The March on Rome

The March on Rome
Mark Cousins
Italy
98
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The March of Rome
Synopsis

True to his conception of film as a mirror of an era, Mark Cousins turns to an obscure Italian short film, A noi, to understand the rise of fascism in Italy in 1922, showing us that politics also has its own mise-en-scène, one full of tricks and special effects. Film, history, and artifice get blended together in a timely film that reminds us that the future is also constructed out of images.

Director biography

Mark Cousins
Mark Cousins

Mark Cousins is an Irish-Scottish director and writer. His films (including “The Story of Film: An Odyssey”, “What is This Film Called Love?”, “Life May Be”, “A Story of Children and Film”, “Atomic”, “Stockholm My Love”, “I am Belfast and The Eyes of Orson Welles”) have premiered in Cannes, Berlin, Sundance and Venice film festivals and have won the Prix Italia, a Peabody, the Stanley Kubrick Award and the European Film Award for Innovative Storytelling. He has filmed in Iraq, Sarajevo during the siege, Iran, Mexico, across Asia and in America in Europe.
Mark’s books include Imagining Reality: The Faber Book of Documentary and The Story of Looking. He has collaborated with Tilda Swinton on innovative film events, and tries to find new, filmic ways to explore his themes: looking, cities, cinema, childhood, and recovery.
His 14 hour documentary “Women Make Film” tries to rethink cinema. His newest films are “The Storms of Jeremy Thomas”, “The Story of Looking” and “The Story of Film: A New Generation”. He has walked across Los Angeles, Belfast, Moscow, Beijing, London, Paris, Berlin, Dakar and Mexico City and likes night swimming.

Finished

Sessions

May

Wednesday 03
18:30 h
CINETECA - Plató

Credits

Language
- Subtitles in spanish and english
Director
Mark Cousins