, the bare shoulders in the half-light, the penetrating gazes, the feverish convulsions of the divas. The erotic component is central: cinema made the prudes tremble, in the darkened rooms it allowed women and men to blend. The cinematic exploration becomes a historical exploration and paints the reality of a country in constant transformation, from the pompous and resplendent scenes to the decadence and abyss of fascism that are inexorably approaching.
Continua la lettura di “ITALIA, IL FUOCO E LA CENERE” BY OLIVIER BOHLER AND CÉLINE GAILLEURD