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Le pupille
Directed byAlice Rohrwacher
Written byAlice Rohrwacher
Produced byAlfonso Cuaron
Starring
  • Alba Rohrwacher
  • Melissa Falasconi
  • Greta Zuccheri Montanari
Distributed byDisney+
Release date
2022
Running time
37 minutes
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian (dubbed into English)

Le pupille (The Pupil) is a short film directed and written by Alice Rohrwacher.[1][2]

The film was shot in Super 16 and in 35 mm format and was released on the Disney+ streaming service on December 16, 2022.

Plot edit

This short film follows a group of rebellious young girls at a Catholic boarding school in Italy during the lenten season (leading up to Christmas) during a time of scarcity and war.[3]

The writer/producer of the film said that the film is "about desires, pure and selfish, about freedom and devotion, about the anarchy that is capable of flowering in the minds of each one of them within the confines of the strict boarding school,” Rohrwacher said. She added that “although the obedient girls can’t move, their pupils can dance the unrestrained dance of freedom.”[4]

The film had its world premier at the Cannes Film Festival [5] and was released on the Disney+ streaming platform in 2022.

Reception edit

Le Pupille was nominated for the "IMDbPro Short Cuts Award for Best Film" award at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2022. It was also nominated for the best short film at the Philadelphia Film Festival in 2022, and was given honorable mentions for Best Production Design (to Emita Frigato and Eachele Meliadò), and for best actor (Melissa Falasconi).[6]

Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times said that, "this charming and surprisingly suspenseful film shares with Rohrwacher’s other work a puckish sense of humor and a deep understanding of how sometimes, in the name of righteousness, people can be awfully wicked."[7]

John Serbe of Decider said that "Le Pupille is a mischievous little thing with a smartly realized setting and visual aesthetic. Shot on warm and grainy 16mm film, it looks suitably authentic – and the emotions and laughs you’ll experience are, too."[8]

Sarah Williams of InReviewOnline said: "Rohrwacher’s amoral fable, though a delightfully rare higher-profile mid-length film dropped into an era of silver screen epic versus glorified TikTok binarism, could arguably benefit from a lengthier study of the institution its narrative is held within. Though the somewhat underbaked narrative is limited to that of the letter, the cultural rise of a Mussolini-era fascist Italy lurking in the background, paralleled with the authoritarian religious state of the Catholic school, reflects a maturation of Rohrwacher’s typical themes."[9]



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