Director Paula Ortiz, known for her work on La Virgen Roja, has shared her experience after two months of filming in the Vatican for a documentary about the tomb of Saint Peter. The project, which includes actor Chris Pratt and is edited by Pablo G贸mez Pan, will premiere in the fall. Ortiz describes the enclave as a central place for history, where she learned during her stay, which included a month in Rome. The production is currently in post-production, adjusting sound, music, and soundtrack to achieve a duration of one hour.
Post-production and editing: the technical pulse of the Vatican documentary 馃幀
The documentary about the tomb of Saint Peter is in its final post-production phase. The team, led by editor Pablo G贸mez Pan, is working on sound adjustment, music synchronization, and soundtrack integration. Ortiz has noted that the technical process requires precision to maintain the narrative rhythm of one hour of footage. Chris Pratt's participation adds an acting component that demands careful editing. The result aims to offer a direct view of the Vatican environment, without artifice or grandiloquence, focused on historical and archaeological data.
Two months in Saint Peter's cave: no wifi, but with style 馃槃
Ortiz spent two months in the Vatican, one of them in Rome, and describes it as an epicentric place, although she does not clarify if the epicenter had good mobile coverage. While the team adjusts the sound and music, one imagines actor Chris Pratt trying not to trip over the relics. The truth is, between tombs and post-production, the documentary promises to be as serious as a mass, but with less incense and more clapperboard.