Ten Years After the Film’s Release – Documentary
FILM CULTURE
A journey through the memory of Italian independent cinema.
Filmstudio Mon Amour tells the story of an iconic place: Filmstudio, the legendary Roman film club that, since the 1960s, has shaped generations of filmmakers and cinephiles.
It is a tale filled with memory and love for the seventh art, where the voices of those who lived that experience intertwine, reaching the present day in a continuous dialogue between past and future.
And speaking of voices, I want to thank the author of the article dedicated to this work of mine, published on Wikipedia.
“Once upon a time, there were the legendary film clubs that, for the boys and girls of the 1970s, were important places of friendship, culture, and life…”
Thus, through the contributions and testimonies of Bernardo Bertolucci, Jonas Mekas, Nanni Moretti, Vittorio Taviani, Carlo Verdone, Adriano Aprà, Armando Leone, Alvin Curran, Alfredo Leonardi, Giovanni Lussu, Tonino De Bernardi, Mimmo Rafele, Pierluigi Farri, Giancarlo Guastini, Bruno Restuccia, Wim Wenders, Silvana Silvestri, Cristina Torelli, Roberto Silvestri, Marco Bellocchio, and Goffredo Fofi, the story of Filmstudio is told — the Roman cineclub in Trastevere, founded in 1967 by Americo Sbardella and Annabella Miscuglio, still active today — through which generations of cinephiles and filmmakers have passed, from the underground artists of the 1960s to a young Nanni Moretti and, today, Tony D’Angelo.
Source: Wikipedia

Trailer
