DOBLE FORZA from OGINO KNAUSS on Vimeo.
Digital Video, color, 30’, 2008)
Spanish language / English subtitles
Spanish language / English subtitles
A film by OginoKnauss
Directed by Manuela Conti, Lorenzo Tripodi
Script: Lorenzo Tripodi
Camera: Manuela Conti, Lorenzo Tripodi
Assistant, aditional camera: Jacopo Mariani
Sound recording: Francesca Mizzoni
Archive research, assistant: Serena Di Pietro
Original soundtrack: Francesca Mizzoni
Editor: Manuela Conti
Sound mixing: Michele Lancuba
General organization: Michele Lancuba, Lucrezia Cippitelli
Directed by Manuela Conti, Lorenzo Tripodi
Script: Lorenzo Tripodi
Camera: Manuela Conti, Lorenzo Tripodi
Assistant, aditional camera: Jacopo Mariani
Sound recording: Francesca Mizzoni
Archive research, assistant: Serena Di Pietro
Original soundtrack: Francesca Mizzoni
Editor: Manuela Conti
Sound mixing: Michele Lancuba
General organization: Michele Lancuba, Lucrezia Cippitelli
Produced by Oginoknauss
With the support of the Novena Bienal de la Habana, Cuba
With the support of the Novena Bienal de la Habana, Cuba
Alamar is a new city built in the 1970s in the outskirts of La Habana, using rudimental prefabricated technologies inherited from the soviets; it has been put in place through self-construction teams of 32 citizens employed in the so called microbrigadas, a system affecting not only the way the physical environment has been produced, but also the social texture formed in the process. Today Alamar has a population of about 100.000. The film documents everyday life occurring in public space between repetitive and anonymous tenements, transforming and appropriating the huge empty lots left by an unfinished urbanization; it testifies to the advantages and defects of the participative construction process, mixing inhabitant’s voices and archival material with impressions captured drifting and getting lost in the urban landscape. Doble Forza is a travelogue about a personal experience in this particular urban experiment, about the everyday life of a socialist urban periphery in Caribbean taste, about the history of a modest utopia and its simple, concrete achievements.