Berliner Boersenzeitung - Italy's Matteo Garrone brings migrant drama to Oscars

EUR -
AED 4.32182
AFN 82.262768
ALL 97.889674
AMD 452.732813
ANG 2.10576
AOA 1078.988694
ARS 1460.811676
AUD 1.808653
AWG 2.120912
AZN 2.00049
BAM 1.955078
BBD 2.377293
BDT 144.426666
BGN 1.953881
BHD 0.443514
BIF 3507.653733
BMD 1.17665
BND 1.49951
BOB 8.135996
BRL 6.379682
BSD 1.177415
BTN 100.482455
BWP 15.595169
BYN 3.853026
BYR 23062.349449
BZD 2.364987
CAD 1.604381
CDF 3394.63644
CHF 0.935318
CLF 0.028529
CLP 1094.790994
CNY 8.431175
CNH 8.439702
COP 4697.953547
CRC 594.605689
CUC 1.17665
CUP 31.181238
CVE 110.224296
CZK 24.644916
DJF 209.664157
DKK 7.461411
DOP 70.466972
DZD 152.223964
EGP 58.071582
ERN 17.649757
ETB 163.405301
FJD 2.644228
FKP 0.86208
GBP 0.864073
GEL 3.200704
GGP 0.86208
GHS 12.1855
GIP 0.86208
GMD 84.134958
GNF 10211.619549
GTQ 9.052657
GYD 246.319038
HKD 9.236606
HNL 30.761947
HRK 7.531266
HTG 154.589482
HUF 399.193377
IDR 19104.332557
ILS 3.935696
IMP 0.86208
INR 100.876837
IQD 1542.350097
IRR 49566.401414
ISK 142.398592
JEP 0.86208
JMD 187.92699
JOD 0.834256
JPY 170.717276
KES 152.020778
KGS 102.89788
KHR 4730.454134
KMF 491.840015
KPW 1058.985622
KRW 1608.73416
KWD 0.359055
KYD 0.98125
KZT 611.461992
LAK 25370.954349
LBP 105492.188268
LKR 353.244056
LRD 236.068842
LSL 20.710516
LTL 3.474343
LVL 0.711744
LYD 6.342008
MAD 10.567598
MDL 19.832929
MGA 5298.268577
MKD 61.537902
MMK 2470.426162
MNT 4216.645015
MOP 9.519606
MRU 46.730729
MUR 52.890159
MVR 18.121555
MWK 2041.715435
MXN 21.948944
MYR 4.983096
MZN 75.258156
NAD 20.710516
NGN 1801.326978
NIO 43.325657
NOK 11.876216
NPR 160.77446
NZD 1.957611
OMR 0.452406
PAB 1.17737
PEN 4.174858
PGK 4.86339
PHP 66.61609
PKR 334.240855
PLN 4.244543
PYG 9383.053325
QAR 4.303111
RON 5.057478
RSD 117.184932
RUB 92.830315
RWF 1692.532513
SAR 4.411366
SBD 9.809646
SCR 16.58551
SDG 706.577172
SEK 11.255897
SGD 1.502106
SHP 0.924663
SLE 26.415732
SLL 24673.776596
SOS 672.874393
SRD 43.989059
STD 24354.289331
SVC 10.302327
SYP 15298.723108
SZL 20.695589
THB 38.335862
TJS 11.449918
TMT 4.130043
TND 3.430333
TOP 2.755837
TRY 47.026364
TTD 7.985153
TWD 34.147593
TZS 3107.45741
UAH 49.103536
UGX 4223.440352
USD 1.17665
UYU 47.25255
UZS 14784.79152
VES 128.81205
VND 30767.056806
VUV 139.348855
WST 3.049888
XAF 655.737139
XAG 0.032118
XAU 0.000355
XCD 3.179957
XDR 0.815533
XOF 655.751066
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.925921
ZAR 20.832814
ZMK 10591.263284
ZMW 28.522194
ZWL 378.880975
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Italy's Matteo Garrone brings migrant drama to Oscars
Italy's Matteo Garrone brings migrant drama to Oscars / Photo: Filippo MONTEFORTE - AFP

Italy's Matteo Garrone brings migrant drama to Oscars

With his latest film in the running for an Oscar, Italian director Matteo Garrone is hoping to shine light on the desperate plight of migrants -- all without broaching politics.

Text size:

"Io Capitano", an epic tale of two teenagers from Senegal crossing Africa to try to reach Europe, is one of five movies nominated for "Best Foreign Film" at the Academy Awards on March 10.

The Oscar nod is "so important", the director told AFP, especially "when these delicate stories are told".

"Every recognition helps us overcome prejudices among a wider audience," Garrone said during an interview at his office in Rome.

Behind him, dozens of photos and drawings on a storyboard point to the many months spent in Morocco and Senegal to prepare the 11th feature film of the director, best known to international audiences for 2008's "Gomorrah" and "Pinocchio" in 2019.

Despite its spectacular photography and touches of poetic dreaminess, "Io Capitano" addresses a brutal reality -- the ordeal of migrants, many of them mere children, making their way across Africa to finally reach the Mediterranean, and Europe beyond.

In the film, two 15-year-old cousins decide to leave their family without a word to try their chances, a scenario that came to Garrone during his first visit to a reception centre for underage migrants in Catania, Sicily.

While there, Garrone heard how a makeshift vessel that had crossed the dangerous waters with 250 people onboard was captained by a teenager, who had never before been at the helm of a boat.

"It reminded me of adventure stories, of the sea, by Stevenson, by Jack London, by Conrad," he said.

"We, especially in Europe, are used to imagining that inside those boats when they arrive there are only people fleeing wars or climate change or desperation," he said.

"This is often the case, but we forget that even in Africa 70 percent of people are young," he said.

Through images and videos posted on social media, they see a vision of another world in the West, "that makes promises to them".

"So there is a whole section of young people, as the film tells, who leave to pursue a dream," Garrone said.

"The dream of knowing the world, finding better opportunities, travelling, trying to succeed today."

- 'Currencies of exchange' -

"Io Capitano" captures some of the "almost documentary reality" of "Gomorrah", about the Camorra mafia in Italy's south, while also tapping the "magical abstraction" of "Pinocchio", the director said.

The violence of the migrant traffickers during chilling scenes of torture is reminiscent of methods used by the organised crime group in the Naples area.

"The mechanisms are always linked to the search for profit. These kids, these victims, become currencies of exchange, vending machines," Garrone said.

But the director, whose country is at the front lines of Europe's migration issue, stops short of pointing fingers at politicians, saying he began working on the film well before the current hard-right government of Giorgia Meloni came to power.

"It is not a film created to criticise or attack a particular government over another," he said.

Instead, it was intended "to try to shed light on an unjust system, on a continuous violation of the most basic human rights."

- Papal screening -

The film won a Silver Lion best directing award at the Venice Film Festival and a best newcomer award for its young star Seydou Sarr.

In Africa, it has been released in about 20 countries, while in Italy it has made the round of schools and even the Vatican, which organised a special screening in September.

Pope Francis, who has repeatedly spoken out for migrants throughout his papacy, received Garrone and the film's two stars, Sarr and Moustapha Fall.

"Francesco told us that this is perhaps the biggest problem of our time, you can see how close he feels to it," Garrone told the Corriere della Sera newspaper after the meeting.

Once migrants from Africa manage to cross the continent to reach the north, they still must survive passage across the central Mediterranean, the world's deadliest migratory maritime crossing.

Last year, 3,041 people died or went missing trying to cross any part of the Mediterranean, according to the UN's International Organization for Migration.

(O.Joost--BBZ)