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Arizona charges prediction market Kalshi with illegal election betting
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Leftist New York mayor under pressure on Irish unity question
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Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill three soldiers
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Atletico boss Simeone defends Spurs star Romero
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Iran vets friendly ships for Hormuz passage: trackers
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Iran women's football team arrive in Turkey on way home
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Mexico prepared to host Iran World Cup games, says president
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Trump blasts 'foolish' NATO on Iran, says US needs no help
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Slot vows to win back support of frustrated Liverpool fans
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In Ukraine, Sean Penn gifted Oscar made from train carriage hit by Russia
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Ships in Gulf risk shortages on board, industry warns
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White House piles pressure on Cuba as island fights power cut
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Newcastle must grow under Camp Nou pressure: Howe
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Trump says to make delayed China trip in 'five or six weeks'
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Kompany warns of complacency as injury-hit Bayern host Atalanta
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Larijani: Iran power player who rose then fell on winds of war
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SAS cancels flights after fuel prices surge
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New particle discovered by Large Hadron Collider
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Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill soldiers, as shelters overflow
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Van de Ven insists it's 'nonsense' to say players don't care about Spurs' plight
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Argentina withdraws from World Health Organization
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US Fed expected to keep rates steady as Iran war impact looms
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Two men in Kenyan court for ant-smuggling
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Cuba scrambles to restore power as Trump threatens takeover
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War fuels fears of new oil crisis
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Kerr 'frustrated' at six-figure sum owed to him by Johnson's failed Grand Slam Track
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Len Deighton, spy novelist who created the anti-Bond
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Belgian diplomat ordered to stand trial over 1961 Congo leader murder
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Pope says idea England 'weren't fussed' about the Ashes was tough to take
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War threatens Gulf's dugongs, turtles and birds
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Germany targets oil firms to prevent wartime price gouging
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Chelsea striker Kerr sends Australia into Asian Cup final
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'East meets West': KPop Demon Hunters brings global fans to Seoul's sites
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Israel says killed Iran's security chief Larijani
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EU to help reopen blocked oil pipeline in Ukraine
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Thai eSports players sentenced over SEA Games cheating scandal
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Nigeria suicide bombings kill 23, wound more than 100
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Iran's Larijani, the man whose power grew during Mideast war
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Millions of Indonesians in Eid travel exodus
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Israel strikes Beirut suburbs as displacement shelters overflow
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Hard-hitting Conway steers New Zealand to victory over South Africa
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During Ramadan, Senegal's Baye Fall community lives to serve
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Russian ballet banned for 'gay propaganda' gets new life in Berlin
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Strikes shake Tehran as Trump presses allies to help in Mideast war
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Malaysia hit with 3-0 forfeits to send Vietnam to Asian Cup
Gianfranco Rosi: the slow documentary maker in a frantic world
If the regular recipe for success in the modern entertainment industry or on social media is being loud, attention-seeking and a prolific creator of "content", Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi has carved out a career doing the exact opposite.
The work of the award-winning documentary producer is everything our contemporary culture is not: slow, nuanced, contemplative.
It's a strategy that has taken him to the pinnacle of European cinema -- he's won the top Golden Lion prize at the Venice Film Festival and the Golden Bear in Berlin -- and has pushed the boundaries for non-fiction in the process.
"There were people saying 'How can you give a Golden Lion to someone that never directed an actor?'" he told AFP. "It's not important that division for me (between fiction and documentary). What I feel close to is cinema."
His latest work "Sotto le nuvole" ("Below the Clouds" in English), which releases internationally in France this week, is a portrait of the gritty Italian port of Naples.
It bears all the hallmarks of Rosi's distinct way of working.
The 61-year-old, who also holds American nationality, believes in "immersion", often heading to live alone at the location of his films with no script and only a vague notion of what he is trying to capture.
He spent three years in Naples, wandering, meeting people, filming relentlessly, finding the characters whose lives form the core of the 115-minute production.
"I'm a director that doesn't go home to sleep. I'm always on location," he explained.
For 2013's "Sacra GRA", his breakthrough documentary, he spent two years living in a van around the ringroad on the outskirts of Rome where he slowly won the confidence of his subjects: an ambulance driver, an eel farmer, a faded aristocrat, prostitutes.
"Notturno", which released in 2020, saw Rosi spend over three years on the borders of Iraq and Syria, documenting the impact of the Islamic State group.
His first film "Boatman" took five years to complete.
"Time is my biggest investment," he told AFP. "Working alone allows me to wait for the right moment, to create a certain intimacy with the people I meet, and allows me to wait for the right light."
- Meditation on time -
Rosi's film-making process is only part of his craft, with his visual language and approach to story-telling also setting him apart.
He disdains the look of many modern documentaries -- shaky handheld camera work and an urgent, grave tone -- preferring a static vantage point, with a fixed lens.
He frames wide and his camera lingers, leaving long pauses that he likens to the space between notes in a piece of music, or the void between the lines of a poem.
He conducts no on-screen interviews, does no narration, and allows himself a strict minimum of directing his subjects to ensure his work remains almost entirely observational.
"Below the Clouds" features a handful of unconnected people around Naples -- an after-school teacher, a fire department call-centre operator, a sailor, archeologists -- whose lives are revealed little by little in looping segments.
There is no place for pizza, football, sun-drenched piazzas, or the mafia -- the cliches of Napolitean life.
"There's always a very strong stereotype about Naples," he explained. "I wanted to get rid of all the elements that belong to the collective imagination of people."
Overall, it is a meditation on time that links the ancient Vesuvius volcano that looms over the city to its buried Roman past and its often chaotic present.
"The film, for me, is a reflection on the complexity of Naples and on history, on the weight of the past, and somehow on suspended time," he added.
It is shot in black-and-white to give it a vintage feel, while the sparse musical score is provided by Britain's Daniel Blumberg, who won an Oscar for his work on "The Brutalist".
Reviews of Rosi's film were overwhelmingly positive when it premiered at the Venice Film Festival in September, where it won the Special Jury prize.
The Hollywood Reporter said Rosi "makes documentaries like no-one else" and called his latest work "stunning".
The Guardian gave it a five-star rating, saying it was "another of (Rosi's) brilliantly composed docu-mosaic assemblages of scenes and tableaux."
S.Spengler--VB