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The art of making a movie…
Is the art of creating more than an atmosphere; it’s creating a whole frame of mind. When you get the chance to watch something responding to this description you realize you’ve been pretty lucky. You suddenly start thinking that watching a good movie has some sort of healing and calming power.
Watching a very good movie heals your soul.

This is what I thought two nights ago, after watching a famous movie I didn’t happen to see in theaters, I’m talking about “Brokeback Mountain”, by Ang Lee. It really is a cinema masterpiece, but not for the story. Even if this movie was highly helped in gaining its fame by the theme it treated, it really deserved all those awards. I personally believe, making a movie isn’t simply telling a story. If it was only this, every piece of video would be called “movie”, instead it’s not this way the world works. Ang Lee is a master of storytelling, a dreammaker. Everything in the movie, soundtrack, landscapes, actors’ small gestures, words and more importantly silences contribute in equal part to a film that breaches in your heart. There is no need for explosions, big stars (even if Ledger and Gyllenhaal are), huge sets to make a rocking film.
Great 2 h 25′ of my audience life. Thanks Ang Lee and everyone who made this reality.
Marathon
The second and, unfortunately, the last movie I got to see at this festival was “Marathon” by Iranian director, Amir Naderi. Shot in black and white, it tells the story of Gretchen who desperately goes after her record of 77 Crossword Puzzles solved in a day. She finds inspiration in Manhattan’s noise. The Subway and the words are the story’s real protagonists.

Sara Paul in Marathon, by Amir Naderi
Being part of a Festiwal (“Il Vento del Cinema“) the theme of which was “The Unfinished Cinema”, Marathon perfectly fits the event. As the very same director stated during a jam session he doesn’t plan too much on a movie, he just makes it as he feels, this movie doesn’t demonstrate to have a focused aim. Sometimes nebulous, sometimes fascinating, isn’t capable of transmitting a message different from what in my opinion seemed a metaphor of chaos. Or better still, a metaphor of struggle against chaos; tidy crosswords contrast what is a city bursting with noises and chaos. This is what Gretchen needs for her concentration, though this doesn’t allow her to go over her previous record. She desperately tries to find a way…, not changing almost anything about her way of working. An unfinished story…
77 & 1/2
That’s how far she goes.
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