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Tag: International

  • Carlo Chatrian Named Jury President at Tokyo Film Festival

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    Carlo Chatrian will serve as the president of the international competition jury at the 38th Tokyo International Film Festival, organizers announced on Thursday.

    An Italian journalist, author and programmer, Chatrian has worked as a film critic for several magazines. He has been a programmer for the Alba Film Festival, Florence Festival dei Popoli and Visions du Réel. In 2009, he curated a program on Japanese animation, including a book, a retrospective and an exhibition. And he was the artistic director at the Locarno International Film Festival (2013-2018) and the Berlinale (2020-2024).

    Chatrian’s writings include works on filmmakers Frederick Wiseman, Errol Morris and Nanni Moretti, and a column for Italian newspaper, La Stampa. He is currently the director of the National Museum of Cinema in Turin and is a member of both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and the Academy of Italian Cinema.

    “It is a great privilege to chair the jury of the Tokyo International Film Festival, an event that, especially under the new direction, has become a vital meeting point for the art of cinema at a global level,” Chatrian said in a statement. “I thank the Chairman Ando-san and the Programming Director Ichiyama-san for giving me this opportunity. I’m looking forward to discovering the selection, as I’m sure I will be inspired and touched by the work of the filmmakers. I’m equally excited to know my fellow jurors and start engaging with them in rich and nourishing conversations.”

    Ando Hiroyasu, chairman of TIFF, added in a statement, “Mr. Chatrian has extensive experience both as a film critic and as a director of prestigious film festivals like Locarno and Berlin. He most recently participated in the Tokyo International Film Festival in 2021 and 2023, giving us the privilege of witnessing his keen insight and unwavering passion for cinema firsthand. Amid a period of profound global transformation, we are truly looking forward to the insights he will bring through his role as a jury president.”

    The 2025 Tokyo Film Festival runs from Oct. 27 through to Nov. 5.

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    Abid Rahman

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  • David Jonsson on Mentoring Young Filmmakers With BAFTA: “We Can’t Expect Them to Make It to the Table — Odds Are There Aren’t Enough Seats”

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    David Jonsson is beaming with pride as he sits down to talk to The Hollywood Reporter.

    It’s late August and the in-demand British actor has come to a local school in rural England to counsel the next generation of film creatives. He’s teamed up with BAFTA and EE for a new initiative, Set the Stage, where 16 teens have been selected to form a crew and produce a short film under the mentorship of Daisy Edgar-Jones and Jonsson, 2025’s recipient of BAFTA’s EE Rising Star Award.

    “I’m relatively quite shy,” the Rye Lane and Alien: Romulus star says to THR. “I feel like I don’t really have anything of use to say most of the time. But it’s just not true. And I think Set the Stage and their initiative with BAFTA and EE, it’s just so pivotal in getting the opportunities that I got as a kid that really helped me go: ‘Oh man, I can do this.’”

    It’s this experience that made it a no-brainer when Jonsson was asked to get involved with Set the Stage. The hand-picked group of 17-year-olds are on site attending a seven-day immersive programme where they were joined by Jonson and Twisters actress Edgar‑Jones. The actors led Q&As and on‑set workshops with the aim of igniting confidence, creativity and collaboration before the teenagers took to set themselves to produce their project Setting Sail.

    The movie explores the theme “growing up as a teenager in Britain today” and follows the main character, Hannah, and her younger self, Peanut, on a nostalgic treasure hunt that rekindles memories of her late grandfather. Featuring a cast that includes House of Dragons actress, Carol Ball, Setting Sail will premiere in early 2026 and be made available to watch on EE’s YouTube channel.

    David Jonsson talks with young filmmakers about the craft and wider industry for BAFTA and EE’s ‘Set the Stage’.

    EE/BAFTA

    “I think staying playful is everything,” continues Jonsson, who also leads the forthcoming adaptation of Stephen King’s The Long Walk. “It helps you to just continue to understand what you really enjoy. Life is short, art is long. With art, you want to continue to find what feels right to you, because the truth is you make a handful of them that really, really matter. If you’re too rigid, you’re limiting that.” His biggest advice for the kids: “Remain playful and be passionate. Find craft.”

    His mission with Set the Stage is about “actively finding” opportunities for new voices in the film industry. “I’m a working class lad. I got excluded from school several times and I found my way into film in a way that feels like I shouldn’t have,” says Jonsson, “which is partially why I feel grateful to be in these rooms and doing what I’m doing. We can’t expect them to make it to the table, because odds are there’s not enough seats.”

    It was advice from his mother, he continues, that motivates his work with aspiring creatives. “There’s something about being vivacious in your belief and holding to it. My mum always used to say, ‘Don’t wait to be told. Go and do it.’ So from both sides, if we can find some form of synergy there, the industry will be way better for it. And I’m all for that. I think Set the Stage is doing that.”

    His newly-founded production outfit with producing partner Sophia Gibber, greyarea, is about finding emerging talent and encouraging them to push the boundaries. “We just produced a play up in Edinburgh — [greyarea] is a film company but we had a story that I wrote that felt like it could work on a stage, and I wanted to workshop it and try it and play with it,” he explains. “It doesn’t matter really what discipline you’re in, I think storytelling is storytelling. You can be an actor one day, and then you can be the perfect producer. That’s what making movies is. You mustn’t ever get too set in your ways.”

    Daisy Edgar-Jones for EE and BAFTA’s ‘Set the Stage’ initiative.

    EE/BAFTA

    London-born Jonsson still can’t quite believe he’s a BAFTA Award winner, let alone asked to usher in the next batch of filmmakers. “I grew up watching the BAFTAs,” he says. “My parents [and I would] sit down on Sunday night and we’d get Chinese and watch these glamorous people in dresses [at the BAFTAs]. It’s partially because my dad loved film and partially because my mum just wanted to watch glamorous people be glamorous,” he recalls.

    “For me, it was escapism. It was everything that I saw and loved in movies, watching these actors be celebrated for doing what they love… I don’t think there’s any better job. To be where I am now, winning the Rising Star Award — which is really all about the people — and BAFTA championing me in that way, I am humbled.”

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    Lily Ford

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  • 14 Exhibitions Not to Miss During Seoul Art Week 2025

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    • P21 Gallery, Seoul
    • Through September 19, 2025

    This group show could not find a better place or moment, given how South Korea’s cosmetics industry has peaked—driven by the global export success of Korean brands—and how cosmetic interventions have become so normalized they border on obsession within the country’s society. Featuring a lineup of established and emerging names including So Young Park, Pamela Rosenkranz, Diane Severin Nguyen, Haena Yoo, Haneyl Choi, Sylvie Fleury, Simon Fujiwara, Sanja Ivekovic, Anna Munk and Ju Young Kim, the exhibition at P21 Gallery examines how artists engage with the material world of cosmetics consumer culture. Exploring the intersections of beauty and capitalism, the show highlights the emotional intensity of cosmetics and makeup, revealing how the body, skin and psyche are metaphorically reconstructed amid the expansion of the consumer goods market—a market fueled by spontaneous, conscious responses to users’ trauma. Rather than offering a simple expression of beauty, the exhibition proposes a psychological, sensory and materialist aesthetic composed of powders, lotions, sprays and plastic packaging, raising urgent questions about our relationship with our own bodies.

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • Paolo Sorrentino’s Buzzy Drama ‘La Grazia’ Gets U.S. Release Date

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    Italian director Paolo Sorrentino’s La Grazia, widely hailed as a return to form for the 2013 Oscar winner, has locked down its theatrical release date in North American cinemas. Mubi will open La Grazia in theaters on Dec. 5, teeing up a potential Oscars campaign for its inimitable Italian star, Toni Servillo.

    La Grazia opened the 82nd Venice Film Festival last week and was greeted with mostly rave reviews, including from The Hollywood Reporter.

    “By the director’s standards, this is a sober and distinctly mature film, centered by the unwavering composure of Servillo’s [character] De Santis,” wrote THR’s chief critic, David Rooney. “But it’s not without the customary creative arias, the witty humor and visual delights that have distinguished Sorrentino’s best work.”

    Heaping praise on Servillo’s performance, Rooney summed up his take, writing: “The alchemical ideal in actor-director collaborations.”

    A political drama of the most introspective kind, La Grazia (which means “Grace” in Italian), follows Servillo as President Mariano De Santis, a widowed jurist in his final months in office at the peak of Italian political power. Confronted with soul-crushing dilemmas — the proposed legalization of euthanasia in Catholic Italy and the pardoning of two convicted killers — De Santis wrestles with moral uncertainty while haunted by memories of his late wife’s infidelity. Anchored by solemn rituals and Sorrentino’s signature surreal elegance, the film in many ways operates as a counterpoint to the director’s best-known work, The Great Beauty, in its meditations on the Italian national character and personal longing and regret.

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • The Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2025 Venice Film Festival

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    Emma Stone. Getty Images

    The Venice Film Festival is always a glamorous affair, but this year’s prestigious competition just might be the most star-studded yet. The 11-day extravaganza, which kicks off on August 27 and runs through September 6, is filled with noteworthy film premieres, screenings and fêtes, all of which are attended by A-list filmmakers and celebrities.

    The 2025 lineup is replete with buzzy, highly-anticipated films; the main competition includes Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia, starring Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, with Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth and Christoph Waltz, Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly, with George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Laura Dern and Billy Crudup, and Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite, starring Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson.

    Luca Guadagnino’s eagerly awaited After the Hunt is also premiering at the festival out of competition, featuring Julia Roberts, Ayo Edebiri, Chloë Sevigny, Andrew Garfield and Michael Stuhlbarg.

    Alexander Payne is the jury president for the 82nd Venice International Film Festival, and this year’s Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement which will be awarded to Werner Herzog and Kim Novak.

    Glitzy movie premieres aside, let’s not forget about the sartorial moments at Venice, because attendees always bring their most fashionable A-game to walk the red carpet in front of the Lido’s Palazzo del Cinema. It’s a week-and-a-half of some of the best style moments of the year, and we’re keeping you updated with all the top ensembles on the Venice red carpet. Below, see the best fashion moments from the 2025 Venice International Film Festival.

    "The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Blunt. Getty Images

    Emily Blunt

    in Tamara Ralph 

    "The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Halsey. WireImage

    Halsey

    "The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Smashing Machine" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Dwayne Johnson. Getty Images

    Dwayne Johnson

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 6 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 6 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman. FilmMagic

    Kaia Gerber and Lewis Pullman

    Gerber in Givenchy 

    "The Testament Of Ann Lee" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Testament Of Ann Lee" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Amanda Seyfried. Getty Images

    Amanda Seyfried

    in Prada

    "The Testament Of Ann Lee" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Testament Of Ann Lee" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Thomasin McKenzie. Corbis via Getty Images

    Thomasin McKenzie

    in Rodarte 

    The 82nd Venice International Film Festival - Day 6The 82nd Venice International Film Festival - Day 6
    Stacy Martin. Deadline via Getty Images

    Stacy Martin

    "The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alexa Chung. Corbis via Getty Images

    Alexa Chung

    in Chloe

    "The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alicia Vikander. Getty Images

    Alicia Vikander

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImag

    Cate Blanchett

    in Maison Margiela 

    "Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Charlotte Rampling. WireImage

    Charlotte Rampling

    in Saint Laurent 

    "Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Mayim Bialik. Getty Images

    Mayim Bialik

    in Saint Laurent 

    Filming Italy Venice Award Delegation Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Delegation Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alicia Silverstone. WireImage

    Alicia Silverstone

    "Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Father Mother Sister Brother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Luka Sabbat. WireImage

    Luka Sabbat

    "The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"The Wizard Of The Kremlin" (Le Mage Du Kremlin) Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Jude Law. Corbis via Getty Images

    Jude Law

    Filming Italy Venice Award Delegation Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Delegation Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Da’Vine Joy Randolph. WireImage

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph

    in Alfredo Martinez 

    "Motor City" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Motor City" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Shailene Woodley. FilmMagic

    Shailene Woodley

    in Fendi

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Molly Gordon. Getty Images

    Molly Gordon

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Mia Goth. Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Dior 

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Jacob Elordi. WireImage

    Jacob Elordi

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Kaitlyn Dever. Getty Images

    Kaitlyn Dever

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Callum Turner. Getty Images

    Callum Turner

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Leslie Bibb. Getty Images

    Leslie Bibb

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Paris Jackson. Getty Images

    Paris Jackson

    in Trussardi

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Gemma Chan. Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImag

    Gemma Chan

    in Armani Privé

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley. Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImag

    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley

    in Armani Privé

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sofia Carson. WireImage

    Sofia Carson

    in Armani Privé

    "Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Suki Waterhouse. Getty Images

    Suki Waterhouse

    in Rabanne 

    "Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. Getty Images

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Julia Roberts. WireImage

    Julia Roberts

    in Versace 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Ayo Edebiri. Getty Images

    Ayo Edebiri

    in Chanel

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Monica Barbaro. WireImage

    Monica Barbaro

    in Dior 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Andrew Garfield. WireImage

    Andrew Garfield

    in Dior 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Chloe Sevigny. Getty Images

    Chloe Sevigny

    in Saint Laurent 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Lady Amelia Spencer and Lady Eliza Spencer. Getty Images

    Lady Amelia Spencer and Lady Eliza Spencer

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Isabeli Fontana. Getty Images

    Isabeli Fontana

    in Yara Shoemaker 

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Chloe Sevigny. WireImage

    Chloe Sevigny

    in Simone Rocha 

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Ayo Edebiri. Corbis via Getty Images

    Ayo Edebiri

    in Chanel  

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Julia Roberts. WireImage

    Julia Roberts

    in Versace 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Mia Goth. Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Versace 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    George Clooney and Amal Clooney. WireImage

    George Clooney and Amal Clooney

    Amal Clooney in vintage Jean-Louis Scherrer 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. WireImage

    Laura Dern

    in Armani Privé

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Riley Keough. WireImage

    Riley Keough

    in Chloe 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig. Getty Images

    Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig

    Gerwig in Rodarte 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Molly Sims. WireImage

    Molly Sims

    in Pamella Roland

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup. Getty Images

    Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup

    Watts in Valentino, Crudup in Celine 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Shailene Woodley. WireImage

    Shailene Woodley

    in Kallmeyer 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Eve Hewson. WireImage

    Eve Hewson

    in Schiaparelli

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. WireImage

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sunny Madeline Sandler, Sadie Madison Sandler, Jackie Sandler and Adam Sandler. WireImage

    Sunny Madeline Sandler, Sadie Madison Sandler, Jackie Sandler and Adam Sandler

    "Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Stone. WireImage

    Emma Stone

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alicia Silverstone. WireImage

    Alicia Silverstone

    in Prada

    "Il Rapimento Di Arabella" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Il Rapimento Di Arabella" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Benedetta Porcaroli. Getty Images

    Benedetta Porcaroli

    in Prada

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Riley Keough. WireImage

    Riley Keough

    in Chanel 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. WireImage

    Laura Dern

    in Saint Laurent 

    "Bugonia" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Stone. Getty Images

    Emma Stone

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Greta Gerwig. WireImage

    Greta Gerwig

    in Prada

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. WireImage

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Eve Hewson. WireImage

    Eve Hewson

    in Erdem 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. WireImage

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Claire Holt. WireImage

    Claire Holt

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Barbara Palvin. Getty Images

    Barbara Palvin

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Zhao Tao. WireImage

    Zhao Tao

    in Prada

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Fernanda Torres. WireImage

    Fernanda Torres

    in Armani Privé

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Heidi Klum and Leni Klum. WireImage

    Heidi Klum and Leni Klum

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Charleen Weiss. WireImage

    Charleen Weiss

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Charlotte Wells. WireImage

    Charlotte Wells

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Paola Turani. WireImage

    Paola Turani

    in Galia Lahav 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    RaMell Ross. WireImage

    RaMell Ross

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Shannon Murphy. WireImage

    Shannon Murphy

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emanuela Fanelli. WireImage

    Emanuela Fanelli

    in Armani Privé

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Benedetta Porcaroli and Carolina Cavalli. Getty Images

    Benedetta Porcaroli and Carolina Cavalli

    "Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Noomi Rapace. Corbis via Getty Images

    Noomi Rapace

    in Courrèges

    "Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sylvia Hoeks. Getty Images

    Sylvia Hoeks

    in Prada

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. Getty Images

    Alba Rohrwacher

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. Getty Images

    Laura Dern

    in Emilia Wickstead

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola

    "Jay Kelly" Cast Arrive In Venice For The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Cast Arrive In Venice For The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Amal Clooney and George Clooney. GC Images

    Amal Clooney and George Clooney

    Amal Clooney in Balmain 

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2025 Venice Film Festival

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • Latam-GPT: The Free, Open Source, and Collaborative AI of Latin America

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    Latam-GPT is new large language model being developed in and for Latin America. The project, led by the nonprofit Chilean National Center for Artificial Intelligence (CENIA), aims to help the region achieve technological independence by developing an open source AI model trained on Latin American languages and contexts.

    “This work cannot be undertaken by just one group or one country in Latin America: It is a challenge that requires everyone’s participation,” says Álvaro Soto, director of CENIA, in an interview with WIRED en Español. “Latam-GPT is a project that seeks to create an open, free, and, above all, collaborative AI model. We’ve been working for two years with a very bottom-up process, bringing together citizens from different countries who want to collaborate. Recently, it has also seen some more top-down initiatives, with governments taking an interest and beginning to participate in the project.”

    The project stands out for its collaborative spirit. “We’re not looking to compete with OpenAI, DeepSeek, or Google. We want a model specific to Latin America and the Caribbean, aware of the cultural requirements and challenges that this entails, such as understanding different dialects, the region’s history, and unique cultural aspects,” explains Soto.

    Thanks to 33 strategic partnerships with institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean, the project has gathered a corpus of data exceeding eight terabytes of text, the equivalent of millions of books. This information base has enabled the development of a language model with 50 billion parameters, a scale that makes it comparable to GPT-3.5 and gives it a medium to high capacity to perform complex tasks such as reasoning, translation, and associations.

    Latam-GPT is being trained on a regional database that compiles information from 20 Latin American countries and Spain, with an impressive total of 2,645,500 documents. The distribution of data shows a significant concentration in the largest countries in the region, with Brazil the leader with 685,000 documents, followed by Mexico with 385,000, Spain with 325,000, Colombia with 220,000, and Argentina with 210,000 documents. The numbers reflect the size of these markets, their digital development, and the availability of structured content.

    “Initially, we’ll launch a language model. We expect its performance in general tasks to be close to that of large commercial models, but with superior performance in topics specific to Latin America. The idea is that, if we ask it about topics relevant to our region, its knowledge will be much deeper,” Soto explains.

    The first model is the starting point for developing a family of more advanced technologies in the future, including ones with image and video, and for scaling up to larger models. “As this is an open project, we want other institutions to be able to use it. A group in Colombia could adapt it for the school education system or one in Brazil could adapt it for the health sector. The idea is to open the door for different organizations to generate specific models for particular areas like agriculture, culture, and others,” explains the CENIA director.

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    Anna Lagos

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  • Mayra Hermosillo’s ‘Vanilla’ Explores Family and Identity in an All-Female Household (Exclusive Venice Trailer)

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    Mexico in the late 1980s. The eight-year-old Roberta watches her family of seven women fight to save their home from mounting debt. It is a struggle that will reshape how she sees herself and those around her. This is the premise of Vanilla (Vainilla), the feature directorial debut by writer-director Mayra Hermosillo, an actress you may know from Netflix’s Narcos: Mexico or Amat Escalante’s Lost in the Night.

    World premiering Wednesday, Sept. 3, in the Giornate degli Autori (Venice Days) lineup, a sidebar of the Venice International Film Festival, the ensemble cast includes Aurora Dávila, María Castellá, Natalia Plascencia, Paloma Petra, Rosy Rojas, Fernanda Baca and Lola Ochoa.

    The cinematography is courtesy of Jessica Villamil, with Sonia Sánchez Carrasco handling editing. The producers are Stacy Perskie (Bardo, Spectre), Karla Luna Cantú, Andrea Porras Madero and Paloma Petra. Bendita Film Sales is handling world sales.

    Based on personal experiences and set in a nontraditional, all-female, multigenerational household, Vanilla is about “the difficult process of breaking free from the limitations of inherited social expectations of women,” highlights a description of the movie. As such, it is “a deeply sensitive exploration of identity, family, and the experience of womanhood.”

    The filmmaker tapped into her personal and professional experience for Vanilla. “I’ve had the privilege of learning from filmmakers whose work encouraged me to find my own voice as a writer and director,” says Hermosillo. “That journey led me to Vanilla, a story rooted in my childhood in northern Mexico. I grew up in a nontraditional home, and although it felt normal to me, the conservative community around us didn’t see it that way.”

    She continues: “The film follows Roberta, a young girl shaped by this environment, who believes she can somehow fix her family’s situation. It’s a story about growing up too soon, about how shame and love intertwine, and how identity is formed when you live outside the norm.”

    Vanilla

    Courtesy of Venice Days

    Concludes Hermosillo: “Rather than criticize tradition, Vanilla asks what it means to belong, and how we judge lives different from our own. Making this film in my hometown is my way of honoring where I come from, while opening the door for other stories that explore family, gender and resilience in places often overlooked by cinema.”

    The trailer for Vanilla that THR can exclusively present below hints at how the movie features all sorts, including signs of financial challenges, a contest featuring a beach holiday as a prize, smiles, dancing, the beach, ice cream.

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    Georg Szalai

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  • The Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2025 Venice Film Festival

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    Emma Stone. Getty Images

    The Venice Film Festival is always a glamorous affair, but this year’s prestigious competition just might be the most star-studded yet. The 11-day extravaganza, which kicks off on August 27 and runs through September 6, is filled with noteworthy film premieres, screenings and fêtes, all of which are attended by A-list filmmakers and celebrities.

    The 2025 lineup is replete with buzzy, highly-anticipated films; the main competition includes Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia, starring Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons, Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, with Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth and Christoph Waltz, Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly, with George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Laura Dern and Billy Crudup, and Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite, starring Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson.

    Luca Guadagnino’s eagerly awaited After the Hunt is also premiering at the festival out of competition, featuring Julia Roberts, Ayo Edebiri, Chloë Sevigny, Andrew Garfield and Michael Stuhlbarg.

    Alexander Payne is the jury president for the 82nd Venice International Film Festival, and this year’s Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement which will be awarded to Werner Herzog and Kim Novak.

    Glitzy movie premieres aside, let’s not forget about the sartorial moments at Venice, because attendees always bring their most fashionable A-game to walk the red carpet in front of the Lido’s Palazzo del Cinema. It’s a week-and-a-half of some of the best style moments of the year, and we’re keeping you updated with all the top ensembles on the Venice red carpet. Below, see the best fashion moments from the 2025 Venice International Film Festival.

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Molly Gordon. Getty Images

    Molly Gordon

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Mia Goth. Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Dior 

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Jacob Elordi. WireImage

    Jacob Elordi

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Kaitlyn Dever. Getty Images

    Kaitlyn Dever

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Callum Turner. Getty Images

    Callum Turner

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Leslie Bibb. Getty Images

    Leslie Bibb

    in Giorgio Armani

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Paris Jackson. Getty Images

    Paris Jackson

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Gemma Chan. Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImag

    Gemma Chan

    in Armani Privé

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley. Max Cisotti/Dave Benett/WireImag

    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley

    in Armani Privé

    "Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Frankenstein" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sofia Carson. WireImage

    Sofia Carson

    in Armani Privé

    "Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Suki Waterhouse. Getty Images

    Suki Waterhouse

    in Rabanne 

    "Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Broken English" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. Getty Images

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Julia Roberts. WireImage

    Julia Roberts

    in Versace 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Ayo Edebiri. Getty Images

    Ayo Edebiri

    in Chanel

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Monica Barbaro. WireImage

    Monica Barbaro

    in Dior 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Andrew Garfield. WireImage

    Andrew Garfield

    in Dior 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Chloe Sevigny. Getty Images

    Chloe Sevigny

    in Saint Laurent 

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Lady Amelia Spencer and Lady Eliza Spencer. Getty Images

    Lady Amelia Spencer and Lady Eliza Spencer

    "After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Isabeli Fontana. Getty Images

    Isabeli Fontana

    in Yara Shoemaker 

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Chloe Sevigny. WireImage

    Chloe Sevigny

    in Simone Rocha 

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Ayo Edebiri. Corbis via Getty Images

    Ayo Edebiri

    in Chanel  

    "After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"After The Hunt" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Julia Roberts. WireImage

    Julia Roberts

    in Versace 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Mia Goth. Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Versace 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 3 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    George Clooney and Amal Clooney. WireImage

    George Clooney and Amal Clooney

    Amal Clooney in vintage Jean-Louis Scherrer 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. WireImage

    Laura Dern

    in Armani Privé

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Riley Keough. WireImage

    Riley Keough

    in Chloe 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig. Getty Images

    Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig

    Gerwig in Rodarte 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Molly Sims. WireImage

    Molly Sims

    in Pamella Roland

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup. Getty Images

    Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup

    Watts in Valentino, Crudup in Celine 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Shailene Woodley. WireImage

    Shailene Woodley

    in Kallmeyer 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Eve Hewson. WireImage

    Eve Hewson

    in Schiaparelli

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. WireImage

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sunny Madeline Sandler, Sadie Madison Sandler, Jackie Sandler and Adam Sandler. WireImage

    Sunny Madeline Sandler, Sadie Madison Sandler, Jackie Sandler and Adam Sandler

    "Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Stone. WireImage

    Emma Stone

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alicia Silverstone. WireImage

    Alicia Silverstone

    in Prada

    "Il Rapimento Di Arabella" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Il Rapimento Di Arabella" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Benedetta Porcaroli. Getty Images

    Benedetta Porcaroli

    in Prada

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Riley Keough. WireImage

    Riley Keough

    in Chanel 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. WireImage

    Laura Dern

    in Saint Laurent 

    "Bugonia" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Bugonia" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Stone. Getty Images

    Emma Stone

    in Louis Vuitton 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Greta Gerwig. WireImage

    Greta Gerwig

    in Prada

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. WireImage

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Photocall - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Eve Hewson. WireImage

    Eve Hewson

    in Erdem 

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 2 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. WireImage

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Claire Holt. WireImage

    Claire Holt

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Barbara Palvin. Getty Images

    Barbara Palvin

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Zhao Tao. WireImage

    Zhao Tao

    in Prada

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Fernanda Torres. WireImage

    Fernanda Torres

    in Armani Privé

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Heidi Klum and Leni Klum. WireImage

    Heidi Klum and Leni Klum

    in Intimissimi 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Charleen Weiss. WireImage

    Charleen Weiss

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Charlotte Wells. WireImage

    Charlotte Wells

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Paola Turani. WireImage

    Paola Turani

    in Galia Lahav 

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    RaMell Ross. WireImage

    RaMell Ross

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Shannon Murphy. WireImage

    Shannon Murphy

    "La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"La Grazia" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emanuela Fanelli. WireImage

    Emanuela Fanelli

    in Armani Privé

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Benedetta Porcaroli and Carolina Cavalli. Getty Images

    Benedetta Porcaroli and Carolina Cavalli

    "Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Noomi Rapace. Corbis via Getty Images

    Noomi Rapace

    in Courrèges

    "Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Mother" Red Carpet - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Sylvia Hoeks. Getty Images

    Sylvia Hoeks

    in Prada

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. Getty Images

    Alba Rohrwacher

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Laura Dern. Getty Images

    Laura Dern

    in Emilia Wickstead

    Celebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film FestivalCelebrity Sightings - Day 1 - The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola. Getty Images

    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola

    "Jay Kelly" Cast Arrive In Venice For The 82nd Venice International Film Festival"Jay Kelly" Cast Arrive In Venice For The 82nd Venice International Film Festival
    Amal Clooney and George Clooney. GC Images

    Amal Clooney and George Clooney

    Amal Clooney in Balmain 

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2025 Venice Film Festival

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • U.S. plans to remove nearly 700 unaccompanied migrant children, senator says

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    WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is planning to remove nearly 700 Guatemalan children who had come to the U.S. without their parents, according to a letter sent Friday by Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, and the Central American country said it was ready to take them in.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Trump administration plans to remove nearly 700 Guatemalan children who crossed into the U.S. without their parents, according to a letter that Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon sent Friday to the office responsible for caring for the children in the U.S.
    • Wyden argues that “this move threatens to separate children from their families, lawyers, and support systems, to thrust them back into the very conditions they are seeking refuge from”
    • Guatemala’s foreign minister says the government has told the U.S. it’s willing to receive hundreds of Guatemalan minors
    • The move is another step in the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration enforcement efforts, even as the treatment of unaccompanied children is one of the most sensitive issues in immigration

    The removals would violate the Office of Refugee Resettlement’s “child welfare mandate and this country’s long-established obligation to these children,” Wyden told Angie Salazar, acting director of the office within the Department of Health and Human Services that is responsible for migrant children who arrive in the U.S. alone.

    “This move threatens to separate children from their families, lawyers, and support systems, to thrust them back into the very conditions they are seeking refuge from, and to disappear vulnerable children beyond the reach of American law and oversight,” the Democratic senator wrote, asking for the deportation plans to be terminated.

    It is another step in the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration enforcement efforts, which include plans to surge officers to Chicago for an immigration crackdown, ramping up deportations and ending protections for people who have had permission to live and work in the United States.

    Guatemala says it’s ready to take in the children

    Guatemalan Foreign Affairs Minister Carlos Martínez said Friday that the government has told the U.S. it is willing to receive hundreds of Guatemalan minors who arrived unaccompanied to the United States and are being held in U.S. facilities.

    Guatemala is particularly concerned about minors who could age out of the facilities for children and be sent to adult detention centers, he said. The exact number of children to be returned remains in flux, but they are currently discussing a little over 600. He said no date has been set yet for their return.

    That would be almost double what Guatemala previously agreed to. The head of the country’s immigration service said last month that the government was looking to repatriate 341 unaccompanied minors who were being held in U.S. facilities.

    “The idea is to bring them back before they reach 18 years old so that they are not taken to an adult detention center,” Guatemala Immigration Institute Director Danilo Rivera said at the time. He said it would be done at Guatemala’s expense and would be a form of voluntary return.

    The plan was announced by President Bernardo Arévalo, who said then that the government had a moral and legal obligation to advocate for the children. His comments came days after U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visited Guatemala.

    Wyden’s letter says the children ‘will be forcibly removed’

    The White House and the Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the latest move, which was first reported by CNN.

    Quoting unidentified whistleblowers, Wyden’s letter said children who do not have a parent or legal guardian as a sponsor or who don’t have an asylum case already underway, “will be forcibly removed from the country.”

    “Unaccompanied children are some of the most vulnerable children entrusted to the government’s care,” Wyden wrote. “In many cases, these children and their families have had to make the unthinkable choice to face danger and separation in search of safety.”

    The idea of repatriating such a large number of children to their home country also raised concerns with activists who work with children navigating the immigration process.

    “We are outraged by the Trump administration’s renewed assault on the rights of immigrant children,” said Lindsay Toczylowski, president and CEO of Immigrant Defenders Law Center. “We are not fooled by their attempt to mask these efforts as mere ‘repatriations.’ This is yet another calculated attempt to sever what little due process remains in the immigration system.”

    Due to their age and the trauma unaccompanied immigrant children have often experienced getting to the U.S., their treatment is one of the most sensitive issues in immigration. Advocacy groups already have sued to ask courts to halt new Trump administration vetting procedures for unaccompanied children, saying the changes are keeping families separated longer and are inhumane.

    Migrant children traveling without their parents or guardians are handed over to the Office of Refugee Resettlement when they are encountered by officials along the U.S.-Mexico border. Once in the U.S., they often live in government-supervised shelters or with foster care families until they can be released to a sponsor — usually a family member — living in the country.

    They can request asylum, juvenile immigration status or visas for victims of sexual exploitation.

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    Associated Press

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  • Colleges struggle as Trump policies send international enrollment plummeting

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    One international student after another told the University of Central Missouri this summer that they couldn’t get a visa, and many struggled to even land an interview for one.


    What You Need To Know

    • Signs of a decline in international students have unsettled colleges around the U.S., but some schools are especially vulnerable
    • Colleges with large numbers of foreign students and small endowments have little financial cushion to protect them from steep losses in tuition money
    • International students represent at least 20% of enrollment at more than 100 colleges with endowments of less than $250,000 per student, according to an Associated Press analysis
    • Many are small Christian colleges, but the group also includes large universities such as Northeastern and Carnegie Mellon

    Even though demand was just as high as ever, half as many new international graduate students showed up for fall classes compared to last year.

    The decline represents a hit to the bottom line for Central Missouri, a small public university that operates close to its margins with an endowment of only $65 million. International students typically account for nearly a quarter of its tuition revenue.

    “We aren’t able to subsidize domestic students as much when we have fewer international students who are bringing revenue to us,” said Roger Best, the university’s president.

    Signs of a decline in international students have unsettled colleges around the U.S. Colleges with large numbers of foreign students and small endowments have little financial cushion to protect them from steep losses in tuition money.

    International students represent at least 20% of enrollment at more than 100 colleges with endowments of less than $250,000 per student, according to an Associated Press analysis. Many are small Christian colleges, but the group also includes large universities such as Northeastern and Carnegie Mellon.

    The extent of the change in enrollment will not be clear until the fall, Some groups have forecast a decline of as much as 40%, with a huge impact on college budgets and the wider U.S. economy.

    International students face new scrutiny on several fronts

    As part of a broader effort to reshape higher education, President Donald Trump has pressed colleges to limit their numbers of international students and heightened scrutiny of student visas. His administration has moved to deport foreign students involved in pro-Palestinian activism, and new student visa appointments were put on hold for weeks as it ramped up vetting of applicants’ social media.

    On Wednesday, the Department of Homeland Security said it will propose a rule that would put new limits on the time foreign students can stay in the U.S.

    The policies have introduced severe financial instability for colleges, said Justin Gest, a professor at George Mason University who studies the politics of immigration.

    Foreign students are not eligible for federal financial aid and often pay full price for tuition — double or even triple the in-state rate paid by domestic students at public universities.

    “To put it more dollars and cents-wise, if an international student comes in and pays $80,000 a year in tuition, that gives universities the flexibility to offer lower fees and more scholarship money to American students,” Gest said.

    A Sudanese student barely made it to the U.S. for the start of classes

    Ahmed Ahmed, a Sudanese student, nearly didn’t make it to the U.S. for his freshman year at the University of Rochester.

    The Trump administration in June announced a travel ban on 12 countries, including Sudan. Diplomatic officials assured Ahmed he could still enter the U.S. because his visa was issued before the ban. But when he tried to board a flight to leave for the U.S. from Uganda, where he stayed with family during the summer, he was turned away and advised to contact an embassy about his visa.

    With the help of the University of Rochester’s international office, Ahmed was able to book another flight.

    At Rochester, where he received a scholarship to study electrical engineering, Ahmed, 19, said he feels supported by the staff. But he also finds himself on edge and understands why other students might not want to subject themselves to the scrutiny in the U.S., particularly those who are entirely paying their own way.

    “I feel like I made it through, but I’m one of the last people to make it through,” he said.

    Colleges are taking steps to blunt the impact

    In recent years, international students have made up about 30% of enrollment at Central Missouri, which has a total of around 12,800 students. In anticipation of the hit to international enrollment, Central Missouri cut a cost-of-living raise for employees. It has pushed off infrastructure improvements planned for its campus and has been looking for other ways to cut costs.

    Small schools — typically classified as those with no more than 5,000 students — tend to have less financial flexibility and will be especially vulnerable, said Dick Startz, an economics professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

    Lee University, a Christian institution with 3,500 students in Tennessee, is expecting 50 to 60 international students enrolled this fall, down from 82 the previous school year, representing a significant drop in revenue for the school, said Roy Y. Chan, the university’s director of graduate studies.

    The school already has increased tuition by 20% over the past five years to account for a decrease in overall enrollment, he said.

    “Since we’re a smaller liberal arts campus, tuition cost is our main, primary revenue,” Chan said, as opposed to government funding or donations.

    The strains on international enrollment only add to distress for schools already on the financial brink.

    Colleges around the country have been closing as they cope with declines in domestic enrollment, a consequence of changing demographics and the effects of the pandemic. Nationwide, private colleges have been closing at a rate of about two per month, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association.

    The number of high school graduates in the U.S. is expected to decline through 2041, when there will be 13% fewer compared to 2024, according to projections from the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education.

    “That means that if you lost participation from international students, it’s even worse,” Startz said.

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    Associated Press

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  • Judge issues order blocking Trump effort to expand speedy deportations

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    WASHINGTON — A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from carrying out speedy deportations of undocumented migrants detained in the interior of the United States.


    What You Need To Know

    • A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from carrying out speedy deportations of undocumented migrants detained in the interior of the United States
    • It’s a setback for the Republican administration’s efforts to remove migrants from the country without appearing before a judge first
    • U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb wrote in a 48-page opinion issued Friday night that the effort is based on the argument “that those who entered the country illegally are entitled to no process under the Fifth Amendment, but instead must accept whatever grace Congress affords them”
    • The administration says the judge’s ruling ignores federal law and Trump’s power under the Constitution

    The move is a setback for the President Donald Trump’s efforts to expand the use of the federal expedited removal statute to quickly remove some migrants in the country illegally without appearing before a judge first.

    Trump promised to engineer a massive deportation operation during his 2024 campaign if voters returned him to the White House. And he set a goal of carrying out 1 million deportations a year in his second term.

    But U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb suggested the administration’s expanded use of the expedited removal of migrants is trampling on individuals’ due process rights.

    “In defending this skimpy process, the Government makes a truly startling argument: that those who entered the country illegally are entitled to no process under the Fifth Amendment, but instead must accept whatever grace Congress affords them,” Cobb wrote in a 48-page opinion issued Friday night. “Were that right, not only noncitizens, but everyone would be at risk.”

    The Department of Homeland Security announced shortly after Trump came to office in January that it was expanding the use of expedited removal, the fast-track deportation of undocumented migrants who have been in the U.S. less than two years.

    The effort has triggered lawsuits by the American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant rights groups.

    DHS in a statement said Cobb’s “ruling ignores the President’s clear authorities under both Article II of the Constitution and the plain language of federal law.” It said Trump “has a mandate to arrest and deport the worst of the worst” and that “we have the law, facts, and common sense on our side.”

    Before the administration’s push to expand such speedy deportations, expedited removal was only used for migrants who were stopped within 100 miles of the border and who had been in the U.S. for less than 14 days.

    Cobb, who was nominated by Democratic President Joe Biden, didn’t question the constitutionality of the expedited removal statute, or its application at the border.

    “It merely holds that in applying the statute to a huge group of people living in the interior of the country who have not previously been subject to expedited removal, the Government must afford them due process,” she wrote.

    She added that “prioritizing speed over all else will inevitably lead the Government to erroneously remove people via this truncated process.”

    Cobb earlier this month agreed to temporarily block the administration’s efforts to expand fast-track deportations of immigrants who legally entered the U.S. under a process known as humanitarian parole. The ruling could benefit hundreds of thousands of people.

    In that case the judge said Homeland Security exceeded its statutory authority in its effort to expand expedited removal for many immigrants. The judge said those immigrants are facing perils that outweigh any harm from “pressing pause” on the administration’s plans.

    Since May, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have positioned themselves in hallways to arrest people after judges accept government requests to dismiss deportation cases. After the arrests, the government renews deportation proceedings but under fast-track authority.

    Although fast-track deportations can be put on hold by filing an asylum claim, people may be unaware of that right and, even if they are, can be swiftly removed if they fail an initial screening.

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    Associated Press

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  • Venice: Anders Thomas Jensen on ‘The Last Viking,’ Mads Mikkelsen and Why He’s Team ABBA

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    If you’ve loved a Danish film in the past 20 years, there’s a good chance it was written by Anders Thomas Jensen. The wildly prolific Danish screenwriter has been a co-author with Susanne Bier — on the Oscar-winning In a Better World (2010), as well as Brothers (2004) and After the Wedding (2006), both of which got U.S. remakes) — Nicolaj Arcel (The Promised Land from 2023) and Kristian Levring (2000’s The King is Alive), while still regularly churning out darkly comic gems as a writer-director.

    He started with 2000’s Flickering Lights, where four inept crooks hole up in the country and accidentally open a restaurant. The Green Butchers (2003) went darker, with Mads Mikkelsen and Nikolaj Lie Kaas discovering human flesh is a best-seller — Hannibal with slapstick. Adam’s Apples (2005) upped the dysfunction, pitting a neo-Nazi, a priest and assorted misfits against stray bullets and falling fruit in a warped take on the Book of Job. A decade later came Men & Chicken (2015), where five maladjusted brothers learn their quirks may stem from dad’s Frankenstein-style experiments. Most recently, Riders of Justice (2020) cast Mikkelsen as a grieving soldier turned vigilante in a revenge thriller that mixes John Wick-esque carnage with math jokes.

    The Last Viking, premiering out of competition in Venice and being sold by TrustNordisk, may be Jensen’s wildest yet. Kaas plays Anker, a bank robber whose loot is entrusted to his traumatized younger brother Manfred (Mikkelsen). But by the time Kaas is released from prison, Manfred — a former viking obsessive — has been diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder. He now believes he’s John Lennon. Kaas sees no alternative: He has to find a collection of similarly afflicted patients — ones that think they’re George, Ringo and Paul — and bring the Fab Four back together, all in the hopes of jogging his brother’s memory and finding the cash before their past catches up with them. An action comedy combined with a sharp but still sweet satire on identity politics, The Last Viking sees Jensen at the top of his game.

    Jensen spoke to The Hollywood Reporter about finding the funny in trauma, giving Mikkelsen his most challenging role yet and why, in the never-ending Beatles vs. ABBA debate, he’s team Bjorn.

    This is a crazy idea for a film. What was the spark that initiated it?

    You always get this question, and I like the idea of being in the shower, and an idea just pops up. It’s not like that for me. Ideas come when I work with them. For the last 15 years, every conversation with my kids and everywhere in the media has been about identity. The whole Western civilization has, instead of looking out towards others, turned the camera on themselves, because they suddenly could, because of social media and whatever.

    So I wanted to do something about identity. And I had this idea about a boy who always wanted to be a Viking and wasn’t allowed to do it. I sat down with [Danish producer] Peter Aalbaek Jensen and was telling him about this old idea I had about a psychiatrist putting together the Beatles with people suffering from identity disorders. He told me to work that into it. It was a lot of different stuff put all together.

    You have a lot of empathy for your characters, but you also seem to be mocking some of the more extreme elements of identity culture, about everyone having the right to their own version of reality.

    I don’t try to mock. And this is an elevated story, it’s sort of absurd. I think it’s fantastic that we live in a part of the world at a time where everybody can seek out who they are and become who they really are. But when the surroundings have to adapt to the reality of one individual, things become absurd. That’s basically where a lot of the comedy in the movie comes from.

    That seems to be personified in Mads Mikkelsen’s character, who is convinced he’s John Lennon. It’s an “identity” for Mikkelsen unlike anything we’ve seen him do before.

    I wouldn’t have dared to do this if it hadn’t been with Mads. It’s not easy what he’s doing. The whole struggle was to get real emotions into a character that is this far out and still make it relatable. I think he pulls it off. Mads approached this role with caution. I know he was challenged by it. But he comes across as real. You believe that this person exists. He lands.

    There’s another conflict in the story, between Beatles and ABBA fans…

    My whole childhood, all the intellectuals liked the Beatles. Like all of Scandinavia, I grew up with ABBA. But it was like: ABBA might be fun, but it’s not art. The Beatles, they’re the real thing. ABBA was always in the shadow of the Beatles, intellectually.

    But any dance floor will tell you otherwise. The Beatles is fantastic music and young people today of course, still know the Beatles. But ABBA is part of mainstream culture in a way that nobody could have foreseen.

    Do you see this film as a spiritual sibling to Riders of Justice? I see a lot of thematic connections…

    They are very different in their structure. With Riders of Justice, I think you could teach a class with that structure. The midpoint is exactly halfway through. I don’t think this movie has a midpoint. It’s more experimental. But we are dealing with people who are on the edge of sanity in both films.

    I think in Riders of Justice there’s actually one normal person, the daughter. But in this movie, there’s nobody who isn’t lying to themselves about who they are. There’s nobody who’s straight or normal in this movie. So that’s a little development there. That was my journey. It took my five years to get away from anything normal.

    You bookend the story with a “children’s book” about The Last Viking, in which the push for inclusion involves chopping off hands and legs to make everyone equal. It seems to undermine the more inclusive message about identity in the rest of the film. Why was it important to include it?

    Well, first of all, the book sets the tone that this movie is a fable, a fairy tale. Because the first 20 minutes of the movie look very realistic, almost like a Danish 90s crime movie, like Pusher of something. So you need to tell people they are watching a fable so you don’t get a shock when you hit the second act.

    On the themes, I tried with this movie to represent everything I’ve heard and seen over the last 15 years about identity. The tone of the movie celebrates the idea that we should all be whatever we are, and there should be room for everybody. I had all the characters from my reality represented, except for the older white male, which is why I put in Werner [played by Soren Malling], who writes the children’s book. So that’s his voice telling us: “Hey, there’s a limit to this identity thing. There’s a reality out there too.” I’m not saying that’s my opinion. It’s Werner’s vision.

    I also just thought it was funny to put such violence and absurdity into a children’s book.

    I imagine Werner’s book won’t be a best-seller.

    We’re actually going to publish it as a real kids’ book. For older kids. So we’ll see.

    You’ve had a lot of your work adapted. How involved are you in the remakes?

    I try not to get too involved. Normally, I’ll read the script. With Brothers, I spoke many times with the director, Jim Sheridan, and I really liked the American version. I think it turned out quite good. But normally, I just pass it on and just wait and see what they do with it.

    I learned this very early as a screenwriter, and I tell younger screenwriters this: If you’re too emotional about what you do and how it turns out, you shouldn’t be a screenwriter. Because a script is not a finished piece of art. It is a working tool that you pass on. Others might elevate it, or they may wreck it. If you get depressed for two years every time you go to a screening and see one of your scripts ruined, you won’t get any work done.

    My philosophy is: Make it as good as you can, make sure you’re on the same page with the director and producer, and then lean back and enjoy what you can enjoy and forget the rest.

    You do your own stuff, but you also co-write with other directors — Susanne Bier, Nikolaj Arcel. Do you adjust your voice to match their sensibilities?

    I do. You have to be a sort of chameleon. You try and see what other directors do well. Nikolaj Arcel, for example, is really good at structure, so I won’t put my energy there. For others, it’ll be character. You try and focus your energy on the parts where it needs help.

    And you need to be aware of what movie you’re doing. When I’m writing for Susanne Bier, doing a very dramatic scene, I have to slap myself on the fingers when I’m writing, because I tend to slip in jokes in what’s supposed to be a melodrama.

    What’s up next, then, another directorial effort?

    I’m writing a few screenplays now. I’m doing one with Arcel and I’m working with another director, but I don’t know if it’s going to land, so I won’t put names on it yet. It’s really good that I can both direct and write. Writing is very internal, a kind of lonely process. After a while you really want to go out and direct. Right now, after finishing this film, it’s the exact opposite. Right now, I’m happy not to have 100 people asking me questions every day. I’m looking forward to being alone to write.

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • As the Aichi Triennale Considers Humanity’s Fragile Bond with Nature, Hoor Al Qasimi Reflects on Its Role

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    Adrián Villar Rojas, Mi familia muerta (My Dead Family), 2009. Photo: Carla Barbero

    Launched in 2010, the Aichi Triennale emerged out of the 2005 World Expo (Expo 2005 Aichi), continuing the spirit of global exchange and innovation sparked by the exposition. Quickly establishing itself as one of the most respected international exhibitions in the region, the Triennale takes place in Nagoya, a coastal city on Japan’s Pacific side. Known as Owari during the Edo period, Nagoya later became a key industrial and shipping hub in postwar Japan, with major companies like Toyota shaping its development. Spanning from the Aichi Arts Center in Nagoya to various locations across the city and the more traditional Sato City, the Triennale embodies the tension between rooted traditions and rapid modernization, as well as the interplay between traditional craftsmanship and cutting-edge technology that defines contemporary Japanese society.

    The sixth edition of the Triennale, set to run from September 13 to November 30, 2025, will be led by artistic director Hoor Al Qasimi, who also serves as president and director of the Sharjah Art Foundation. One month before the opening, Observer sat down with Al Qasimi to learn more about this edition and discuss the role of biennials and triennials in a rapidly changing world.

    This year, the Aichi Triennale will feature works by sixty artists and groups from twenty-two countries and territories under the highly poetic title “A Time Between Ashes and Roses,” which explores the contemporary divide between humans and nature, along with the fragility of our times. “It’s about our primordial connection to nature,” Al Qasimi tells Observer. “I wanted to juxtapose these two extremes of our relationship with the environment—both generative and destructive.” She selected a poetic title not only because poetry holds deep personal significance, but also because it leaves room for interpretation, expressing a more universal sentiment.

    A woman stands against a textured brick wall, wearing a striking bright red cape with gold buttons and embroidered floral motifs on the chest pockets. She pairs the outfit with black pants, black boots, and a chunky gold bracelet. Her dark hair is styled simply, and she gazes directly at the camera with a confident, composed expressionA woman stands against a textured brick wall, wearing a striking bright red cape with gold buttons and embroidered floral motifs on the chest pockets. She pairs the outfit with black pants, black boots, and a chunky gold bracelet. Her dark hair is styled simply, and she gazes directly at the camera with a confident, composed expression
    Hoor Al Qasimi. Photo: Sebastian Boettcher

    The title is drawn from a 1970 poem by Syrian poet Adonis, a figure who embodies both the spirit and the troubled history of the contemporary Arab world. In the poem, Adonis wonders how trees can continue to blossom amid war and destruction. “A time between ashes and roses is coming. When everything shall be extinguished, when everything shall begin,” reads the poem, capturing in just a few lines the perpetual cycle of birth, death and renewal that defines the universe.

    “The exhibition aims to raise questions about our relationship with the earth, with the environment, with each other and with the built environment as well,” Al Qasimi explained. Interestingly, many Japanese viewers interpret the title as “heavy,” likely because it echoes the country’s own historical traumas, especially given that this edition of the Triennale coincides with the 80th anniversary of the attack on Hiroshima.

    In addressing these timely questions, Al Qasimi has embraced a global curatorial perspective, selecting an exceptionally diverse group of international artists. While many participants are based in Japan, there is significant representation from the Middle East, along with artists from Asia, Africa, the Americas, Oceania and Europe. Given Al Qasimi’s central role in shaping the artistic ecosystem of the UAE and the broader Gulf region through the Sharjah Art Foundation, it is unsurprising that many of the artists—though perhaps lesser known in international circles—hail from that region.

    A layered, dreamlike painting by Kamala Ibrahim Ishag featuring numerous faces and figures enclosed in translucent cube-like frames, with a central larger cube containing a seated woman, rendered in muted earthy tones with streaks of green, pink, and gray creating a fluid, atmospheric effect.A layered, dreamlike painting by Kamala Ibrahim Ishag featuring numerous faces and figures enclosed in translucent cube-like frames, with a central larger cube containing a seated woman, rendered in muted earthy tones with streaks of green, pink, and gray creating a fluid, atmospheric effect.
    Kamala Ibrahim Ishag, People in Crystal Cubes, 1984. Photo: Shanavas Jamaluddin, Courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation Collection of Sharjah Art Foundation

    When asked whether there’s a particular narrative or recurring theme among artists from the region, Hoor Al Qasimi emphasizes the diversity of their perspectives and research. While they draw from local identities and traditions, she notes that they also engage with broader global issues. “From the individual to the collective, they are all questioning the meaning and impact of our presence in this world, in this moment. I think they’re all addressing different aspects of it, because their practices and locations are different.”

    This edition of the Triennale explores the complex relationship between humans and the planet as viewed through a geological timescale rather than the anthropocentric lens of nationhood, territory or ethnicity. The works do not focus on boundaries, but on entanglement—the interconnected system that binds us. They address universal principles: trust, nurturing and the ability to complement one’s surroundings and environment.

    In a world consumed by an ever-growing number of unresolved conflicts, contemplating the idea of war feels not only timely but essential. The exhibition approaches it as a means of examining war’s impact not only on society and ecosystems, but at a deeper, geological level—understanding trauma as something embedded in the earth’s enduring timeline. It’s a long-term perspective that shifts the focus away from immediate causes or territorial disputes and instead opens up a planetary view.

    Among the notable international names featured in the exhibition, Cannupa Hanska Luger—a Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota, Austrian and Norwegian artist—will present his concept of Future Ancestral, fusing sci-fi and Native American culture to challenge and reframe 21st-century understandings of Indigenous identity. His work emphasizes the relevance of Indigenous knowledge in addressing today’s global challenges. For the first time in Japan, Simone Leigh will exhibit ceramic and bronze sculptures that draw from traditional African forms to center Black female subjectivity and labor, resonating with Wangechi Mutu’s exploration of interconnectivity and hybridity—beings and species rendered through a feminine sensibility rooted in a primordial relationship with the earth and filtered through African spirituality and ancestral traditions.

    Al Qasimi sought to use this Triennale as an opportunity to spotlight contemporary Japanese artists, who comprise a significant portion of the lineup. That required extensive research, not only in the country’s major cultural hubs but also through collaboration with Japanese curators closely attuned to the evolving landscape of the national art scene.

    She appointed Iida Shihoko, who served as curator at the Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery for 11 years, having begun as assistant curator in 1998 during preparations for the gallery’s opening. The curatorial team also includes Irizawa Masaaki, a specialist in contemporary ceramics and current curator at the Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum; Ishikura Toshiaki, an anthropologist and associate professor in the Department of Arts & Roots at the Akita University of Art, who focuses on Pacific Rim comparative mythology and multispecies artistic anthropology; and Cho Sunhye, assistant curator at the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum.

    For performing arts, Al Qasimi enlisted Nakamura Akane, a performance producer who served as program director at ST Spot Yokohama from 2004 to 2008 before founding precog Co., Ltd., which she now leads. On the learning and education side, Al Qasimi is collaborating with architect Tsuji Takuma, whose work centers on the theme of intermittent yet fluid transitions within buildings and spatial environments.

    A colorful, abstract painting split into two panels, depicting distorted, organic humanoid forms in vivid swirling colors against contrasting black and pink backgrounds.A colorful, abstract painting split into two panels, depicting distorted, organic humanoid forms in vivid swirling colors against contrasting black and pink backgrounds.
    Kato Izumi, Untitled, 2023. Photo: Kei Okano Courtesy of the artist / ©2023 Izumi Kato

    “There are a lot of artists out there in Japan, but they don’t always have the opportunity or platform, especially those who don’t live in the main cities,” acknowledges Al Qasimi, after spending more than a year engaging with the scene. “I’m still interested in doing more research,” she adds. Still, it’s difficult to identify a single theme or dominant sensibility in contemporary Japanese artistic practices, which tend to be highly diverse. “They’re all pretty different in their own ways,” she notes.

    To reflect the range of Japanese artistic output and the evolution of different aesthetics, the list also includes two manga artists from different generations. Morohoshi Daijiro (b. 1949) works in the realm of science fiction, blending humor, ancient folklore and Japanese popular culture to imagine a post-human underworld that coexists with everyday life. In contrast, the enigmatic Panpanya—a manga artist active online and at doujinshi (self-published works) conventions since the 2000s—is known for intricate, dystopian narratives rendered in obsessive detail.

    Both artists provide important links to Nextworld (1951) by Osamu Tezuka, a foundational science fiction manga that serves as another reference point anchoring this year’s Triennale theme. Set during the Cold War era, Nextworld critiques escalating tensions between global superpowers while exploring themes of apocalypse and renewal that remain eerily relevant today.

    Another notable Japanese artist in the Triennale is Kato Izumi, whose internationally recognized work blends abstraction and figuration in kaleidoscopic forms that probe the human condition. His paintings and sculptures suggest an infinite range of transformation, transfiguration and hybridization, gesturing toward a post-human future.

     A minimalist display on a white shelf featuring a row of small glass jars with cork lids containing various organic materials suspended in liquid, alongside two reddish clay vessels and small sculptural objects arranged in between. A minimalist display on a white shelf featuring a row of small glass jars with cork lids containing various organic materials suspended in liquid, alongside two reddish clay vessels and small sculptural objects arranged in between.
    Cannupa Hanska Luger, A WAY HOME, 2020. Photo: Steve Mann 2020

    Notably, the majority of participating artists and groups are non-Western—a curatorial decision that opens deeper space for exploring alternative paradigms and perspectives rooted in ancestral knowledge systems and Indigenous worldviews. These frameworks often stand in stark contrast to the extractive, capital-driven mentality that has shaped the modern world.

    Yet because biennials are also meant to engage with the specific socio-cultural and geographic context in which they take place, Observer asked Al Qasimi how this edition of the Triennale responds to the history and cultural fabric of Aichi and, more broadly, Japan. She answered that the search for traditional knowledge and wisdom will be especially apparent in Seto City, where the Triennale will investigate the region’s long history of ceramic craftsmanship and its entanglement with broader narratives about the evolution of civilization.

    For instance, Guatemalan artist Marilyn Boror Bor will address the deconstruction of colonial narratives and the revitalization of Indigenous languages and traditions. Her work involves encasing Indigenous pots in concrete, creating a potent metaphor for colonial imposition and the environmental and cultural impacts of industrialization.

    Syrian artist Simone Fattal, also known for her poetic and metaphorically rich work in clay and ceramics, will present pieces that delve into myths and ancient civilizations. Her practice explores enduring questions of displacement and identity within the broader human condition.

    A ceramic vessel shaped like a bird, with a rounded white body, a brown and black head resembling a duck, and a spout extending from the back, set against a plain white background.A ceramic vessel shaped like a bird, with a rounded white body, a brown and black head resembling a duck, and a spout extending from the back, set against a plain white background.
    Marilyn Boror Bor, They too, the mountains, gave us back concrete, 2022. Courtesy of the artist

    As the Aichi Triennale Considers Humanity’s Fragile Bond with Nature, Hoor Al Qasimi Reflects on Its Role

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • Israel declares Gaza’s largest city combat zone as death toll surpasses 63,000

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    GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Israel declared Gaza’s largest city a dangerous combat zone and recovered the remains of two hostages on Friday as the army launched the “initial stages” of a planned offensive that has drawn international condemnation.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Gaza Health Ministry said the death toll in Gaza has risen to 63,025 in the 22-month war between Israel and Hamas
    • The latest figure was released on Friday as Palestinians faced the start of Israel’s expanded offensive in Gaza City and as Israel said its military had recovered the remains of two hostages
    • The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, said the bodies of 59 people killed by Israeli strikes were brought to hospitals in the last 24 hours.
    • It said five people had died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 322, including 121 children, since the war began

    As the military announced the resumption of fighting, health officials said the death toll in Gaza has risen to 63,025, with 59 new deaths reported by hospitals over the last 24 hours. Aid groups and a church sheltering people said they would stay in Gaza City, refusing to abandon the hungry and displaced who depend on them.

    The shift comes weeks after Israel first announced plans to widen its offensive in the city, where hundreds of thousands are sheltering while enduring famine. The military has in recent days ramped up strikes in neighborhoods on the city’s outskirts.

    Plumes of smoke and thunderous blasts could be seen and heard across the border in southern Israel on Friday morning.

    Israel has called Gaza City a Hamas stronghold, alleging that a network of tunnels remain in use by militants after several previous large-scale raids on the area throughout nearly 23 months of war.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has argued that crippling Hamas’ capabilities in the city is critical to shielding Israel from a repeat of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war.

    While United Nations agencies and aid groups condemned the offensive’s announced start, people in Gaza City said it made little difference: Strikes already have been intensifying and the aid reaching them was insufficient.

    Mohamed Aboul Hadi said it made no difference.

    “The massacres never stopped, even during the humanitarian pauses,” he said in a text message sent from Gaza City.

    More than 63,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war started, the Gaza Health Ministry said Friday. The ministry’s count — 63,025 — does not distinguish between fighters and civilians. It also said five people had died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 322, including 121 children, since the war began.

    The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. The U.N. and independent experts consider it the most reliable source on war casualties. Israel disputes its figures but has not provided its own.

    Some refuse to leave as Gaza City assault begins

    Facing international criticism, Israel instituted what it called “tactical pauses” in Gaza City last month that it said were geared toward letting in more food and aid. The pauses included a suspension of fighting from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., though aid groups have said deliveries remained challenging due to blockade, looting and Israeli restrictions.

    Midday Friday, the military said it had suspended pauses, marking the latest escalation after weeks of preparatory strikes in some of the city’s neighborhoods and calling up tens of thousands of reservists.

    “We will intensify our strikes until we bring back all the kidnapped hostages and dismantle Hamas,” Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee said.

    Adraee, the Israeli military’s Arabic-language spokesperson, has for days urged Palestinians in Gaza City to flee south, calling evacuation “inevitable.”

    The U.N. said Thursday that 23,000 people had evacuated over the past week, but many Palestinians in Gaza City say they are exhausted after multiple displacements and question leaving when there is nowhere safe and any journey is costly.

    The Holy Family Church of Gaza City told The Associated Press on Friday that the roughly 440 people sheltering there would remain along with members of the clergy who would assist them.

    Farid Jubran said the church had left the decision up to the people even though they had few recourse to insulate themselves from fighting.

    “When we feel danger, people get closer to the walls or whatever, it’s more protected,” he said, noting the church had few specific defenses.

    The UN’s humanitarian agency said its staff and NGOs also would remain on the ground.

    Aid groups say they weren’t notified

    As Israel suspended pauses on Friday in Gaza City, the military did not say whether they had notified residents or aid groups of the impending declaration ahead of the 11:30 a.m. announcement.

    Norwegian Refugee Council, which coordinates a coalition of aid groups active in Gaza, said it had not received notification that Israel’s “tactical pauses” would be suspended.

    The U.N. said Thursday the besieged strip could lose half of its hospital bed capacity during an expanded assault on Gaza City.

    “We cannot provide health services to 2 million people besieged in the south,” said Zaher al-Wahidi, a spokesperson for Gaza’s Health Ministry, noting a forcible evacuation of the strip’s largest city would be an environmental and health catastrophe.

    The suspension of the pause also comes one week after the world’s leading food security authority declared Gaza City was being gripped by famine after months of warnings.

    Remains of hostages recovered

    Israel on Friday said its military had recovered the remains of two hostages — Ilan Weiss and another left unnamed.

    “The campaign to return the hostages continues continuously. We will not rest or be silent until we return all of our hostages home — both the living and the dead,” Netanyahu said in a statement.

    Weiss, 55, was killed in the attack on Kibbutz Be’eri, one of the communities near Gaza that Hamas-led militants stormed on Oct. 7.

    For the families of hostages, the return of their remains meets a central demand and brings some closure, but also is a reminder of hostages who remain in Gaza.

    “At least they have closure,” said Rubi Chen, whose son was abducted during the Oct. 7 attack and is believed to be dead. “There are still 49 families waiting to have that closure.”

    Of the 251 hostages taken by Hamas-led militants, nearly 50 remain in Gaza including 20 that Israel believes to be alive.

    Israel’s Hostages and Missing Families Forum, which has organized large-scale protests demanding a ceasefire to return the hostages, mourned the losses and said Israeli leaders should prioritize a deal to return both the living and the dead.

    “We call on the Israeli government to enter negotiations and stay at the table until every last hostage comes home. Time is running out for the hostages,” it said in a statement.

    Hamas-led militants abducted 251 people and killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in the Oct. 7 attack. Most of the hostages have been released in ceasefires or other deals.

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    Associated Press

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  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will attend a military parade in Beijing next week

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    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will make his first visit to China in six years to attend a military parade next week, the two countries said Thursday, in an event that would bring him together with a group of world leaders for the first time since taking office in late 2011.Kim and Russian President Vladimir Putin will be among 26 foreign leaders who attend next Wednesday’s parade in Beijing to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China’s resistance against Japan’s wartime aggressions, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.“We warmly welcome General Secretary Kim Jong Un to China to attend the commemorative events,” Hong Lei, China’s assistant minister of foreign affairs, told a press conference. “Upholding, consolidating and developing the traditional friendship between China and the DPRK is a firm position of the Communist Party of China and the Chinese government.”DPRK refers to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.North Korea’s state news agency, KCNA, said Kim will visit China at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping to attend celebrations of the 80th anniversary of the war’s end. It gave no further details, including how long he will stay in China and whether he will hold an official meeting with Xi, Putin or other leaders visiting China.Others coming for the parade include the leaders of Iran, Belarus, Serbia, Cuba, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan and Malaysia. No leaders from the United States or other major Western European countries are expected to attend, in part because of their differences with Putin over the war in Ukraine. The parade is expected to feature some of China’s newest weaponry and a speech by Xi.If Kim’s trip is realized, it would be his first trip to China since 2019. Since inheriting power upon his father’s death in December 2011, Kim has met Xi, Putin, U.S. President Donald Trump, former South Korean President Moon Jae-in and others, but all those summits were bilateral meetings and Kim hasn’t attended any multilateral events involving foreign leaders.In all, Kim traveled to China four times from 2018 to 2019 to meet Xi.China has long been North Korea’s biggest trading partner and main aid provider, but there have been questions about their relations in recent years. North Korea has been focusing on expanding cooperation with Russia by supplying troops and ammunition to support its war against Ukraine in exchange for economic and military assistance.But many observers say North Korea is expected to take steps to improve ties with China to revive its troubled economy, because there is a limit to what it can get from Russia and it’s also unclear if North Korea and Russia would maintain the same level of cooperation after the Ukraine war ends. In 2023, about 97% of North Korea’s external trade was with China, while 1.2% was with Russia, according to Chinese data.Kim’s visit to China could also be related to efforts to restart diplomacy with Trump, who has repeatedly highlighted his relationship with Kim and expressed his hopes to resume talks. North Korea has so far dismissed Trump’s outreach, but many analysts say North Korea would return to talks if it believes the U.S. would make greater concessions.“Pyongyang’s illicit cooperation with Moscow has strained ties with Beijing, even as China’s political and economic support remains vital for the North Korean regime,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.“To re-engage Trump from a position of strength, Kim seeks to repair relations with Xi, and attending the parade in Beijing is a highly visible way of doing that,” Easley said.During a meeting with Lee in Washington this week, Trump spoke of his past summits with Kim, including one at the Korean Demilitarized Zone. Responding to a question over whether he would return to the Demilitarized Zone, Trump told reporters, “I loved it. Remember when I walked across the line and everyone went crazy.”During Trump’s first term, he met Kim three times from 2018-19, but their high-stakes summit eventually collapsed due to wrangling over U.S.-led sanctions on North Korea. Kim has since conducted weapons tests to modernize and expand his nuclear arsenal.

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will make his first visit to China in six years to attend a military parade next week, the two countries said Thursday, in an event that would bring him together with a group of world leaders for the first time since taking office in late 2011.

    Kim and Russian President Vladimir Putin will be among 26 foreign leaders who attend next Wednesday’s parade in Beijing to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China’s resistance against Japan’s wartime aggressions, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

    “We warmly welcome General Secretary Kim Jong Un to China to attend the commemorative events,” Hong Lei, China’s assistant minister of foreign affairs, told a press conference. “Upholding, consolidating and developing the traditional friendship between China and the DPRK is a firm position of the Communist Party of China and the Chinese government.”

    DPRK refers to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.

    North Korea’s state news agency, KCNA, said Kim will visit China at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping to attend celebrations of the 80th anniversary of the war’s end. It gave no further details, including how long he will stay in China and whether he will hold an official meeting with Xi, Putin or other leaders visiting China.

    Others coming for the parade include the leaders of Iran, Belarus, Serbia, Cuba, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan and Malaysia. No leaders from the United States or other major Western European countries are expected to attend, in part because of their differences with Putin over the war in Ukraine. The parade is expected to feature some of China’s newest weaponry and a speech by Xi.

    If Kim’s trip is realized, it would be his first trip to China since 2019. Since inheriting power upon his father’s death in December 2011, Kim has met Xi, Putin, U.S. President Donald Trump, former South Korean President Moon Jae-in and others, but all those summits were bilateral meetings and Kim hasn’t attended any multilateral events involving foreign leaders.

    In all, Kim traveled to China four times from 2018 to 2019 to meet Xi.

    China has long been North Korea’s biggest trading partner and main aid provider, but there have been questions about their relations in recent years. North Korea has been focusing on expanding cooperation with Russia by supplying troops and ammunition to support its war against Ukraine in exchange for economic and military assistance.

    But many observers say North Korea is expected to take steps to improve ties with China to revive its troubled economy, because there is a limit to what it can get from Russia and it’s also unclear if North Korea and Russia would maintain the same level of cooperation after the Ukraine war ends. In 2023, about 97% of North Korea’s external trade was with China, while 1.2% was with Russia, according to Chinese data.

    Kim’s visit to China could also be related to efforts to restart diplomacy with Trump, who has repeatedly highlighted his relationship with Kim and expressed his hopes to resume talks. North Korea has so far dismissed Trump’s outreach, but many analysts say North Korea would return to talks if it believes the U.S. would make greater concessions.

    “Pyongyang’s illicit cooperation with Moscow has strained ties with Beijing, even as China’s political and economic support remains vital for the North Korean regime,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.

    “To re-engage Trump from a position of strength, Kim seeks to repair relations with Xi, and attending the parade in Beijing is a highly visible way of doing that,” Easley said.

    During a meeting with Lee in Washington this week, Trump spoke of his past summits with Kim, including one at the Korean Demilitarized Zone. Responding to a question over whether he would return to the Demilitarized Zone, Trump told reporters, “I loved it. Remember when I walked across the line and everyone went crazy.”

    During Trump’s first term, he met Kim three times from 2018-19, but their high-stakes summit eventually collapsed due to wrangling over U.S.-led sanctions on North Korea. Kim has since conducted weapons tests to modernize and expand his nuclear arsenal.

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  • Venice Film Festival Kicks Off With Premiere of Paolo Sorrentino’s ‘La Grazia’, Francis Ford Coppola Tribute to Werner Herzog

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    The 2025 edition of the world’s oldest film festival kicked off with a poignant moment of movie history Wednesday night as American film legend Francis Ford Coppola took the stage inside Venice’s Sala Grande cinema to present German uber-auteur Werner Herzog with an honorary Golden Lion, the event’s highest honor for lifetime achievement.

    The two cinema legends — Coppola is also a Venice film festival Golden Lion honoree from 1992 — adorably walked hand in hand down the red carpet to the openingnight ceremony.

    Herzog’s moment in the Venice spotlight got underway with a video tribute to his gloriously eccentric filmography, spanning Fitzcarraldo; Grizzly Man; Aguirre, the Wrath of God; My Best Fiend; and so many more.

    Presenting him with his statue, Coppola said he “came here to praise Werner Herzog, and it’s not enough to praise Werner Herzog. One must celebrate the fact that someone like him can actually exist.

    “If Werner has limits, I don’t know what they are,” Coppola added. “Werner’s life and his very existence send a challenge to everyone out there: top me if you can! And all of us truly wonder if anyone ever will. Werner, I will eat my hat if anyone comes along who can do it.”

    Herzog began his acceptance speech by expressing his gratitude to Coppola for his generosity and kindness over the years, noting that they had been friends for 50 years.

    “He’s been generous, inviting me when I didn’t have money to pay for a hotel room. I stayed at his house in San Francisco and wrote my screenplay of Fitzcarraldo,” Herzog said. He went on to explain that it was Coppola who introduced him to his wife of nearly 30 years, adding that he hasn’t had an unhappy day since.

    Herzog also shared that he and Coppola came close to making a film together “about the conquest of Mexico together seen from the perspective of the Aztecs.” Although the project never materialized, “it was a wonderful time when we plotted about it,” he added.

    Speaking about his approach to his art and his career, Herzog said he had always “tried to strive for something that goes deeper beyond what you normally see in movie theaters, going to a deep form of poetry that is possible in cinema, searching for truth in unusual ways. Truth is always somehow in cinema, it’s mysterious and elusive, and I always tried to do something which was sublime or something transcendental.

    “This may sound a little bit lofty. So in fact, I do believe that all this has much simpler reasons. I always wanted to be a good soldier of cinema, and that means perseverance, it means loyalty, it means courage, and it means a sense of duty. And this is ultimately, is what brought me here.”

    Venice festival director Alberto Barbera put it succinctly when he first revealed his plans to honor the New German Cinema pioneer, hailing how Herzog “has never ceased from testing the limits of film language, belying the traditional distinction between documentary and fiction.” He added: “A brilliant narrator of unusual stories, Herzog is also the last heir of the great tradition of German romanticism, a visionary humanist, and a tireless explorer.”

    Herzog added that he hasn’t “come to Venice empty-handed.” His latest documentary, Ghost Elephants, is showing out of competition in Venice.

    Coppola is also featured in the festival’s screening lineup this year — as the subject of Leaving Las Vegas director Mike Figgis’ feature documentary, Megadoc, a behind-the-scenes chronicle of the making of Megalopolis, the cinema lion’s experimental epic from last year. Sofia Coppola, who was by his side in the Sala Grande on Wednesday night, also returns to Lido later in the week to unveil a documentary she directed about the fashion designer Marc Jacobs. 

    The festival then officially got underway with the well-received world premiere of Italian mainstay Paolo Sorrentino’s latest resplendent drama, La Grazia, which plays much like a thematic companion piece to his 2013 Oscar-winning breakthrough, The Great Beauty.

    Sorrentino and his cast, led by inimitable Italian screen icon Toni Servillo, warmed up the Venice red carpet Wednesday for the parade of global movie stars who will alight at the Sala Grande by glamorous water taxi over the coming 12 days — including George Clooney (on behalf of Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly), Julia Roberts (Luca Guadagnino’s After the Hunt), Emma Stone (Yorgos Lanthimos’ Begonia), Dwayne Johnson (Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine), Mads Mikelson (The Last Viking), Squid Game star Lee Byun-hun (Park Chan-wook’s No Other Choice), Jude Law (playing Vladimir Putin in The Wizard of the Kremlin), and Jacob Elordi and Oscar Issac (Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein), among many others.

    The 82nd Venice Film Festival will conclude when a jury led by Oscar-winning filmmaker Alexander Payne reveals its pick for the winner of this year’s Golden Lion for best film on Sept. 6.

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    Patrick Brzeski

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  • Alexander Payne “Unprepared” to Comment on Gaza as He Fields Flurry of Political Questions in Venice

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    In his first official appearance as the president of this year’s Venice Film Festival competition jury, veteran filmmaker Alexander Payne fielded some heavy questions about everything from the war in Gaza and his personal views on the ongoing conflict to the role of movies today amid a constantly shifting industry.

    In fact, questions about Gaza dominated the start of the presser held inside the Lido’s Palazzo del Casinó — a Q&A session that saw Payne joined by festival director Alberto Barbera and fellow jury presidents of alternate sections, including filmmakers Charlotte Wells, Julia Ducournau, and Tommaso Santambrogio — but Payne opted not to weigh in at length.

    He first was asked about how the jury will be approaching “what’s happening in the world” with conflicts raging in Ukraine and Gaza, but he deflected by suggesting it was a better question for Barbera as festival directors are more adept at answering as they have “their fingers on the pulse of cinema” and how it reflects culture, society and politics. But then another journalist asked a more pointed question: What are your views on Gaza?

    “Quite frankly, I feel a little bit unprepared for that question,” Payne explained. “I’m here to judge and talk about cinema. My political views, I’m sure, are in agreement with many of yours. But as far as my relationship with the festival and what the industry does, I have to think about that for a while to give you a measured response.”

    Barbera then took over by offering a more detailed response in Italian, adding that the festival has “not hesitated” to say that they are against the “enormous suffering” that is happening in Palestine, particularly with the deaths of civilians and “especially of children.” He also said that everyone is welcome at the festival and no one has been disinvited from participating.

    Barbera’s comments come just hours after a protest in front of the festival’s red carpet premiere venue, Sala Grande, where two dozen pro-Palestine activists raised a “Stop the Genocide” banner as a way to call attention to the raging war in Gaza. The group has stated that they have a march scheduled for Saturday morning as another tool to demand the festival denounce what’s happening there.

    The Venice Film Festival’s competition jury finds Payne serving as president with members including Brazilian actress Fernanda Torres, Iranian auteur Mohammad Rasoulof, French director and screenwriter Stéphane Brizé, Italian director and screenwriter Maura Delpero, Palme d’Or winning Romanian director Cristian Mungiu and Chinese actress Zhao Tao. He said that his role leading the team didn’t actually feel real until yesterday when he arrived “by water taxi to my beautiful hotel” and dropped his bags off.

    “Soon I was seated next to Francis Ford Coppola watching a restoration of a 1928 silent film,” Payne revealed of his private itinerary. “And I thought, I’m in heaven. Now I get to watch 21, 22 films by incredible directors for the first time in a theater, not knowing anything about them, surrounded by jury members, all of whom I have the most immense respect for, and it’s an honor to be with them. This is heaven.”

    The only hard part of seeing so many films? Deciding who to award with prizes. “We’ll figure it out somehow,” he teased.

    The entertainment industry is also figuring out how to steady itself amid a shifting landscape of moviegoing habits and studio consolidation, and Payne weighed in on that as well during one of his answers to another heavy question: What is the relevance of movies today?

    Payne approached his answer by focusing on “who sees movies and how.” He used himself as an example: “I watch a lot of movies at night, you know, on my stomach but I much prefer to see them projected in the cathedral of cinema. And I lament that many great movies, both of artistic and political importance, don’t become a larger part of the conversation — certainly a cinematic conversation — because of the immediate means of distribution [with streaming]. Maybe I’m just an old guy, I’ve been doing this for 30 years, but as a film lover, it’s typically films which have a theatrical release that become a part of the cultural conversation and then have some kind of impact.”

    Payne then posed another question: Can a film really change society or culture?

    “I don’t know, doubtful,” he said. “But at least though when we make films which are relevant to the times, we leave a document that someone was thinking about that. Did [Ernst Lubitsch’s To Be or Not to Be] or [Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator] prevent World War II or the Holocaust? No, but they are documents that people were aware of at the time, even before those things happened. We have those [films] as documents and, as such, we can try to learn from them.”

    Moments later, Payne offered a sneak peek at the speech he will deliver later this evening during the opening ceremony about how he’s approaching his work here on the ground. “I always tell myself, and I’ll tell my fellow jury members that we’re selected because working professionals that maybe know something about cinema. But at the same time, I think we should approach each film as though we’ve never seen a movie in our lives before, and to treat each movie we see as a type of small miracle.”

    The miracles of 82nd edition of the Venice Film Festival will be presented this year from Aug. 27-Sept. 6.

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    Chris Gardner

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  • Denmark summons U.S. envoy over claims of interference in Greenland

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    COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Denmark’s foreign minister summoned the top U.S. diplomat in the country for talks after the main national broadcaster reported Wednesday that at least three people with connections to President Donald Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland.


    What You Need To Know

    • The top U.S. diplomat in Denmark has been summoned by the government after a report that people connected to Donald Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland
    • Danish broadcaster DR reported Wednesday that at least three Americans have been involved in these operations
    • They allegedly compiled lists of U.S.-friendly Greenlanders and tried to influence local politics
    • The Danish Security and Intelligence Service believes Greenland is a target for influence campaigns, and said it is strengthening its efforts and presence in Greenland in cooperation with authorities there

    Public broadcaster DR said Danish government and security sources which it didn’t name, as well as unidentified sources in Greenland and the U.S., believe that at least three American nationals with connections to Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in the territory.

    One of those people allegedly compiled a list of U.S.-friendly Greenlanders, collected names of people opposed to Trump and got locals to point out cases that could be used to cast Denmark in a bad light in American media. Two others have tried to nurture contacts with politicians, businesspeople and locals, according to the report.

    The White House did not offer an immediate comment.

    An influence operation is an organized effort to shape how people in a society think in order to achieve certain political, military or other objectives.

    Trump has repeatedly said he seeks U.S. jurisdiction over Greenland, a vast, semi-autonomous territory of Denmark. He has not ruled out military force to take control of the mineral-rich, strategically located Arctic island.

    Denmark, a NATO ally of the U.S., and Greenland have said the island is not for sale and condemned reports of the U.S. gathering intelligence there.

    DR said its story was based on information from a total of eight sources, who believe the goal is to weaken relations with Denmark from within Greenlandic society. It said it had been unable to clarify whether the Americans were working at their own initiative or on orders from someone else. It said it knows their names but chose not to publish them in order to protect its sources. The Associated Press could not independently confirm the report.

    “We are aware that foreign actors continue to show an interest in Greenland and its position in the Kingdom of Denmark,” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said in a statement. “It is therefore not surprising if we experience outside attempts to influence the future of the Kingdom in the time ahead.

    “Any attempt to interfere in the internal affairs of the Kingdom will of course be unacceptable. In that light, I have asked the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to summon the U.S. chargé d’affaires for a meeting at the Ministry.”

    Cooperation between the governments of Denmark and Greenland “is close and based on mutual trust,” he added.

    The U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen directed queries on the issue to Washington.

    The Danish Security and Intelligence Service said it believes that “particularly in the current situation, Greenland is a target for influence campaigns of various kinds” that could aim to create divisions in the relationship between Denmark and Greenland.

    It said it “assesses that this could be done by exploiting existing or fabricated disagreements, for example in connection with well-known individual cases, or by promoting or amplifying certain viewpoints in Greenland regarding the Kingdom, the United States, or other countries with a particular interest in Greenland.”

    The service, known by its Danish acronym PET, said that in recent years it has “continuously strengthened” its efforts and presence in Greenland in cooperation with authorities there, and will continue to do so.

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    Associated Press

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  • How Museum Tinguely Is Keeping Jean Tinguely’s Legacy Alive 100 Years Later

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    “La roue = c’est tout” with works from Jean Tinguely: Fatamorgana, Méta-Harmonie IV, 1985 (in the back), Klamauk, 1979 (in the front). 2022 (c) foto daniel spehr

    With his chaotic absurdist performances of motorized machines, Swiss artist Jean Tinguely embraced both the principle of entropy and the noise of contemporary society to create a disruptive form of artistic expression that parodied automation, consumer culture and the art world itself. A pioneer of multimedia and multidisciplinary approaches, Tinguely worked with scrap metal, discarded materials and industrial parts, aligning with Dadaist traditions while pushing them into more radically experimental territory. His work dissolved the boundaries between material, language and public interaction, anticipating both contemporary media art and relational practices. The climax of his oeuvre, Homage to New York (1960), famously self-destructed—partially exploding in the sculpture garden of the Museum of Modern Art. It was an explicit attack on the mechanization of labor, institutional authority and the commodification of art, rejecting permanence and objectification in favor of process, failure and spectacle.

    This year, 2025, marks the 100th anniversary of his birth—a milestone certain to prompt renewed interest in his multifaceted practice through exhibitions, retrospectives and critical reassessments. Since its opening in 1996, Museum Tinguely in Basel, Switzerland, has played a central role in preserving and promoting the artist’s legacy while becoming a fixture of the annual art world pilgrimage to Basel, thanks to its progressive programming and ambitious commissions. Located on the banks of the Rhine, the museum houses the world’s largest collection of Tinguely’s kinetic works—218 sculptures spanning from his early reliefs and 1960s collaborations to the darker, more monumental machines of the 1970s. More than half of these works are regularly on view and kept in working order, sustaining the spirit of movement, instability and joyful collapse that defined his vision.

    Jean Tinguely in his workshop surrounded by sculptural machine parts, wearing a blue work jacket and resting one hand on a metal beam, with kinetic components and colorful materials scattered around him.Jean Tinguely in his workshop surrounded by sculptural machine parts, wearing a blue work jacket and resting one hand on a metal beam, with kinetic components and colorful materials scattered around him.
    Jean Tinguely in front of Dernière Collaboration avec Yves Klein, 1988. Photo Credit: Vera Isler

    For the centennial of Jean Tinguely’s revolutionary legacy, Observer spoke with Museum Tinguely director Roland Wetzel about how the artist’s disarmingly playful, radically innovative and still strikingly relevant work continues to meet contemporary societal needs and how the museum’s program keeps it alive by engaging artists who share his boundary-blurring, multimedia spirit.

    For Wetzel, two perspectives connect the museum’s exhibition program with Tinguely’s legacy. “One reaches back to Dadaism and Marcel Duchamp, where fundamental questions about what art is were absolutely vital to a younger generation of artists,” he explains. “The other is that we’re still living in a time comparable to the 1960s. I’d say we are in a new epoch that began around that time, when artists started asking themselves what role they could and should play in society.”

    Tinguely was never a classical modernist bound by the fixed framework of modern art. “He constantly tried to reach beyond it—to connect with people, to expand his audience and to make his work relevant to everyday life,” Wetzel says. That impulse feels especially resonant today, when many artists are again considering where we stand, how we live and how art can meaningfully enter that conversation. “Tinguely always opened his art to daily life, and I think that’s something essential in his practice.”

    The Museum Tinguely is located right by the city beach, south facade as seen from the Rhine.The Museum Tinguely is located right by the city beach, south facade as seen from the Rhine.
    The south facade of Museum Tinguely as seen from the Rhine. Museum Tinguely ©2022Foto Daniel Spehr, Basel

    Tinguely also embraced accident and chance. He rejected the idea of a pre-established script or fixed concept, choosing instead to surrender to possibilities that emerged in the process itself—as the work interacted with its surroundings, its context and the world at large. He welcomed this dialectical relationship between the work and the world. In that sense, his practice anticipated what we now call relational art: it invited participation not only from viewers but also from the environment, always seeking dialogue with its context. His art was never a static object—it was alive, contingent, responsive.

    Wetzel also points out how deeply collaborative Tinguely’s process was. “A lot of his work didn’t come out of a studio in isolation—it came out of interactions with friends, other artists, curators,” he explains. “He was involved in organizing, curating and building ideas together. That was a core part of his practice.”

    For the centenary, the museum recreated Tinguely’s art ghost train, reimagined as a large-scale dynamic installation designed by British artist Rebecca Moss and Swiss artist Augustin Rebetez. In a nostalgic return to traditional lunapark attractions, Scream Machines takes visitors on a haunting journey through demons, monsters and other eerie figures designed by the artists, paying homage to Le Crocrodrome de Zig et Puce, the 1977 work Tinguely created with Bernhard Luginbühl, Daniel Spoerri and Niki de Saint Phalle for the opening of the Centre Pompidou in Paris. That historic project was spearheaded by Pontus Hultén, the legendary museum director who championed Tinguely throughout his career. An exhibition currently on at the Grand Palais in Paris explores the creative partnership between Hultén, Tinguely and de Saint Phalle.

    A hand-drawn, mixed-media sketch of Le Crocrodrome de Zig et Puce by Jean Tinguely, featuring a fantastical machine structure filled with crocodile-like creatures, mechanical components, and carnival-like figures. The drawing combines architectural plans, colorful ink washes, and chaotic annotations in French and German, referencing the 1977 installation at the Centre Georges Pompidou.Let me know if you need a caption or print-friendly version as well.A hand-drawn, mixed-media sketch of Le Crocrodrome de Zig et Puce by Jean Tinguely, featuring a fantastical machine structure filled with crocodile-like creatures, mechanical components, and carnival-like figures. The drawing combines architectural plans, colorful ink washes, and chaotic annotations in French and German, referencing the 1977 installation at the Centre Georges Pompidou.Let me know if you need a caption or print-friendly version as well.
    Bernhard Luginbühl and Jean Tinguely, Le Crocrodrome de Zig & Puce, 1977. Reworked exhibition flyer with black felt-tip pen, gouache and collage, 55 x 120 cm. © 2025 Pro Litteris, Zurich, Museum Tinguely, Basel Credit: Donation Prof. Dr Roland Bieber in memory of Karola Mertz-Bieber

    In researching this installation, Wetzel was struck by the extent of Tinguely’s involvement in the original Pompidou project. “He wasn’t just one of the participating artists—he helped coordinate people, manage finances, source materials,” Wetzel explains. “His role went far beyond that of a traditional artist. He was always crossing boundaries, thinking beyond the usual frameworks, reaching into new territories.”

    The installation has been a major success with audiences of all ages, showing that Tinguely’s playful chaotic spirit still resonates in an era often numbed by media overstimulation, societal alienation and both emotional and intellectual disaffection. “With this project, we’ve been able to reach an even broader audience,” Wetzel notes. “While our museum already draws a diverse public, the Ghost Train connects on another level. It’s playful, it’s accessible—you don’t need any prior knowledge to have a meaningful art experience.” For Wetzel, this kind of crossover is exactly what Tinguely envisioned—especially in his desire to reach children. “Tinguely always said children were his most important critics. If it works for them, it can work for many others, too. His art was meant to operate on multiple levels, and we’ve really tried to carry that thinking forward.”

    Jean Tinguely in his studio during the 1960s, flanked by two collaborators, all wrapped in or holding long scrolls of drawing paper covered with automatic linework, with sketches pinned to the walls behind them.Jean Tinguely in his studio during the 1960s, flanked by two collaborators, all wrapped in or holding long scrolls of drawing paper covered with automatic linework, with sketches pinned to the walls behind them.
    Eva Aeppli, Jean Tinguely and Per Olof Ultvedt with Méta-Matic-Drawings at Atelier Impasse Ronsin, Paris, in 1959. © Christer Strömholm / Strömholm Estate Photo Credit: Christer Strömholm

    Interaction with the broader public—and with public life itself—was central to Tinguely’s practice. Accessibility and engagement, even beyond the confines of the art world, remain priorities for the museum’s programming today. Part of its identity lies in creating spaces where people of all ages can encounter art in playful, open-ended ways. “We believe it’s just as important to be welcoming to older audiences and to offer meaningful experiences to people of all generations,” Wetzel says. “That openness is something we care deeply about.”

    One earlier project at Museum Tinguely involved collaborating with window-front designers. “When you do an exhibition in a shop window, you reach a completely different audience—and it’s visible 24/7 in the public space,” he explains. “These might seem like small interventions, but they’re incredibly effective ways to expand access. And that’s something Tinguely always tried to do.”

    Today, the museum serves several publics—it’s not just one audience, Wetzel clarifies. As he notes, the museum is often a place where people—especially children—experience art for the first time. “That was important to Tinguely, and we’ve really built on that,” he says, adding how programming for young children begins as early as age two. “They can come in, be active, play, explore—and leave with a positive, hands-on experience of what art can be. That kind of accessibility, that invitation to engage through the senses, is something quite unique. I don’t know many other museums that offer the same potential for early connection.”

    The museum’s dedicated Art Education Department is one of the central pillars of its mission. It collaborates not only with local schools but also with institutions such as the High School for the Arts and the High School for Music, fostering a dense and long-standing network across Basel’s educational and cultural ecosystems.

    In a dark exhibition room, visitors lie on a cushioned platform beneath a large ceiling projection that simulates the shimmering surface of water viewed from below.In a dark exhibition room, visitors lie on a cushioned platform beneath a large ceiling projection that simulates the shimmering surface of water viewed from below.
    In “Midnight Zone,” Julian Charrière invites visitors to engage with water as atmosphere, memory, movement and kin. © 2025 ProLitteris, Zürich; Courtesy of the artist. 025 Museum Tinguely, Basel; Matthias Willi

    At the same time, the museum draws international visitors—especially during Art Basel—for its special exhibitions. Museum Tinguely typically stages four major shows per year, which can be as ambitious as “Midnight Zone,” Julian Charrière’s immersive journey into the abyssal mysteries of the ocean and ecological awareness, on view through November 2.

    Set to be unveiled at the end of September, the museum’s next exhibition will feature Scenes from the Invention of Democracy, a poignant video installation by Austrian artist Oliver Ressler that interrogates what democracy still means in a world where the term is increasingly emptied of substance. A work and a question that feel more urgent than ever, as democratic rights and civil liberties are steadily eroded across multiple countries, with national politics veering toward authoritarianism dressed up as conservatism and protectionism.

    Opening in December is an extensive survey dedicated to the underrecognized yet quietly brilliant Chinese American artist Carl Cheng, “Nature Never Loses.” Spanning six decades of work, the exhibition highlights Cheng’s pioneering investigations into the intersection of art and ecology, his questioning of institutional relevance and his prescient explorations of technology’s role in society. Organized by The Contemporary Austin in partnership with Museum Tinguely, the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania and Bonnefanten in Maastricht, the show underscores the international reach of the museum’s program. In recent years, this model of cross-institutional collaboration—pooling resources and cutting costs while mounting ambitious projects—has become a strategic hallmark of Museum Tinguely’s approach.

    “When I started here 16 years ago, we focused more on Tinguely’s role models and his historical context,” Wetzel explains. “But increasingly, we’ve been engaging with contemporary artists who reflect on and respond to Tinguely’s practice from today’s perspective. That feels more relevant—and more compelling—for a younger generation.”

    Jean Tinguely standing atop a towering pile of scrap bicycles, mid-gesture as he throws a disassembled bicycle wheel into the air—an iconic performance reflecting his fascination with entropy and mechanical ruin.Jean Tinguely standing atop a towering pile of scrap bicycles, mid-gesture as he throws a disassembled bicycle wheel into the air—an iconic performance reflecting his fascination with entropy and mechanical ruin.
    Jean Tinguely looking for materials in 1960. Photo Credit: Photographer unknown

    Yet despite Tinguely’s pioneering and playful use of technology, Museum Tinguely remains focused on more materially and sensorially anchored forms of artistic expression. While the museum doesn’t reject digital work entirely, it isn’t a central focus for now, the director explains. For Wetzel, it remains crucial to create moments of real presence—tactile, embodied encounters that happen in and around the museum. “As so much of life is already spent in front of screens, it feels even more vital to offer a more comprehensive, embodied experience,” he says. “Whether it’s through Tinguely’s kinetic works or our special exhibitions, we want visitors to engage physically, emotionally and socially.”

    Today, the museum plays multiple roles within Basel’s art ecosystem, Wetzel notes. It can be a place to spend a leisurely Sunday afternoon, but it also aims to be politically and socially relevant—whether through exhibitions or a year-round calendar of talks, panels and performances. “Our programming is quite wide-ranging,” he says. “We don’t focus on blockbuster shows. We focus on education, accessibility and making art approachable.”

    Asked about the evolving role of museums in society, Wetzel stresses the importance of a clear ethical compass. For him, the idea that we can live together in a better way is a crucial starting point. “It’s not about making grand gestures, but about taking small, meaningful steps: creating space for people to come in, learn, reflect on their own lives and share those reflections with others,” he explains. “That’s how communities are formed—and I believe that’s something museums can and should help facilitate.”

    In Wetzel’s vision, the museum must function as a public platform—a space for genuine exchange. In recent years, that commitment has expanded into talks, performances, concerts and events that deepen and broaden the exhibition experience. “Over time, our role has evolved,” Wetzel says. “Maybe 20 or 30 years ago, it was just about putting on exhibitions. Today, museums need to operate as public platforms—even at a grassroots level—to foster participation, welcome diverse communities and enable open dialogue,” he adds. This includes making room for different political perspectives while also being willing to take a stance. “In times like these, I think it’s essential that we speak up, stay relevant and above all, create spaces where people can come together.”

    Black-and-white portrait of Jean Tinguely smiling mischievously as he sits among dozens of identical plates of hors d’oeuvres arranged in rows, blurring the line between artist, guest, and orchestrator of chaos.Black-and-white portrait of Jean Tinguely smiling mischievously as he sits among dozens of identical plates of hors d’oeuvres arranged in rows, blurring the line between artist, guest, and orchestrator of chaos.
    Tinguely’s kinetic art embraced chaos, chance and humor to critique automation, consumer culture and the institutions of modern art. Photo; Nanda Lanfranco

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  • ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Sing-Along, Sean Baker-Produced ‘Left-Handed Girl,’ Locarno Winner Set for Busan Film Festival

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    The Busan International Film Festival, which takes place every fall in the beachfront of the country’s largest port city, unveiled its 2025 lineup in Seoul on Tuesday. The 30th edition of the fest will run Sept. 17-26.  
     
    The Busan festival opens with director Park Chan-wook’s No Other Choice, a black comedy thriller based on the novel The Ax by Donald Westlak, which follows Man-su (played by Lee Byung Hun) in his desperate struggle to hunt for a new job after being fired from a position he has held for 25 years.  
     
    This year’s Busan presents 241 official selection films – up from 224 from last year, including satellite programs and community events taking place throughout the city and entertaining local audiences during the festival period.  
     
    Busan has also strengthened its competitive section, highlighting contemporary Asian cinema, with 14 Asian titles set to vie for the festival’s key award categories this year with sections including best film, best director, the special jury prize, best actor, and artistic contribution. 
     
    The Busan lineup also includes Gloaming in Luomu, the latest work by Asian auteur Zhang Lu, Spying Star by Sri Lankan director Vimukthi Jayasundara, Resurrection by Chinese filmmaker Bi Gan, and Two Seasons, Two Strangers by Miyake Sho, the Locarno-winning latest movie by the rising director of contemporary Japanese cinema. 

    Left-Handed Girl, produced by Anora director Sean Baker and longtime collaborator and screenwriter Tsou Shih-Chung, will also be screened in Busan this year. Taiwan’s Shu Qi’s Girl, a directorial debut, Seven O’Clock Breakfast Club for the Brokenhearted by South Korea’s Lim Sun-ae, and Leave the Cat Alone, the debut feature of Japan’s new talent Shigaya Daisuke are also part of the key lineup.   
     
    Every evening, Busan presents Open Cinema at its outdoor theater with a lineup of audience-friendly genre films, including The Final Piece, a mystery drama starring Watanabe Ken, action crime thriller The Shadow’s Edge featuring Tony Leung and Jackie Chan, and Measure in Love starring Hsu Kuang-Han and Angela Yuen.  
     
    The festival also brings together a list of works by Korean filmmakers abroad. The World Cinema program presents Andrew Ahn’s latest adaptation of The Wedding Banquet, while Flash Forward features Korean-Canadian Lloyd Lee Choi’s Lucky Lu, based on the story of a delivery biker in New York.  Other notable features include The Botanist from China, the winner of the Grand Prix of the International Jury for Best Film at Berlin, and The River That Holds our Hands by Chen Jianhang, a Venice Film Festival competition title.  
     
    As a satellite program, this year’s festival will present KPop Demon Hunters in a special sing-along screening at Busan. Maggie Kang, the Korean-Canadian director behind the hit Netflix animated feature, will also partake in a program titled “Carte Blanche” – a series of screenings by leading cultural pioneers in Korea and abroad, including director Bong Joon-ho, followed by a conversation with audiences.  
     
    For its 30th edition, Oscar-winning Bong Joon-ho, Tony Leung Ka-fai, Juliette Binoche, and Sean Baker are among the high-profile figures who are expected to grace the red carpets.  
     
    This year’s Asian Filmmaker of the Year Award goes to the Iranian director Jafar Panahi, who portrayed the resilience of individual freedom against censorship through films like The Circle (2000), Taxi (2015), and It was Just an Accident. Separately, the recipient of this year’s Korean Cinema Award is director-screenwriter Chung Jin-young known for his work that deeply reflects on contemporary Korean history in films like Life and Death of the Hollywood Kid (1994) and National Security (2012). The festival will also dedicate its Camellia Award to Sylvia Chang, one of Asia’s most acclaimed directors, actors, producers and screenwriters who appeared in more than 100 films, such as Murmur of the Hearts (2015) and Love Education (2017).  
     
    On the market front, this year’s Asian Contents & Film Market (ACFM) will focus on reaffirming its position as “a global business platform,” strengthening networking opportunities and introducing new market trends.  
     
    This year’s market expanded its role as a co-production hub by introducing Doc Square, a newly set up networking program tailored to foster exchange and collaboration among documentary creators across Asia. The program is expected to reflect on the Asian documentary landscape, through sessions that gather producers from across Asia to discuss the production environments and current trends in their respective regions. 
     
    ACFM will also highlight new trends in AI by inviting global tech leaders from Amazon Web Services (AWS), MegazoneCloud, a cloud service provider, China-based AI audio-visual generational platform PixVerse and Kling Ai.  InnoAsia will bring together technology experts and film industry professionals in an attempt to foster creative partnerships for the Asian content industry, with a series of conferences led by the key participants.   
     
    As part of the key program of the market, Asian Project Market will showcase 30 selections from 15 countries by emerging Asian directors. Asian Cinema Fund will offer three funding programs – the Script Development Fund, the Post-Production Fund and the Asian Network of Documentary Fund. Fourteen projects have been chosen out 850 submissions this year.  
     
    The 20th Asian Contents & Film Market (ACFM) will also present Busan Story Market – a key marketplace for original IPs for content providers – focusing on a strong lineup of IPs from Taiwan and Japan.   
     
    Six Taiwanese IPs have been selected this year that blend refined storytelling and unique characters, while six Japanese IPs, including books, comics and TV drama, have been selected, highlighting on Japan’s distinctive storytelling. For the Korean IP section, the Market has selected 19 original IPs, with genres including romance, fantasy and animation.  

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    Georg Szalai

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