Venice Film Festival 2004 Under Way

 

Venice Film Festival

This past Wednesday, Sept. 1, the 61st edition of the Venice Film Festival kicked off with a gala screening of Steven Spielberg’s The Terminal, a box-office and critical disappointment in the United States, where it opened more than two months ago. At the festival’s press screening, the film received an equally unenthusiastic reception — but none of that matters to the festival organizers, who surely didn’t pick Spielberg’s latest production because of its cinematic qualities. What matters is that both Spielberg and The Terminal’s star, Tom Hanks, were on hand for the gala evening — a surefire way to guarantee worldwide coverage for the festival.

"I wanted a festival of quality films for mass audiences," says festival director Marco Muller. "But if the Venice Film Festival is really going to be useful it has to create the conditions so that more fragile films will finally find a distributor and an audience."

Meryl Streep, Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Will Smith, Denzel Washington, Jonathan Demme, Angelina Jolie, and John Travolta are among the other Hollywood celebrities attending or expected to attend the festival in order to — supposedly — help movies made by lesser known filmmakers reach the screens of Vancouver, London, and Beijing. (In their initial English-language report about the festival, Reuters, the Associated Press, and Agence France Presse made no mention of any non-American celebrity attendees, with the exception of Golden Lion presenter — and part-time Hollywood star — Sophia Loren.)

Yet, despite all the media emphasis on the American stars, the festival is not going to be solely about Hollywood glitz. Indeed, more than seventy features will be presented, including many world premieres.

Javier Bardem in The Sea Inside by Alejandro AmenabarTwenty-one films are vying for the Golden Lion awards, including Mar adentro / The Sea Inside (left), Alejandro Amenábar’s real-life tale about the thirty-year struggle of a tetraplegic man (Javier Bardem) to gain the legal right to assisted suicide; Mike Leigh’s Vera Drake, the story of an abortionist (Imelda Staunton) in 1950s England; and Mira
Nair
’s adaptation of Thackeray’s 19th-century novel Vanity Fair, with Reese Witherspoon as Becky Sharp.

Also, Claire Denis’s L’Intrus / The Intruder; Gianni Amelio’s Le Chiavi di casa / The Keys to the House, with Kim Rossi Stuart and Charlotte Rampling; and the Nicole Kidman vehicle Birth, directed by Jonathan Glazer.

Michelle Williams in Land of Plenty

Two other important (and potentially controversial) contenders are Land of Plenty (above), Wim Wenders’s downbeat exploration of life in the United States following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and François Ozon’s 5×2, about the five stages of romance between a man and a woman.

The Bridesmaid by Claude Chabrol with Laura Smet, Benoit Magimel

Among the out-of-competition fare, are the high-profile Eros, an amalgam of three erotic short films directed by nonagenarian Michelangelo Antonioni, Steven Soderbergh, and Wong Kar Wai; Jonathan Demme’s political thriller The Manchurian Candidate; veteran Claude Chabrol’s La Demoiselle d’honneur / The Bridesmaid (above); Michael Radford’s The Merchant of Venice, starring Al Pacino as Shylock; and O Quinto Império / The Fifth Empire, another film by a nonagenarian filmmaker, Manoel de Oliveira.

Joe Dante and Quentin Tarantino will host a retrospective named "The Italian Kings of the B’s."

The festival’s nine-person jury is headed by British director John Boorman. Other jurors include director Spike Lee, and actresses Scarlett Johansson, and Helen Mirren. The awards will be handed out on September 11 at a ceremony hosted by Sophia Loren.

 

Venice Film Festival 2004 Winners

Venice Film Festival 2005 Winners

Venice Film Festival 2006 Winners

62nd Venice Film Festival - Official Competition Line-Up

Lauren Bacall and the 1997 Academy Awards

Teresa Wright

 

 

 

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