Venice film fest gets underway with George Clooneyâs âIdesâ
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With its romantic Italian trappings, Venice lends itself to a certain kind of film festival: one with a lot of A-list talent and showy movies. This yearâs event, which kicks off Wednesday, is no exception, with George Clooney, Madonna, Kate Winslet, Gwyneth Paltrow and Matt Damon expected to be on hand to premiere their films.
Many of the movies headed to Venice â including Clooneyâs American presidential campaign drama âIdes of March,â which opens the fest, and Madonnaâs Wallis Simpson drama âW.E.â â will also screen at the much larger Toronto International Film Festival, which begins Sept. 8. Thereâs also bound to be some overlap between Veniceâs lineup and the programming at the Telluride Film Festival, which starts Friday, though the organizers of the Colorado event keep their titles under wraps until the very last minute.
Photos: George Clooney, Evan Rachel Wood and more at Venice Film Festival
A few high-profile pictures, though, will debut in Venice and then keep North American filmgoers, even festival audiences, waiting for a bit. Those films include Roman Polanskiâs âCarnage,â an adaptation of Yasmina Rezaâs Broadway play âGod of Carnageâ; Tomas Alfredsonâs adaptation of John le Carreâs âTinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spyâ (with Gary Oldman as super spy George Smiley); and Al Pacinoâs âWilde Salome,â about Pacinoâs obsession with Oscar Wilde and his controversial play âSalome.â Check out our photo gallery of high profile Venice titles here.
The Venice festivalâs top honor, the Golden Lion, isnât seen as a particularly good indicator of eventual attention from Oscar voters. Last year, Sofia Coppolaâs âSomewhereâ walked away with the award, while in 2009 the prize went to Samuel Maozâs war drama âLebanonâ; neither landed Academy Award nominations. This year, Darren Aronofsky, director of last yearâs Oscar best picture nominee âBlack Swan,â will head up the Venice jury.
The Venice fest, which is in its 68th year, will feature 22 films in its international competition. Besides âTinker, Tailor,â âIdesâ and David Cronenbergâs âA Dangerous Method,â the field includes William Friedkinâs âKiller Joeâ (a drama starring Emile Hirsch and Matthew McConaughey); Todd Solondzâs âDark Horse,â starring Mia Farrow; and âTexas Killing Fields,â the directorial debut of Michael Mannâs daughter Ami Canaan Mann.
Sony Pictures Classics is releasing âCarnage,â and co-head Michael Barker says he sees the Italian festival as particularly well suited to the film, which stars Jodie Foster, Christoph Waltz, John C. Reilly and Winslet.
âVenice is a perfect launching pad for âCarnage,â â he said. âThe play is a huge hit all over the world and is about to open in Europe in the fall.â
After Venice, âCarnageâ will play as the opening-night picture at the New York Film Festival, which starts Sept. 30. Because the play is set in New York, taking the film there next was a natural choice. But there was one hiccup â âCarnageâ had to pull out of the Toronto festival because the New York fest wonât select a film for opening night that has played at any other North American festival.
Barker is pursuing a Venice-Toronto strategy with âA Dangerous Method,â a film that examines the friendship between renowned psychotherapists Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. The film is slated for a general U.S. release at Thanksgiving, and he hopes the festivals will build buzz ahead of the crowded holiday season.
âTo launch a film in Venice, youâre launching it to Europe. To launch in Toronto, youâre launching it to North America. The two together are a perfect combination,â Barker says. âAnd âA Dangerous Methodâ is a very European story, but itâs also perfect for Toronto because it could be David Cronenbergâs most accessible film.â
Venice has also become a launching pad for high-profile studio films, such as this yearâs âIdes,â from Sony Pictures, and Warner Bros.â drama âContagion,â from festival veteran Steven Soderbergh, which opens in U.S. theaters Sept. 9. Not only does the film feature a high-profile international cast including Damon, Winslet, Paltrow and Marion Cotillard, but its storyline â itâs about the spread of a killer virus around the world â has relevance to the international audience present at the festival.
Warner Bros. has used Venice to focus critical attention on films with overt commercial appeal, such as last yearâs Ben Affleck heist drama âThe Town.â
âI think the roles of festivals have changed in the last few years. Itâs always been much more important for a smaller film looking for distribution, or one that doesnât have the power of the studio behind it, to be at a festival. And we could accomplish a lot of what we do without them,â said Sue Kroll, Warner Bros. Picturesâ president of worldwide marketing.
âBut I think itâs a wonderful place for us to be, especially for a movie like this: With the timing of the release, the international cast and this filmmaker, it helps us frame the movie and say to the press and critical audience that there is moreâ to âContagionâ than just its commercial appeal.
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-- Nicole Sperling