Roma, santa e dannata
Movies
Who can narrate Rome, its mysteries, its secrets, its ethics/underbelly, its importance as a moral/immoral capital, today? Who has preserved the memory of the stories often told in newsrooms and salons, but certainly not published or publishable? Stories that represent the darkest and deepest part of a Holy City. For over two thousand years, Rome has had only one certainty, granite-like and unshakeable, a power as eternal as the city that contains it: the Vatican. And our journey begins precisely with the story of a cinema in Porta Castello, a hundred meters from the Dome, which the Holy See saw fit to rent to a wild group of gay sinners. And it became the famous "Mucca Assassina" (Killer Cow), the most transgressive club in the Eternal City.
If there's anyone who can recount and in some way represent the great Capitoline Theatre, it's Roberto D'Agostino, a Roman from San Lorenzo, creator and director of the celebrated website Dagospia, described by himself as "an electronic concierge." An information bulletin that interprets the political, social, and cultural backstories, enveloping facts and misdeeds, truths and half-truths—that is, gossip—of our extraordinary and unfortunate country. Because in Rome, solidarity doesn't exist; complicity does. That's why it's the city with more than twenty recreational clubs, from Hunting to Chess, from Aniene to Clay Pigeon Shooting. Fierce jokes and clownish improvisation. Everyone improvises everywhere: at the bar, on the street, in restaurants where reality always surpasses fantasy. And everything that appears in newspapers and talk shows is just a lot of fluff. In Rome, true power has no face. It's like a potato: the best part is hidden underground, and its filaments are the threads that move the puppets among the damask rooms of Palazzo Chigi and its surroundings.
Life, in the end, is a matter of encounters. Encounters are our coming-of-age novel, our story that cannot do without the stories of others; it is the story of what one has become, what one is. Thus, on their nocturnal journey, Dago & Giusti go in search of eyewitnesses to these tales, personalities like Carlo Verdone, Enrico Vanzina, Sandra Milo, Massimo Ceccherini, Giorgio Assumma, Vera Gemma, Vladimir Luxuria, Carmelo Di Ianni, Enrico Vanzina.