On the Road Film Festival 2018 Competition> OUR WILDEST DREAMS by Marie Elisa Scheidt

On the Road Film Festival 6. A story of modern nomadic life, of its beauty and its hardships. Torn between society‘s expectations and their love of freedom, Foots and Torjus are on a quest for themselves in America’s asphalt jungle and in the deep woods of Norway – until their longing for their kids catches up with them. Foots and Torjus are united by their common attitude to life. They recognise their desire to be on the road as an existential human need.

On the Road Film Festival 2018 Concorso> BLUE KIDS by Andrea Tagliaferri

On the Road Film Festival 6. A brother and sister, an obsessive relationship, an inheritance, a conflict with their father and a foolish and studied gesture makes them run away together. Blue Kids is a story of love and vengeance brought to its extremity, rooted in a state of absence in which the protagonists live. Their only hand-hold seems to be the memory, distant and confused of when they were small, cradled by the stories of their grandmother and by cartoons, in that state of naivety in which they would have liked to stay forever. Debut feature film produced by the acclaimed director Matteo Garrone.

THE SPACE IN BETWEEN. Marina Abramović and Brazil

A mixture between road movie and spiritual thriller, the film brings an unprecedented approach of the intimate creative process of one of the most important artists of our time. Pioneering performance artist Marina Abramović travels through the remote areas of Brazil to experience sacred rituals and reveal her creative process amidst the wonders of the landscape. From visits with healers, sages, shamans, and sects, to intimate personal rituals and experiences within the natural landscape, the documentary follows Abramović through a profound introspective journey of memories, pain, and past experiences.

THE SPACE IN BETWEEN. Marina Abramović in Brazil. Ultima proiezione!

A mixture between road movie and spiritual thriller, the film brings an unprecedented approach of the intimate creative process of one of the most important artists of our time. Pioneering performance artist Marina Abramović travels through the remote areas of Brazil to experience sacred rituals and reveal her creative process amidst the wonders of the landscape. From visits with healers, sages, shamans, and sects, to intimate personal rituals and experiences within the natural landscape, the documentary follows Abramović through a profound introspective journey of memories, pain, and past experiences.

LE JEUNE KARL MARX. Di Raoul Peck candidato all’Oscar e vincitore di BAFTA e César con “I’M Not Your Negro”

Marx and Engels meet cute in this intense, fervent film about the early development of communism from I Am Not Your Negro director Raoul Peck. It’s a sinewy and intensely focused, uncompromisingly cerebral period drama, co-written with Pascal Bonitzer, about the birth of communism in the mid-19th century. It gives you a real sense of what radical politics was about: talk. There is talk, talk and more talk. It should be dull, but it isn’t. Somehow the spectacle of fiercely angry people talking about ideas becomes absorbing and even gripping.

THE SPACE IN BETWEEN. Marina Abramović in Brazil. A Road Movie

A mixture between road movie and spiritual thriller, the film brings an unprecedented approach of the intimate creative process of one of the most important artists of our time. Pioneering performance artist Marina Abramović travels through the remote areas of Brazil to experience sacred rituals and reveal her creative process amidst the wonders of the landscape. From visits with healers, sages, shamans, and sects, to intimate personal rituals and experiences within the natural landscape, the documentary follows Abramović through a profound introspective journey of memories, pain, and past experiences.

APRÈS LA GUERRE. Di Annarita Zambrano

The tranquil life of a former left-wing terrorist from Italy who started anew in France is upended when the law preventing his extradition is unexpectedly lifted in the captivating drama After the War (Dopo la guerra). Moving back and forth between the man hiding out in the southern boondocks with his moody, France-raised teenage daughter and the morose mother and sister he left behind in Italy — and with both families clearly impacted by the actions stemming from the lead’s radical idealism several decades earlier — this is intelligent and emotionally accessible fare that fuses the individual and the political while plumbing questions of personal morality and state responsibility.