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Luca Castellani: The Actor-Producer Whose Passion Project AMERICA Is Turning Heads on the Road to the Oscars
Hollywood

Luca Castellani: The Actor-Producer Whose Passion Project AMERICA Is Turning Heads on the Road to the Oscars

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

After years of studying his craft, chasing auditions, and searching for the right story to tell, Luca Castellani decided to create his own opportunity. The result is AMERICA, a 22-minute live-action short that’s already being called one of the most emotionally resonant films of the year and a frontrunner in the Oscar race.

For Castellani, AMERICA is more than a role; it’s the culmination of years of discipline and artistic pursuit. “I’ve been training for this moment most of my life,” he says. “There comes a point where you stop waiting for permission to be seen, you build your own door.” He adds, “For years, I auditioned for roles that never came close to representing the kind of truth I wanted to tell. So I decided to write and produce something that did.”

That door opened when he crossed paths with acclaimed Brazilian filmmaker Aly Muritiba, whose reputation for deeply human storytelling (The Factory, Private Desert, City of God: The Series) has made him one of Latin America’s most respected auteurs. Together, they crafted AMERICA, a story about love, identity, and the quiet ache of belonging. “Aly and I met at exactly the right time,” says Castellani. “We both wanted to tell a story about human connection, something that transcends borders, languages, and politics.”

In the film, Castellani plays Tom, a Brazilian immigrant whose search for the American dream takes a heartbreaking turn. His performance is stripped of artifice, raw, unguarded, and deeply lived-in. There’s a moment late in the film, when Tom drives through the night beside his dying partner, softly singing an old song, where everything else falls away. Fear, disbelief, and devotion flicker across his face in silence. It’s acting that doesn’t perform emotion, it reveals it. “That scene broke me,” Luca admits. “It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done on screen. But I think in that pain, I found the truth of who Tom really was.”

Muritiba calls Luca’s approach “precise and fearless.” He adds, “Luca has that rare stillness that pulls you in. He understands that silence can speak louder than dialogue.”

When traditional casting paths didn’t yield the complex roles he sought, Castellani took control of his narrative. “Producing AMERICA was never about control,” he explains, “it was about responsibility, to the story, to the crew, and to the craft. I knew this was a film that deserved to exist.” He reflects, “I’ve always believed that if the story chooses you, you owe it everything. That’s how I felt about AMERICA, it wasn’t just a project, it was a calling.”

His producer’s touch ensured that the film remained intimate and authentic, assembling a world-class team that included cinematographer Andressa Cordeiro, editor Karen Akerman, and sound designer Pavel Iaroshenko. “We didn’t have a massive budget,” Luca recalls, “but what we had was heart. Every person on that set was there because they believed in what we were doing.” The result is a piece of cinema that feels handcrafted, each frame charged with purpose.

The collaboration between Castellani and Muritiba feels less like actor-director and more like two craftsmen building something sacred. “Aly works with empathy,” says Luca. “He trusts his actors completely. That freedom made it possible to go to darker, more honest places.” He continues, “He gives you space to fail, to try, to explore and in that space, you find the real magic.”

Muritiba echoes that respect: “Luca is not afraid of vulnerability. He leads by example; his passion elevates everyone around him.”

AMERICA has quietly become one of the most talked-about short films of the season, earning praise at private screenings in Los Angeles, London, and São Paulo. Critics have compared Castellani’s performance to the early breakthroughs of Gael García Bernal and Timothée Chalamet actors who radiate intensity without demanding attention. “It’s humbling to even be mentioned alongside those names,” says Luca. “But what matters to me is that people feel something real when they watch AMERICA. That’s all I ever wanted.”

With the film gaining traction in Academy circles, Castellani remains grounded. “The dream isn’t the award,” he says. “The dream is that the work reaches people, that it stirs something.” He pauses before adding, “But I won’t lie it feels good to know that all those years of hustling, of being told ‘no,’ led me to this moment.”

Yet, as AMERICA continues its journey through the awards circuit, it’s clear that Luca Castellani’s moment has arrived. The actor who once built his own opportunity is now standing on the threshold of a career that could redefine him, not just as a performer, but as a filmmaker with something vital to say. “This film changed me,” he reflects. “It reminded me why I fell in love with cinema in the first place because it has the power to make people see each other again.”

 

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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'After The Hunt's Luca Guadagnino On Film's Power & Desire Dynamics
TV & Streaming

‘After The Hunt’s Luca Guadagnino On Film’s Power & Desire Dynamics

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Luca Guadagnino, director of Amazon MGM Studios‘ picture After The Hunt, has revealed what drew him to the debut script of Nora Garrett.

After The Hunt follows a college professor (Julia Roberts) who finds herself at a personal and professional crossroads when a star pupil (Ayo Edebiri) levels an accusation against one of her colleagues (Andrew Garfield), and a dark secret from her own past threatens to come to light.

Guadagnino regular Michael Stuhlbarg and Chloë Sevigny also star along with Lío Mehiel, Thaddea Graham, Will Price, Christine Dye, and Burgess Byrd.

Appearing on stage at Deadline’s Contenders London event on Saturday, the Oscar-nominated Italian director said the dynamics of power and desire were appealing to him. He recalled reading Garrett’s script for the first time on a flight.

“It struck me the way in which Nora could bring together a very particular story in a very specific place, and make it a stage for idiosyncrasies and impulses that could speak to everybody,” he explained.

Garrett, an actress who has appeared in Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders, said it was “difficult to put into words” how grateful she was that Guadagnino took on the project after his previous work on films like Call Me by Your Name and Challengers.

Unpacking the ambition behind the story, she said: “I was really interested in someone who had such a powerful mechanism of self-denialism, and that mechanism is what supported their effort towards external success in a way that was powerful and propulsive, but hampered them in an emotional integrity way.”

Cinematographer Malik Hassan Sayeed said they wanted After the Hunt to feel like it was shot in the 1980s, using a single lens and other technology from that time. “He’s [Guadagnino] very precise and masterful at his craft, and I think it was an amazing pairing for us,” Hassan Sayeed said.

Guadagnino praised casting director Jessica Ronane for her “astonishing” work in balancing a cast that was “so wide and deep.” Roanne said it was a “great responsibility and a great thrill” to work on the movie.

After The Hunt premiered on October 10.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Luca Guadagnino on Woody Allen Influence on 'After the Hunt'
TV & Streaming

Luca Guadagnino on Woody Allen Influence on ‘After the Hunt’

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Luca Guadagnino‘s academia cancel-culture thriller “After the Hunt” (Amazon/MGM Studios) is the Italian filmmaker’s latest work to premiere at the Venice Film Festival. It stars Julia Roberts as a Yale philosophy professor, who’s unraveling amid a sexual-assault accusation made by her student (Ayo Edebiri) against her colleague (Andrew Garfield).

From a script by first-time feature writer Nora Garrett, Guadagnino’s third feature in three years plays out of competition in Venice, with the director joined by Roberts, Michael Stuhlbarg, Garfield, Edebiri, and Chloë Sevigny on the Lido. During Friday’s press conference in the Palazzo del Casino, the actors tangled with the film’s thorny topics, which deal not only with assault but also race relations in the academic world and the ideological divide between generations.

George Clooney in Jay Kelly

Given the film’s cancel-culture overtures, it’s noteworthy and not by accident that the film’s opening credits are in the style of a Woody Allen movie: in the Windsor typeface and white text against a black screen, in alphabetical order, and acknowledging said alphabetical order. Eagle-eyed audiences will ponder the connection between an artist who’s become persona non grata in American culture and Roberts as a professor who is facing accusations and persecution of her own.

During the Friday morning press conference, IndieWire asked Luca Guadagnino why those opening credits share an aesthetic with a Woody Allen movie. “The crass answer would be why not?” the “Call Me By Your Name” filmmaker said. “There is a canon that I grew up with, and why I started thinking about this movie with my collaborators, in front of the camera and behind the camera, we couldn’t stop thinking of ‘Crimes and Misdemeanors’ or ‘Another Woman’ or even ‘Hannah and Her Sisters,’ and there was an infrastructure to the story that felt linked to the great oeuvre of Woody Allen between 1985 and 1991.”

He added, “I played with that a few times before this, a couple of times used that kind of graphic and font, and I felt it was also interesting thinking of an artist who has been, in a way, facing some sort of problems about his being and what is our responsibility in looking at the work of an artist that we love, like Woody Allen. And by the way, it’s a classic font, that kind of font. It goes beyond Woody.”

Roberts said it’s “not so much that we’re making a statement” with the hot-button film. “We’re sharing these lives for this moment and want everyone to go talk to each other after… we are kind of losing the art of conversation in humanity right now, and if making this movie does everything, getting everyone to talk to each other is the most exciting thing we can accomplish.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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