The documentary film Borrowed Memories stories from Yugoslavia, realized as additional activity of the project Networking Memories, from the Veneto Region (I) and ARCS – ARCI Culture and Development, will be presented in Venice, Friday, November 30, 2012 (16.00, Veneto Region Big Station Palace, Conference Room, Cannaregio 23).
The film has the main purpose to tell the story of Yugo-nostalgia with the language of cinema.
The material has been gathered from the experiences of young people and through theatrical performances, the museum of memories and workshops organized in each country.
At the same time, exploring them with the camera, the same cities where the project was implemented have become material to document: their architecture, infrastructure and the past visible and audible in the streets.
This movie does not pretend to directly intervene in the process of reconciliation, but it certainly throws a little light on various aspects of the past, giving a whole new reading.
Fundamental to this is the experience of people involved in the project, who have offered their own story already full of models of community life.
The documentary film Borrowed Memories stories from Yugoslavia, realized as additional activity of the project Networking Memories, from the Veneto Region (I) and ARCS – ARCI Culture and Development, will be presented in Venice, Friday, November 30, 2012 (16.00, Veneto Region Big Station Palace, Conference Room, Cannaregio 23).
The film has the main purpose to tell the story of Yugo-nostalgia with the language of cinema.
The material has been gathered from the experiences of young people and through theatrical performances, the museum of memories and workshops organized in each country.
At the same time, exploring them with the camera, the same cities where the project was implemented have become material to document: their architecture, infrastructure and the past visible and audible in the streets.
This movie does not pretend to directly intervene in the process of reconciliation, but it certainly throws a little light on various aspects of the past, giving a whole new reading.
Fundamental to this is the experience of people involved in the project, who have offered their own story already full of models of community life.