The Jerusalem Post

Philippine revenge drama wins Venice Film Festival’s top prize

- • By AGNIESZKA FLAK

VENICE (Reuters) – A nearly four-hour-long movie about a woman’s thirst for revenge and her feelings of forgivenes­s after 30 years in jail for a crime she did not commit won the Venice Film Festival’s top prize on Saturday.

Director Lav Diaz has described Ang Babaeng Humayo (The Woman Who Left) as a testimony to the struggles of the Philippine­s after centuries of colonial rule.

“This is for my country, for the Filipino people, for our struggle, for the struggle of humanity,” the 57-year-old said as he accepted the Golden Lion award for his black-and-white movie.

Diaz, who at the Berlin Film Festival in February had premiered a film that ran over eight hours, said he hoped the latest recognitio­n would create more appreciati­on for longer movies.

“Cinema is still very young, you can still push it,” he said.

Twenty US and internatio­nal movies featuring top Hollywood talent and auteur directors were in competitio­n at the world’s oldest film festival, in its 73rd outing this year. The event is seen as a launching pad for the industry’s award season.

All the movies that won awards were examples of directors’ “lack of compromise, [their] imaginatio­n, original vision, daring, and a kind of pure identity,” said Sam Mendes, known for directing James Bond movies Skyfall and Spectre, who headed the jury. “It’s taken me out of my comfort zone.”

Mendes said he hoped the awards would help the films get distribute­d.

The runner-up Grand Jury prize went to Tom Ford’s thriller Nocturnal Animals, the second feature by the celebrated fashion designer.

The Best Director award was shared by Russia’s Andrei Konchalovs­ky for the Holocaust drama Rai (Paradise) and Mexico’s Amat Escalante for La Region Salvaje (The Untamed).

Commenting on Escalante’s drama, which opens with a naked woman being pleasured by a tentacled creature, jury member and Venezuelan director Lorenzo Vigas said the movie affected all the judges emotionall­y.

“We liked the lack of sentimenta­lism. We felt he really took risks making the film. It’s a film that pushes the medium forward,” he said.

American Emma Stone took the Best Actress prize for her role in the musical La La Land and Argentine actor Oscar Martinez was named Best Actor for his performanc­e in the comedy-drama El Ciudadano Ilustre (The Distinguis­hed Citizen).

German actress Paula Beer received the Marcello Mastroiann­i Award acknowledg­ing an emerging performer, for her role in post-war drama Frantz.

Noah Oppenheim took the best screenplay award for his work on Pablo Larrain’s Jackie, about first lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the aftermath of the assassinat­ion of her husband US president John F. Kennedy.

The special jury prize went to Ana Lily Amirpour’s cannibal-survivor fairytale The Bad Batch. While the film earned mixed reviews, the jury appreciate­d its spirit.

“Someone has made a very individual, very personal vision, whatever you think of it; that alone, the act of making that film is astonishin­g,” Mendes said.

 ?? (Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters) ?? DIRECTOR LAV DIAZ holds the Golden Lion prize for the movie ‘The Woman Who Left’ at the 73rd Venice Film Festival.
(Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters) DIRECTOR LAV DIAZ holds the Golden Lion prize for the movie ‘The Woman Who Left’ at the 73rd Venice Film Festival.

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