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The Saturnia Film Festival returns for its ninth edition  , an event dedicated to emerging cinema, organized by the cultural association Aradia Productions under the presidency of Antonella Santarelli and the artistic direction of director Alessandro Grande. The ninth edition will kick off with a special pre-opening evening on Friday,  July 24th , before entering full swing  from July 30th to August 2nd, 2026 , once again transforming the squares of the Maremma’s most charming villages into a captivating open-air theater.

Five days dedicated to emerging international cinema, featuring meetings, screenings, and discoveries in the squares of San Martino sul Fiora, Saturnia, and Montemerano, with a grand finale at the Terme di Saturnia spa. The program includes two competitions, for short and feature films, and a series of special events spread across the surrounding municipalities, reflecting the festival’s traveling spirit.

The 2026 edition of the Saturnia Film Festival will pay tribute to Anna Magnani, an absolute icon of Italian and international cinema, on the seventieth anniversary of her Oscar win for  Daniel Mann’s The Rose Tattoo  (1956), which established her as the first Italian actress in the history of the Academy Awards to win the Best Actress statuette. Her talent and legacy will also be celebrated with the festival’s official image, designed by Davide Pompili and inspired by her. The tribute will continue with a screening of  Anna  by and with  Monica Guerritore , an intimate and powerful account of the actress’s life and artistic journey. Monica Guerritore, director as well as the star of the film, will also be the guest of honor on Friday, July 31st for the screening of her film.

Rounding out the Feature Film Competition are two films that were protagonists of last year’s film and festival season:  Le città di pianura  by Francesco Sossai, an instant cult of this year’s Italian cinema and winner of the latest David di Donatello Awards, a road trip tale across the Veneto plains starring three unlikely outsiders; and  Il rapimento di Arabella  by Carolina Cavalli, a road movie that sees the unexpected encounter between a young woman trapped by her regrets and a little girl determined to escape from it all, in a delicate and surprising tale about the desire to change the past.

The ninth edition of the Saturnia Film Festival once again offers a Short Film Competition dedicated to the best short films from around the world, divided into three sections: Italy, International, and Animation.

Among the international titles in competition:  Choice  by Marko Crnogoroski, the story of a woman forced to face the brutal reality when a new law bans scheduled abortion;  Normal  by Lara Panah-Izadi, in which a hypersensitive man is forced to confront the violence of his own emotions;  Rhubarb Rhubarb  by Kate McMullen, which centers on a family running a thriving rhubarb farm in Yorkshire.
Among the Italian titles: the dystopian  Arborea  by Letizia Zatti, in which the vegetation has mysteriously stopped reproducing and a scientist monitors the sound frequencies of an oak tree until one day she hears a new sound;  Arca  by Lorenzo Quagliozzi, in which a group of Hollywood filmmakers fight to preserve cinema from the end of history;  and Extra Time  by Matteo Memè, in which a scooter trip allows a father and son to finally confront their complex relationship.
For animation:  Mud  by Caterina Salvadori and Mariasole Brusa, in which the “mud” of the title is told from a poetic, creative, and material perspective;  Retirement Plan  by John Kelly, Best Animated Film at the 2026 Oscars, in which the protagonist Ray daydreams about his future in retirement;  Rukeli  by Alessandro Rak, a story dedicated to Johann Wilhelm Trollmann, who became middleweight champion in Nazi Germany, the first Sinto, or “Gypsy,” to win this title in world boxing.

The Women’s Views  section returns this year  , produced in collaboration with  Mujeres nel Cinema and the Olympia de Gouges Association,  with three short films directed by women and focusing on women’s issues:  Gente per bene  by Irene Girotti, in which the protagonist Luna, a middle-class student, tries to help Alina, a Ukrainian woman in Italy without a residence permit;  La parola amore non esisteva  by Eva Dematté, in which the director follows her grandfather’s daily life, imagining that his recently deceased grandmother is there with him;  Punti nascondenti  by Beatrice Baldacci, in which a seventy-five-year-old woman finds the strength to regain her freedom in an encounter with a young seamstress, trapped in a life of control.

The festival program is completed by the  Art Short School section , directed by David Pompili, with videos by students from the Gandhi Institute of Narni that will remain on display at the Polo Culturale Le Clarisse in Grosseto for all days of the festival as well as at the Polo Culturale Pietro Aldi in Saturnia.

The complete program of the ninth edition of  Saturnia Film Festival will be announced in the coming weeks.