Massive masses of water, moving on the surface of the sea, cause seismic waves that intersect with the movements of the sea depths. This encounter triggers an extraordinary phenomenon: an endless planetary sound that is easy to hear if you are near the Van Allen belts, 20 thousand kilometers from the Earth’s surface; just as the Pueblo Indians hear it when they come down from the windows of their homes. They stamp their feet on the ground and their grandparents arrive, as they call the clouds. And it starts to rain. And the water swirls between the sky and the earth, making it vibrate like a giant bell that runs through space at 100 thousand kilometers per hour.
“This is the story of a rainy day. This is the story of a homeless woman who doesn’t ask for alms and an eight-year-old gypsy, of the barmaid who earns money with slot machines and an African porter, but also of an old man they call Job. This is the story of the Chinese man, of a mother who makes freeze-dried soup, and of a couple of fathers whose names I don’t know. This is the story of a young woman who works as a cashier at the supermarket and of the people she meets.”
What Happened to the Pueblo Indians? is a vision of fascinating scenarios. But traveling also responds to an irresistible provocation. As expected from Ascanio Celestini.
Full ticket €15.00
Reduced ticket €12.00
Exclusively for under 26s, over 65s and residents of Jerzu, Ulassai and Osini.
At the entrance, the conditions for taking advantage of the reduction will be checked.