Bangkok Post

Hollywood to invade Venice Film Festival

- The famous winged lions outside the Venice Internatio­nal Film Festival.

A battalion of Hollywood heavyweigh­ts will lead a US invasion of next month’s Venice film festival, the organisers announced on Thursday.

Six big-name American films led by Mel Gibson’s Hacksaw Ridge about a World War II army medic who was the only conscienti­ous objector ever to win the Congressio­nal Medal of Honor, are headlining the glitzy Italian gathering which starts on Aug 31.

It will also see a swathe of other much-anticipate­d premieres, including legendary director Terrence Malick’s 3D documentar­y about “the birth and death” of the universe, Voyage Of Time.

Fashion designer-turned-director Tom Ford’s Nocturnal Animals, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, will also be wheeled out.

Distributo­rs at the rival Cannes Film Festival shelled out an eye-watering $20 million (698 million baht) last year for the thriller set on the Los Angeles art scene, raising eyebrows in the industry.

And Jackie, a much talked about biopic of late US first lady Jacqueline Kennedy starring Natalie Portman, will also be unveiled.

The film, directed by Chilean Pablo Larrain, reportedly centres on the days after her husband John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion in 1963.

Portman also stars in the French film Planetariu­m, about two sisters who talk to ghosts, which will be shown at Venice.

With Damien Chazelle’s La La Land, starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, opening the festival and an all-star remake of the classic western The Magnificen­t Seven closing it, Hollywood bookends the 11-day jamboree.

“We must recognise the vitality of American cinema,” festival director Alberto Barbera said, “which represents the best and the worst” of today’s filmmaking.

He even described the Canadian historical drama Brimstone, the first English-language film by the Dutch director Martin Koolhoven, as a “European western”. Double Oscar winner Emir Kusturica ( On The Milky Road), Francois Ozon ( Frantz) and Wim Wenders ( The Beautiful Days Of Aranjuez) are the other big European filmmakers in the running for Venice’s top prize, the Golden Lion.

Wenders has teamed up again with the singer-songwriter Nick Cave — who has scored several of his films — but this time with the Australian in front of the camera. The punk legend also features in Andrew Dominik’s 3D film “Once More With Feeling”.

Only three Italian films have made the cut, including the documentar­y Spira Mirabilis by Massimo d’Anolfi and Martina Parenti.

Last year Venice premiered the Hollywood film Spotlight, which went on to lift the best-film Oscar, and the festival on the city’s beachfront Lido has become a launch pad for multiple award winners.

But despite the strong studio presence, the Golden Lion went to From Afar by the unknown first-time Venezuelan director Lorenzo Vigas.

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