However, interpreting it as a creative prompt, I’ve crafted a short story inspired by its dreamlike, fragmented feel — as if the title itself were a forgotten memory or a corrupted file from 1986. Desiderando Giulia (1986)
Marco found it in a cardboard box at a flea market in Bologna, tucked between a broken accordion and a stack of L'Espresso magazines. The seller shrugged. "Don't know. Maybe someone's home movie."
The tape had no studio logo, no copyright date. Just a handwritten label in fading ink: "Desiderando Giulia – 1986 – mtrjm kaml – may syma 1" fylm Desiderando Giulia 1986 mtrjm kaml - may syma 1
One night, in a dream, Marco saw Giulia. She was younger, maybe seventeen, standing in a video rental store in 1986. She was holding the same tape. She walked to a shelf marked "Nessun prezzo – Solo desiderio" (No price – Only desire). She placed it there, turned, and mouthed: "Trova la chiave." (Find the key.)
"If you are watching this, you are already inside the desire. The key does not open a door. It opens a memory. Remember me." However, interpreting it as a creative prompt, I’ve
"Se stai guardando questo, sei già dentro il desiderio. La chiave non apre una porta. Apre un ricordo. Ricordami."
Marco became obsessed. He spent months tracking down film archives, old cinema clubs, even a retired private investigator from the '80s. No Giulia. No record of the footage. One old projectionist in Ravenna told him, "Some films aren't made to be seen. They're made to be desired." "Don't know
Then Marco noticed something. The phrase "mtrjm kaml" — when typed on a telephone keypad (old letter-to-number mapping), it translated to 68756 5265. Not a phone number. But "may syma 1" — "May Syma" sounded like "miasma" or a misspelling of "Simya" (an obscure Turkish name). Or maybe "SYMA" was an acronym.
The final frames: "may syma 1" — then a single, shaky close-up of a key, held in Giulia’s palm. She closed her fingers around it, and the tape ended.