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Afghanistan Year 1380 by Fabrizio Lazzaretti, Alberto Vendemmiati & Giuseppe Petittor
About the Film

The months leading up to the religious New Year of 1380 in Afghanistan were the months after the September 11, 2001 attacks and the U.S. retaliation against the Taliban regime. For ordinary Afghans, the time between President Bush's declaration of war and the fall of Kabul brought yet another passage of death and suffering in a country alternately ravaged and abandoned by global political forces.

In a riveting follow-up to their internationally acclaimed documentary, "Jung (War) In the Land of the Mujaheddin," which looked at life under the Taliban pre-September 11, the Italian filmmaking team of Alberto Vendemmiati, Fabrizio Lazzaretti, and Giuseppe Petitto have produced a remarkable journal of life under the bombs after September 11 in "Afghanistan Year 1380."

"Afghanistan Year 1380" has its American television premiere Monday, September 9, 10 p.m. ET, in a special edition of public television's P.O.V. series (check for rebroadcasts). The film airs as part of PBS's week-long commemoration of the September 11 attacks. One of three specials concluding P.O.V.'s 15th anniversary season as television's first and longest-running showcase of independent, non-fiction films, "Afghanistan Year 1380" will be followed by "Two Towns of Jasper," which airs Wednesday, January 22, 2003 at 9 p.m. ET (check for rebroadcasts), and the 2003 Special "Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin."

In the wake of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the filmmakers felt a special responsibility to use the trust and knowledge they had gained in making "Jung (War)" to report once again on conditions inside Afghanistan. With unsparing detail, the plight of ordinary Afghans is seen through the prism of the independent medical relief group, Emergency. Surgeon Gino Strada and medical coordinator Kate Rowlands, and their staff of local and international volunteers, struggle through civil war, air raids, and lawlessness to treat civilian victims and prisoners-of-war.

As war with the U.S. loomed, Emergency was running a hospital for civilians on the front lines between the Northern Alliance and the Taliban, and providing medical care to prisoners of the Taliban — a service the group would later provide to Taliban prisoners of the Alliance. Emergency was also hoping to re-open its surgical center in Kabul. Designed to treat war victims in need of trauma treatment and reconstructive surgery, the 110-bed hospital had been shut down by the Taliban only a month after its opening in April 2001. Even as the city comes under attack in October 2001, Strada and Rowlands make a perilous journey across the front lines in an effort to get the trauma center operating.

Filmed with the cinematic power of a Hollywood drama — but shorn of the formulas that make tragedy more bearable — "Afghanistan Year 1380" shows close-up the human toll among civilians of current and past wars. Strada and Rowlands and staff find themselves treating victims of old Soviet mines as readily as casualties of current U.S bombing. The wounds are horrific, whole families are wiped out. Ordinary people curse both sides, pray to God, and hope for a peaceful future. As always, it is the children who provide the most searing spectacle of wanton destruction in a country where war has been a constant for generations.

Emergency is a non-profit, humanitarian organization dedicated to providing assistance to civilian victims of war — both the wounded and those who suffer war's consequences of hunger and lack of medical care. A private, independent, and neutral humanitarian organization, Emergency uses low-cost technology and materials to establish surgical/rehabilitation centers inside conflict zones, and trains staffs of local people to meet civilian medical needs. Since its inception in 1994, the group has treated over 285,000 victims of war free of charge on a strictly neutral and egalitarian basis.

"Afghanistan Year 1380" is an extraordinary record of war and humanitarian activism. It is an apt reminder that modern war is most brutal for the young and helpless.

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Credits
Directed by: Alberto Vendemmiati and Fabrizio Lazzaretti
Produced by: Giuseppe Petitto

About the Filmmakers

Alberto Vendemmiati
Alberto Vendemmiati, after getting a degree in the Theatre School of Bologna (Italy), worked as an actor for some years. In 1993 he received his D.A.M.S. degree in Film and Literature at the University of Bologna, and in 1994 graduated Director at the National Film School in Rome. He's realized several short films, presented at International film festivals, focusing on the relationship between fiction and documentary. In 1994 to 1996 he produces and served as director on the feature film "Cadabra" (a Quadra Image release), inspired from the poetic and personality of Italian screenwriter and director Cesare Zavattini. In 1998 he co-produced and served as co-director, and sound engineer on "Crucifige (Let's Crucify)" and "Le Voci Fuori (Voices Off)" (Karousel Films releases), focusing on themes related to mental diseases. Vendemmiati has co-produced, co-directed, and served as cameraman and sound engineer on the critically acclaimed "Jung (War) in the Land of Mujaheddin," shot in Afghanistan in 1999 and 2000. "Afghanistan Year 1380" is a follow-up of that experience in the wake of September 11th.

Fabrizio Lazzaretti
Fabrizio Lazzaretti is the son of a renowned Filmmaker of the Italian Public Television who spent his career covering military conflicts, and producing other socio-political and cultural documentaries. Lazzaretti began his own filmmaking career alongside his father as an assistant and second camera. In 1985, he began a series of freelance projects, working first at RAI London and then with the New York RAI corporation. In the mid-90s he turned his full attention to independent documentary production serving as a producer, director, cinematographer and cameraman on several films including "Drug Stories," about the heroin traffic of the Golden Triangle area, and "Victory at all Costs," about the after-affects of the war in Vietnam. In 1998 he co-produced, and served as co-director and cameraman, on "Crucifige (Let's Crucify)," and "Le Voci Fuori (Voices Off)," focusing on themes related to mental diseases. In 1999-2000 Lazzaretti co-produced, co-directed, and served as cameraman on "Jung (War) in the Land of the Mujaheddin". In 1999-2000 he was the director of "Report", an investigative journalism series airing on the Italian public channel RAI 3. In 2001 he co-produced and served as director and cameraman on "Socialmente Pericolosi (A Danger to Society)," surveying conditions in a criminal mental hospital near Naples, where patients are still considered sub-human and subjected to outmoded, sometimes brutal therapies. In 2001 he served as co-director, and cameraman on "Afghanistan Year 1380." He is currently co-producing, directing and serving as a cameraman on "A Fight for Justice "(working title), a film that tracks the legal battle resulting from the death of a young Italian poet in Colombia.

Giuseppe Petitto
A bold filmmaker as well as a skilled lawyer, Giuseppe Petitto combines these seemingly disparate career interests as Managing Director of Karousel Films, a cooperative non-profit organization that provides technical support and production expertise to independent filmmakers. The director of several short films, both documentary and fictional, Petitto has served as a producer, director and editor on several Karousel productions including "Sanpeet (Poison)," a film about seven year-old Sanpeet Petnonnoi and other boys like him who risk their lives as contestants in unregulated, high stakes kickboxing matches as they struggle to keep their families above the poverty line. In 1998 he co-produced, and served as editor on "Crucifige (Let's Crucify)," and "Le Voci Fuori (Voices off)." In 2001 he co-produced and served as editor on "Socialmente Pericolosi (A Danger to Society)," (a Karousel films release). Petitto also worked on "Jung (War) in the Land of the Mujaheddin" as line producer, field editor, and editor. He is a graduate of the EAVE (European Audiovisual Entrepreneurs), Europe's premier advanced training program for audiovisual production, and is also a Graduate Director of the National Film School in Rome. Petitto is currently directing "Rooms Are Never Finished", a film depicting Kashmiri people's grief, struggle, and expectations in these days of escalating violence amidst the mounting political tension of an impending election, as seen through the magnifying lens of a great Kashmiri-American poet.

Check out an interview with producer Giuseppe Petitto and a production journal detailing the making of "Afghanistan Year 1380."




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