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Garrone gets Oscar nod for migrant tale Io Capitano

Tale of Senegalese migrants journey to Europe among 5 contenders

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, JAN 23 - Matteo Garrone's Io Capitano was named Tuesday among the five contenders for the best foreign-language film Oscar on March 10.
    The Italian director's tale of two Senegalese migrants who travel from Dakar to Europe won Garrone the best-director award at last year's Venice Film Festival, but missed out to Justine Triet's Anatomy Of A Fall at the recent Golden Globes.
    Reacting to the news, Garrone said he was happy that the Oscar "adventure" was continuing.
    "It's a great satisfaction and we're happy that the adventure is continuing, in the hope that the film, and the story of Seydou, is seen by an ever greater number of spectators in the whole world," said the 55-year-old Rome-born director.
    The other nominees are Perfect Days (Wim Wenders, Japan), Society of the Snow (J.A. Bayona, Spain), The Teacher's Lounge (İlker Çatak, Germany), and The Zone of Interest (Jonathan Glazer, United Kingdom).
    The latter, loosely adapted from late cult British novelist Martin Amis's 2014 novel of the same name about a Nazi concentration camp chief and his family, is favourite as it has also been nominated in the main best picture category and for best adapted screenplay.
    But the latest by cult German director Wenders will give it a good run for its money, bookies say.
    However, Garrone, who is best known for Cannes second prize winner Gomorrah (2008), from the Roberto Saviano Mob exposé, Cannes third prize winner Reality (2012), Tale of Tales (2015), Dogman (2018) and Pinocchio (2019), all Italian award winners, is also in with a chance, according to the international bookmakers.
    Io Capitano, for which Senagalese newcomer Seydou Sarr has won acclaim as one of the protagonists, has been lauded for showing the reality of the horrors faced by African migrants on their arduous and often perilous journeys to Europe.
    The title, which translates as I, Captain, comes from Sarr's character's being forced to steer the migrant boat from Libya to Sicily after suffering terrible ordeals including torture at the hands of trafficking gangs.
    The cinema production branch of state broadcaster Rai, which is behind the film, said the nomination was "a huge result for Matteo Garrone and for Rai.".
    Cinema group ANICA chief Francesco Rutrelli said "Garrone's film speaks to the world".
    Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano sad Garrone's nomination was a "source of pride for Italy". (ANSA).
   

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