FILM FESTIVAL-VENICE/PREVIEW Film critic looks ahead to Venice festival highlights
Record ID:
140570
FILM FESTIVAL-VENICE/PREVIEW Film critic looks ahead to Venice festival highlights
- Title: FILM FESTIVAL-VENICE/PREVIEW Film critic looks ahead to Venice festival highlights
- Date: 2nd September 2015
- Summary: VENICE, ITALY (SEPTEMBER 1, 2015) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) FILM CRITIC FOR VARIETY, JAY WEISSBERG, SAYING: "So, it's really hard in this case. What's interesting though is the diversity of the titles. The diversity of subject matter, countries and directors. And that, I think, is going to make the people who are here, the critics, who rather than having to sit through the same kinds of films day in and day out - we need that diversity, we need those highs and lows - I don't just mean in terms of good and bad, but in terms of storylines and that gives a better atmosphere on the Lido at any festival without question." VENICE, ITALY (SEPTEMBER 1, 2015) ( REUTERS) STAGE SET FOR FESTIVAL CLOSE OF FESTIVAL SIGNS RED CARPET EXTERIOR OF SALA DARSENA CLOSE OF LION STATUE
- Embargoed: 17th September 2015 13:00
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- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA2K5QP6E5PQUWUDKBA2VC3QRN1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Final preparations were being made on Tuesday (August 1) as the 72nd Venice film festival prepares to get going.
The festival kicks off on Wednesday (September 2) with a gala screening of Baltasar Kormakur's "Everest", starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Keira Knightley and based on the 1996 climbers' disaster on the world's highest mountain.
In competition are 21 films, including Tom Hooper's "The Danish Girl" starring Academy Award winner Eddie Redmayne as one of the first known people to undergo a sex change operation, and performance artist Laurie Anderson's "Heart of a Dog".
Drake Doremus' "Equals", a romantic science fiction movie starring Kristen Stewart and Nicholas Hoult, also competes as does "Beasts of no Nation", a war drama with Idris Elba.
Italian director Luca Guadagnino comes to the festival with "A Bigger Splash" starring Tilda Swinton, Dakota Johnson and Ralph Fiennes, while Charlie Kaufman, writer of the 1999 cult fantasy-comedy "Being John Malkovich", brings stop-motion movie "Anomalisa".
Also in competition are Argentine director Pablo Trapero's "El Clan", Chinese director Zhao Liang's "Behemoth", Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski's "11 minut", and "Looking for Grace" from Australia's Sue Brooks.
"Black Mass", starring Johnny Depp as criminal turned FBI informant Whitey Bulger, will screen in the out-of-competition line-up.
"Go with Me" with Anthony Hopkins, Julia Stiles and Ray Liotta, also features in that line-up as does "Spotlight" with Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo about how the Boston Globe revealed a Roman Catholic clergy sexual abuse scandal.
The Variety film critic,Jay Weissberg, believes there is a more diverse array of films on offer this year than there has been in the past.
"Venice's line-up this year and the competition is much more diverse it seems to me than it has been in the past. There's a little bit of everything which gives a broader perspective on what cinema is about at this moment. So, you've got some political films, you'll have a few light-hearted films from France. You've got social dramas, family dramas. There's even a sci-fi film, so there's a much broader range and a much more diverse line-up than in the past," he said.
Weissberg also spoke on one of the biggest stars to attend the event, Johnny Depp.
"Well, first, remember 'Black Mass' is out of competition, it's not incompetition. So, it's got a little less weight behind it but also more popularity. In terms of Depp, obviously he's made some mediocre films in the last few years, I would never say that's he's become a joke because I don't think he has. He's become himself in the sense that he's an iconic figure and it almost doesn't matter what he's in at this point. With this film hopefully it's going to be a film that makes people remember what a terrific actor he is and something that's out of the norm for him - it's not a Tim Burton role or one of those twee roles, tongue-in-cheek or camp roles. It's a much more serious role in which he's playing a gangster so it's going to be an interesting shift for him and I think audiences to accept him in that role."
Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron, known for "Gravity", will head the jury, which includes Hollywood actresses Elizabeth Banks and Diane Kruger.
The 72nd Venice film festival runs Sept. 2-12. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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