Gunther's Millions (2023) s01e02 Episode Script

Episode 2

1
I was picked for this job,
first of all, because I'm blessed.
[dance music playing]
I don't want a place to stay ♪
Get your booty on the floor tonight
Make my day ♪
I love my job.
Second of all,
I understood what the goals
of the dog's inheritance were about.
The group was kind of like the face,
the symbol of power and money and beauty.
It's almost like
he wanted to have an image
of something that was beyond human.
[robot voice]
You have been selected for an experiment.
Worldwide travel,
business ventures, and pleasure
in the most beautiful locations
of sun and things in the world,
to create five human samples
as an analogy similar to the dog,
Gunther sample.
Only at the end of the experiment
will you be truly worthy.
[Ed] You have to ask yourself,
is this guy the next Carl Jung?
Is he the next Sigmund Freud?
Or is he just fucking with people's heads?
[dramatic music]
[Maxidus]
Sitting down and meeting with Maurizio,
I kind of had an understanding
that my job
is to make them look beautiful.
You know, choreography dance, singing.
We were supposed to be
this Renaissance group,
and we made appearances.
We did some small shoots,
you know, it was very exciting.
[Michelle] Everything was so glamorous.
I was very naïve back then too.
I was only like 23 years old.
I just really wanted it
to actually be, you know, true.
I knew that the cameras were supposed
to be filming these rehearsals,
but then we had these people coming in
with white lab coats watching us,
studying the way
we interacted with one another,
studying how
we were interacting with the dog.
[Ed] It sounds more like
a science experiment than a musical group.
It sounds like
you want to study these people.
That was what happened.
[operatic music playing]
[Maurizio, in Italian] Why scientists?
We were studying
how people can find a state of well-being,
to reach perfection.
[Aurelien, in English] So you were
studying how they could be happier?
Yes.
Why?
[Maurizio, in Italian] It was a thing
that was very important to the Countess
because she had a son
who committed suicide due to depression,
severe depression.
[Lucy, in English]
So one of the Countess' wishes
before she passed
was to do a scientific experiment
to really find out why her son Gunther,
who had everything,
became so depressed throughout his life
and eventually taking his life.
[Maurizio, in Italian]
As it was written in the Trust,
these groups
were to be involved in this experiment,
in this research.
[classical music]
[in English] We had two scientists
at the time following our experiment,
you know, our lifestyle.
Hey, Barry.
[Barry] Hi.
[Carla] Always watching us.
[Barry] Okay.
The face, to us,
of the science part of this was Barry,
who is to us our housemother.
You can stick it in deeper, man.
Don't worry about it.
Plenty of room in these pants.
[laughs]
I'm Barry,
and I used to work for the Gunther Group.
They actually had a group
in there one day and they were saying,
"This is the dog's attorney,
this is the dog's caretaker,
this is dog's 'cosmopologist, '
and this is Barry."
I didn't fit
into any of their massive plans,
and I just was there.
Had input into everything
and responsibility for nothing.
- What's your name?
- [Barry] I'm Barry.
- Nice to meet you, Barry.
- [Barry] It's a pleasure.
I don't think I'd forget you.
[both laugh]
Nice energy. Cute.
We'd like more buxom, but
we like the variety.
And you're 18, right?
[girl] Yes, I'm 19.
[laughs]
[Aurelien] So, do you come
from a scientific background?
Are you a scientist?
I haven't taken a science class
since Watson and Crick
won the Nobel Prize for DNA,
which was 1964, I believe.
[Aurelien] There are pictures of you
wearing a white lab coat,
collecting data around the experiments.
What was that all about?
We were doing research,
trying to attempt to find
exactly what that center of joy is.
What brings joy? What brings joy?
Let's do things which makes people happy
and watch them.
[violin music]
[Carla, in Italian]
The idea was to let five individuals
and a dog live inside the house
under the best possible conditions,
deprived of any form of stress.
[in English] Like, what are we doing?
[both laugh]
[Aurelien] That data you were collecting,
this analysis that you were drafting,
was that passing on to someone else?
Only to Maurizio.
[Aurelien] What was Maurizio
doing with the info?
Maurizio was gathering
was taking the information
that we were gathering
relating to the science of joy
and passing it on to other scientists.
- [Aurelien] Have you met these scientists?
- No.
My name is Matteo Pacini,
and I'm a physician.
I'm specialized in psychiatry.
Maurizio was introduced to me,
and we ended up discussing
about depression, addiction, happiness,
and reward for human beings.
[no audio]
Maurizio has a background in pharmacology,
and so I first thought
that he would propose something
concerning a new therapy.
But the thing was completely different.
[Piero] The Burgundians
had to follow a certain way of life.
We have this,
and it's specifically stated in the Trust,
and it's called the 13 Commandments.
Would you like me to read them?
- [Aurelien] I would love to.
- Okay.
"To avoid traditionalism."
"To adopt science as the only useful tool
to ensure that one's attained
the heights of satisfaction and pleasure."
[Carla] "Boundary between work and play
must disappear."
[Lee] "Family and marriage
play no part and must be abolished."
[woman] Do you feel like
that could almost be cult-like?
[laughs]
Not at all. Okay.
So, wow, that is hilarious.
So, if you put into context today
what the word "cult" means,
that comes from a negative fear place,
and when you're in a group
that is pushing joyous things,
then there's no real need
for an allegiance.
I didn't have to sit in a room
and get electric shock therapy
with Tom Cruise.
[Michelle] We were supposed to, like,
expand our minds,
and they wanted us to, like,
trip one time on acid to see,
you know, how we would react.
[Lucy] "Six, scientific cyber sex
is the most intense source of pleasure."
"Seven, music is a necessary ingredient
in the pursuit of science."
[Lee] "Eight, sport is for
entertainment and joy."
"Nine, nationalism must be"
- "Ten, arms must be eradicated"
- [Piero] Twelve, wealth is a positive."
"Beauty and intelligence
are synergetic values."
So this were and are, actually,
the 13 Commandments of the Trust
by which the young people must obey.
[woman] You laughed a little bit
when you were reading them.
What do you think personally about them?
Well, you know,
I'm an attorney for the Trust,
so I cannot express my personal opinion.
I have to abstain from personal opinion,
otherwise I will not be an independent.
[Aurelien] Was this experiment,
this data you collected,
in line with the Countess' wishes?
Yes, obviously the You know
The Countess is the source
of the meaning of the mission,
to avoid this sliding towards unhappiness.
[Maurizio, in Italian]
In their best interest,
we suggested they take part
in a kind of therapeutic protocol.
[in English] The idea was that
excessive sex randomly gives happiness.
[Lucy] They encouraged them to have sex,
be naked, orgies.
You can only imagine.
[Aurelien] Were you having sexual
relationships between yourselves?
Yeah, we were free
and allowed to have sex to each other.
[Michelle] They would set things up
so that we would be alone in the house,
maybe with just the one person,
and then everyone
kind of just started hooking up.
It wasn't exactly like PG-13.
Let's put it that way.
[Lee] Wild, orgy-esque,
Caligula-level situation.
I mean, we've all done things.
And then, I don't know what happened,
it just got weird.
It morphed from this glamorous,
hedonistic lifestyle to more of, like,
we were being watched 24-7.
We were not told about this initially,
so that's when I realized that maybe
they were filming everything in the house,
because there was cameras
in the bedrooms too.
[Ed] I actually didn't find out
'til later about the cameras,
and that kind of gave me a little creeps.
[Aurelien] Was the analysis
of the sexual behavior part of your work?
Yes.
It started to get strange
when they started asking us questions
about our preferences, sexual preferences.
[in Italian]
Occasionally, our data would be collected.
We would be called individually
into a room to talk about our week.
[in English] For example, how many sexual
intercourses have you had during the week?
How many partners we'd been with,
if we'd been with more than one person.
They did weigh-ins often.
We had to stay a certain weight.
We had to stay under,
like, 130 pounds for the girls.
[Carla] I told that group, "Don't worry."
"This is not going to be
something dangerous or whatever."
"This is just going to be fun,
and it's going to help each of us."
And if you interview them,
you're going to find out that.
There wasn't supposed to be any jealousy
or anything in the house,
and I embraced it initially.
But it was kind of hard to control,
like, your feelings,
because at the time, I was with Lee.
[Matteo] It's interesting to study people
inside a confined environment
and see how they behave.
They usually do two things, they match.
So, they have sex with each other,
a certain point, and they start arguing.
[Aurelien]
So you were hurt about the whole, like
Yeah, it got kind of weird at one point.
[Aurelien] Who were you having
relationships with inside the house?
This is a very private question, though.
[laughs]
Maybe Lee can say something,
I don't. [laughs]
From the moment I met Carla,
I was taken aback.
Carla just seemed so,
like, worldly and powerful,
and I knew, a lot of times,
she's just as much in control
as Maurizio of the situation.
I totally crushed on her,
like, totally crushed on her,
and it was reciprocated.
Maurizio for years would introduce me as,
"Oh, and this is Lee, Carla's boyfriend."
[woman] Was Maurizio also having
relationships with people in the house?
Not with the members of the group,
you know. Outside that, I mean, yeah.
Just outside the group.
Maurizio was the scientist
and the guide for these kids.
[woman] So you were still with him
when you were in the house?
Actually, you know, we "handed up"
our relationship in 2001, I think.
[woman] Why?
We
Why are you so curious today?
Who's there? Someone is there?
[laughs]
Because I don't really believe in that,
but it's okay. [chuckles]
[woman] Why don't you believe in that?
No, well, I do believe that
I truly believe that we
Each of us should be feel free of,
you know,
doing whatever
makes me feel better, for example,
but when you have a family,
and you got to respect also,
you know, your son.
So, it's not that easy.
I won't say any more.
[laughs]
That's it.
[Michelle] After a while,
I was starting to question, with Carla,
what happened to all the artistic stuff
we were supposed to be doing,
and what was the reason
why we were doing all this stuff.
I walked away from it because,
what seemed really cool before,
like, it just didn't feel comfortable
or right anymore.
I thought it was gonna be
an amazing opportunity,
but it was almost like
a cult of perfection,
with Maurizio sitting at the very top.
[in Italian]
The scientific project was impeded
by just about everyone.
[Carla, in English]
You know, there were bad rumors about us.
[Ed] There was press out there.
Like, "Five unmarried people
living in one house together."
"Could it be the house of orgies?"
Or whatever.
[laughs]
Those walls are thick.
That house was built in the '30s.
Come on, man. They didn't hear us.
[Ed] The neighbors were all very,
like, they're bank presidents,
they're icons of society.
And so to have
that kind of noise and lifestyle concept
coming from that house, it didn't go well.
So, I think the neighbors got upset,
and they all petitioned to shut him down.
["Für Elise" playing]
[Maurizio, in Italian]
Now I can say that I made some mistakes,
that I could have done better,
but, in the end, it's fine the way it is.
Anyway, I too felt the need
to change scenery a bit.
[in English] I distinctively remember,
I get a phone call.
All right, I think it was a Monday,
"You need to be in Rome on a Thursday."
[man singing in Italian]
I knew immediately, this is gonna be more.
Italians do everything
a little bit more extra.
[Cristina, in Italian] When Maurizio
came back to Italy from Miami,
he had the idea
of creating another experiment
that wouldn't just happen in a house.
[Aurelien]
You're gonna go by "Garren James"?
- "Garren James," yeah.
- [Aurelien] "Garren James"?
"Garren James," yeah,
'cause that has more clout.
A lot more clout.
I'm Garren James.
I'm the current owner
of Cowboys for Angels,
the largest
male escort agency in the world.
[bluesy music]
And back when I was younger,
I worked for Maurizio
and Gunther, the German Shepherd.
At the time that I met Maurizio,
I had gone to Italy to follow this dream
to become, like, a model actor,
and I was at a dark point in my life
because I was too tall to work in Italy.
None of the clothing really fit me,
and I was completely broke,
but I didn't want to give up.
And one day, I got a call from a friend
who was a model, Lee Dahlberg.
We went to this party,
and there were so many
beautiful people there.
And Lee said,
"Let me introduce you to Maurizio."
I walk over
and there's this tall Italian man,
and he's kind of, like
looking at me.
And he said,
"I want to hire you for a job."
And then Maurizio handed me
an envelope with a lot of money in it.
[Italian pop song playing]
I was fortunate enough to actually
get hired to help open up a nightclub.
I was so excited.
This was larger than life,
grand experience for me
where it was all about having fun
and living a dream.
[Lee] I'm there in a yellow Lamborghini
with the dog and I'm just like,
"Yep, this, Tuesday. This is a Tuesday.
This is a Tuesday."
[in Italian] Craziest Crazy years.
[in English] It was amazing place.
[in Italian] It was beautiful, and it
allowed him to invite a lot of people.
Many just came on their own.
So, he could observe them and see
if they were suited to
uh, his "lifestyle."
[dramatic music]
[Matteo, in English] The club revealed
an interesting way to see
a social conception of happiness
and reward for human beings.
But it's very difficult
to find objective indicators of happiness
inside this excessive environment.
[Maurizio, in Italian] At a certain point,
we tried to develop and broaden
this type of research
for a bigger audience.
And so Maurizio Mian decided
to enter the world of soccer and sports.
[rock music]
[crowd cheering]
[Carla] Why soccer?
Because all over the world,
and particularly in Italy,
soccer allows one to be
at the center of media attention.
[in English]
The Trust started to buy soccer teams,
and they purchased the Pisa.
[all cheer and applaud]
[Lee] You buy Pisa's soccer team.
That's, like, larger than buying
the Miami Dolphins.
[Massimo, in Italian]
That morning, Maurizio Mian showed up
with actors
from The Bold and the Beautiful
and the dog,
drawing interest from the national media.
Let's welcome the new owner
of Pisa's soccer team, Gunther IV.
[applause]
Donadei, do you see him better
in the front or in the back
as a dog president?
How did you become
the man in charge of Gunther?
My mother and I were the last people
to be friends with this countess.
And this lady
had a brilliant son who died.
I was best friends with her son.
Then later,
Maurizio bought Pontedera's team.
Excuse me, President,
how was your experience at Pontedera?
[whimpers]
[Maurizio] This was an important thing
for my friend Gunther.
He was, shall we say, a fervent Lutheran.
Christianity should be
much more open-minded,
even in matters of sex.
[Massimo] He had beliefs
he passionately wanted to convey.
But they were controversial beliefs
the media was mostly opposed to.
Sexuality is almost a taboo subject.
I'm thinking about
all the taboos around pornography.
But there was a need to talk about
these things in a more scientific way,
and less angry or moralistic.
So the dog made some moves
that were a bit peculiar.
Friends, I'm at Pontedera,
where, in a bizarre scene,
the local soccer team
has appointed to its presidency
not only the dog Gunther,
but also two pornstars.
[in English] Maurizio hired world-famous
Italian porn star La Cicciolina
to be the face
of one of his football teams.
[Valentine, in Italian]
Cicciolina is a legend.
She was always
getting arrested for indecent exposure,
or because she violated
one "moral" or another of the time.
I agree with much of Gunther's ideology,
especially the ideas
on sexuality and sexual freedom.
- In the end love, happiness
- Love, exactly.
- these are the things that matter.
- And many goals.
[kisses] Ciao.
[reporter]
The brainchild of this corporate structure
is the eccentric and disheveled owner,
Maurizio Mian.
A presidential dog and pornstars?
In such a serious world,
silly things
have their place too sometimes.
[Valentine]
Maurizio called Cicciolina first.
Then he looked for another porn star.
I said, "Listen, I'm here."
I'm Valentine Demy.
Italian porn star. Very Italian.
I volunteered,
and in the end, it all worked out.
[woman] But did he explain why?
No.
[Maurizio] Cicciolina and Valentine
were just pawns
in this provocative game, clearly.
Are you also
going to mother these players?
A mother in every sense.
Good. Wait, what do you mean? Oh!
Friends.
I was President.
I would go into the locker room
to warm things up a little.
I kept the morale up. Kept it up.
Get it? Yeah?
[laughs]
[man] As the president,
what were your administrative roles?
Ah. [chuckles]
- Nothing.
- [man] Okay.
I don't know anything about soccer,
so I think
We did this thing in Pisa
and it scandalized my city, so
I was only a figurehead, the "porn star."
But a figurehead
with a rather unique role.
[man] The presidents are
representations of a collegiality,
a philosophy whose core value
is the pursuit of happiness.
The choice to make porn stars
presidents of a soccer team
[crowd cheering]
represents a common
thread in Maurizio's life.
He's always wanted to impress and amaze,
to draw attention,
even knowing such things
would create problems
and lead to serious missteps
like what happened in Liechtenstein.
[Marianna, in English] Lichtenstein is
a tiny landlocked country
tucked between Switzerland and Austria.
Much of its wealth
is based on its status as a tax haven.
[reporter] Hundreds of super-rich
around the world could be in trouble.
[Aurelien]
Why don't we start with an introduction?
My name's Jack Blum. I'm an attorney.
I have been identified frequently
as the worldwide expert
in financial crime and tax evasion.
In 2008, Heinrich Kieber,
who became a client of mine
and who had been
the IT person for LGT Bank,
owned by the ruler of Lichtenstein,
walked into
the tax authorities of Germany,
then the US and Canada and others,
with all of the trust company records
of the bank
and showed all of the files of the people
who were using
LGT Bank and Lichtenstein to hide money.
These revelations are explosive.
[Jack] One of the accounts
that was disclosed
was the account of Gunther the dog.
[Massimo, in Italian] One morning
I was reading Repubblica
and discovered the Mian-Gentili family
had deposited money in Liechtenstein.
Four hundred million euros.
[Aurelien, in English] I thought it was
the Countess who had 400 million euros,
so why was Maurizio's name
in the newspaper?
Well, I don't want to go into that.
I think Maurizio should do that.
[Aurelien] If it was the Countess' money,
then why was your family's name exposed?
[sighs]
Uh
[man] Yeah.
[in Italian] No hair or makeup.
No hair or makeup, guys, please.
- These people We have to be careful.
- You're a born actor.
We gotta be careful here.
- [man] I can hear what you're saying.
- We gotta be careful.
It's quite complicated.
To understand how this money came to be,
we have to tell the story of my family.
[in English] Istituto Gentili
was a pharmaceutical company
founded by my great-grandfather.
[dramatic music]
[in Italian] My mother
was a pharmaceutical entrepreneur,
and my father was a university researcher.
[Carla] His mother was the president
of the family's pharmaceutical company,
the Gentili Institute.
[Piero, in English] So Maurizio's mother
was put in charge of the company.
Through the laboratory,
through the research,
they developed this molecule
which is called alendronate.
[Maurizio] The molecule
very effective in bone diseases.
It was the most efficient
drug treatment for osteoporosis.
Why wait?
Ask your doctor about a bone density test.
[announcer] Fosamax once-weekly,
proven to help reverse bone loss.
[in Italian] The discovery increased
the value of the company so much that,
at a certain point,
it was better for us to stop
because we'd already reached the top.
[in English] And that's why they
were able, by developing this drug,
to sell the company to Merck
for an inordinate amount of money.
[in Italian]
There was nothing else left for us to do,
so we started thinking about
what we could do with all our money.
Taxes were too high in Italy.
His mother was thinking about the family,
the group, the grandchildren,
the future of the lineage.
[Maurizio, in English] To avoid taxes
[in Italian] my mother, for a long time,
had been bringing all the earnings
related to our company to Liechtenstein.
But this was against Italian law.
In Italy, up until the late '80s,
there was a huge investigation
into undeclared money kept abroad.
So, then it became a question
of finding a trustworthy person
who could keep the money in their name.
The trick was to find a foreigner.
The Countess was German,
and my mother
considered her a very close friend.
In the end
[in English] the money was transferred
in the name of the Countess.
All the money in the bank
in Liechtenstein was in her name.
But the real owner was my mother.
[Aurelien] What did you know
about the origins of Maurizio's money?
It sort of unraveled
when I learned a little bit more,
but it was so secretive.
Can I say that?
[woman]
Just tell us whatever you know.
Okay.
As I dug deeper into this Gunther Group,
I found out that the Countess
really didn't have all that money.
It was given to her
by Maurizio and his family
as sort of a tax shelter.
And, so,
then it sort of really clicks like,
"Ah, okay,
so that's what this is all about."
[Aurelien]
How did the dog become part of this plan?
[Maurizio, in Italian]
Aunt Carla, the Countess, got sick,
but we carried on with her
despite this tumor she had.
She knew she was dying.
She had no other relatives
with whom she was in contact.
She had lost her son,
and her husband was dead.
She was alone.
In the uncertainty,
we didn't know what to do with the money.
[in English] The two women decided
together to place the money hidden
under the name of the dog of the Countess.
That way
[in Italian] my mother would be
the curator after the Countess died.
According to the law,
the way a dog can receive
an inheritance is through a trust.
[in English]
To make the Gunther Trust legitimate,
Maurizio and his mother
had to name a trustee,
preferably a lawyer.
They found Caryl Lashley in the Bahamas,
and she has been the trustee ever since.
[Caryl] My name is Caryl Lashley.
I'm an attorney by profession,
qualified in 1979.
[Piero] Ms. Lashley's father
was the governor of the island.
He felt comfortable in opening a trust.
[Caryl] Maurizio, he loved the Bahamas.
He loved the life here. He loved our food.
He loved everything we had to offer.
And we loved him likewise.
[Aurelien] So, why the Bahamas?
The Bahamas because
Why are you asking so
[laughs] Why are you asking so
Should I say? No, I can't say why.
If I answer the true, I'm gonna
[laughs, in Italian] No, how can I say it?
[Jack, in English] The point
of keeping the trust in the Bahamas
is there's no tax on the income
that's earned by the trust offshore.
We like the island.
[laughs] We like the island.
It's a beautiful island.
[Aurelien]
So, what is your role as a trustee?
I make sure that all of the rules
and regulations of the Trust are followed,
ensuring that the Countess' wishes
would have been carried out.
[Aurelien] How much do you know
about the Countess herself?
I know very little about the Countess.
What I do know is what I have gleaned
through my instructions.
I do know that she was a lover of animals,
but I don't know
how she came upon her inheritance.
[Aurelien] Maurizio told us that the money
originally came from his family,
not the Countess.
What do you know about that?
A lot of it remains
confidential and private.
And, for my part,
we were only interested
in having the information
that was requisite for us
to do the documentation that we had to do.
It's all absolutely low-grade comedy.
Setting something up that's that screwball
is hard to understand.
I can't fathom someone thinking
that it would stay out of sight,
that it would remain hidden,
and that nobody would figure it out.
[Maurizio]
When Liechtenstein Papers came out,
at the beginning, you know,
we were a bit worried.
We got a bit concerned for a while.
Then we understood that, you know,
it should have been no problem.
[Jack] The Italians,
like other governments,
got the revenue back
by granting the people
who had the money hidden
amnesty as long as they pay tax.
They come up with a rule and they say,
"Hey, guys."
"We basically charge you a bit of tax
and we forget everything."
[Jack] So the question is,
how do the Italians know these people
brought the money back, all of it?
But the Italians bought the argument
that the money was all returned.
If I was being perfectly honest,
we have nothing done anything wrong
except to avoid taxes
through a technical device.
[in Italian] The Countess
had been a great help to us.
My whole family owes her so much.
[Aurelien, in English] Who told you
what should be in those trust documents?
The legal terminology
would have been done through our offices,
but we couldn't have done that
without the instructions
that Maurizio would have brought to us.
[Aurelien] Who came up
with these documents?
Was it you?
[in Italian] I don't know if I can
tell you because I want to be respectful
of those who are no longer here,
those who died,
who gave me certain ideas,
certain signals.
It was something
that had always been suggested
by our late Gunther in the past.
Certainly his memory
has pushed me to be very different,
to experience things
I'd never experienced before,
and to do so
both in his name and in his memory.
[in English]
The legacy was a Gunther Legacy.
[Aurelien]
So, the money is under the dog's name,
but his mother
was the caretaker all along.
So when did Maurizio
actually get control of the money?
Well, when the Countess
and Maurizio's mother set up this thing,
they say, "Guys, please, let's not do"
"Let's not Maurizio do whatever the fuck
he wants all the time." Okay?
Maurizio's mother
was a very demanding person.
She was a very
There was a lot of presence.
[Massimo, in Italian] Maria Gabriella
Gentili lived for Maurizio.
She dedicated her life to her family.
So she was deeply concerned
about everything he did.
She gave in to him on everything,
but at the same time,
she was strict on important matters.
[Maurizio]
My mother was starting to age,
and she wasn't as self-reliant
as she used to be.
Then my mother died.
At 82, she died.
His mother died,
and he didn't speak
to anyone for about a week.
I didn't want to disturb him
because I knew
he was suffering terribly at her loss.
[Maurizio]
Before she died, she simply said to me,
"Do as you like. Do as you wish."
The only thing she held me to,
more as advice for me,
concerned the choice of people
I should trust.
[Aurelien, in English]
Who are you? Introduce yourself.
[Fabrizio] Who I am,
it's really difficult to say.
I am God.
God-God.
Not the godfather. God.
The problem is,
if you want to understand Mian's project,
you need to delve into his psyche.
The dog, the mission.
[in English] We are going into
a difficult subject.
[in Italian] We're talking about things
people would think were nuts.
We worried the Vatican
could come for our baby and take her away.
[dramatic music]
[baby crying]
[dramatic music]
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