In modern times, people often live unknowingly behind a mask.
A mask they have built over time, influenced by society, religion, and tradition.
Without realizing it, they play roles and wear a persona that eventually replaces their true identity.
As time passes, this persona becomes a second skin, a fictitious face that merges with one’s essence, creating an ever-deepening distance between what we are and what we show.
Within that distance, an inner void opens, a silent abyss that becomes a source of suffering, alienation, and confusion.
And yet, it all happens invisibly.
People believe they are free, but in reality, they live in portable prisons, cages made of habits, conventions, fears, and illusions.
They move, speak, love, but always behind a mask.
Maskera is a mirror reflecting this universal condition.
A journey into the contemporary soul, where the search for authenticity becomes a revolutionary act.
The film invites us to look courageously behind the face we show to the world, to rediscover the pure breath of being, the nakedness of the self, the freedom to exist without roles.



































































