Two strangers cross paths on the eve of Carnival in Venice — a cellist from Vienna and a restorer of ancient frescoes — and lose themselves in a city that seems determined to keep them together until dawn.
The Story
Katarina has traveled from Vienna to perform a single concert at La Fenice. Marco has spent six months alone in a scaffolded chapel on the island of Torcello, painstakingly reviving a fourteenth-century fresco. They meet at a masked bacaro tucked behind the Rialto — she orders a Spritz, he orders silence — and the evening spirals outward from there, through fog-laced calli, across the lagoon by water taxi, and into an argument about whether beauty is something you create or something you uncover.
Director Elisa Ferrante frames Venice not as a postcard but as a living, breathing accomplice. The camera drifts through doorways, lingers on reflections, and lets dialogue trail off into the ambient hum of the city. The result is a film that feels less watched than overheard.
The city doesn’t care whether you stay or go. That’s what makes it honest.
Katarina, played by Lena Vogt
Cast & Crew
- Director: Elisa Ferrante
- Starring: Lena Vogt, Alessandro Ferraro, Ginevra Bassi
- Cinematography: Tomás Lindgren
- Original Score: Nadia Park
Ferrante drew on her own experience living in Venice for three years, shooting entirely on location with natural light and a stripped-down crew. The film’s celebrated nine-minute single-take bridge scene was captured on the third attempt, just before sunrise.

Winner of the Audience Award at the Venice Film Festival and nominated for Best Foreign Language Film, Midnight in Venice is an unhurried meditation on chance, connection, and the spaces between the words we choose not to say.
