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Joe Shlabotnik

(5,604 posts)
Thu Oct 24, 2013, 07:49 PM Oct 2013

An Occupied Cinema in Rome

In the middle of downtown Rome, in the fashionable and tourist-filled Trastevere neighborhood, sits the Cinema America. The audacious lettering of its original 1950s awning hails the theater as being from another time—it is a reminder of the age before multiplexes and DVD rentals, when going to a movie was itself a big event, a social happening, like a night at the opera. For long-time Trastevere residents, the theater’s bold sign is a fixture of the neighborhood landscape, a reminder of a romantic nightlife hotspot from years gone by. The Cinema America went out of business some time around the turn of the millennium, and the building has stood vacant and decaying in the decade and a half since. But in the last year, something has changed: the old sign has been augmented by a black banner hung below, proclaiming the building “occupato,” or “occupied.” The cinema has been taken over by squatters. And they have been showing great films. When I visited recently, there were screenings of the hip-hop classic Beat Street and Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.

In Italy, a squat of this sort is referred to as a “centro sociale,” or “social center.” In many cities, such places are found on the outskirts of town, and often the atmosphere is not actually very social. Militant political discourse, abrasive music and an overabundance of mangy dogs can characterize the squatter aesthetic. But the Cinema America is part of a new wave of squatting, and it pursues a different strategy. The project is located in the city center, and has been bolstered by support from the neighborhood. An Al Jazeera article on the current occupation trend in Rome makes note of the cinema, saying it “symbolizes the new attitude of opposing speculation and defending public goods across generations and social backgrounds—by linking activists, workers, and local residents.”

Cinema America was taken over in November 2012 by students and neighborhood residents who were alarmed at reports that a three-story parking garage would soon be built on the site. Since renovating and re-opening the theater, the occupiers have organized film screenings, performances, lectures, and workshops. They have also provided study spaces for students and hosted local public assemblies. The cinema has quickly become a hub of social activity in the area, attracting a diverse crowd and some unusual allies: a petition to save the cinema has circulated among Italian directors and actors, and Rome’s architectural community has rallied behind the theater as well.

The occupation of Cinema America remains a powerful symbol in the Trastevere neighborhood. But for thousands of Italians, squatting is not a symbolic act; it is a necessity of life. Government statistics estimate that 2,850 buildings in Rome are illegally occupied: most of these are not “centri sociale” but acts of economic desperation. The European financial crisis and ensuing austerity programs have caused misery, eroded faith in government institutions, and created an atmosphere in which radical voices and ideas have gained legitimacy; the phrase “social center” is prescient, defining what is increasingly missing from Italian society. Fascist groups have capitalized on discontent and have had an easy time organizing on the social margins amongst the nihilistic and hopeless. Meanwhile, the occupiers of Cinema America are banking on community, knowing that popular local support is essential for the survival of their project. For left-wingers, this means an image overhaul. "Nobody would expect us to keep this place so clean and tidy,” one of the squatters told a reporter. “We are young, but responsible.” Indeed, when the Cinema America was attacked by hooligans, the first thing the occupants did was issue a press statement, apologizing to the neighbors for the noise.

Short article (4 of 6 paragraphs posted above) From: http://www.vice.com/en_ca/read/an-occupied-cinema-in-rome
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