Venice Film Festival gears up to award masked Golden Lion winner | Inquirer Entertainment

Venice Film Festival gears up to award masked Golden Lion winner

/ 04:46 PM September 12, 2020

Venice Film Festival

Eighteen films are vying for the top Golden Lion at the Venice film festival. Image: AFP/Tiziana Fabi

The Venice Film Festival will present its coveted Golden Lion award Saturday after a competition marked by facemasks and missing stars but billed as a relaunch of global cinema, bruised by the coronavirus crisis.

Throughout the 11 days of industry schmoozing and movie watching on the glitzy beachfront Lido, elbow bumps replaced handshakes, theatergoers were masked and the red carpet eerily devoid of screaming fans.

ADVERTISEMENT

The 77th edition of the “Mostra” festival has taken place against an unprecedented backdrop, in a year where theaters have been closed, film sets shut down and moviegoers forced to embrace streaming video at home instead, during months of coronavirus-imposed lockdown.

FEATURED STORIES

Many directors saluted the festival’s organizers for going ahead with the event.

“The Venice Film Festival has given us the opportunity and the privilege to start dreaming again,” Italian director Emma Dante said in Ciak magazine, distributed daily at the festival.

Leading contenders among the 18 films vying for the top prize include Michel Franco’s “Nuevo Orden” (New Order), a dystopian view of Mexico, Gianfranco Rosi’s documentary “Notturno” shot on the borders of Syria, “Quo Vadis, Aida?” by Bosnia’s Jasmila Zbanic about the 1995 Srebrenica massacre and “Dear Comrades!” from veteran Russian director Andrei Konchalovsky about the 1962 shooting of striking factory workers in the USSR by the army.

The last entry in the competition lineup to premiere was the much anticipated “Nomadland” by American director Chloe Zhao, starring Frances McDormand — one of the few films from the United States at the festival — which received sustained applause during its earlier press screening.

High-profile ‘test’

Normally attended by more than 10,000 film industry executives, critics, journalists and moviegoers, the Venice festival was the first major international movie competition to go ahead after others around the world, including its main rival, the Cannes Film Festival, were canceled.

ADVERTISEMENT

Festival director Alberto Barbera called the event “a sort of test” for the film industry, which is slowly regaining its footing, with some production resuming and cinemas reopening, even as Covid-19 cases continue to rise in many parts of the world.

In Italy, the festival was also viewed as a sign of hope and normalcy for the first country in Europe to be battered by the global crisis.

Nevertheless, big-budget blockbusters that have premiered in Venice in years past were missing, as was the bevy of Hollywood A-listers, who have fans screaming for autographs on the sidelines of the red carpet.

Instead, the 2020 version was decidedly low-key, with about half the usual number of attendees, fewer films and seating in theaters that was staggered to respect social distancing.

Masks were mandatory, hand sanitizer bountiful, temperatures were taken on entering the festival grounds and ubiquitous red signs warned attendees to respect the anti-coronavirus measures.

Still, organizers said the scaled-down event offered a diverse panorama of cinema today, with 50 different countries represented in the lineup.

Of the contenders for the top prize, eight were directed by women, which some hope reflects a new direction for festivals after criticism in past years over a lack of gender diversity.

‘A miracle’

Brad Pitt, Meryl Streep and Scarlett Johansson were among those to have supplied the celebrity panache at last year’s festival.

But ongoing travel restrictions — especially a travel ban from the United States into Europe — mean most Hollywood big names were no-shows this year, along with actors and directors from China, India and South America.

However, Cate Blanchett, as jury president, provided some much-needed star power, telling an opening night audience that the festival’s launch seemed “some kind of wondrous miracle.”

“The way is uncertain, but tonight is a beginning,” she said.

As well as Blanchett, the judges comprise American actor Matt Dillon, Austrian director Veronika Franz, British director Joanna Hogg, Italian writer Nicola Lagioia, German director Christian Petzold and French actress Ludivine Sagnier.

Last year, “Joker” by American director Todd Phillips took home the Golden Lion, while Roman Polanski won the runner-up Grand Jury prize for “An Officer and a Spy”. IB

RELATED STORIES:

Virus delays filming of 2 seasons of ‘Atlanta’ until 2021

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Academy Museum details plan for inaugural Hayao Miyazaki exhibit

For more news about the novel coronavirus click here.
What you need to know about Coronavirus.
For more information on COVID-19, call the DOH Hotline: (02) 86517800 local 1149/1150.

The Inquirer Foundation supports our healthcare frontliners and is still accepting cash donations to be deposited at Banco de Oro (BDO) current account #007960018860 or donate through PayMaya using this link.

TAGS: Awards, Cinemas, covid-19, Golden Lion award, Italy, Movies, Venice Film Festival

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. To find out more, please click this link.