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20.01.26, 20:30, Vittorio De Seta, Rosa Butsi, Re:Score

Although Italian cinema has no shortage of icons, Vittorio de Seta is something of an odd man out. Trained in his anthropological programme, de Seta devoted his life to capturing disappearing folk customs on film. For years, he wandered around the remote corners of Sicily, Sardinia and Calabria to document how farmers, shepherds and fishermen, among others, were changing their lives in the light of post-war modernisation. These observations would lead him to the monumental Banditi a Orgosolo (1961), which launched his career as a filmmaker and screenwriter.

In the 1950s, however, he also made a series of documentary films that distilled his research into stunning visual material. Musician Roos Denayer (Rosa Butsi) brings some of Seta's early films to life with her characteristically sensitive blend of pop, jazz and folk. As lyrical as they are didactic, these short documentaries are poetic odes to the relationship between humans and their environment and the animal world. In The Age of The Swordfish (1955) and Orgosolo's Shepherds (1958), the work rhythm of shepherds and fishermen is examined, while The Golden Parable (1955), A Day in Barbagia (1958) and The Forgotten (1959) exhibit the human body in a spiral of work, rest and pleasure.

With live accompaniment by musician Rosa Butsi featuring Marie Cocriamont.

Vittorio De Seta, Italian intertitles, English subtitles
Campus Bijloke
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent