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Tag: Alexander Payne

  • Stars and geopolitics share the spotlight at Venice Film Festival

    Stars and geopolitics share the spotlight at Venice Film Festival

    VENICE: The Venice Film Festival opens on Wednesday, drawing Hollywood royalty, European auteurs and Asian masters, plus a strong dose of political tension as Israel’s war in Gaza casts a shadow over the Lido.

    The 11-day event fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering here over the past four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it top draw for actors, producers and directors alike.

    Among the A-listers expected on the red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac and Amanda Seyfried, while the programme spans psychological thrillers, art house dramas, documentaries and splashy studio-backed productions.

    The celebration of cinema is also colliding with geopolitics.

    A collective of film industry figures, Venice4Palestine, has urged the festival to take a robust stand over the war in Gaza, calling on the organisers to promote Palestinian voices and denounce Israeli actions in Gaza.

    The appeal was signed by more than 1,500 people, including directors such as Ken Loach and Matteo Garrone, and actors Toni Servillo, Charles Dance and Alba Rohrwacher.

    Festival director Alberto Barbera told Reuters on Tuesday that Venice welcomed open debate, but dismissed calls for Israeli filmmakers and actors to be barred from the Lido, the thin barrier island a short boat trip from the main city that hosts the festival.

    “We don’t boycott anyone, of course, and we’re open to all the possible speeches about the contemporary situation, which is the way of better understanding how to solve this huge mass of problems that we have to face every day,” he said.

    PALESTINIAN GIRL

    One of the films in the main competition tackles the war in Gaza head on.

    “The Voice of Hind Rajab”, directed by Tunisia’s Kaouther Ben Hania, tells the true story of a 5-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in the territory in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces.

    “I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression,” Barbera predicted last month.

    International politics and global intrigue feature strongly in the 82nd edition of the world’s oldest film festival.

    Director Kathryn Bigelow will premiere her nuclear thriller “A House of Dynamite” on the Lido, while Olivier Assayas will present “The Wizard of the Kremlin”, which looks at the rise of Vladimir Putin, with Jude Law playing the Russian leader.

    “It’s the comeback of a cinema of reality, the sensibility of the filmmakers, invested a lot in reflecting on the major problems of our contemporary world,” said Barbera.

    Streaming giant Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in force with not just the Bigelow movie, but also Guillermo del Toro’s re-telling of “Frankenstein” and Noah Baumbach’s comedy-drama “Jay Kelly” competing for the coveted Golden Lion award.

    Other highlights include Italian director Paolo Sorrentino’s “La Grazia”, which will open the festival, Yorgos Lanthimos’s satire “Bugonia”, Jim Jarmusch’s family triptych “Father Mother Sister Brother”, and Benny Safdie’s fighter biopic “The Smashing Machine”.

    A very different biopic is “The Testament of Ann Lee” – a musical take on the life of the radical 18th-century Shaker leader, which is directed by Norway’s Mona Fastvold.

    Read More: Venice jury chief says films don’t change the world, but document it

    A trio of films from Asia are also in the main competition – “Girl” by Taiwan’s Shu Qi, “No Other Choice” by South Korea’s Park Chan-wook and “The Sun Rises on Us All” by China’s Cai Shangjun.

    Out of competition, but still very much in the limelight, Luca Guadagnino presents his #MeToo-themed “After The Hunt” with Julia Roberts, who will be making her Venice red carpet debut.

    The main jury is chaired by U.S. director Alexander Payne, joined by fellow filmmakers Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu and Mohammad Rasoulof, alongside actresses Fernanda Torres and Zhao Tao.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Venice jury chief says films don’t change the world, but document it

    Venice jury chief says films don’t change the world, but document it

    VENICE: U.S. director Alexander Payne, president of the jury at this year’s Venice Film Festival, said on Wednesday that while movies rarely alter the course of society, they serve as vital documents of their times and shape memory.

    “Can a film really change society or culture? I don’t know. Doubtful,” Payne said, recalling that films such as Charlie Chaplin’s “The Great Dictator” did not stop World War Two, but rather showed that people were aware of what was going on.

    “We have those as documents and, as such, we can try to learn from them,” he said ahead of the formal opening of the 11-day festival later on Wednesday.

    Payne, whose credits include the Oscar-winning comedies “Sideways” and “The Holdovers”, lamented the shrinking space for theatrical releases in the age of streaming, saying movies that were only seen online struggled to make a broad impact on society.

    “It’s typically films which have theatrical release, which become a part of a cinema conversation, of a cultural conversation, and then have some kind of impact,” he said.

    Big streamers such as Netflix and Amazon regularly showcase their films at Venice but then offer little or no exposure for those movies in cinemas, reserving them instead for their subscribers.

    In the run-up to the 2025 event, some 1,500 film industry figures signed a petition urging the festival to take a robust stand over the war in Gaza, calling on the organisers to promote Palestinian voices and denounce Israeli actions.

    Payne declined to say if he supported their call, while the head of the festival, Alberto Barbera, said he welcomed open debate but rejected suggestions that Israeli filmmakers or actors should be banned.

     

    Read More: When is Venice Film Festival 2025 and what can we expect?

    “We reject outright the demand to disinvite artists who wish to take part in the festival. At the same time, we have never hesitated to express our enormous anguish at what is happening in Gaza,” he told reporters.

    The Venice festival opens on Wednesday night with the world premiere of Italian director Paolo Sorretino’s “La Grazia.”

    The event ends on September 6 when Payne and his fellow jury members announce who has won the top Golden Lion award.