The “Dog Years” are not the most logical ones to think about. These are not the years of braces and first loves, of the months suspended in limbo that no more children are needed, but creatures torn between the dream of being able to be adults and the agony of a seemingly infinite puberty. The Dog years, those referred to in the title of first Italian Amazon Original film, are special years, destined to count as they do in the animal kingdom: one for seven. Stella, played by Aurora Giovinazzo, assigned them a value seven times greater when a car accident made clear the precariousness of existence. Then, she told herself that she would begin to count each year of her as you do with dogs, one by seven until she matured, around her sixteenth birthday, the absurd belief that she was now nearing the end.
Stella feels the indomitable time, the life that flows. He fears he will not be able to do everything he has slipped into his own, very personal list of essential experiences. He is afraid, but that sense of uneasiness shared only with his closest friends, Nina and Giulio, suddenly fades into an unexpected encounter. Stella, which in Dog years shares part of his daily life with his mother, the face of Sabrina Impacciatore, runs into Matteo, a shy and introverted boy, not at all engulfed by his own frenzy to live a thousand. It will be this young man who will change, once again, the perspective of the sixteen-year-old, whose story will arrive online October 22.
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