Stars flock to Venice as world's oldest filmfest begins | Inquirer Entertainment

Stars flock to Venice as world’s oldest filmfest begins

/ 10:31 AM August 27, 2014

Venice Film Festival

Enricco Masserdotti prepares a sign for the 71st edition of the Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy, Monday, Aug. 25, 2014. The 71st edition of the festival opens on Wednesday, Aug. 27 and runs until Sept. 6. AP

VENICE — The Venice film festival kicks off Wednesday with the arrival of stars by water taxi for an art house dominated line-up rich with tales of war, poetry and the mafia.

Taking the stage first at the world’s oldest film festival will be Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s “Birdman or the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance”, starring Michael Keaton of “Beetlejuice” and “Batman” fame.

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In the first of 20 flicks vying for the coveted Golden Lion award, Keaton plays a washed-up actor once famous for playing a superhero, who is now struggling to put on a broadway play in a bid to regain his former glory.

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Crowd-pleaser Inarritu, best known for his films “21 Grams” and “Babel”, pampers fans by bringing on board other superhero veterans for the movie, including Emma Stone from “The Amazing Spiderman” and Edward Norton, star of the 2008 “The Incredible Hulk”.

Other hotly-awaited world premieres include “Good Kill” by New Zealand’s Andrew Niccol, starring Ethan Hawke as a drone operator in Afghanistan, and David Gordon Green’s “Manglehorn” with Al Pacino as an ex-con turned locksmith with a broken heart.

French film composer Alexandre Desplat — whose dozens of works include the scores for “The King’s Speech” and “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” — will head up the main jury at the festival, which runs until September 6.

Desplat was among the cinema luminaries quaffing prosecco at the festival’s opening party on a roof terrace near Saint Mark’s Square in the floating city Tuesday, kicking off a fortnight of glamorous beach galas and red-carpet ceremonies.

Festival director Alberto Barbera brushed off criticisms that this year’s edition was light on Hollywood stars, saying the aim of the organizers had been to create space for high-quality, innovative flicks which risk falling through the cracks.

“I have nothing against glamor, but it cannot be the only component in a festival. The idea is to explore cinema today in all its complexities,” he said.

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The festival is bringing a new generation of artists to the Lido this year with its first edition of a gap-financing market — which matches young producers in need of funds with investors and distributors — as well as Final Cut, which showcases finished films from Africa and the Middle East to buyers.

While still in its infancy, the Venice market — now in its third year — recorded a 25 percent increase in the number of producers and agents attending last year, with a particularly strong showing from China, according to Barbera.

There is buzz from critics already over the only first feature competing for the Lion, the Turkish “Sivas”, by Kaan Mujdeci, about a young boy who befriends a dog he saves from a fight in a bid to protect himself from a violent society.

American Ramin Bahrani looks at the fallout of the economic crisis with his drama “99 Homes” about a father trying to recover his house after an eviction, while Russia’s Andrei Konchalovsky dwells on loneliness in “The Postman’s White Nights”.

The only documentary in competition is “The Look of Silence”, Joshua Oppenheimer’s follow-up to his acclaimed 2012 “The Act of Killing”, which this time sees Indonesian genocide survivors confront the killers of their brother.

Out of competition slots have gone to US director Peter Bogdanovich’s “She’s Funny That Way”, a comedy starring Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston, as well as American Lisa Cholodenko’s four-part HBO series “Olive Kitteridge”, starring Bill Murray, and pulp master Joe Dante’s horror comedy “Burying the Ex”.

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TAGS: Entertainment, Film festivals, Italy, Venice Film Festival

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