Showing posts with label VENICE FILM FESTIVAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VENICE FILM FESTIVAL. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Venice Film Festival Winners


GOLDEN LION 
Sacro Gra (Italy)- directed by Gianfranco Rosi

GRAND JURY PRIZE 
Stray Dogs (Taiwan)- directed by Ming-Liang Tsai

SILVER LION FOR DIRECTOR
Alexandros Avranas, Miss Violence (Greece)

BEST ACTOR
Themis Panou, Miss Violence (Greece)

BEST ACTRESS
Elena Cotta, Via Castellana Bandiera (Italy)

BEST SCREENPLAY
Philomena (UK)- Steve Coogan & Jeff Pope

MARCELO MASTROIANNI AWARD FOR BEST YOUNG ACTOR/ACTRESS
Tye Sherdian, Joe (US)

SPECIAL JURY PRIZE
The Police Officer's Wife (Italy)- directed by Philip Groning 

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Who's On First?

The summer movie season is officially over and cinematic mindset quickly shifts over to a different kind of bloodbath.  The superheroes and their ilk will return next year, as they always do, and game turns, not so much to quality as we might be persuaded into thinking, but into eventual awards possibilities.  It's September, so really, nobody knows anything quite yet, but the fall festival season in full gear and the yesterday's concluding of the Telluride Film Festival raises hopes, piques interest and cements points to bludgeon our senses for the next few months.  Forget about the revolution being televised, it's being tweeted, as critics, journalists and bloggers headed to Colorado-- others are in Venice, which is ongoing and Toronto, which starts shortly.  All in hopes of being the first the tout this years "one." The king of the castle and the bragging rights that those entail.  Oy the hyperbole.

It's not for nothing-- Telluride, with its idyllic mountain-side surroundings, has played a hand in playing host to a plethora of recent Best Picture winners-- including, but not limited to last years king Argo.  But let's not forget that the narrative from Telluride to box office hit to Oscar winner was an especially bumpy one for Ben Affleck's baby last year, and not without its own bloodshed. 

This year, a bunch of titles appear to very much be in play, but Musings and Stuff is always leery when it comes to festival reviews.  Here are some of notables to be screened so far:


12 Year a Slave- The hyperbole went into hyper drive after a special Telluride sneak preview of Steve McQueen's latest-- the tale of Solomon Northup, a free black man whose sold into slavery in the height of the Civil War-- and the the buzz was deafening.  Scary so, for fans of McQueen's past work (Hunger, Shame) as the level of expectation morphed into overdrive for those unlucky to be glimpsing the film for the first time-- it even trended on Twitter, a crazy accomplishment for a violent art film about slavery.  Chiwetel Ejiofor, a radiant talent who needs better roles, was instantly signaled as an Oscar frontrunner.  Variety said, "This epic account of an unbreakable soul makes even Scarlett O'Hara's struggles seem petty by comparison." The film will next try to replicate it's wow factor in Toronto before heading to theaters this October.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Venice Film Festival Line-Up Announced

This year marks the 70th Venice Film Festival, one of the holy trifecta of fall festival season.  It was already announced that Alfonso Cuaron's Gravity, his bold 3-D lost in space science fiction odyssey will be opening out of competition.  Here is the rest of the slate:

COMPETITION
Scarlett Johansson in Under the Skin
Ana Arabia (Israel)- directed by Amos Gitai
Child of God (USA)- directed by James Franco- Just months after the Cannes premiere of Franco's Faulkner adaptation of As I Lay Dying, the actor-multi-hyphenate takes his adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel to Venice; Franco co-stars with Tim Blake Nelson. 
Es-Stouh (France)- directed by Merzak Allouache
Joe (USA)- directed by David Gordon Green-  Nicolas Cage and The Tree of Life's Tye Sheridan star in Green's latest, a drama about the relationship between an ex-con and a 15-year-old boy.
La Jalousie (France)- directed by Philippe Garrel
L'intrepido (Italy)- directed by Gianni Amelio
Miss Violence (Greece)- directed by Alexandros Avranas
Night Moves (USA)- directed by Kelly Reichardt
Philomena (UK)- directed by Stephen Frears- As expected Frears is premiering his latest drama-- about a woman and her search for her adult son-- in competition here.  Frears previously took his The Queen, Dirty Pretty Things and Liam to Venice.
The Policeman's Wife- directed by Philip Groning
Sacro Gra (Italy)- directed by Gianfranco Rosi
Stray Dogs (Taiwan)- directed by Ming-liang Tsai
Tom at the Farm (Canada)- directed by Xavier Dolan- The latest gay drama from the director of Laurence Anyways and I Killed My Mother.
Tracks (UK)- directed by John Curran- This biographical drama starring Mia Wasikowski and Adam Driver about a young woman who goes on a 1,700 mile trek across the deserts of West Australia will also play Toronto.  Curran previously directed Stone, The Painted Veil and We Don't Live Here Anymore.
Under the Skin (USA/UK)- directed by Jonathon Glazen-  Scarlett Johansson stars as in alien in Glazen's follow-up to Birth, the Nicole Kidman oddity that came out nine years ago.
The Unknown Known: The Life & Times of Donald Runsfeld (USA)- directed by Errol Morris
Via Castellana Bandiera (Italy)- directed by Emma Dante
The Wind Rises (Japan)- directed by Hayao Miyazaki
The Zero Theorem (USA)- directed by Terry Gilliam-- Gilliam's latest surrealist fantasia stars Matt Damon, Christoph Waltz and Tilda Swinton and involves a computer hacker's goal to discover the key to human existence.

Full list here.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

And So It Begins...

So sinister that sounds...
Deadline reports that Gravity, Alfonso Cuaron's ambitious and hotly anticipated 3-D science fiction thriller, will open (albeit out of competition) the 70th Venice Film Festival.  The film stars Sandra Bullock and George Clooney and debuted a startling teaser trailer a few months back.  Venice is a part of the trifecta of the early fall festival spree that starts to announce and gauge the beginning of the awards season-- the other two being Telluride and Toronto, all which occur nearly concurrently.  Cuaron has a history with Venice, which makes this announcement not so surprising.  Y Tu Mama Tambien, his wonderful 2001 sexual coming of age film won the screenplay prize that year.  He also took his last film, Children of Men to Venice in 2006, which won a special prize for Emmuanuel Lubezki's Oscar-nominated cinematography.  Gravity holds as an awards hopeful for Warner Bros. this year and potentially may boast a significant performance from Bullock, who based on early reports, is the only one on screen for the majority of the feature.  The Venice Film Festival will begin August 28th.  Let the games begin...

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Venice Film Festival

The awards seasons has officially begun with the Venice International Film Festival unveiling the winners, as the Telluride Film Festival and Toronto Film Festival continue to unleash and distinguish the haves vs. the havenots.  Paul Thomas Anderson's greatly anticipated Scientology-soaked feature The Master makes huge strides toward eventual Oscar-dom, winning two prizes at Venice, while failing to take the top award.  Michael Mann headed the jury.  the winners:

Golden Lion: Pieta, directed by Kim Ki-duk

Silver Lion (Best Director): Paul Thomas Anderson, The Master

Special Jury Prize: Paradise: Faith, directed by Ulrich Seidl

Best Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Wonder what the Academy will do with the possibility of both being considering leading actor-- usually one gets downsized to supporting, however the monumental-ness of the performances\performers seems a crime to do so in this case.

Best Actress: Hadas Yaron, Fill the Void

Best Screenplay: Something in the Air- Olivier Assayas

Technical Achievement Award: It Was the Son- Daniele Cipri

Best Young Actor: Fabrizio Falco, It Was the Son and Dormant Beauty

The other main attraction out of Venice was the latest by Terrence Malick, To the Wonder, starring Javier Bardem, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams and Olga Kurylenko, a mere fourteen months after The Tree of Life opened in theaters.  The reviews were mixed as many argued that the film was even less accessible and free of dialogue than the former.  The film is still awaiting a distributor, however one can at the very least except that the religiously-scoped love story is scrumptiously filmed...cinematographer\poet Emmanuel Lubezki filmed this one as well.   

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Venice Film Festival Winners

Golden Lion: Faust (Russia), directed by Aleksandr Sokurov (he also directed the art house one-shot hit Russian Ark)
Silver Lion for Best Director: Shangjun Cai, Mountain People Sea (China)
Special Jury Prize: Terraferma (Italy), directed by Emanuele Crialese
Volpi Cup for Best Actor: Michael Fassbender, Shame (UK)
Volpi Cup for Best Actress: Deannie Yip, A Simple Life (China, Hong Kong)
Osella Award for Best Screenplay: Alps (Greece)- Yorgos Lanthimos & Efthimis Filippou
Osella Award for Best Technical Contribution: Robbie Ryan (cinematography), Wuthering Heights (UK)
Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Acting Newcomer: Shota Sometani, Himizu (Japan)
The big news that Michael Fassbender, who pulled double duty at this years Venice Film Festival with Shame (directed by Steve McQueen, who also helmed Fassbender's breakthrough Hunger in 2008) as well as co-starring in David Croenberg's A Dangerous Method won top honors for his portrait of a sex addict.  The film itself, based on early reviews, seems like unlikely catnip for the Academy, but it certainly ups the credibility for the up and coming, and seemingly ubiquitous actor, he's already scaled the heights of such iconic roles of Magneto and Mr. Rochester, and that's this year alone.  The film was recently snapped up by Fox Searchlight, which will be interesting for a film that most seem to think will get slapped with an NC-17.

The other get was Alps, which was directed and co-authored by the provocateur of last year's best foreign language film nominee Dogtooth, as well as the cinematography mention for the umpteenth rendition of Wuthering Heights, directed by Andrea Arnold, whose 2009 feature Fish Tank (which co-starred Fassbender) was a beaut.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Something's Coming

While it may be hard to tell, but the movie seasons are slowly but surely beginning to change.  While perhaps hard to see from the perspective of the regular filmgoer (which sadly I'm apart of) who had to witness a sad past weekend where the brightest thing was a soggy Helen Mirren thriller and Shark Night 3-D (both of which were bested by a month old message picture), the fall festival seasons is most certainly underway.  The Telluride Film Festival has already wrapped, and the shined a few lights on a few noteworthy films coming our way.  The festival, a favorite of the exclusive cinephiles, for that it announces its selection after tickets are already sold.  The exclusives the festival typically brings are the reason it can get away with such things.  Recent films like The King's Speech, Slumdog Millionaire, Up in the Air and Juno made their first big splashed at Telluride.  That's not all, however, as the Venice Film Festival is underway-- last year's opening night film-- Black Swan-- made it all the way to an Oscar nomination.  Then comes the big festival orgy of the Toronto Film Festival, which offers even more films than anyone could possibly hope to see in one lifetime, and that it offers that on a yearly basis is quite exhausting.  Later on, comes the New York Film Festival (last year The Social Network opened), this year the honor belongs to Roman Polanski's Carnage.  After that comes the London Film Festival (Fernando Mierelles, director of City of God, opens that festival with his latest ensemble drama 360, starring Rachel Weisz and Jude Law.)  And that's followed by the AFI Film Festival, which will unspool Clint Eastwood's latest J. Edgar, starring Leonardo DiCaprio...whew!

Carnage:
Roman Polanski's latest, adapted from the Tony Award winning play, God of Carnage, played Venice, with it's very starry cast-- Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, John C. Rielly and Christoph Waltz, and was greeted with lukewarm praise, all of which translates to a potentially interesting, but possibly non-awards caliber type of film.  For a film shot in real time, set in one apartment over a group of two squabbling parents, the film reeks of potential stagy-ness.  And the tone of melodrama and overt comedy may harken its chances of awards and a large audience, but still how can one not be curious.

The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's well-acted and giddily enjoyable, if slightly less so once the characters start to analyse their descent into barbarism."

The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Snappy, nasty, deftly acted and perhaps the fastest paced film ever directed by a 78-year-old, this adaptation of Yasmina Reza's award-winning play God of Carnage fully delivers the laughs and savagery of the stage piece..."


A Dangerous Method:
David Croenberg's latest- a period drama and study of the relationship between Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung and the girl caught in the middle stars Michael Fassbender, Viggo Mortenssen and Keira Knightley.  The film earned mixed reviews from its bow at Telluride and Venice and due to the kinky but seemingly austere nature of the film may not be able to become the film that finally warms the Academy to endless but idiosyncratic talents of Croenberg.  The performances and the technical aspects of A Dangerous Method seem to have earned high praise, but the film seems to have come across as the least-Croenberg-like film he's every created, and a lot of attention was payed to Knightley's performance that seems to be dividing critics.

The Daily Telegraph said:
"It's Knightley that one remembers, for a full-on portrayal that is gutsy and potentially divisive in equal parts."

The Guardian said:
"A Dangerous Mind feels heavy and lugubrious. It is a tale that comes marinated in port and choked on pipe-smoke."

The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Precise, lucid and thrillingly disciplined, this story of boundary-testing in the early days of psychoanalysis is brought to vivid life by the outstanding lead performances of Keira Knightley, Viggo Mortensen and Michael Fassbender."


The Descendants:
The brightest thing potentially from Telluride was Alexander Payne's latest feature starring George Clooney as a husband and father trying to rebuild his family after his wife is struck with a life-threatening ailment.  It's been seven years since Payne unleashed the huge critical sweep (and Oscar winner for Best Adapted Screenplay) Sideways, and should at the very least, on paper, be primed for another awards contender.  While the trailer may have read a bit nondescript and possibly lacking in the usual humor one might expect from Payne, there's bound to be a great deal of attention towards the film, as well as Clooney's performance, and with distributor Fox Searchlight, it's fairly certain a stellar campaign will be mounted.  The next step is Toronto, where perhaps the film will truly sink or swim.

Variety said:
"Some movies aim to distract us; others seek to help us understand. "The Descendants" tackles some of the prickliest issues a contempo family can face -- coping with a loved one's right-to-die decision -- with such sensitivity that it's hardly noticeable you're being enlightened while entertained. As a Hawaiian father of two negotiating complex emotions while his wife lies comatose after a boating accident, George Clooney reveals yet another layer of himself. His involvement, plus the welcome return of "Sideways" director Alexander Payne, will bring in auds; their tell-a-friend enthusiasm should spell sleeper success among catharsis-seeking adults."


The Ides of March:
George Clooney's is everywhere, as per usual.  The stars and directs this film, which opened the Venice Film Festival, and while play Toronto.  A timely, political story with an all star cast-- Ryan Gosling, Marisa Tomei, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Evan Rachel Wood, Paul Giamatti, and Jeffrey Wright.  The film received mostly kind, if unspectacular notices.  Yet many seem to assume the film, a very American story, will play better here than in Venice, and if the film reaches out to the uber-Hollywood liberal elite, it could certainly be an awards film.

The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Classy and professional throughout, the technical work gracefully holds all the threads together."

Time Magazine said:
"Clooney sees blustering bustle and edgy familiarity - giant closeups of private conversations - as the contrasts of political campaigns, which are, at heart, all rhetoric and no accountability."

Variety said:
"[An] intriguing but overly portentous drama, which seems far more taken with its own cynicism than most viewers will be."

Shame:
A film of definite interest that played both Telluride and Venice to a lot of good notice was Steve McQueen's second feature starring Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan.  Defined as an unflinching film about the relationship between a depraved sex addict and wayward sister, the film seems to have gotten a lot of attention, not perhaps as a magnet for upcoming awards, but it's frank, and full-frontal realism.  While much press on the film has noted that the film will likely be rated NC-17, there still seems to be a lot of interest in the story as an alleged bidding war is underway between Fox Searchlight, The Weinstein Company and Sony Pictures Classics.  Whatever there's to make of the outcome, one certainly hopes that McQueen follows through on the promise of his hard-edged, provocative, but ultimately dazzling debut feature, Hunger, which (depending on what year the few of you that caught it, actually saw it-- release dates for the little ones can be confusing-- was the real breakout feature for the formidable Fassbender.)  The film will trek onto Toronto next.

The Guardian said:
"This is fluid, rigorous, serious cinema; the best kind of adult movie."

This is London said:
"McQueen's film-making is undoubtedly powerful and without compromise, especially during the frequent sex scenes, which depict a man on the edge intent on propelling himself over the cliff."

W.E.:
Directed by Madonna, W.E. was snapped up by The Weinstein Company well before it made its auspicious and critically reviled premiere at Venice.  Described as a Julie & Julia-like biopic of Wallis Simpson (the woman King Edward III abdicated the throne for) and a modern woman obsessed with the tale.  The film stars Andrea Riseborough and Abbie Cornish.  Perhaps the Weinstein's were hoping for a side story of sorts to last years champ The King's Speech.  Either way the film received a critical drubbing, and will surely rouse endlessly curiosity and hisses as it approaches theaters; Madonna just can't get a break in films, can she?

The Guardian said:
"What an extraordinarily silly, preening, fatally mishandled film this is."

The Hollywood Reporter said:
"Madonna's second foray into directing is pleasing to the eyes and ears, but lacking anything for the soul."

Variety said:
"Burdened with risible dialogue and weak performances, pic doesn't have much going for it apart from lavish production design and terrific, well-researched costumes."

Other possible films of interest include Albert Nobbs, the two decades long passion project for Glenn Close, who both stars and scripted the gender-bending tale of a woman who poses as a man in 19th century Ireland.  While reviews were mild, there's still bound to be interest and praise given to Close (who received a Lifetime Achievement Award at Telluride) and who, after five tries and an Oscar track record in the 1980s that rivaled Meryl Streep, still has yet to win the big award.  What the irony that Streep herself as an Oscar bid in her Margaret Thatcher biography The Iron Lady coming out later this year...a festival run is thus far unannounced for that one.  And what of the further irony if eventually when all pans out if Viola Davis ends up becoming the victor for The Help...

Cannes favorites The Artist and We Need to Talk About Kevin also played Telluride, further building potentially buzz.  The Artist, which was snapped by the very busy Weinstein Company earlier this year seems likely to benefit most from the fall festival circuit (it will play Toronto as well), and crowd-pleasing old Hollywood throwback to silent era, might very well be the toast of this coming season, if early reaction is any indication.  Kevin, on the other hand might have a bit more trouble seeing it's rough subject matter-- a family drama centered around a Columbine-like high school shooting.  However the film's star Tilda Swinton has received a lot of acclaim, and received a tribute at Telluride, as did George Clooney, and its distributor, Roadside Attraction (also handling Albert Nobbs) had a good run last year with not so easy sells like Winter's Bone and Biutiful.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Venice Film Festival

In competition for the Golden Lion this year:



The Ides Of March – George Clooney (US) [opening film]
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy – Tomas Alfredson (UK, Germany)
Wuthering Heights – Andrea Arnold (UK)
Texas Killing Fields – Ami Canaan Maan (US)
Quando La Notte – Cristina Comencini (Italy)
Terraferma – Emanuele Crialese (Italy/France)
A Dangerous Method – David Cronenberg (Germany/Canada)
4:44 Last Day On Earth – Abel Ferrara (US)
Killer Joe – William Friedkin (US)
Un Ete Brulant – Philippe Garrel (France/Italy/Switzerland)
A Simple Life (Taojie) – Ann Hui (China/Hong Kong)
The Exchange (Hahithalfut) – Eran Kolirin (Israel)
Alps (Alpeis) -Yorgos Lanthimos (Greece)
Shame – Steve McQueen (UK)
L’ultimo Terrestre – Gian Alfonso Pacinotti (Italy)
Carnage – Roman Polanski (France/Germany/Spain/Poland)
Chicken With Plums – Marjane Satrapi, Vincent Paronnaud (France/Belgium/Germany)
Faust – Aleksander Sokurov (Russia)
Dark Horse – Todd Solondz (US)
Himizu – Sion Sono (Japan)
Seediq Bale – Wei Te-Sheng (Taiwan)

The Ides of March trailer
 
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy trailer
 
One of these films will be win in a jury headed by Darren Aronofsky, whose Black Swan debuted last years Venice Film Festival. 

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Venice Film Festival

The winners:



Golden Lion: Somewhere- directed by Sofia Coppola
Silver Lion: A Sad Trumpet Ballad- directed by  Alex de la Iglesia
Special Prize: Essential Killing- directed by Jerzy Skolimowski
Coppa Volpi (Best Actor): Vincent Gallo, Essential Killing
Coppa Volpi (Best Actress): Ariane Labed, Attenberg
Marcelo Mastroianni Award (Best Young Actor or Actress): Mila Kunis, Black Swan
Osella (Best Screenplay): Alex de la Iglesia, A Sad Trumpet Ballad
Osella (Best Cinematography): Silent Souls- Mikhail Krichman
European Cinema Award: The Clink of Ice
Golden Lion Cub Award: Barney's Version- directed by Richard J. Lewis
Queer Lion (Best Gay Film): In the Future


Focus Features has much to celebrate winning the top honor from Sofia Coppola's latest dreamscape set on the Sunset Strip's famed Chateau Marmont, as seemingly muted, albeit mostly positive reviews came out in it's initial screening.  It may not be an Oscar contender, but this high achievement gives the film early bragging rights.

In other news, Barney's Version, starring Paul Giamatti will come out later this year thanks to it's recent acquisition by Sony Pictures Classics.

The jury was headed by Quentin Tarantino (an ex of Coppola's), and included writer\director Guillermo Arriaga (21 Grams, Babel), Lithuanian actress Ingeborga Dapkunatite, director Arnaud Desplechin (A Christmas Tale), film composer Danny Elfman, director Luca Guadagnino (I Am Love), and director Gabrielle Salvatores.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Black Swan to Open Venice Film Festival

While the full line-up of the 67th Annual Venice Film Festival has yet to be unveiled, their website is confirming that Darren Aronofsky's latest, Black Swan, will be the opening night attraction, and be in competition.  Described as a psychological drama set in the New York Ballet, focusing on the rivalry between two ballerinas, played by Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis.  The supporting cast includes Barbara Hershey, Vincent Cassel, and Winona Ryder.  I'm sooo looking forward to this, so I wish I was in the film elite and that I could fly to Venice on a whim for this.  The movie is being released later this year by Fox Searchlight Pictures.

Aronofsky's latest triumph, The Wrestler won the top award at the Venice Film Festival in 2008, where it debuted and assuredly awed.  As an avid fan of Mr. Aronofsky's work (even the the much reviled The Fountain is such an incoherently interesting feature, it's hard to completely loathe, I'd say-- I think it flawed, but hypnotic), I'm anxious and nervous about this one, but since he's proven such an assured, often brilliant filmmaker, I think it's safe to say, that at the very least, there's a nugget of something here.  Just as so, I'm always curious about the major film festival, and the big ones (Venice and Toronto) are just over a month away.  Venice starts September 1 to September 11.

While other titles haven't been made official yet, speculation is that Julian Schnabel's latest, Miral, his follow-up to 2007's The Diving Bell & the Butterfly starring Frieda Pinto (Slumdog Millionaire) will debut as well, as well as Sofia Coppola's latest, Somewhere, starring Stephen Dorff and Elle Fanning (remember Lost in Translation made it's big splash in 2003 at Venice for a sense of history), as well as Tom Hopper's (HBO's John Adams), The King's Speech starring Colin Firth and Helena Bonham Carter.  The big question however is if Terrence Malick's latest, The Tree of Life, might make it's premiere at Venice, after missing on Cannes.  I have a feeling I may never see it!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

And So It Begins

After a long break of personal matters and unforgivable laziness I've returned-- and what do you know it-- awards season is right, as we speak, getting started...say it isn't so, it's only September!! But festival season is in full swing-- Venice and Telluride have already had their say, and Toronto is currently going on. From all the online sources thusly, I hear Jason Reitman's Up in the Air starring George Clooney is a definite hit, as is The Coen Brothers' A Serious Man, while Creation, the Charles Darwin biopic starring real-life married couple Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connolly is a miss, and The Road is mixed...

Anyway the real big news is the announcement of the winners of this years Venice Film Festival, and drum roll...

Golden Lion for Best Film: Lebanon (Israel, France, Germany)

Silver Lion for Best Director: Shirin Neshat, Women Without Men (Germany, Austria, France)

Special Jury Prize: Soul Kitchen (Germany)

Best Actor: Colin Firth, A Single Man (USA)

Best Actress: Ksenia Rappaport, La Doppia Ora (Italy)

Best Screeplay: Life During Wartime- Todd Solondz (USA)

Queer Golden Lion: A Single Man (USA)-- special award given to Tom Ford


So the big news-- not much, with the exception of Colin Firth winning for fashion designer Tom Ford's directorial debut A Single Man, also starring Julianne Moore, Lee Pace and Matthew Goode about a gay man coming to odds with the loss of a lover. It's the first significant prize for an actor that could potentially be an Oscar contender, that is granted the film gets US distribution in time for a 2009 release (sucks to be a small time film in a recession-ville America.) Also goods news for longtime troublemaker Todd Solondz (Happiness, Welcome to the Dollhouse), but doubt Oscar will ever be brave enough for him.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Venice Film Festival Winners

GOLDEN LION (Best Picture)
The Wrestler
Darren Aronofsky's latest film starring Mickey Rourke, Marisa Tomei and Evan Rachel Wood won the top prize.

BEST DIRECTOR
Aleksei German, Paper Soldier

BEST ACTOR
Silvio Orlando, Il

BEST ACTRESS
Dominique Blanc, L'Autre

BEST YOUNG ACTOR (Marcello Mastroianni Award)
Jennifer Lawrence, The Burning Plain

SPECIAL JURY PRIZE
Teza

Friday, August 1, 2008

Venice Film Festival

The 2008 line-up has been announced:

IN COMPETITION
The Wrestler- directed by Darren Aronofsky (USA)
Stars Marisa Tomei, Evan Rachel Wood and Mickey Rourke
The Burning Plain- directed by Guillermo Arriaga (USA)
Stars Kim Basinger and Charlize Theron; Arriaga is screenwriter of Amores Perros and 21 Grams, this is his directorial debut.
Il Papa di Giovanna- directed by Pupi Avati (Italy)
Birdwatchers- directed by Marco Bechis (Italy)
L'Autre- directed by Patrick Mario Bernard & Pierre Trividic (France)
The Hurt Locker- directed by Kathryn Bigelow (USA)
Stars Ralph Fiennes and Guy Pearce
Il Serne Della Discordia- directed by Pappi Coricato (Italy)
Rachel Getting Married- directed by Jonathon Demme (USA)
Stars Anne Hathaway and Debra Winger, and marks the first original film in nearly 20 years for Demme, whose been stuck in remake hell as of late with the ill-advised The Manchurian Candidate and The Truth About Charlie. This film been slowly generating possible Oscar buzz.
Teza- directed by Haile Gerima (Ethiopia\Germany\France)
Paper Soldier- directed by Aleksey German, Jr. (Russia)
Sut- directed by Semih Kaplanoglu (Turkey\France\Germany)
Achilles and the Tortoise- directed by Takeshi Katino (Japan)
Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea- directed by Hayao Miyazaki (Japan)
Miyazaki's follow-up to his wonderous Howl's Moving Castle and Spirited Away.
Vegas: Based on a True Story- directed by Amir Naderi (USA)
The Sky Crawlers- directed by Oshii Mamoru (Japan)
Un Giorno Perfetto- directed by Ferzan Ozpetek (Italy)
Jerichow- directed by Christian Petzold (Germany)
Inju, La Bete Dans L'Ombre- directed by Barbet Schroeder (France)
Stars Benoit Magimel, of The Piano Teacher fame, director of Kiss of the Spider Woman.
Nuit de Chien
- directed by Werner Schroeter (France\Germany\Poland)
Inland- directed by Taniq Teguia (Algeria\France)
Plastic City- directed by Yu Lik-Wai (Brazil\China\Hong Kong)

OUT OF COMPETITION
Puccini e La Fanciulla- directed by Paolo Benvenuti (Italy)
Yuppi Du- directed by Adriano Celantano (Italy)
Burn After Reading- directed by Joel & Ethan Coen (USA)
The Coen Brothers latest film will serve as the opener of the Venice Film Festival.
35 Rhums- directed by Claire Denis (France/Spain)
Cry Me A River- directed by Jia Zhangke (China/Spain/France)
Shirin- directed by Abbas Kiarostami (Iran)
Tutto e Musica (1963)- directed by Domenico Modugno (Italy)
Vicino al Colosseo…c’e Monti- directed by Mario Monicelli (Italy)
Do Visivel ao Invisivel- directed by Manoel de Oliveira (Brazil/Portugal)
Orfeo 9 (1973)- directed by Tito Schipa Jr (Italy)
Les Plages D’Agnes- directed by Agnes Varda (France)
Vinyan- directed by Fabrice du Welz (France/UK/Belgium)
Encarnacao do Demonio- directed by Jose Mojica Marins (Brazil)
Volare (Nel blu dipinto di blu) (1959)- directed by Piero Tellini (Italy)

The complete list here.
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