Program
2022

22 June
Thursday 22-06-2023
time 15:00
Teatro Sperimentale - Sala Grande

pff2021 art marona

AA.VV. del corso di B. Pucci

LOTTA DI LATTA

Italy 2022 , 1’15’’

Blu and Red, two tin characters who feed on cogs, have to take turns eating because they are connected to each other and when one moves forward, the other is lifted off the ground. Blue is thrifty while Red is selfish, but Red’s gluttony will eventually be fatal for both. Lotta di latta is a short film made with puppet animation. We wanted to depict visually the theme of selfishness, explored through robots and gears in a minimal environment.

BEST IN SHORTS has now reached its 9th edition at the Pesaro Film Festival. The noncompetitive section is dedicated to inventive, moving works made by Italian animation filmmakers over the past few months: “Contemporary Italian Animation”, literally. There is a really substantial number of BEST IN SHORTS this year (including very short ones), something which proves there is a very wide, and high-quality, offer.

There are mainly works made by young and very young filmmakers, very capable beginners, who are being trained in animation film at Schools, Institutes, and Fine Arts Academies. The selection also includes the latest, qualified productions of some wellknown filmmakers – whose award-winning work has already circulated abroad – with whom the Festival has a special connection: Michele Bernardi and Donato Sansone, friends of our Festival who had each a dedicated complete retrospective and a meeting. All the creators selected work like artisans, for many months, even years (except Donato Sansone who is very fast), in order to express themselves and present films of great imagination and originality, usually at festivals. These works are extremely diverse in terms of language, style, and techniques, which include hand drawing and stop motion. We believe all of them give the idea of the level of vitality, creativity, innovation, and research that many filmmakers in our country are able to express in spite of the lack of means and the scant attention received by the Italian establishment. In fact, the latter is particularly tight-fisted as regards the circulation of original works including in the audiovisual field (why doesn’t at least one of the public digital terrestrial television stations broadcast art-house animation shorts?) We would like to be able to contribute to the circulation of our filmmakers’ works as we did in the past. We wish we could start working together in this direction, so that audiences see extraordinary works that otherwise risk falling into oblivion. BEST IN SHORTS – Contemporary Italian Animation was made possible this year thanks to the fundamental partnerships with the Academy of Fine Arts in Urbino, the Istituto Superiore per le Industrie Artistiche in Urbino (with the animation courses conducted by Mara Cerri, Magda Guidi, and Massimo Salvucci), the Ravenna Academy of Fine Arts, and Liceo artistico – Scuola del Libro in Urbino.


ALL SCREENINGS ARE FREE