Guests in the room include director Alessandro Bernard, researcher Monica Gagliano, and anthropologist Anna Perdibon.
In the film by Alessandro Bernard and Paolo Ceretto, the Paneveggio Forest becomes the stage for a visionary experiment. Alessandro Chiolerio, scientist and alchemist of the future, seeks to capture the secret signals of the forest to decipher the plant language. Beside him, Monica Gagliano, an ecologist inspired by the knowledge of shamans, seeks a deep dialogue with the forest wounded by Hurricane Vaia and slowly devoured by an insect that leaves traces resembling hieroglyphics. It is a fascinating journey in search of a new way to understand and live our relationship with nature. The forest reveals itself as a living entity, a place where science, technology, and myth intertwine.
Monica Gagliano, professor of Evolutionary Ecology at Southern Cross University in Australia, is one of the researchers who are radically changing the way we think about life. If Stefano Mancuso, who has worked extensively with Gagliano, has taught us about the intelligence of plants, Monica Gagliano investigates their sensitivity and emotionality. Her book "Thus Spoke the Plant" is an international success, already translated into many languages.
Anna Perdibon is an anthropologist, writer, and storyteller.
Alessandro Bernard writes and directs documentary films, also working as an author of transmedia projects and podcasts.
Free entry with a conscious donation.
Mezzano, Civic Center in Via Vecchia, 9:00 PM