The primary objective, to capture the attention of the media, has been achieved: judging by the press conference, the risk of handing over the artistic direction of the
25th Turin Film Festival (November 23-December 1) to
Nanni Moretti seems to have paid off.
All eyes are on him: a director, actor, producer, exhibitor and distributor, the man behind
Dear Diary is for the first time heading one of the most important film events in Italy, and immediately proved his intentions of continuing along the lines of Turin’s past.
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“I love this festival," he said. "It's rooted in the city and I’d like for cinema to feel at home here. It’s also an important space for short and documentary films, two ways of filmmaking that interest me, and to which we will dedicate two sections –
Italiana.doc and
Italiana.corti – while the competition will be at the heart of the programme”.
The competition section – reserved for first, second or third films – features 15 titles, six of which are European:
Lino by
Jean-Louis Malesi and
Water Lilies [
trailer] by
Cèline Sciamma (both from France), Lithuania’s
Volgelfrei (directed by
Janis Kalejs, Janis Putnins, Gatis Smits and Anna Viduleja), Irish director
Lenny Abrahamson’s
Garage [
trailer,
film focus], German title
Neandertal by
Jan Christoph Glaser and Ingo Haeb, and
Bard Breien’s Norwegian black comedy
The Art of Negative Thinking [
trailer].
Italy, however, will be the focus of a special sidebar,
Panorama Italiano, which will include
Alina Marazzi’s
We Want Roses Too [
trailer] (highly acclaimed at Locarno), and four world premieres: the feature debut by actor
Fabrizio Bentivoglio (
Lascia perdere, Johnny!),
Peter Del Monte’s latest (
Nelle tue mani), and two films tied to the city’s industrial traditions,
In fabbrica by
Francesca Comencini (a documentary on the working class) and
Signorina Effe by
Wilma Labate, a difficult love story set against the Fiat union struggles.
The collateral sections teeming with European titles include
Anteprime, in which Italian distributors present premieres of some of the strongest titles from their upcoming slates, such as
Sam Garbarski’s
Irina Palm [
trailer,
film focus] (in competition at Berlin and out in Italy in December through
Teodora) and Irish musical
Once [
trailer] by
John Carney (distributed by
Eagle Pictures);
La zona, dedicated to experimental cinema, which will offer two Hungarian directors much loved by international critics,
Béla Tarr (
The Man from London [
trailer]) and
Benedek Fliegauf’s (
Milky Way.
Fuori concorso (Out of Competition) features
Farkas by Hungary’s
Tamás Tóth, UK film
Brick Lane [
trailer]
by
Sarah Gavron and Cannes titles
Actrices [
trailer] by actress-director
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi and French/Russian co-production
Aleksandra [
trailer] by Aleksandr Sokurov.