LUCIA'S GRACE
2018 Films
•
1h 49m
Single working mother Lucia is trying to find the right balance between life with her teenage daughter, a complicated romance and her career as a land surveyor. Lucia’s future is jeapordized when she realizes that an ambitious new building is environmentally dangerous due to the city council’s inaccurate maps. Lucia is torn by her decision to keep her mouth shut for fear of losing her job. A mysterious foreign woman tries to convince Lucia to stand up to her superiors and recommend a church as the only solution for the troubled building site. Lucia’s belief in miracles will soon be put to the test.
Direction: Gianni Zanasi
Script: Gianni Zanasi, Giacomo Ciarrapico, Michele Pellegrini, Federica Pontremoli
Production: Rita Rognoni
Cinematography: Vladan Radovic
Editing: Rita Rognoni, Gianni Zanasi
Production Design: Massimiliano Sturiale
Costume Design: Olivia Bellini
Make-Up: Valentina Iannuccilli, Sefora Loprete
Sound: Stefano Campus
Original Score: Niccolò Contessa
Cast: Alba Rohrwacher, Hadas Yaron, Elio Germano, Giuseppe Battiston
Original Title: TROPPA GRAZIA
Original Language: Italian
Film Production Countries: Italy, Spain, Greece
Statement of the Director/s
I do not think anyone really knows why a story gets told. When all is said and done, I think that’s for the best. Perhaps there is no why, perhaps there is just a how.
Lucia “appeared” to me for the first time quite unexpectedly. I saw her walking aimlessly, on her own, in a large shopping mall. But immediately I saw quite a “wild” character, an independent spirit. I thought perhaps she lived in a provincial town. Perhaps Lucia had spent her childhood in a beautiful field.
As I followed her, I felt she was weighed down by something. It was related to the feeling of unending daily drudgery. A weight that was obviously my own, so strong that the unthinkable suddenly happened: Lucia turns around, and there is the girl wearing the veil, staring at her and saying, with the seriousness of another age: «Go and talk to the men…». Lucia looks at her, frightened, and replies (and I with her): «Why don’t YOU go…». And I burst out laughing. I couldn’t believe it. Honestly that was how it began. With a good belly laugh.
And that laugh touched some extremes. The sudden and incongruous feeling of the Mystery, our life that has contact with another world, even in a commonplace sort of way: the unmoving, powerful mystery on the one hand, and our mixed-up day-to-day lives on the other. The profound questions we feel, the bumbling, random answers we give to them, and even more so the questions we avoid. Truths and lies.
Troppa grazia (Lucia’s Grace) immediately presented itself as a film of extremes that can be touched and contrasted. But at the time I was confused, I didn’t know why it was me that had to make a film with the Virgin Mary. In the end I stored the image, I thought it was both beautiful and crazy, and passed on to something else.
Only a few years later, again quite out of the blue and with no rhyme or reason, the voice of the Holy Mary returned, asking «Have you been to talk to the men?» and that of Lucia answering, anxiously, «Hey, I don’t talk to men, don’t you think that’s your business?». And I again laughed out loud. I began to write the screenplay. But I have to be honest, it was not with a full conscience. With the first draft, what got me interested and working day after day was the fact I was laughing so much. I also realised that with it being so eccentric, this story could have gone on to be many things: an irreverent sit-com, a reflection on modern-day religion, and so on. The difference was that in no time at all I was enamoured of Lucia, and fell into a completely empathic relationship with her. How can you fail to love someone who says to the Virgin Mary “I’ve already said no! You’re more insistent than a little child!”. Putting myself in her shoes, I asked myself: what if it happened to me? Not in a film, but in real life: how would I react? These questions removed every obstacle between me and her. And this was how, out of all the many possibilities, only one remained in the end. How I believe it should be.
This is not, clearly, a film with a religious slant. It is not a film about one’s ability to believe in God. It is, rather, about the ability to Continue To Believe, even though we are no longer children. About our ability to feel, to imagine. The Madonna in the film is not that of the Bible, it is, simply, “Lucia’s Madonna”. A schizophrenic expression of the ability to believe, typical of childhood, that Lucia has put aside for so long, but that returns to her, rightly seething, in order to prevent her from completely squeezing to death the “living” part of her. no one else could have appeared to her. What I think we find so fascinating with the Blessed Virgin – apart from the iconography instilled into us when we are children – is her intransigence. A gaze that has a limpidness of another era, which tells the modern age held hostage to many compromises: you are not everything. A “Madonna” that calls to men and repeats a relentless ethical and existential message that no one wants to hear, that which, in the end, Lucia tells herself: «Lucia, you have to tell the truth, life is short».
I love Lucia for this reason, since she is still not absolutely certain what is happening to her, and because even though she has not yet realised it, and cannot do so because she is still living the experience, she has allowed herself to finally live her life to the full, with all the consequences this entails.
Here we see the effort required to make room once more in our hearts for a complexity of feelings, and for the great mystery of feeling those things that we cannot see.
Biography of the Director/s
Gianni Zanasi studied philosophy at Bologna University before attending a playwriting school and a cinema course directed by Nanni Moretti. He also attended the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome, obtaining a directing diploma in 1992. He made his director’s debut in 1995 with the film Nella mischia, selected for the Quinzaine des Realisateurs at Cannes Film Festival. In 1999 he directed Fuori di me and A domani, presented at the Venice Film Festival. In 2004 he directed the documentary La vita breve ma la giornata è lunghissima, with Lucio Pellegrini, receiving a Special Mention from the Venice Film Festival jury. In 2007 he presented Non pensarci out of competition, a bittersweet comedy starring Valerio Mastandrea. The film was received positively by critics, notably Paolo Mereghetti: "the clichés of Italian-styles dramas have been sidestepped , avoided or overturned(...) with a winning lightness and irony”. Zanasi returned to the cinema after working on a television series of Non pensarci, directing the film La felicità è un sistema complesso. Again appearing in this film are Giuseppe Battiston and Valerio Mastandrea; the original soundtrack was composed by Niccolò Contessa, going under thealias of I Cani.
Filmography of the Director/s
2018: Lucia’ s Grace (Troppa Grazia)
2015: Happiness is a complex matter (La Felicita' e' un sistema complesso)
2007: Ciao Stefano (Non pensarci)
2005: No international title (La Vita e' breve ma la giornata e' lunghissima)
2000: Besides myself (Fuori di me)
1999: Until tomorrow (A domani)
1995: In the Thick of it (Nella mischia)
World Sales:
The Match Factory Gmbh
Carolina Jessula
Domstraße 60
COLOGNE, 50668, Germany
E-Mail: [email protected]
Phone: +49 221 539 709 19
Website: http://www.hte-match-factory.com/
Press:
Gabriele Barcaro
Gabriele Barcaro
via dei Bresciani 23
Roma, 00186, Italy
E-Mail: [email protected]
Phone: +39 340 5538425
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