Bertrand Mandico’s Roma Elastica delves into the fevered labyrinth of 1980s cinematic excess, weaving a surreal narrative where Marion Cotillard, a once-magnificent scream queen, grapples with the toll of stardom through an odyssey of over-the-top spectacle. This avant-garde flick, produced in its own right as a transgressive teen fantasy, channels the chaos and allure of the ’80s—combining giallo horror, slasher thrillers, and existential dread into a provocative exploration of the cost of fame. Mandico’s masterful vision sees Cotillard not just play a tragic figure, but embody the paradox of being both the muse and the subject of a film that prioritizes kitsch over substance. As she navigates a world where reality is a blur, the audience witnesses the duality of success and suffering, a theme that resonates deeply in an era increasingly consumed by spectacle over depth. What many overlook, however, is the film’s ability to juxtapose entertainment with existential dread, leaving viewers questioning whether true fulfillment lies beyond the screen or within the chaos itself. In this case, the answer is clear: Rome, as a city of endless possibilities, becomes the metaphor for life’s endless journey.