May things change
Andrea Segre, con la fotografia di Luca Bigazzi
Italia 2009, 63 min
Italy 2009, 63'
Language: Italian (English and French Subtitles)
Production: ZaLab and OFF!CINE
Author and director: Andrea Segre
DoP: Luca Bigazzi
Editing: Luca Manes
With: Neda Bonardi, Sara Shokry, Lorenzo and Gabriele Bonardi, Luca Li Calsi, Paolo Berdini
Director's assistant: Matteo Calore
Consultant: Stefano Liberti
Sound designer: Riccardo Spagnol
Distribution : Giulia Moretti
Graphics: Sara Zavarise and Marco Lovisatti
Soundtrack: Piccola Bottega Baltazar, Collettivo Angelo Mai, Slede Zlive Slede
trailer on ZaLab.tv
full lenght video in pay per view on ZaLab.tv
Poster, press kit and photos - blog
Official selection at 27° TorinoFilmFestival - ItalianaDoc
Language: Italian (English and French Subtitles)
Production: ZaLab and OFF!CINE
Author and director: Andrea Segre
DoP: Luca Bigazzi
Editing: Luca Manes
With: Neda Bonardi, Sara Shokry, Lorenzo and Gabriele Bonardi, Luca Li Calsi, Paolo Berdini
Director's assistant: Matteo Calore
Consultant: Stefano Liberti
Sound designer: Riccardo Spagnol
Distribution : Giulia Moretti
Graphics: Sara Zavarise and Marco Lovisatti
Soundtrack: Piccola Bottega Baltazar, Collettivo Angelo Mai, Slede Zlive Slede
trailer on ZaLab.tv
full lenght video in pay per view on ZaLab.tv
Poster, press kit and photos - blog
Official selection at 27° TorinoFilmFestival - ItalianaDoc
From the very heart of a Roman “borgata” (suburb) Sara and Neda guide us in a sort of spontaneous inquiry about the dynamics of business and power influencing the everyday life of many citizens like themselves. This story tells about discomforts and rage, it tries to follow the lives and the thoughts of extraordinary people in hard places. They are photographed in the lively geometries of a great cinematographer, Luca Bigazzi. “May be things change” tells about the dignity of men and particularly of women who still have the courage to fight against social injustice and against the conflicts among poor people. The film is presented by two new independent and free production society, ZaLab and Officine, facing the immobile Italian cinema market.
