In 2018 Marco Greco, director of Torino Psychodrama Institute, found in France a video produced by RTF in 1956 (which everyone believed had disappeared) directed by Roberto Rossellini and filmed by a young Claude Lelouch about a psychodrama conducted by Jacob Levi Moreno in the spirit of the "Psychocinema" announced in his books. Also participating in this experiment is Anne Ancelin Schutzenberger, the student of Moreno who would become famous throughout the world for her research on the inter-generational transmission of the unconscious in families. In the video, Schutzenberger, during the conduction of a role playing, urged by RTF officials, often repeats the french words "Vite! Vite!" (Quick! Quick!) to speed up work times.
The French expression "Vite! Vite!" (which in Italian also means "Lifes! Lifes!") is also present in a mysterious dream of Ottavio Rosati
played in his Storia del treno e del passaggio a livello (2012) a psychodrama realized in Italy 35 years later, for the TV series Da Storia Nasce Storia (1991) produced by Italian television (Rai 3). It is the only story of the program that investigates the inter-generational unconscious. Here appears a phenomenon of synchronicity between two psychodrama experiments carried out by two television companies: RTF in 1956 and RAI in 1991.
The archetype in common between Storia del treno e del passaggio a livello (2012) and Le Psychodrame (1956) is the the Secret Meaning of Time, in the sense explored by M. L. Von Franz (a pupil who was as important to Jung as A. A. Schutzenberger was to Moreno). Another coincidence between the Moreno's psychodrama directed by Rossellini in Paris and the italian psychodrama from Da Storia Nasce Storia (1991) is that both have been made public in the form of videos in the same year (2018). Because RTF never transmitted Rossellini's film, considering it difficult for a TV audience.
In 2019 Istituto Luce Cinecittà published the DVD of the movie, subtitled in four languages and with a booklet in italian, french and english with contributions by Sergio Toffetti, Felice Laudadio, Roberto Cicutto, Adriano Aprà, Marco Greco, Paola de Leonardis, Ottavio Rosati and others.