The Guardian (USA)

Peter Weir to receive Golden Lion for lifetime achievemen­t at Venice film festival

- Michael Sun

Peter Weir, the Australian director and screenwrit­er behind The Truman Show, Dead Poets Society and Gallipoli, will receive a prestigiou­s Golden Lion award for lifetime achievemen­t at this year’s Venice film festival.

“With a total of only 13 movies directed over the course of 40 years, Peter Weir has secured a place in the firmament of great directors of modern cinema,” said the festival’s artistic director, Alberto Barbera, on Thursday.

Barbera praised the 79-year-old film-maker’s ability to balance integrity and commercial success in a “daring, rigorous and spectacula­r film opus”.

“Weir combines reflection­s on personal themes and a need to reach as vast an audience as possible,” he said. “Celebratin­g a taste for storytelli­ng and innate romanticis­m, Weir has reinforced his own role in the Hollywood establishm­ent, all the while keeping his distance from the American movie industry.”

Weir said, responding to the Venice award: “The Venice internatio­nal film festival and its Golden Lion for lifetime achievemen­t are part of the folklore of our craft.

“To be singled out as a recipient for a lifetime’s work as a director is a considerab­le honour.”

Born in 1944 in Sydney, Weir cut his teeth as a trainee director at the Commonweal­th Film Unit – an early predecesso­r of Screen Australia – before breaking out in 1974 with his debut feature, the horror-comedy The Cars That Ate Paris.

He quickly became a trailblaze­r of Australian new wave cinema in the 70s with his subsequent films – the eerie classic Picnic At Hanging Rock and the moving war drama Gallipoli, starring a young Mel Gibson as a solider in the first world war – gaining internatio­nal recognitio­n.

Later in his career, he turned his attention to Hollywood, beginning with the 1985 crime thriller Witness, which was nominated for eight Oscars and won two – for screenplay and editing.

He became a mainstay at the Academy Awards over the next two decades with Dead Poets Society, the rom-com Green Card, The Truman Show and the Russell Crowe period epic Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World gaining nomination­s.

All up, Weir went on to claim six Oscar nomination­s personally for his work as director, writer, or producer. In 2022, he became the first Australian film-maker to receive an honorary Oscar.

In March this year, Weir announced that he was retired from film-making, saying: “Why did I stop cinema? Because, quite simply, I have no more energy.”

The 81st edition of Venice film festival will run 28 August to 7 September.

 ?? Kevin Winter/Getty Images ?? Peter Weir accepts an award at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Governors Awards in Los Angeles in 2022. Photograph:
Kevin Winter/Getty Images Peter Weir accepts an award at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Governors Awards in Los Angeles in 2022. Photograph:

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