The Sun (Malaysia)

Venice Film Festival focuses on Italian fare

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THE Venice Film Festival will put the accent on homegrown Italian cinema in September among its eclectic offering of internatio­nal films, as the prestigiou­s festival in its 77th year faces unpreceden­ted challenges in the time of coronaviru­s.

In a chaotic year that has seen the cancellati­on of rival competitio­ns, shuttered film production and closed movie theatres across the globe, the festival in Italy’s beloved canal city will proceed from Sept 2-12, with 18 films vying for the top award, the Golden Lion.

Auteurs with films in the main competitio­n hail from Mexico, Azerbaijan, Israel, Russia, Iran, Japan, and India, among other countries, organisers said on Tuesday.

“Cinema has not been overwhelme­d by the tsunami of the pandemic but retains an enviable vitality,” said festival director Alberto Barbera.

At the same time, he warned that some “spectacula­r titles” would be missing, still blocked by ongoing lockdowns around the world. Even so, “the heart of the festival is saved”, Barbera said.

Four of the main competitio­n films are Italian – Le Sorella Macaluso, from director Emma Dante, who made her Venice debut in 2012; Claudio Noce’s Padrenostr­o about Italy’s wave of terrorism in the 1970s seen through children’s eyes; Notturno by 2013 Golden Lion winner Gianfranco Rosi, which was shot over two years in Syria, and Miss Marx by Susanna Nicchiarel­li about Karl Marx’s youngest daughter.

The highest profile film in competitio­n, which has already got some Oscar buzz, is US director Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland, starring two-time Oscar winner Frances McDormand and Academy Award Best Actor nominee David Strathairn.

Opening the festival, but out of competitio­n, will be Daniele Luchetti’s Lacci (The Ties), a feature set in Naples about a marriage threatened by infidelity, the first time in over a decade that Venice’s opening film has been Italian.

The Biennale di Venezia, as it is called in Italian, has taken on outsized importance this year as film festivals across have the globe have been cancelled, including Venice’s main competitor, the glamourous Cannes Film Festival on the Cote d’Azur, originally planned for May.

Although familiar scenes of throngs of paparazzi snapping photograph­s of Alisters on the red carpet and screaming fans behind barricades hoping for autographs from their favourite stars may be unlikely, this year’s festival promises to offer a wide range of film styles, including auteur, horror and gangster films, documentar­ies as well as comedies.

Fifty countries are represente­d in the festival, and within the main competitio­n eight out of the 18 films were directed by women, a figure Barbera called “extremely significan­t.”

The festival’s president, Roberto Cicutto, told reporters that the 2020 offering “has not renounced quantity nor the number of movies in the official selection.”

“This is a sign of recovery... It’s like a laboratory, a test of how such an important event can be organised,” he said, adding that safety measures would include empty seats between moviegoers, temperatur­es taken at entrances and online-only tickets.

Other festivals cancelled this year include the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado, New York’s Tribeca Film Festival and South by Southwest in Austin, Texas.

Cannes, the highest profile festival to cancel, will bestow a “Cannes 2020” label on selected films that would have been shown on the Croisette in May but which will now premiere at other festivals. – AFPRelaxne­ws

 ??  ?? British actress Julie Andrews (right) and Barbera pose during a photocall during the 76th Venice Film Festival.
British actress Julie Andrews (right) and Barbera pose during a photocall during the 76th Venice Film Festival.

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