documentary

A film journey in the territories of art. Conversation with Lucille Carra

A film journey in the territories of art. Conversation with Lucille Carra

Lucille Carra was born in Manhattan, New York City. She is an american documentary film director, producer, and writer. She holds a BFA in Film Production and an MA in Cinema Studies from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. Carra has worked in the distribution and archiving of international films, including the collections of several master Japanese filmmakers. Through her company, Travelfilm, she has produced, directed and written critically acclaimed cultural documentaries on an international scale as The Inland Sea, Dvorak and America, The Last Wright.

Mother Fortress. Interview with Maria Luisa Forenza

Mother Fortress. Interview with Maria Luisa Forenza

We meet Maria Luisa Forenza. She graduated in Foreign Languages and Literatures, in Directing at the Experimental Center of Cinematography-Rome, with Duetto, based on Alberto Moravia's “Roman Tales”, played by Giulio Brogi. Assistant to Dino Risi, Francesco Maselli, Giancarlo Sepe, after a scholarship at the Academy of Arts in Belgrade with the Serbian director Dusan Makavejev, she mainly dedicates herself to documentaries with a historical-social slant, shot in Italy and abroad, with production and distribution Rai, Rai-Trade, History Channel (Usa-Uk), Netflix. Among these: Guatemala Nunca Mas (with Rigoberta Menchù), Mussolini: the last truth, Albino Pierro: investigation of a poet (from which a multilingual theatrical show with Agneta Eckmanner, staged in Rome and Stockholm). Conceived in San Francisco, presented and awarded for Special Mention and Best Documentary in Film Festivals, Mother Fortress is the latest result of this cinematographical journey. It seemed to us an operation as for Antonioni’s depth, a reflection on evil and good understood in a metaphysical sense, investigated in their mystery with an authentic and powerful language, a road movie in the Mediterranean light, captured with splendid photography both in its spectacular power and in the dim light of a mystical place like a monastery.