(Adnkronos) - Il film italiano in concorso alla Msotra del cinema. Il regista: “Se bastasse un film avremmo risolto tutto”.
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00:00I have a question for both of you.
00:04The wounds of the war, even after a century, are still felt.
00:09We are in the face of a third world war.
00:13What echo of the past do you hope that the battlefield can awaken in today's consciousness?
00:20If a film was enough, we would have solved everything.
00:24Unfortunately, films are small things compared to the interests of power.
00:33Because wars are born from the powerful.
00:38Wars are born from the desire for conquest.
00:42Both the current wars and the wars that are far away in time.
00:49The first world war was particularly a war almost at the table,
00:57where Italy sat down with its allies, a little exchanged, etc.
01:05But it was won, it is said, with the sacrifice of hundreds of thousands of people.
01:18They were all innocent.
01:21Not only civilians, but the soldiers who went to battle were innocent.
01:27They were 19-20-year-old boys who had no training.
01:35For the first time, they fought hand-to-hand with a rifle.
01:42The war that is not seen in the film is very much told inside a hospital,
01:51where these wounded boys arrive every day.
01:58And there are two doctors, two friends, who have two different ideas on how to heal them.
02:08Either heal them because they must return home,
02:13or heal them because they must return to fight.
02:17We don't tell anything else, because it is a film that touches feelings that go beyond time, in my opinion.
02:27It touches things that concern us and thoughts that we have had many times,
02:34and questions to which we may not yet be able to give an answer.
02:40It is very important, even without making it reach a dimension as important as that of war.
02:46I think I have often spoken today about the importance of education and the possibility of being educated.
02:54I don't know how much it is Roman, or even used in other parts of Italy,
03:01who says that you have to know how to be in the world,
03:05that is, the way we decide, who we decide to be when we wake up in the morning.
03:10As for the character, he does not give up his human part,
03:16but the fulcrum of the way we tried to put the character in the scene is precisely this.
03:21How human it is, however, to take away the sight of a person, promising him salvation.
03:28And it is the contradictory that is in the film, which was the basis of all the settings,
03:33of the details and nuances that we tried to do in the characters.
03:36Because it was important for me, I hope for us, to make a film that told a story,
03:40where the characters were extremely rigorous and precise,
03:43but did not give the viewer the opportunity to say,
03:46perfect, I understood from whom I have to be, and who does the right thing and who does the wrong thing.
03:51Because it allows us, in this way, to get out of the room and ask ourselves a series of questions,
03:55to understand what we would have done instead of our protagonists.
03:58And this, in my opinion, is a very important thing for cinema.
04:01Then, as a human being, I try to do my best,
04:05and I think I'm a good person, but I also do a lot of bullshit, I think.
04:10And then, you know, the subjectivity of our actions depends on the context,
04:14on the people we meet.
04:16It is a whole thing that only salvation is found in the fact of continually asking ourselves
04:20what is the right thing to do,
04:22and hoping that either someone will tell us what it is,
04:24or that in some way we will be able to find it ourselves, I don't know how.
04:28I don't know, they tell me that I have a good ear,
04:31they noticed it also with the music and also singing,
04:34so I'm in tune, so they give me instruments,
04:36and after a week I can play things.
04:39I put the fact of the dialects together with a series of challenges that I like to face,
04:44to try to create characters that have a very strong identity.
04:49Because I say that in the end, who really speaks only Italian,
04:53in intimacy, in this world? Few people, in short.
04:56So it's nice to have the opportunity to make nuances.
05:00I don't know, now it's been a long time since I've made a film in Roman, for example,
05:03but I'm sure that when I do it again, they'll tell me that I only recite in Roman,
05:06so in reality, since the external point always leaves the time I find,
05:10I understood, I just have fun and then I don't care.
05:14Maybe it depends on the fact that I have an age.
05:17I think about the past not with nostalgia,
05:22but having lived it, I probably know it better,
05:27so I choose to talk about things that belong to me.
05:34I didn't make the First World War,
05:37I was born during the Second World War,
05:40but in a way, the gaze that looks at the past is always directed at the future.