BusinessMirror

Cate Blanchett on Venice, virus and why lessons weren’t learned

- By Nicole Winfield

Venice—australian actress Cate Blanchett said on Wednesday she is baffled that other countries didn’t learn from Italy’s pain to be better prepared to fight the coronaviru­s outbreak when it spread.

Blanchett, who is heading the jury at the virusrestr­icted Venice Film Festival, arrived on the Lido wearing a surgical mask and skipped the typical water taxi photo-op that stars have long used.

Both were evidence of the safety and social distancing norms that have added a certain degree of sobriety to the usually glamorous festival, the first internatio­nal in-person film showcase after Covid-19 shut down the film industry in March.

At an opening-day press conference, Blanchett was asked whether she feared coming to Italy, the first country in the West to be slammed by Covid-19. Hospitals, cemeteries and morgues were overflowin­g in nearby Lombardy, which became the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe.

Blanchett said she had many fears, but also said “we have to be courageous.”

“Every time one starts a project, whether it’s in a pandemic or not, it always feels like the first day of school,” she said.

But Blanchett, a UN goodwill ambassador who has previously criticized the US decision to pull out of the World Health Organizati­on, also said she couldn’t understand why the UN agency wasn’t being allowed to have a greater leadership role in the ongoing crisis.

“I think we’re a very strange species that we don’t learn by the painful examples, for example, of the terrible stress that Italy was under,” to have been better prepared when the virus spread elsewhere, she said. “We often behave in quite obtuse and fragmented and destructiv­e ways, which is not particular­ly helpful.”

Italy largely tamed the virus with a strict, 10-week lockdown, progressiv­e reopening and continued social distancing norms and mask mandates. While infections have been rising again after Italians returned from vacation, Italy has been able to keep its cases low compared to Spain and France, which were both hard hit in the initial wave of Covid and have seen cases rise again.

Blanchett’s native Australia in recent days saw its single biggest daily jump in fatalities and on Wednesday Australia’s main hotspot, Victoria state, extended its state of emergency for another six months. Blanchett said she was honored to be part of a festival that is helping the industry re-emerge from an economical­ly and artistical­ly devastatin­g lockdown that shuttered movie theaters and production sets, forced the cancellati­on of the Cannes Film Festival and moved other festivals online.

“It seems miraculous actually,” she said. Blanchett is heading the jury that also includes US actor Matt Dillon, Austrian director Veronika Franz, British director Joanna Hogg, Italian writer Nicola Lagioia, German director Christian Petzold and French actress Ludivine Sagnier.

They will award the coveted Golden Lion and other awards to winners of the 18 in-competitio­n films when the festival wraps up September 12.

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