There's a series that's driving young people and now adults crazy, and which has become one of the most popular and eagerly awaited television series, a true phenomenon: Mare Fuori, set in a juvenile prison in Naples.
The third season, streaming preview on Rai Play where it is totaling record viewers, has been in prime time on Raidue since February 15. A fourth will be on set in May. In the meantime, the cast of young people, all elegant, sang the theme song, a hit, on the Ariston stage, 'protected' by the director Carolina Crescentini.
Anna Ammirati is Liz, the IPM educator, “maternal and carnal”, she says in an interview with ANSA, “she has a special relationship with the kids and even when she has to put them in line and scold them you can tell she loves them and understands them. This attitude of hers will get her into trouble during the third season: in the second we saw her consumed by guilt for not having helped a boy, Attilio, outside the institute, who was found murdered. She embarks on a journey of solitude, she decides to act on her own, making a mistake, to help a boy again”.
From the beginning “Mare fuori was different. For the themes and for the harmony on the set. You have to think that apart from the adult roles, mine, that of the director Carolina Crescentini, the educator Carmine Recano and a few others, the young cast is almost entirely made up of kids with their first experiences who are growing together during the production. Also thanks to the director Ivan Silvestrini who also off the set was able to create continuous opportunities to socialize, form a group, support each other. In addition to being a director, he is a great educator and Mare Fuori is one of the happy sets that all actors dream of”.
The two young leaders of the group Nicolas Maupas, Filippo Ferrari O'Chiattillo (which stands for daddy's son, as the young people of Vomero are called) and Massimiliano Caiazzo, Carmine Di Salvo, the son of the boss who doesn't want to be a boss, have become close friends, true brothers. “In addition to the harmony, which evidently breaks through the screen, another element that makes Mare Fuori a special project – continues Ammirati on the fiction written by Cristiana Farina produced by Roberto Sessa of Picomedia for Rai Fiction – It's empathy for all kids. They are minors who have made mistakes and society must give them a second chance.
Furthermore, finally the finger is pointed at adults, they are the ones who are wrong because they put them under pressure, because they are absent or control them too much, or do not give them freedom of choice as happens to the children of Camorristi. This series makes us reflect even more on our responsibilities as educators. For me as an actress and as a person it is a total life experience”.
Anna Ammirati, who started out as Monella in the Tinto Brass film of the same name, and has become a popular face, continues to cultivate the dream of her profession as a psychologist, in addition to that of an actress: “I won a call for tenders for the OSA social project on risky online behavior, for which I created a full-time course for 40 kids and I hope to continue”.
She was born in Castellamare di Stabia and explains how the entire cast, mostly Neapolitan and debuting, tailor-made the language of the characters, “from the scripts in Italian by Cristina Farina to the dialogues on the set in the language, this too is a strength of Mare Fuori, you can feel that it is true even from the way it speaks”.
Obviously, no spoilers for the third season, about the fourth season on the set in May he only says “some adults will leave and new kids will come in to tell about a different world…”.






Choose the social channel you want to subscribe to