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Exclusive Interview – Francesco Dalli Cani on psychological thriller Roomination

April 13, 2026 by Amie Cranswick

For actor and filmmaker Francesco Dalli Cani, some of the most compelling stories don’t begin with scale, they begin with trust. That ethos defines Roomination, a psychological thriller born not out of a studio system, but out of years of creative collaboration, shared growth, and an unfiltered desire to tell something honest.

Directed by Cesar Alvarez and written by Doroteja Jurican, the Los Angeles-made film marks a return to the fundamentals of filmmaking for Dalli Cani, an actor who continues to build his career across performance, production, and creative development.

At its core, Roomination follows Laura, an established author trapped within a deeply unsettling therapy session led by the enigmatic Dr. Heigold. As the session unfolds, the boundaries between reality and internal projection begin to collapse, revealing that the entire encounter exists within Laura’s mind, a recurring psychological loop tied to her fear of aging, stagnation, and falling behind in life. It is a story rooted not in spectacle, but in emotional truth, something that resonates deeply with the team behind it.

A Project Years in the Making

What appears on screen as a tightly contained psychological piece carries a much longer history behind it. The origins of Roomination trace back to 2023, when Dalli Cani, Jurican, and Alvarez were students in the MFA Acting program at the New York Film Academy. As part of their training, the trio were tasked with developing and shooting a class project that would expose them to all stages of production.

Jurican’s concept stood out immediately. “We ended up going with Doroteja idea,” Dalli Cani recalls. “She wrote the script, and I was cast as the therapist.”

That early version, now referred to internally as Roomination V1, remains archived, a foundational experiment that planted the seed for something far more refined.

Years later, Jurican revisited the concept, rewriting it multiple times, ultimately arriving at a seventh draft that would become the definitive version. The evolution of the script is not just structural, it is narrative. The cyclical nature of Laura’s therapy sessions is mirrored in the development process itself, with earlier drafts effectively representing “failed sessions” within the story’s internal logic.

This meta-layer adds depth to the final product, reinforcing the film’s central theme, the difficulty of confronting one’s own internal fears.

Built on Collaboration, Not Resources

If Roomination proves anything, it is that limitations can be an advantage when paired with clarity of vision. The production was deliberately designed as a low-budget project, operating with minimal financial resources and a lean crew of just three core creatives.

“We only spent money on M&Ms,” Dalli Cani says, underscoring the project’s stripped-down nature.

Filmed entirely inside his apartment at AVA Toluca Hills, the team transformed everyday spaces into narrative environments. The living room became a therapist’s office, while the bathroom doubled as a secondary location, solving the script’s need for multiple settings within a single accessible space.

The illusion was achieved through thoughtful design choices rather than expensive production elements. A borrowed therapist’s chair established authority and tone, while colorful post-it notes, tied to the film’s recurring motifs of red, blue, and green, added visual texture and psychological symbolism to otherwise blank walls.

Even the technical setup reflected the project’s ingenuit

Shot entirely on a phone and recorded with lavalier microphones, the team engineered creative solutions to compensate for the absence of traditional equipment, including a DIY boom setup constructed from tape, a microphone, and a spare tripod.

Finding Freedom in Constraint

The film’s visual language leans into unease and unpredictability, reinforcing the psychological tension at the center of the story. Through intentional framing and unconventional angles, the project creates a world that feels slightly off balance, mirroring Laura’s internal state and keeping the audience in a constant state of uncertainty. This approach, developed through careful pre-production and planning, allowed the team to explore creative risks during filming, resulting in a final product that feels both intimate and stylistically deliberate.

A Set Built on Trust

Despite the technical limitations, or perhaps because of them, Roomination became one of the most rewarding experiences of Dalli Cani’s career to date. The reason was simple: familiarity.

Having worked together for nearly three years, the trio entered production with a deep understanding of each other’s strengths, weaknesses, and creative instincts.

“We’ve been on sets that didn’t work,” Dalli Cani notes. “So, we knew exactly what we wanted to avoid.”

That shared history translated into a set environment defined by collaboration, efficiency, and mutual respect, qualities that often prove more valuable than budget. Each member of the team contributed across multiple areas, from performance to technical execution to set design, creating a fully immersive and cooperative production experience.

Challenges That Shaped the Film

Still, the production was not without its obstacles. Perhaps the most unpredictable challenge came from the weather. The team happened to shoot on the only two rainy days in an otherwise dry stretch, with heavy rainfall creating significant sound issues inside the top-floor apartment.

At times, filming had to pause entirely, waiting for the rain to subside enough to capture clean audio. These interruptions compressed the schedule, forcing the team to push scenes into the second day of shooting and adapt on the fly. Yet, the disruption never compromised the energy on set.

“It was just another tough day,” Dalli Cani says, reflecting the resilience that defined the production.

Creative Solutions, Unexpected Results

In many ways, the film’s most distinctive elements emerged from necessity. The promotional poster, for example, was originally envisioned as a traditional image featuring Laura and a birthday setting. When the concept failed to resonate, the team pivoted.

Drawing inspiration from the film’s color motifs and the trio themselves, they created a striking visual identity using colored lighting and close-up portraits. Blue represented the therapist’s logic, red embodied fear through the “Bearded Man,” and green reflected Laura’s emotional state.

The result was a clean, conceptual design that not only solved a problem but elevated the project’s branding.

What Comes Next

With the film now completed, Roomination is preparing for a festival run in the coming months, positioning itself within the independent circuit as both a psychological exploration and a testament to collaborative filmmaking.

For Francesco Dalli Cani, the project reinforces a principle that continues to guide his evolving career: Storytelling is not defined by budget or scale, but by intention, trust, and the ability to create something meaningful with the tools at hand. And with Roomination, that philosophy is unmistakably on screen.

For more on Francesco Dalli Cani follow on IMDb and Instagram.

 

Filed Under: Interviews, Movies Tagged With: Francesco Dalli Cani, Roomination

About Amie Cranswick

Amie Cranswick is Executive Editor of Flickering Myth, responsible for overseeing editorial coverage across film, television and pop culture.

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