Chisinau - Borders of Europe #5

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Chisinau - Borders of Europe #5 (Chisinau - Confini d’Europa #5)

original title:

Chisinau - Confini d’Europa #5

directed by:

cast:

Corso Salani, Raluca Botorogeanu

cinematography:

production:

country:

Italy

year:

2008

film run:

52'

format:

HD - colour

aspect ratio:

1.66:1

status:

Ready (21/04/2008)

festivals & awards:

Corso Salani is asked to act as cameraman when student film-maker Raluca has to shoot her final film project at the Romanian School of Cinema. The chosen subject is Romania’s near and poor neighbour Moldova, its surroundings and its capital. Together, Salani and Raluca will discover this secluded and unknown state as they search for Raluca’s roots. Like many people in Romania, her family is originally Moldavian. Its geographical position between Romania and Ukraine makes Moldova a sort of buffer between Europe and post-communist Russia. This condition became emblematic when Transnistria declared independence in 1990 with military help from Moscow. The region still operates as a de facto independent state but is not recognised by any country. The political and economical influence of the former Soviet Union remains an overwhelming reality for Moldova. When Raluca interviews young reporters at a local radio station, they reveal they have renounced their native language in favour of Russian in order to enhance their social status. Raluca and Salani devote great attention to the local media, for this turns out to reveal much about the fledgling democratic state. The little troupe visits the national radio station and an independent media-oriented NGO struggling to cope with the mediocre local cinema industry. In the studios of “Promoldova” TV a female news presenter is interviewed. Salani records these and other brief encounters in his travel notes, reflecting on surprising details and interludes of lightness. Taken together, these quick sketches build to create a polyphonic portrait of a genuine and straightforward people, respectable in the way they face up to poverty and the scourge of emigration. He records an experience lived intensely but, as often happens in life, with the feeling that things have vanished too quickly. The residue of the experience ¬– as Raluca says in her last letter – is a sense of joy for all that has been known and done but a sadness for what has been left behind.