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Sophie Chiarello's documentary "Attitudini: Nessuna" won the Nastro d'Anno award. The Silver Ribbon Award presentation for Documentaries was held at the Cinema Barberini in Rome, and the film, which closely follows the comic trio Aldo, Giovanni, and Giacomo as they retrace their career and style, won. Among the recognitions awarded by the Italian Film Journalists (SNGCI), “Sotto le nuvole” by Gianfranco Rosi was also honored in the “Cinema del reale” section. In the "Cinema, Entertainment, Culture" category, two films were recognized: "Roberto Rossellini - Più di una vita" by Ilaria De Laurentiis, Andrea Paolo Massara, and Raffaele Brunetti, which is dedicated to the last twenty years of the master of Italian cinema, and "Ellroy vs L.A." by Francesco Zippel, which examines the relationship between noir writer James Ellroy and the city of Los Angeles. The best documentary in the "Music" special selection was "Andando dove non so. Mauro Pagani, una vita da fuggiasco" by Cristiana Mainardi, which focused on Mauro Pagani's career and artistic story. "Nino. 18 giorni," directed by Toni D'Angelo, "San Damiano" by Gregorio Sassoli and Alejandro Cifuentes, which is dedicated to the world of the most disadvantaged around Rome's Termini station, and "Quarant'anni senza Giancarlo Siani" by Filippo Soldi, a tribute to the young reporter murdered by the Camorra in 1985, were among the special awards. Carlo Liberatori's "The Madmen Coach" was given special recognition for its dedication to the Senegalese national soccer team for people with mental health challenges. Finally, Simone Manetti bestowed the Nastro della Legalità upon "Giulio Regeni - Tutto il male del mondo," an award that also recognizes the Regeni family's dedication to truth and justice.
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