The China Mail - Gianfranco Rosi: the slow documentary maker in a frantic world

USD -
AED 3.672496
AFN 64.000194
ALL 81.719319
AMD 368.499257
ANG 1.790403
AOA 913.116019
ARS 1429.268702
AUD 1.415008
AWG 1.801525
AZN 1.697004
BAM 1.684662
BBD 2.014307
BDT 122.763646
BGN 1.69088
BHD 0.377198
BIF 2989.857226
BMD 1
BND 1.282253
BOB 6.910839
BRL 5.047397
BSD 1.000134
BTN 94.672782
BWP 13.41861
BYN 2.768827
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011413
CAD 1.39817
CDF 2294.999901
CHF 0.793615
CLF 0.022746
CLP 895.199882
CNY 6.771499
CNH 6.758525
COP 3492.51
CRC 454.982019
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.978251
CZK 20.802202
DJF 178.089213
DKK 6.439103
DOP 58.780714
DZD 132.880346
EGP 50.350395
ERN 15
ETB 161.237628
EUR 0.86155
FJD 2.237201
FKP 0.746148
GBP 0.745045
GEL 2.655028
GGP 0.746148
GHS 11.101445
GIP 0.746148
GMD 73.000013
GNF 8761.079479
GTQ 7.62406
GYD 209.236521
HKD 7.834085
HNL 26.744076
HRK 6.487796
HTG 130.714732
HUF 301.947501
IDR 17726
ILS 2.911703
IMP 0.746148
INR 94.62135
IQD 1310.156512
IRR 1375877.498196
ISK 124.590317
JEP 0.746148
JMD 158.526028
JOD 0.708984
JPY 160.18103
KES 129.379887
KGS 87.450013
KHR 4019.208821
KMF 426.000365
KPW 900.00035
KRW 1514.030332
KWD 0.30823
KYD 0.833473
KZT 489.555787
LAK 22021.999604
LBP 89562.850473
LKR 332.536555
LRD 182.018649
LSL 16.177014
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.359584
MAD 9.24575
MDL 17.396473
MGA 4155.30719
MKD 53.088084
MMK 2099.090156
MNT 3576.689019
MOP 8.070461
MRU 39.92506
MUR 47.119774
MVR 15.459994
MWK 1734.220557
MXN 17.211445
MYR 4.050402
MZN 63.901722
NAD 16.176944
NGN 1359.180092
NIO 36.806698
NOK 9.52483
NPR 151.476624
NZD 1.71296
OMR 0.384505
PAB 1.00006
PEN 3.401239
PGK 4.380015
PHP 60.331023
PKR 278.247736
PLN 3.658025
PYG 6123.407023
QAR 3.646058
RON 4.510902
RSD 101.090154
RUB 72.530323
RWF 1469.173289
SAR 3.752094
SBD 8.045573
SCR 13.697273
SDG 600.500101
SEK 9.38855
SGD 1.282225
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.649504
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 571.527015
SRD 37.509498
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.103498
SVC 8.750743
SYP 110.532098
SZL 16.174171
THB 32.553502
TJS 9.270929
TMT 3.51
TND 2.926901
TOP 2.40776
TRY 46.269498
TTD 6.788552
TWD 31.531099
TZS 2626.503005
UAH 44.83735
UGX 3715.140944
UYU 40.562483
UZS 11980.705457
VES 581.95784
VND 26290
VUV 119.50104
WST 2.743493
XAF 565.02961
XAG 0.014105
XAU 0.000231
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802434
XDR 0.703376
XOF 565.02961
XPF 102.727985
YER 238.598748
ZAR 16.213695
ZMK 9001.200372
ZMW 17.580733
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    17.5

    +2.63%

  • VOD

    -0.4050

    15.125

    -2.68%

  • BCC

    1.6200

    72.76

    +2.23%

  • JRI

    0.0936

    12.7601

    +0.73%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.39

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.0819

    24.195

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    -0.6400

    81.2

    -0.79%

  • RELX

    -0.5400

    33.2

    -1.63%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • RIO

    1.1350

    106.485

    +1.07%

  • BTI

    -0.4200

    61.9

    -0.68%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.33

    +0.31%

  • BP

    -1.2100

    41.57

    -2.91%

  • AZN

    -1.1650

    177.585

    -0.66%

  • GSK

    -0.2850

    52.755

    -0.54%

Gianfranco Rosi: the slow documentary maker in a frantic world
Gianfranco Rosi: the slow documentary maker in a frantic world / Photo: © AFP

Gianfranco Rosi: the slow documentary maker in a frantic world

If the regular recipe for success in the modern entertainment industry or on social media is being loud, attention-seeking and a prolific creator of "content", Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi has carved out a career doing the exact opposite.

Text size:

The work of the award-winning documentary producer is everything our contemporary culture is not: slow, nuanced, contemplative.

It's a strategy that has taken him to the pinnacle of European cinema -- he's won the top Golden Lion prize at the Venice Film Festival and the Golden Bear in Berlin -- and has pushed the boundaries for non-fiction in the process.

"There were people saying 'How can you give a Golden Lion to someone that never directed an actor?'" he told AFP. "It's not important that division for me (between fiction and documentary). What I feel close to is cinema."

His latest work "Sotto le nuvole" ("Below the Clouds" in English), which releases internationally in France this week, is a portrait of the gritty Italian port of Naples.

It bears all the hallmarks of Rosi's distinct way of working.

The 61-year-old, who also holds American nationality, believes in "immersion", often heading to live alone at the location of his films with no script and only a vague notion of what he is trying to capture.

He spent three years in Naples, wandering, meeting people, filming relentlessly, finding the characters whose lives form the core of the 115-minute production.

"I'm a director that doesn't go home to sleep. I'm always on location," he explained.

For 2013's "Sacra GRA", his breakthrough documentary, he spent two years living in a van around the ringroad on the outskirts of Rome where he slowly won the confidence of his subjects: an ambulance driver, an eel farmer, a faded aristocrat, prostitutes.

"Notturno", which released in 2020, saw Rosi spend over three years on the borders of Iraq and Syria, documenting the impact of the Islamic State group.

His first film "Boatman" took five years to complete.

"Time is my biggest investment," he told AFP. "Working alone allows me to wait for the right moment, to create a certain intimacy with the people I meet, and allows me to wait for the right light."

- Meditation on time -

Rosi's film-making process is only part of his craft, with his visual language and approach to story-telling also setting him apart.

He disdains the look of many modern documentaries -- shaky handheld camera work and an urgent, grave tone -- preferring a static vantage point, with a fixed lens.

He frames wide and his camera lingers, leaving long pauses that he likens to the space between notes in a piece of music, or the void between the lines of a poem.

He conducts no on-screen interviews, does no narration, and allows himself a strict minimum of directing his subjects to ensure his work remains almost entirely observational.

"Below the Clouds" features a handful of unconnected people around Naples -- an after-school teacher, a fire department call-centre operator, a sailor, archeologists -- whose lives are revealed little by little in looping segments.

There is no place for pizza, football, sun-drenched piazzas, or the mafia -- the cliches of Napolitean life.

"There's always a very strong stereotype about Naples," he explained. "I wanted to get rid of all the elements that belong to the collective imagination of people."

Overall, it is a meditation on time that links the ancient Vesuvius volcano that looms over the city to its buried Roman past and its often chaotic present.

"The film, for me, is a reflection on the complexity of Naples and on history, on the weight of the past, and somehow on suspended time," he added.

It is shot in black-and-white to give it a vintage feel, while the sparse musical score is provided by Britain's Daniel Blumberg, who won an Oscar for his work on "The Brutalist".

Reviews of Rosi's film were overwhelmingly positive when it premiered at the Venice Film Festival in September, where it won the Special Jury prize.

The Hollywood Reporter said Rosi "makes documentaries like no-one else" and called his latest work "stunning".

The Guardian gave it a five-star rating, saying it was "another of (Rosi's) brilliantly composed docu-mosaic assemblages of scenes and tableaux."

M.Chau--ThChM