Angelo Rocco Troiano • Productor, Mediterraneo Cinematografica
“Los documentales no cambian el mundo por sí solos, pero pueden cambiar la forma en que la gente lo ve”
- El productor italiano explica por qué elige proyectos que mantienen una clara dimensión social y cultural

Este artículo está disponible en inglés.
Angelo Rocco Troiano is a European indie cinema producer with a background in law and a focus on sustainable production. He co-founded Mediterraneo Cinematografica in 2014, where he currently serves as CEO. He works primarily with emerging talent and international co-productions. Since 2023, he has expanded into podcast storytelling and became an EAVE alumnus in 2024. An interview with him, now selected for the 2026 Emerging Producers programme (read his EP profile here).
Why do you produce documentaries? Do you see documentary cinema as an instrument of social and political change?
Angelo Rocco Troiano: I produce documentaries because filmmaking is one of my forms of civic engagement. Before working full-time in cinema, I was active in local politics. When I stepped away from that role, I did not abandon the desire to contribute to public discourse but redirected it through film. Documentary allows me to support stories rooted in reality, open space for underrepresented voices, and encourage informed conversation.
I do see documentary cinema as an instrument of social and political change, not in a simplistic or propagandistic sense, but as a tool for awareness and complexity. Documentaries do not change the world alone, but they can change how people look at it. That shift in perception is often the first real step toward change.
At a time when we are surrounded by synthetic and AI-generated imagery, documentary filmmaking gains additional relevance through its commitment to context and accountability. Producing is my profession and my livelihood, but I choose projects that maintain a clear social and cultural dimension. The value that defines my path is perseverance – strong documentaries require time, rigor, and continuity.
How do you achieve and maintain work-life balance and foster overall well-being?
My involvement in volunteering with Mediterranea Saving Humans, which I joined through my wife, has significantly changed how I evaluate urgency and responsibility. In that environment, urgency has a direct human meaning. This perspective has helped me recalibrate how I experience pressure in the film industry.
I learned to distinguish between what is important and what only appears urgent. That distinction improves decision-making and reduces unnecessary stress. Production work is structurally demanding, so balance must be built consciously rather than postponed.
I protect time for family life, civic engagement, and physical well-being. I also treat well-being as part of production culture, not only a private matter. Sustainable workflows, realistic scheduling, and transparent communication strengthen both teams and outcomes.
Where do you find audiences for your films?
When possible, I work with a transmedia approach that we define as Eco Audience Design Production Strategy. The principle is to develop an audiovisual work as the core of a broader cultural ecosystem rather than a standalone product.
In Mediterraneo Cinematografica, we applied this experimental model to Se il Mare Muore, combining the film with parallel outputs – podcasts, music projects, and editorial micro-content – created by different authors around the same topic. Each format reaches a specific audience segment while remaining interconnected.
Instead of pursuing a single target group, we design multiple entry points and encourage movement between formats. This creates layered engagement and extends project visibility over time. The approach requires coordination and editorial coherence, but it has proven effective in widening reach and deepening impact.
What projects do you have underway (including fiction films and other projects)?
Our company focuses primarily on first and second features by emerging directors, frequently structured as international co-productions. In documentary, we are finalizing MATERnA, developed alongside a related podcast series, and we are developing Popo by Eleonora Deligio and Like Two Strangers by Carolina Astudillo.
In fiction, two co-productions are in advanced development: Sema by Lorenzo Puntoni with partners in Slovenia and France, and La Gruta del Viento by Eduardo Crespo in co-production with Argentina and Brazil. Both are director-driven projects designed for strong festival circulation.
Across the slate, the constants are international collaboration, author-centred development, and structured audience strategy. We try to build projects with patience and solid partnerships, aiming for stories that are locally grounded and internationally resonant.
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EMERGING PRODUCERS is a leading promotional and educational project, which brings together talented European documentary film producers. The programme is organised and curated by the Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival.
Deadline for applications to the EMERGING PRODUCERS 2027 edition is 31st March 2026.
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