A group of colorful houses, the largest shopping center in Europe, a "new centrality" in Rome, the perfect neighborhood to live in. It is Ponte di Nona, the eastern outskirts of the capital, where the most recent public housing in the city were built and where dozens and dozens of families have slowly been moved in recent years. But Ponte di Nona is still a place without identity, an urban agglomeration built without precise rules and in which contradictions are the order of the day. With the right tones and the usual delicacy capable of entering into the lives and stories of its protagonists, Segre creates another small masterpiece of reality cinema. A wonderful story of our time, which shows us - thanks to the splendid photography of Luca Bigazzi - the voids, the silences, the distortions, but also the life of those who live in those suburbs, which is the only thing that can really give those places a bit of warmth.