Like a cat on the highway
For me every film is born out of the wish to tell and, above all, share a story. Perhaps never as much as in this film has it been fun and liberating to do so…
Because, as a father of three girls, the human adventure experienced by our main characters, Giovanni and Monica, is something I’m fairly well-acquainted with. Deep down, all parents, however unintentionally, day after day build up an idea for themselves about their children only to then notice that in fact they’re something quite other from us. And that probably the world they present to us is also quite other from us: their passions, their friendships and often their love relationships too.
And this represents a formidable opportunity, because thanks to our kids we’re forced to come out of our protected zone and face this “other.”
Like a cat on the highway is all about this opportunity of directly confronting those who are distant from us in terms of social class, culture or nationality.
Given the opportunity to enter such a conflicting situation, we can start questioning our certainties and indulge in a luxury that tends more and more to frighten us: changing. Or rather, perhaps, understanding. Or, perhaps, better still, finding out before talking and judging.
The greatest privilege was to do so with laughter, with a comedy that brings together two actors who have worked with me together for the second time, Paola and Antonio. Extraordinary in their ability to give depth to two human characters without judging them, but instead loving them and making them a part of themselves, making them representatives of two opposite sides of Italy and allowing us to tell the story in popular language.
This film tries to focus our attention on a simple concept: in a culturally and socially divided country, it may be of some importance to make an effort to understand the reasons of the other, genuinely finding out about them.
I hope that Like a cat on the ring road will be a film about our present and perhaps about our future too; which, in certain moments of disheartenment, we feel will never come.