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Nokia N90 Camera Phone Movie: ”New Love Meetings”

Nokia N90“New Love Meetings” movie theme is familiar with other many independent movies — explicit chat about love and sex — but the tool used to shoot an Italian feature-length documentary is new: A standard cell phone camera. Its was filmed in a MPEG4 format with a Nokia N90 - a regular, higher-end cell phone on sale around the globe. Italian directors have completed a 93-minute documentary they say is the first feature film to be entirely shot by such a technique. 

The technique underscores what has become a fixture in today’s globalized world: The use of amateur video and cell phone cameras to immortalize moments in people’s lives. Also, when news breaks, early footage is often shot with a cell phone, and, in the case of major events, authorities and news outlets have been known to call on amateurs to come forward with video.

”With the widespread availability of cell phones equipped with cameras, anybody could do this,” Mencarini said in a telephone interview from Milan. ”If you want to say something nowadays, thanks to the new media, you can.”

When it comes to movies, though, cell phone cameras present limits, such as the difficulty to film in darkness or the lack of microphones. As a result, the movie mostly features close-ups, and the image, while overall clear, is slightly shaky. Directors said Tuesday that no post-production manipulation was made on the image.

Although no professional lightening was needed, a pocket flashlight was used at times, said Milan-based Barbara Seghezzi, the other director of the movie. The approach offers the advantage of being intimate, leading people to open up a little more easily, directors say. In a documentary about love and eroticism, that doesn’t hurt.

For two months last year, the directors interviewed some 700 people across Italy, at bars, open markets, on the beach. About 100 of them ended up in the movie. ”To use a small instrument that belongs to people’s daily routine allows you to establish an intimate dialogue, instead of using a regular camera,” she said. ”The interview becomes more like a chat.”

In his documentary Pasolini interviewed Italians to find out their views about sex in postwar Italy. Attitudes across the country showed people had taboos and self-censorship was widespread.

”New Love Meetings” explores subjects ranging from the first time to homosexuality and jealousy, in interviews that include transsexuals and a priest. And it found that not much has changed. ”When it comes to sexuality a certain malaise is still there, taboos and problems persist,” Seghezzi said.

The directors’ idea was to do a modern version of the 1965 documentary ”Love Meetings” by Pier Paolo Pasolini, the famed film director and writer found beaten to death 30 years ago. Low costs and greater flexibility were among the reasons why Seghezzi and Mencarini decided to use a cell phone. Now, producers are looking at ways to distribute the film.

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11:53 pm - Thu 8 Jan 2009




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