
We will visit his hometown, where it all began, where he realized that music would become his way of life. At the same time, it seems essential for this type of narration to leave as much as possible to the viewer’s own imagination to uncover the story, and to self-identify with an exceptional life recounted as simply as it was lived. We will meet his family, his friends, and others who knew of the dreams of the young Henry. We will witness the truth when Henry Padovani – thirty years after the break-up of The Police’s original line-up – joins Sting, Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers on the stage of the Stade de France, to play in front of a crowd of 80,000 people. The film will focus on the elements of Padovani’s lifestyle. Whether as a young student or a rock’n’roller, we will follow the details of his life as faithfully as possible. From concerts in the historic clubs of the punk/rock London, to unpremeditated reunions and improvised discussions, Henry Padovani’s voice will guide us through the maze of this unique period. The descent into hell of Topper Headon (The Clash), the IRS label adventure alongside Miles Copeland (REM, The Bangles, Lord of the new Church etc.), friendship, solidarity, drugs, women and music all belong in this incredible story. It is this element of human adventure contained in the story of rock during the mid/late 1970s that we will reproduce in "Rock'n'Roll…Of Corse!" Through interviews and meetings in London and Corsica, we will try to capture the essence of this amazing adventure where rock'n'roll is all about. Thanks to his personality, values, and demonstrated loyalty, Padovani remains the one to whom nothing is denied, the constant observer of these complicated years. And it is precisely through his dedication to friendship, solidarity, and joie-de-vivre that Henry Padovani became an ideal witness of this social-artistic gestation. To the big names of rock, Padovani was not simply a musical partner, but also – and above all – a friend the type who stocked Sting’s fridge when The Police were still obscure and broke. Yet Padovani distanced himself from the spotlight, focusing his life on human values. Sting and The Police, Topper Headon and The Clash, Glen Matlock and The Sex Pistols, Kim Wilde or The Stranglers, all became part of his life. This important era of musical and social history became, for Padovani, a formative period of friendship with those who are today known as the undisputed stars of pop and rock. His two-week vacation turned into a seven-year sojourn as the novice musician discovered an entirely new world, whose fresh philosophy he quickly and instinctively adopted. It was against this social backdrop that the young Corsican Henry Padovani first arrived in England. The movement involved all imaginable forms of rebellion, but music quickly became its chief manifestation. The punk movement burst into a sterile artistic and cultural context, times devoid of any sense of revolt. London 1976: Social protest is at its height.
