The ACT (Academy of Cinema and Television) Multimedia school aims to give
aspiring talents the opportunity to learn about the industry from experts who
are making a success of it .
Top Italian directors, actors, editors, screenwriters, make-up artists,
photographers, 3D animators and journalists have been enlisted to join the
teaching staff.
"The initiative aims to harvest this vast, precious legacy of know-how and use
it for the cinema of tomorrow," said ACT Director Vittorio Giacci.
In the process the academy hopes to contribute to reviving Italian cinema .
Italian professionals continue to play a lead role in some areas of the
industry, like costume design, and there is a handful of highly promising
home-grown young directors, such as Ferzan Ozpetek and Gabriele Muccino, coming
through. But film critics agree that Italian cinema today is some way from the
post-war highs it hit with fabled filmmakers like Federico Fellini, Roberto
Rossellini, Vittorio De Sica and Luchino Visconti .
The academy is well-positioned to inspire the next generation of Italian
filmmakers to follow in those illustrious footsteps .
The likes of Fellini, Visconti and De Sica produced much of their best work at
Cinecitta' and the studios and the City of Rome continue to play a starring role
in the industry .
Mel Gibson shot parts of The Passion at Cinecitta', while Ocean's Twelve and
Mission Impossible III are among the movies Rome has recently provided backdrops
for .
Academy students will have access to an archive packed with screenplays, film
posters, books, specialist periodicals, around 15,000 videos, DVDs and
laserdiscs and 20,000 photographs .
As well as learning how make to feature films, they will also be drilled on
directing for television and making adverts, music videos and documentaries .
"Our teaching for directors aims to form the most complete filmmakers possible,"
said Giacci .
The academy runs three-year courses for budding directors, actors and 3D
animators and short courses in cinema make-up and hair-dressing .