Where else can you find great Italian culture in Cardiff?
- Ffwrnes Pizza: This renowned spot in Cardiff Market offers a combination of traditional Neapolitan pizza and Welsh produce and serves up an entire menu worth of this fusion food every Tuesday to Saturday. Having begun in 2014 in a three-wheeled van and a wood-fired oven, Ffwrnes is now a popular spot for anyone looking for a taste of the Neapolitan.
- Italian Cultural Centre Wales (ICCW): This initiative, co-founded by Luisa Pèrcopo herself, is dedicated to providing information regarding the latest cultural Italian events in Cardiff and South Wales. Previously, the ICCW has hosted an Italian carnival at Penarth Pier Pavilion and the promotion of Italian films showing at independent Cardiff cinemas.
- Wally’s Delicatessen in the Royal Arcade provides a range of traditional Italian food and ingredients, from tri-colour pasta to classic Italian puff pastries and amaretti cookies. Here, you can find a wide variety of supplies to quench any desires for a homemade Italian dish.
Chapter Arts Centre will be home to a celebration of some of the quirkiest Italian films around this November
Offbeat Italian cinema has found a home in the Welsh capital for the fifth year running, as the Italian Film Festival Cardiff (IFFC) is due to take place again from 16-19 November.
The festival is dedicated to offering an insight into the culture of independent Italian film here in Cardiff and often serves as a platform for Italian filmmakers and industry workers to showcase their work in the UK.
Luisa Pèrcopo, one of the festival’s artistic directors, feels IFFC is a hotspot for the portrayal of a varied Italy – particularly as this year, she strove to include a number of films in the minority languages found in the country.
The festival’s 2019 programme includes films in the old Venetian language, in Sardinian dialogue, and even in Arbëreshë: the ancient Albanian language found in Southern Italy.
Luisa stated: “The intention of IFFC is to bring to the screens of Wales a dynamic and diverse portrait of contemporary Italy, without hiding its contradictions.”
Fedor Tot, editor of Buzz magazine and a regular attendee of IFFC, believes that the festival is satisfying a need in Cardiff and South Wales for the recognition of independent foreign language cinema.
He said: “The Italian Film Festival is the kind of thing we always need more of – festival directors and programmers willing to take on unique, often ignored films that might otherwise struggle to be seen in the UK and given a home.”
As of this year, IFFC is the only festival celebrating Italian cinema in the UK that will award a prize to both the best film and the best documentary of the competition – which highlights its unique position within UK film festival culture.
IFFC 2019 is shaping up to be an alternative and inclusive event, where the depths of Italian cinema can be shown to audiences here in South Wales.
Where else can you find great Italian culture in Cardiff?
- Ffwrnes Pizza: This renowned spot in Cardiff Market offers a combination of traditional Neapolitan pizza and Welsh produce and serves up an entire menu worth of this fusion food every Tuesday to Saturday. Having begun in 2014 in a three-wheeled van and a wood-fired oven, Ffwrnes is now a popular spot for anyone looking for a taste of the Neapolitan.
- Italian Cultural Centre Wales (ICCW): This initiative, co-founded by Luisa Pèrcopo herself, is dedicated to providing information regarding the latest cultural Italian events in Cardiff and South Wales. Previously, the ICCW has hosted an Italian carnival at Penarth Pier Pavilion and the promotion of Italian films showing at independent Cardiff cinemas.
- Wally’s Delicatessen in the Royal Arcade provides a range of traditional Italian food and ingredients, from tri-colour pasta to classic Italian puff pastries and amaretti cookies. Here, you can find a wide variety of supplies to quench any desires for a homemade Italian dish.