‘Citadel: Diana’ interview: Matilda De Angelis and Gina Gardini on reinventing ‘Citadel’ in Italy

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‘Citadel: Diana’ interview: Matilda De Angelis and Gina Gardini on reinventing ‘Citadel’ in Italy

There’s a selected thrill in constructing worlds — particularly when the canvas stretches throughout continents, genres, and even languages. Such is the audacious promise behind Prime Video’s Citadel: Diana. The Italian spinoff of Amazon’s formidable but divisive spy franchise Citadel, looks like a revelation of kinds — if solely as a result of the Russo brothers have managed to create one thing that doesn’t drown in its personal spectacle, not like its mother or father present, starring Richard Madden and Priyanka Chopra, which was met with a lukewarm response. For showrunner Gina Gardini and sequence lead Matilda De Angelis, it’s clear that Diana is, in some ways, an evolution — not only a spinoff, however a reinvention.

Gina is not any stranger to large, gritty productions, having labored on Italy’s seminal crime dramas Gomorrah and ZeroZeroZero. Diana, nonetheless, introduced a completely new problem: not simply to construct a spy thriller, however to carve out a bit of the long run, by way of the lens of Italy’s previous. “It was essential to create a world that felt actual and attainable in a brief time period, regardless that we’re set in a close to future,” Gina explains. Becoming into an expansive worldwide universe whereas sustaining the native essence of the nation, Gina’s imaginative and prescient of Italy comes into sharper focus: a brutalist, considerably dystopian backdrop, saturated with the nation’s corruption.

Matilda De Angelis in a still from ‘Citadel: Diana’

Matilda De Angelis in a nonetheless from ‘Citadel: Diana’
| Picture Credit score:
Prime Video

On the coronary heart of it’s Matilda because the eponymous Diana Cavalieri, a former Citadel agent turned mole embedded deep inside the enemy syndicate, Manticore. It’s a efficiency that asks Matilda to stroll a tightrope — concurrently chilly and weak, indifferent however simmering with internal battle. “The humorous factor is once you don’t need to present feelings, you truly must really feel these feelings,” Matilda says. “I needed to really feel concern, ache, anger, and in a manner, present the alternative. Nevertheless it needed to stay in my coronary heart and core.”

Matilda’s description of her course of sheds mild on the unusual alchemy of taking part in Diana. The character is a puzzle field of contradictions — hardened by loss and espionage, however pushed by an unstated craving for the household she has left behind. In lesser fingers, the trope of a “robust, emotionally distant spy” may have felt hole, however Matilda infuses Diana with a haunting sense of loss that lingers in her eyes, even when she’s orchestrating an elaborate assassination or slipping effortlessly into one other disguise. It’s this complexity that provides Diana its emotional anchor, a departure from the exaggerated plot-heavy mechanics of its predecessor.

Gina is fast to credit score the collaborative course of behind Diana’s creation. “I believe that’s what’s so nice about Matilda’s efficiency,” she notes. “That communication she has with the viewers, the place you recognize what she’s feeling, however she’s displaying one thing completely completely different.” And maybe it’s this stability — between inner and exterior, emotion and motion — that will elevate Citadel: Diana above mere franchise fodder.

After all, the sequence doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s a part of the bigger Citadel universe, which, if nothing else, has ambition in spades. With the upcoming launch of Citadel: Honey Bunny, an Indian spin-off starring Varun Dhawan and Samantha Ruth Prabhu, in addition to a second season of the unique sequence on the best way, the query stays: How do these seemingly disparate items match collectively?

Gina’s response is simple. “What was so nice about working with the Russo brothers and AGBO was their imaginative and prescient for every present to have its personal specificity,” she says. “You didn’t have to look at Citadel to know Diana. It’s grounded in its cultural specificity — this story may solely occur in Italy.” That cultural grounding, Gina explains, was no small activity. “As soon as we had established our narrative, an important character grew to become Italy itself — its context, its structure, its historical past. You’ll be able to’t transpose this present wherever else.”

Matilda De Angelis in a still from ‘Citadel: Diana’

Matilda De Angelis in a nonetheless from ‘Citadel: Diana’
| Picture Credit score:
Prime Video

At its core, Citadel: Diana is a narrative of reinvention. Very like its protagonist, who should always adapt to shifting allegiances and hidden agendas, the sequence itself is a pivot for the bigger Citadel franchise. It takes the bombast of the Russo spectacle and roots it in one thing extra intimate and culturally particular. And maybe, in doing so, it presents a glimpse of what this interconnected spy universe may probably rework itself into.

Following the primary cross-border meet-up, Matilda lights up when speaking about her first encounters with Priyanka Chopra, Samantha Ruth Prabhu, and the remainder of the Citadel world workforce. “It was good to see all us girls of Citadel all collectively. It makes you are feeling a part of one thing larger,” she says. “I believe she [Priyanka] is such an incredible actress, and I beloved her efficiency in Citadel. Every part about her impressed me and I really feel comfy round her.”

Because the Citadel universe expands, the problem might be sustaining the distinctiveness of the varied cultural narratives with out diluting them into an amorphous world product. If Diana is any indication, there’s hope but for the sprawling ambition of this spy saga. However even when the bigger franchise falters, Gina and Matilda have already succeeded in crafting one thing distinctly their very own.

Citadel: Diana is at the moment streaming on Prime Video