Mestia International Short & Mountain Film Festival
-focus on Italy!
Mestia International Short and Mountain Film Festival is celebrating a 5 years jubilee. And the big news to celebrate with this anniversary are:
Mestia FF is now an official member of the International Alliance for Mountain Film-IAMF! A great achievement for its festival director Khatuna Khundadze who invited on this occasion to Mestia the former IAMF former coordinator Aldo Audisio and one of the biggest supporters of the festival, the Embassy of Italy. The embassy was represented by Fabiola Albanese, Deputy Head of the Mission in Georgia.
To everybody's surprise Fabiola Albanese spoke in Georgian language her opening remarks at the opening ceremony on July 28, highlighting also the fact that no less than 4 Italian films have been selected. Two short films are part of the competition: "The magic box" by Christian Antonilli and "Here where the sea shines" by Giuseppe Joey. Two mountain films are running out of competition, including "Carne et Ossa" by the Italian director Roberto Zazzara, who is one of the jury members at this year competition.
Roberto Zazzara at the screening of his film
The other film running out of competition is a masterpiece. The film was screened in Mestia on the exact day July 31 and 71 years after reaching the summit of K2. "It was Aldo's idea" Khatuna told me at our interview. The film "K2" shot in 1954 follows the journey of 19 Italian mountaneers, their goal unreachable so far, to reach the summit of "K2". Set up as a documentary, the film follows the individual journey of each one, alternating between the progress in climbing up the mountain and setting up a new camp and the live of their families back home. It is rich in suspence and in emotional moments, it can easily happen that the audience forgets it's watching "just" a documentary.
On the 1954 Italian expedition to K2 (led by Ardito Desio), Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli became the first people to reach the summit of K2, 8,611 metres (28,251 ft), the second-highest mountain in the world. They reached the summit on 31 July 1954. K2 is more difficult to climb than Mount Everest, 8,849 metres. And they film themselves with Kodak while on the pic. These are the first pictures from a summit.
While Marcello Baldi was the director, especially his DOP was very important. His comments and notes were taken into account at the restauration of the film. The DOP Mario Fantin, who climbes up to the camp number 5 takes us on a emotional story, showcasing remarcable determination and skill.
The film is divided into three parts: the preparation of the expedition in Italy, the approach to the K2 base camp in Pakistan, and the climb to the summit. Baldi oversaw the filming of the sequences filmed in Italy, while the filming in Pakistan was handled by Mario Fantin. Compared to similar works created by other expeditions of the time, "K2" presents the novelty of also showing shots taken from the summit. These shots were carried out by Compagnoni and Lacedelli themselves.
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