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Venice film festival returns with Hollywood blockbusters

Italian actress Serena Rossi, who is to host the opening and closing nights of the 78th Venice International Film Festival, and Director of the Venice Film festival, Alberto Barbera. © AFP/Filippo Monteforte

The Venice Film Festival returns Wednesday with an ultra-glitzy lineup, including the world premiere of sci-fi blockbuster "Dune" and Kristen Stewart's turn as Princess Diana, cementing its status as a serious rival to Cannes.

After a low-key event last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, La Mostra is raising the stakes once again in the battle for film fest supremacy with the sort of lineup that has drool running down the chins of red carpet gawkers and pretentious film critics alike.

The world's oldest film festival has embraced Hollywood in recent years and its 78th edition, running September 1-11, is no exception.

Dune brings hot young things Timothee Chalamet and Zendaya to the Venice festival, while Ridley Scott's The Last Duel marks the bromantic return of Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, writing and starring together for the first time since their Oscar-winning breakout Good Will Hunting in the 1990s.

But Venice still has serious arthouse chops, and the competition for the Golden Lion award features some of the era's most revered filmmakers, including Spain's Pedro Almodovar, Italy's Paolo Sorrentino and New Zealand's Jane Campion.

Almodovar opens the festival with the Penelope Cruz-starring Parallel Mothers and true to his provocative style, the poster was immediately banned on Instagram for featuring a lactating nipple.

Even the Princess Diana biopic, Spencer, promises to be more than the usual fawning royal mush, as it comes from Chilean director Pablo Larrain, whose 2016 film was an intelligent and lauded take on Jackie Kennedy, starring Natalie Portman.

Penelope Cruz is in Parallel Mothers, by Pedro Almodovar, the opening film at the La Mostra Venice film festival, 2021
Penelope Cruz is in Parallel Mothers, by Pedro Almodovar, the opening film at the La Mostra Venice film festival, 2021 Vincenzo PINTO AFP

Oscar buzz-maker

Since taking over in 2012, festival director Alberto Barbera is credited with rejuvenating La Mostra, partly by positioning it as the launchpad for Academy Award hopefuls.

Two of the last four Golden Lion winners, The Shape of Water and Nomadland, have gone on to win the best picture Oscar -- something which had never previously happened.

Frances McDormand, the lead actress in "Nomadland" (L) with the director Chloé Zhao.
Frances McDormand, the lead actress in "Nomadland" (L) with the director Chloé Zhao. © Searchlight Pictures

Many other recent critical and box-office hits have debuted in the floating city, including La La Land, Joker and A Star Is Born.

Part of the success is that publicists love having their stars snapped on gondolas, but it's primarily a question of lucky timing.

"Venice's position on the cusp of summer and fall gives it unmatchable clout as a launchpad" for the Hollywood awards season, explained The Hollywood Reporter.

Venice has also side-stepped the fracas between Netflix and Cannes, over the latter's demand that entries hit the big screen.

That has left Venice with first dibs on recent Netflix hits such as Roma and Marriage Story, and two of this year's hopefuls: Campion's The Power of the Dog and Sorrentino's The Hand of God.

Movies from 59 countries are being presented this year across its multiple sections, though Cannes director Thierry Fremaux has previously sniffed at his Venice counterpart's "obsession with American movies".

It's true that the main competition has a fairly narrow geographic remit, with nothing from Africa and only one from Asia (the sequel to Filipino action-thriller On the Job) among the 21 selections.

But Cannes has hardly steered clear of Hollywood. Its blockbuster premiere this year was Fast & Furious 9.

(with AFP)

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