An Interview With The Director, Stars and Producer of Sworn Virgin

You have 2 more chances to see Sworn Virgin at Tribeca! Don’t miss this exceptional film!

Flonja Kodheli, who plays Lila in Laura Bispuri’s ‘Sworn Virgin’ (Vergine Giurata) and actually comes from Albania, the film’s location, gave me the insider’s point of view:

“Sworn virgins were like a legend for me when I was growing up, a story our mothers told us. I didn’t know that they really existed.”

The story of the sworn virgin, a woman who, for many reasons, decides to renounce her sexuality and live as a man, has been fascinating audiences here at the Tribeca Film Festival. Many wanted to know, “Are they cross dressers? Lesbians?” And they may be, but the custom, particular to a very remote, mountainous part of Northern Albania, has its practical advantages for women who need to work (men’s jobs are forbidden to women), families without boys, or women who are more comfortable in this role.

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But for the director, Laura Bispuri, this isn’t really the point. For what could have been a movie about women’s’ rights is more a film about human rights, and though the film portrays very severe life and limited opportunities for women, Bispuri tells the story entirely without adjudication.

“The beauty of the film is that it is without judgment”, said the film’s star, Alba Rohrwacher. “It’s reality with a delicate touch, and it doesn’t demonize this reality. It looks at the phenomenon in a very loving way,” and she pointed to part of the film in which the mother, played by Ilire Vinca Celaj, lovingly tells her girls what is expected of them in life. It is not good to have a man’s job. It is not good to drink or smoke. It is not good to choose your own husband.

Rohrwacher, an ethereal beauty straight out of a Botticelli painting, also stars in another film that is yet to be shown at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival, Hungry Hearts. She is Italy’s most sought after and dynamic actresses, and is never afraid to push herself to the limit in a film.

Director Laura Bispuri with her stars
Director Laura Bispuri with her stars

“I’m not afraid when I have a director like Laura”, she said. “I trust her. She make things that seem harsh very easy. I took my body to a place that is so far from what my body really is, and Laura gave me the courage to go to these extremes.”

She went on, “If you have a director who doesn’t know how to contain that you risk falling and getting hurt.”

Bispuri says that her favorite part of the film is when Mark, the sworn virgin played by Rohrwacher, leaves Albania and takes one last look at her homeland.

“It was sad”, I said.

“Freedom doesn’t necessarily mean happiness”, said Flonja with bittersweet tenderness.

Vergine Giurata will compete at Tribeca.
Vergine Giurata will compete at Tribeca.

I wanted to know what Bispuri’s secret, as she and other directors from her era continue to make Italian cinema stronger every day.

“I just do what I love,” she said, and I suppose we’d all do better following her lead.

We’ll watch for screenings of Sworn Virgin in other parts of the country and keep you posted, but if you are here in NYC, please don’t miss it at the Tribeca Film Festival.