Pietro Castellitto on Depicting the Romantic Side of Rome’s One Percent in His Frenzied Film ‘Enea’
07.09.2023 - 16:01
/ variety.com
Nick Vivarelli International Correspondent Italian hotshot Pietro Castellitto is in competition in Venice with his second feature “Enea,” in which he also stars as the titular character, a young Roman sushi restaurant owner and cocaine dealer whose best friend Valentino just got his license as an airplane pilot. There is a lot going on in this fresh and frenzied film lensed by ace cinematographer Radek Ladczuk (“The Babadook”). “Enea” is produced by Lorenzo Mieli’s the Apartment, which is a Fremantle company, and Luca Guadagnino’s Frenesy.
Vision Distribution is handling world sales. Castellitto spoke to Variety about what drew him to make what he calls a gangster movie without the gangster bits. This seems like a very personal film. Is it? I would say it’s basically a movie about the desire to feel alive.
What moves Enea is the need to feel life pulsing within him. There is this tragic paradox that we feel more alive when we are at war of some sort. So Enea is almost forced to invent a war to feel alive and to do this he gets involved with a corrupt Roman underworld.
But the desire that drives him is pure and incorruptible. Of course Enea comes from privilege, he’s a wealthy young man In dramatic terms that was important precisely because you feel more alive when you are at war, whereas within a context of comfort, in which peace proliferates, there is also greater paralysis. Enea’s neighborhood, the restaurants where he eats, can be considered elitist.
But his basic desire to feel life pulsing in his veins is not elitist, it inhabits everyone. As far as I’m concerned, it’s common to all young people in any neighborhood, in any city, anywhere in the world. Rome, mainly the city’s wealthy side, is also a character in
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