Hard-hitting migrant films tighten Venice race
Filmmaker wanted to break through Europeans' complacency
07 September, 11:41
(ANSA-AFP) - VENICE, SEP 7 - The blistering tale of an
African's journey to Europe and a moving film about refugees at
Poland's border, which has angered its government, have
tightened the race at the Venice Film Festival. "Io Capitano",
which premiered on Wednesday, is the latest from Italian
director Matteo Garrone, known for his gritty mafia drama
"Gomorrah". The epic drama follows two naive 16-year-olds who
leave Senegal for Europe, only to find themselves robbed,
tortured and enslaved along the route, and ultimately aboard a
dangerously rickety boat to Italy. Garrone told reporters he
wanted to break through Europeans' complacency about the
migrants arriving by sea. "For years we've seen boats arriving
across the Mediterranean -- sometimes they are saved, sometimes
not," he said. "Over time, we've gotten used to thinking of
these people as numbers and lost sight of the fact that behind
the numbers there is a whole world of families, dreams,
desires." The director said he wanted to "put the camera on the
other side -- in Africa, pointing towards Europe -- to tell
their journey and live it with them". His film arrived in Venice
a day after another powerful drama about migrants, "Green
Border", which focused on refugees trapped between the borders
of Belarus and Poland in 2021. Critics were impressed, with The
Guardian calling it a "brutal, angry, gruelling drama, in sombre
black and white". But it triggered an angry response from her
country's justice minister Zbigniew Ziobro, who compared it to
Nazi propaganda because it criticised Poland. Its Polish
director Agnieszka Holland, 74, told reporters in Venice:
"Europe is in the process of losing its convictions." "We have
to face the real challenge. Europe, the continent of freedom,
democracy, human rights, will disappear... It will change to
some kind of fortress where people who want to reach our
continent will be killed by us, by Europeans," she said.
(ANSA-AFP).