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1-14 of 14
- Big John is in pieces. It needs to be reconstructed quickly, as it's worth millions of dollars. Big John is the largest triceratops dinosaur ever discovered. A small family-owned company in Trieste, Northern Italy, has very little time to prepare the immense skeleton for an international auction in Paris. For Flavio, his daughter Giorgia, and the entire team, it's a once-in-a-lifetime endeavor.
- The meeting between the director Francesca Archibugi and the poet Pierluigi Cappello.
- Lorenzo, 25 years old, discovers the researches of the linguist Ugo Pellis of early XX Century and the thousands of photographs he took. Fascinated by the great amount of faces, he decides to return in those places to look for those who are still alive. The journey becomes a carousel of encounters, turning points and surprises. His research brings successes and failures: landscapes have changed, people are dead, men or nature could have canceled houses and communities for good. Through these experiences, Lorenzo reflects on memory, language, identity, diversity, love and death. Because Pellis' linguistic atlas goes far beyond words and images. It is like an enormous map to be explored in several dimensions: it is an atlas of memory.
- The history of Nintieth century in Friuli told through archival footages.
- Over time, I have understood the distance between my view of the world and that of my family that I left here. Sometimes I perceive a distance such that I imagine exploring a new planet, as if I were an astronaut.
- Some old men remembers what happened to them during the Secon World War in Croatia and Slovenia.
- The painter Giuseppe Zigaina tells about his friendship with Pier Paolo Pasolini.
- The Balkan route is the path that, for thousands of people, represents the hope for a future in Europe. The documentary tells the story of how Trieste has become one of the main European gateways for those fleeing wars and hardships.
- In 1923, Italo Svevo published "Zeno's Conscience." What makes that novel so special and relevant even today? Three characters: a writer (Mauro Covacich), a contemporary literature professor (Maria Cristina Benussi), and the curator of the Svevo Museum (Riccardo Cepach) in their Trieste, humorously ponder why such an improbable novel continues to be a reference point in Italian and international literature.