ReportWire

Tag: Sienna Miller

  • All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    The Venice Film Festival has begun—get ready for 11 days of some of the best red carpet fashion of the year. WireImage

    While last year’s Venice Film Festival was a quieter, more subdued occasion than usual due to the SAG-AFTRA and WAG strikes, the 2024 iteration is expected to bring the usual array of A-list filmmakers and celebrities to the Palazzo del Cinema on the Lido for a week and a half of premieres, screenings and parties.

    Isabelle Huppert is the 2024 jury president, and this year’s cinematic line-up is packed with some of the most anticipated movies of the year. Todd PhillipsJoker: Folie à Deux, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival, as is Luca Guadagnino’s Queer (with Daniel Craig and Jason Schwartzman), Pablo Larrain’s Maria (starring Angelina Jolie) and Halina Reijn’s Babygirl (Nicole Kidman), among many others. Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, screened out of competition, will open the festival.

    Along with plenty of must-see films, the stars also bring their sartorial best for the glamorous film festival in Venice, Italy, strutting down the red carpet in fashionable designs—this is, after all, the very event that brought us couture moments like Florence Pugh’s dazzling black glitter Valentino ensemble at the Don’t Worry Darling premiere, along with Zendaya’s custom leather Balmain dress in 2021 and Dakota Johnson in bejeweled Gucci.

    The 81st annual Venice International Film Festival kicks off on August 28 and runs through September 7, which means a whole lot of high-fashion moments are headed for Lido. Below, see the best red carpet fashion from the 2024 Venice Film Festival.

    81th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 202481th Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 2024
    Sienna Miller. WireImage

    Sienna Miller

    in Chloe 

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Schiaparelli

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Abbey Lee. Getty Images

    Abbey Lee

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga 

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Fuhrman. WireImage

    Isabelle Fuhrman

    2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival2024 Closing Ceremony Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. WireImage

    Zhang Ziyi

    "M - The Son Of The Century" (M - Il Figlio Del Secolo) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"M - The Son Of The Century" (M - Il Figlio Del Secolo) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Haley Bennett. WireImage

    Haley Bennett

    "Iddu" (Sicilian Letters) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Iddu" (Sicilian Letters) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Brunello Cucinelli

     

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lady Gaga. WireImage

    Lady Gaga

    in Christian Dior 

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Joaquin Phoenix. Getty Images

    Joaquin Phoenix

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rain Phoenix. WireImage

    Rain Phoenix

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. Getty Images

    Isabelle Huppert

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. Getty Images

    Zhang Ziyi

    "Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Joker: Folie à Deux" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Iris Law. Getty Images

    Iris Law

    in Burberry 

    "Jouer Avec Le Feu" (The Quiet Son) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Jouer Avec Le Feu" (The Quiet Son) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Adjoa Andoh. Getty Images

    Adjoa Andoh

    "Diva E Donna" Prize Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Diva E Donna" Prize Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Georgina Rodriguez. WireImage

    Georgina Rodrigue

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz. Getty Images

    Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz

    Craig in Loewe, Weisz in Versace

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lesley Manville. Getty Images

    Lesley Manville

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Drew Starkey. WireImage

    Drew Starkey

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sara Cavazza Facchini. WireImage

    Sara Cavazza Facchini

    in Genny

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Omar Apollo. WireImage

    Omar Apollo

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jason Schwartzman. WireImage

    Jason Schwartzman

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Loewe 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu. Getty Images

    Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu

    in Erdem 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. WireImage

    Tilda Swinton

    in Alaia 

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Armani Privé

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Maria Borges. WireImage

    Maria Borges

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rose Bertram. Getty Images

    Rose Bertram

    "Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Queer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Natalia Paragoni. WireImage

    Natalia Paragoni

    "Harvest" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Harvest" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Rosy McEwen. WireImage

    Rosy McEwen

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Julianne Moore. FilmMagic

    Julianne Moore

    in Bottega Veneta 

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stella Maxwell. FilmMagic

    Stella Maxwell

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. FilmMagic

    Taylor Russell

    in Alaia 

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tilda Swinton. FilmMagic

    Tilda Swinton

    in Chanel

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Janine Gutierrez. WireImage

    Janine Gutierrez

    in Vania Romoff

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Josephine Skriver. Corbis via Getty Images

    Josephine Skriver

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. FilmMagic

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga

    "The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Room Next Door" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Barbara Paz. WireImage

    Barbara Paz

    in Lenny Niemeyer 

    "Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sveva Alviti. WireImage

    Sveva Alviti

    in Fendi

    "Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Finalement" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sofia Resing. Corbis via Getty Images

    Sofia Resing

    "Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival
    Brad Pitt. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Brad Pitt

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Amal Clooney and George Clooney. WireImage

    Amal Clooney and George Clooney

    Amal Clooney in Versace

    "Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" World Premiere - Venice International Film Festival
    Amy Ryan. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Amy Ryan

    in Alexis Mabille 

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva. FilmMagic

    Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Vittoria Puccini. FilmMagic

    Vittoria Puccini

    in Armani Privé

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Annabelle Belmondo. Getty Images

    Annabelle Belmondo

    "Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Wolfs" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Louis Vuitton

    Filming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film FestivalFilming Italy Venice Award Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ludovica Francesconi. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Ludovica Francesconi

    "I'm Still Here" (Ainda Estou Aqui) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"I'm Still Here" (Ainda Estou Aqui) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Hannah Stocking. Getty Images

    Hannah Stocking

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stacy Martin. WireImage

    Stacy Martin

    in Louis Vuitton

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Raffey Cassidy. WireImage

    Raffey Cassidy

    in Chanel

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Joe Alwyn. WireImage

    Joe Alwyn

    in Gucci

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Adrien Brody and Georgina Chapman

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Felicity Jones. Dave Benett/WireImage

    Felicity Jones

    in Prada 

    "The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Brutalist" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emma Laird. Getty Images

    Emma Laird

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Emily Ratajkowski. Corbis via Getty Images

    Emily Ratajkowski

    in Gucci

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Stella Maxwell. Corbis via Getty Images

    Stella Maxwell

    in Iris van Herpen 

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Nicholas Hoult. Corbis via Getty Images

    Nicholas Hoult

    in Ralph Lauren 

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jurnee Smollett. WireImage

    Jurnee Smollett

    in Louis Vuitton

    "The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"The Order" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jude Law. WireImage

    Jude Law

    in Brioni 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Toni Garrn. Corbis via Getty Images

    Toni Garrn

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Green. Corbis via Getty Images

    Eva Green

    in Armani Privé

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jasmine Tookes. Corbis via Getty Images

    Jasmine Tookes

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Madisin Rian. Corbis via Getty Images

    Madisin Rian

    in Armani Privé

    "Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Battlefield" (Campo Di Battaglia) Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lucien Laviscount. WireImage

    Lucien Laviscount

    in Burberry

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Nicole Kidman. WireImage

    Nicole Kidman

    in Schiaparelli

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sophie Wilde. Getty Images

    Sophie Wilde

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Green. WireImage

    Eva Green

    in Armani Privé

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kaya Scodelario. WireImage

    Kaya Scodelario

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. Getty Images

    Zhang Ziyi

    in Chanel

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Harris Dickinson. WireImage

    Harris Dickinson

    in Bottega Veneta

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Antonio Banderas and Nicole Kimpel. WireImage

    Antonio Banderas and Nicole Kimpel

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Halina Reijn. WireImage

    Halina Reijn

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Chase Stokes. WireImage

    Chase Stokes

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ella Purnell. Getty Images

    Ella Purnell

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Lili Reinhart. Getty Images

    Lili Reinhart

    in Armani Privé

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Camila Mendes. Getty Images

    Camila Mendes

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Madisin Rian. Getty Images

    Madisin Rian

    in Giorgio Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Ncuti Gatwa. Getty Images

    Ncuti Gatwa

    in Armani 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Valentina Ferragni. WireImage

    Valentina Ferragni

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Martina Strazzer. WireImage

    Martina Strazzer

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Leonie Hanne. Getty Images

    Leonie Hanne

    in Milla Nova 

    "Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Babygirl" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sveva Alviti. WireImage

    Sveva Alviti

    in Versace 

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. WireImage

    Cate Blanchett

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Louis Partridge. Getty Images

    Louis Partridge

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kodi Smit-McPhee. Getty Images

    Kodi Smit-McPhee

    "Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer - Chapter 5-7" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Hoyeon Jung. Getty Images

    Hoyeon Jung

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Angelina Jolie. Getty Images

    Angelina Jolie

    in Tamara Ralph

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Loewe 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Bianca Brandolini. Corbis via Getty Images

    Bianca Brandolini

    in Schiaparelli

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Alba Rohrwacher. Corbis via Getty Images

    Alba Rohrwacher

    in Dior 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Eva Herzigova. Getty Images

    Eva Herzigova

    in Etro 

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Miriam Leone. WireImage

    Miriam Leone

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Patti Smith. Getty Images

    Patti Smith

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Greta Bellamacina. WireImage

    Greta Bellamacina

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Giusy Buscemi. WireImage

    Giusy Buscemi

    "Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Valentina Cervi. Corbis via Getty Images

    Valentina Cervi

    in Max Mara

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tim Cook. WireImage

    Tim Cook

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jung Ho-yeon. WireImage

    Hoyeon Jung

    in Louis Vuitton

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sacha Baron Cohen. Getty Images

    Sacha Baron Cohen

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Leila George D’Onofrio. Getty Images

    Leila George D’Onofrio

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Kodi Smit-McPhee. WireImage

    Kodi Smit-McPhee

    in Versace 

    "Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Louis Partridge. WireImage

    Louis Partridge

    in Prada 

    "Maria" Photocall - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Maria" Photocall - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Angelina Jolie. Corbis via Getty Images

    Angelina Jolie

    in Saint Laurent

    "Disclaimer" Photocall - Venice International Film Festival"Disclaimer" Photocall - Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Dave Benett/Getty Images for App

    Cate Blanchett

    in Moschino

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sigourney Weaver. Getty Images

    Sigourney Weaver

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Jenna Ortega. Getty Images

    Jenna Ortega

    in Dior 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Winona Ryder. WireImage

    Winona Ryder

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Catherine O’Hara. Getty Images

    Catherine O’Hara

    in Oscar de la Renta

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Justin Theroux. Getty Images

    Justin Theroux

    in Zegna

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Arthur Conti. WireImage

    Arthur Conti

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci. Getty Images

    Tim Burton and Monica Bellucci

    Bellucci in Vivienne Westwood 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Cate Blanchett. Getty Images

    Cate Blanchett

    in Armani Privé

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Isabelle Huppert. WireImage

    Isabelle Huppert

    in Balenciaga

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Willem Dafoe and Giada Colagrande. Getty Images

    Willem Dafoe and Giada Colagrande

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Taylor Russell. WireImage

    Taylor Russell

    in Chanel

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Zhang Ziyi. WireImage

    Zhang Ziyi

    in Armani Privé

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Patti Smith. Getty Images

    Patti Smith

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Amy Jackson. WireImage

    Amy Jackson

    in Alberta Ferretti 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Izabel Goulart. WireImage

    Izabel Goulart

    in Ermanno Scervino 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Poppy Delevingne. Getty Images

    Poppy Delevingne

    in Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Paola Turani. Getty Images

    Paola Turani

    in The Andamane

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Barbara Paz. Getty Images

    Barbara Paz

    in Dolce & Gabbana 

    "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" Opening Red Carpet - The 81st Venice International Film Festival
    Sveva Alviti. Getty Images

    Sveva Alviti

    in Armani Privé

    All the Best Red Carpet Fashion from the 2024 Venice Film Festival

    Morgan Halberg

    Source link

  • I’d Like A Quiet Ride: Daddio

    I’d Like A Quiet Ride: Daddio

    Before even going into Daddio, the premise is already a hard sell. It’s just Dakota Johnson and Sean Penn talking for roughly one hour and forty minutes (or one hour, thirty-three if you exclude the credits). And yet, the script, written by Christy Hall, managed to make its way onto the Black List in 2017. Unsurprisingly, it was originally intended as a stage play, hence the minimalism and dialogue-heavy nature of it. But, being that a play usually has to be slightly more “bulletproof” with its dialogue, it’s a bit of a shock to see that the content of Daddio is so undeniably cringe. Not, as Hall, Johnson and Penn seemed to be hoping, “edgy” and “no holds barred.” In this case, some holds definitely ought to have been barred, starting with the unsavory gender cliches that both Johnson’s character, whose name is never revealed, and Clark, the driver played by Penn, embody.

    Perhaps just as vexing is that one keeps waiting (and hoping) for some theoretically inevitable twist that finds “Girlie” (this is how Johnson is referred to in the credits) upending everything that Clark thought he knew about life and women (and contempt for modern conveniences). Sort of the way Steve Buscemi’s 2007 film, Interview, did. In a similar fashion to Daddio, Interview also relies solely on the dialogue between a man and a woman of very different stature and in very different places in their lives, while also leaning mostly on one location: Katya’s (Sienna Miller) loft in Manhattan. The film was a remake of Theo van Gogh’s (yes, Vincent is his great-granduncle) 2003 movie of the same name, with Buscemi directing and starring in it, in addition co-writing the script with David Schechter. Like “Girlie” and Clark, Katya and Pierre (Buscemi) play what amounts to a game of verbal cat and mouse, with each person one-upping the other on “emotional sluttiness” as the movie unfolds.

    Hall likely thought that the context of a cab ride remains a totally plausible milieu in which someone might get overly confessional with a stranger. Even though, more than ever, no one wants to talk to their driver, least of all a female passenger forced to engage with a male “ferrier.” But, in having “Girlie” opt to take a yellow cab instead of using an app to call an Uber or a Lyft, etc., Hall seems to want to leave the impression that this woman is an “old soul.” Therefore, also willing to talk to an “old man” like Clark instead of totally disappearing into her phone. In fact, one of the first things Clark says to her is, “It’s nice you’re not on your phone. You don’t have to keep talking to me or nothing, but, just…nice. You, know? To see a human, not plugged in.” Here, it’s worth noting that a great many people do still relish the small talk interactions of the cab ride, along with small talk in other service-centric environments as well. Indeed, some are appalled at the idea that “quiet mode” a.k.a. “quiet ride” could even exist. That it only serves to make us all more isolated from one another and, consequently, even lonelier and more depressed. But then one looks to what a conversation between “Girlie” and Clark is like, and it’s enough to kill off all romanticism about the need for “interacting” with strangers.

    Something that “Girlie” appears rather deft at as she gives an obsequious laugh to Clark’s comment about her being off her phone and asks, “What’s your name?” When he tells her what it is, he doesn’t feel at all inclined to do the “human” thing and ask her what her own name is in response. Therefore, the namelessness of “Girlie,” despite the numerous opportunities presented where he could have asked for it, is one of many things about Daddio that makes it so inherently sexist. That a woman created the product, as usual, has nothing to do with the fact that it is a misogynistic one. Indeed, throughout the movie, rather than being repulsed by the type of man Clark is, “Girlie” only encourages him with her “coy looks” and reinforcing giggles.

    Clark’s overt chauvinism begins around the ten-minute mark of Daddio, when he tells “Girlie” that her “little outfit” gave her away in terms of being someone who actually lives in New York rather than someone who’s just visiting. Instead of being grossed out by that description, she titters and repeats, “My little outfit?” Clark then proceeds to rattle off the reasons why her outfit represents, ultimately, that she can “handle herself,” the supposed true mark of being a New Yorker (who can often never “handle themselves” anywhere else). For those wondering, at this point in the “narrative,” how the fuck it’s going to manage to drag on for a full movie-length amount of time, Hall presents the convenient obstacle of a standstill traffic jam around the twenty-one-minute mark. A.k.a. the proverbial “end of act one.” At which time, it starts to become clear that even 2004’s Taxi has more value when it comes to romanticizing cab rides.   

    With act two, Clark’s freak flag flies unchecked as he has the audacity to turn around (as “Girlie” is engaged in another gross text exchange with the older married man she’s having an affair with), slide open the partition and ask her, “Did you like getting tied up?” This in reference to a story she just told about her much older sister tying her up by her hands and legs and putting her in the empty bathtub when she was a kid. A means to teach her how to “escape” if she was ever kidnapped. Obviously, Clark is more turned on by than “sympathetic” to the story. Rather than shutting him down at this point, as she should have long ago, “Girlie” continues to invite Clark’s skeevy rhetoric by justifying the question with the answer, “I liked the challenge of getting free.”

    After enduring Clark’s “shrink bit” for a while though, there does come a point when “Girlie” finally has the presence of mind to say, “Go fuck yourself”—and it certainly took her long enough. Unfortunately, she opens the door, so to speak, to him again after he “apologizes” by saying, “I just like to push buttons.” Sounds like something his first wife, Madonna, might wield as an excuse. And yes, there’s a missed opportunity for playing one of her songs in the cab when Clark asks if “Girlie” wants to listen to the radio. To keep some aspect of the ride “quiet,” she opts to say no. And it goes without saying that there wasn’t enough money in the budget for “Papa Don’t Preach” (the lead single from the album Madonna actually dedicated to Penn, True Blue) to blast from the speakers—which, for “Girlie,” would have been far more emotionally soothing than indulging Clark for this fucking long. Or even the married man she keeps texting with, often revealing facial expressions that indicate how “icky” she feels at certain moments throughout the “conversation,” not least of which is when the married guy, saved in her phone as “L,” keeps insisting that he “needs her pink.” Needs her to get him off, etc., etc. Alas, she’s already busy getting Clark off on an emotional level in the cab.

    The car doesn’t start moving again until around the fifty-four-minute mark, which means thirty-three minutes have gone by wherein these two are as stationary as the plot and dialogue itself, the latter always dancing around the trope of “Girlie’s” “Daddy issues,” hence the reason why she’s with an older man who’s already taken. And yes, “Girlie” does get into it with Clark about her absentee father, and the fact that he never actually touched her as a child (you know, in the affectionate way, not the molester way).

    Far earlier than this point, a reasonable viewer might ask themselves: are there times when one is feeling this chatty with their driver? Apart from when one is a rich woman with a regular chauffeur? Sure, but this goes well-beyond the “TMI” level of believability. Granted, when straight women are in an especially vulnerable state, particularly over a dude, it’s not out of the realm of possibility for her to become confessional with another man—ideally, an “objective” stranger. Alas, the grotesqueness of their conversation would seemingly require a certain amount of drunkenness to be at play. Not least of which is the almost Woody Allen-meets-Jean-Luc Godard-esque exchange during which “Girlie” says to Clark, “If I told you that I was twenty-four or thirty-four, your opinion of me would drastically change.” He replies, “That’s not true.” She rebuffs, “For women, it is true. It is fuckin’ true. The moment we hit thirty, our value is cut in half.” Clark shrugs, “I mean, fine. Fuck it, it’s true.” He then “comforts” her by adding, “You really do look twenty-something, but by the way you talk all smart and shit, you know, if I wasn’t lookin’ I would guess you were fifty.” (Side note: Dakota Johnson is thirty-four.)

    Through all this supposed repartee (again, by more twentieth century standards of what would constitute that), a tension seems to keep building, but there is never any real release. Never any grand denouement that would make it worthwhile enough to, as a viewer, endure this very long cab ride. Not even the “revelatory” final piece of information that “Girlie” metes out to Clark.

    Worse still, “Girlie” is so “touched” by Clark’s toxic masculinity-based candor that she tips him five hundred dollars at the end of the ride. Of course, an Uber would have been much cheaper in every way, not to mention the prior-to-booking offer it gives to have a “quiet ride” and not deal with any chatty bullshit from fundamentally lonely men like Clark, a driver who, in the end, doesn’t make anyone feel all that nostalgic about the slow death of the yellow cab.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Princess Beatrice and husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi join Sienna Miller on Day 9 of Wimbledon

    Princess Beatrice and husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi join Sienna Miller on Day 9 of Wimbledon

    The cloudy weather failed to put a damper on the Wimbledon Championships on Day 9 of the prestigious tennis tournament.

    A fleet of stars brought their own sunshine to West London, with a throng of sporty luminaries lighting up Centre Court.

    So far, we’ve already seen a bevy of well-known faces flock to the Wimbledon grounds, with the likes of Jodie Turner-Smith, Hannah Waddingham and Salma Hayek all making appearances.

    WATCH: Princess Kate’s best Wimbledon fashion moments

    Keep scrolling to see the full list of celebrity arrivals on day nine of Wimbledon…

    © Getty Images

    Princess Beatrice and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi

    Princess Beatrice and her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi joined guests in the coveted Royal Box. Exuding elegance, Beatrice wowed in a gorgeous white dress peppered with flowers, whilst Edoardo looked suave in a caramel-hued suit. 

    Oli Green and Sienna Miller at wimbledon

    Sienna Miller

    Actress Sienna Miller was all smiles as she stepped out with her beau Oli Green. Dressed to impress, the star donned a long-sleeved polka dot dress, whilst Oli rocked a charcoal grey suit. 

    stephen fry at wimbledon in cream suit© Getty Images

    Stephen Fry

    Comedian and writer Stephen looked his usual dapper self in a cream suit, a sky blue shirt and a striped tie in candy pink and sage green. Despite the light rain, Stephen was all smiles as he made his way into the Wimbledon grounds.

    Michael McIntyre in blue suit at wimbledon© Getty Images

    Michael McIntyre

    Comedian Michael donned a smart navy suit and a Wimbledon-esque purple tie for the star-studded occasion.

    Ann and steve redgrave at wimbledon© Getty Images

    Sir Steve Redgrave

    Olympic rower Steve attended with his wife Ann. The couple looked suitably elegant for the sporty outing, with Steve donning a navy blazer and a red striped tie, whilst Ann looked oh-so chic in a trendy denim dress.

    Sidharth Malhotra and Kiara Advani in suits at wimbledon© Getty Images

    Sidharth Malhotra and Kiara Advani

    Bollywood stars Sidharth Malhotra and Kiara Advani looked loved-up as they donned co-ordinating suits in SW19. 

    denise lewsis in orange trousers at wimbledon© Getty Images

    Dame Denise Lewis

    Denise Lewis attended as a guest of Emirates, Official Airline Partner of The Championships, Wimbledon. She was pictured beaming from ear to ear in a pair of tangerine trousers and a blush pink blazer. Amping up her look, she accessorised with gold jewellery and wore a pair of sleek white trainers for a sporty touch. 

    princess beatrice and Edoardo talking to stephen fry and lena dunham© Getty Images

    Lena Dunham

    Writer and actress Lena Dunham sat next to Stephen Fry in the Royal Box. As ever, she won us over in the style stakes rocking an edgy boucle top and funky necklaces. 

    Aimee Fuller in leopard print outfit at wimbledon© Getty Images

    Aimee Fuller

    British snowboarder Aimee also attended as a guest of Emirates. Offering a masterclass in fierce dressing, she rocked a leopard print skirt suit which she teamed with matching heels and a slick of red lipstick. 

    Phoebe Tatham

    Source link

  • Q&A: Kevin Costner on unveiling his Western saga ‘Horizon’ at Cannes

    Q&A: Kevin Costner on unveiling his Western saga ‘Horizon’ at Cannes

    CANNES – A month before Kevin Costner puts the first installment of his multi-chapter Western “Horizon: An American Saga” into theaters, the actor-director came to the Cannes Film Festival to unveil his self-financed passion project.

    “Two of my boys are out fishing right now,” Costner said with a grin in an interview at the Carlton Hotel. “And the three girls found their way onto a boat. So dad’s in here, stumping for his movie.”

    The movie is actually two, or if Costner has his way, four. “Horizon: Chapter One,” which runs three hours, will be released by Warner Bros. in theaters June 28. “Chapter Two” follows August 16. Costner has scripts ready for parts three and four.

    It’s only the fourth time Costner, 69, has directed, following 1990’s “Dances With Wolves,” 1997’s “The Postman” and 2003’s “Open Range.” But when he has, Costner has usually done it with a clear-eyed passion for storytelling and character. That’s on display in the wide-ranging epic “Horizon,” with a cast including Sienna Miller, Abbey Lee, Sam Worthington and Costner.

    It’s also Costner’s biggest gamble, ever. To raise the money for the $100 million-plus production, he mortgaged his seaside Santa Barbara, California, estate. He’s been trying to make “Horizon” for more than 30 years.

    “I thank God for Cannes. I’m an independent filmmaker, essentially, and I’m here by myself,” said Costner, whose film was to premiere Sunday. “So this is a high moment for me because it’s helping me create awareness for a movie. I don’t have all the money in the world to expose this movie. But I have my time and a platform here.”

    Remarks have been lightly edited for brevity.

    AP: What was your calculus in deciding to put your money into “Horizon”? What made it worth it to you?

    COSTNER: You can spend your life just trying to make your pile grow bigger and bigger. And I’ve not been really terribly great at that. I’m like anyone else, I’d like it to be big. But not at the expense of not doing what I feel like I’ve love to do. If no one will help me do it and I believe strongly in its entertainment value — there’s commerce on my mind. But I don’t let it overshadow the entertainment value and essence of what I’m trying to portray. I don’t try to let the fear of that control my instincts on any level. I don’t want to live that way. If I was watching a movie about me and I thought, “Oo, don’t risk your money and make something like that,” what a (expletive).

    AP: Was it an easy decision? You didn’t look around your seaside Santa Barbara estate and question mortgaging it?

    COSTNER: No, it wasn’t an easy decision, but it was the decision I needed to make. It’s like, wow, why am I having to do this? I think I’m making mainstream entertainment. I don’t know what you felt about the movie but I felt like it’s really mainstream. I don’t feel that I’m an avant-garde type of a person. But yet I think my things are a little off. I’m willing to (in a wagon trail scene in the film) see a woman bathe because her desire to be clean was so pronounced. If you’re a woman, who wouldn’t want to be? But then in the next moment, you realize it’s against the rule, man. You could cost yourself your life. So that scene became important to make the next scene important. To me, a scene like that is just as important as a gun fight. And if that kind of scene doesn’t want to exist in a mainstream movie…

    AP: Could this have been a series?

    COSTNER: I guess. It will be. They’re going to break this up into a hundred pieces, you know what I mean? After four of these, they’re going to have 13, 14 hours of film and they’re going to turn into 25 hours of TV, and they’re going to do whatever they’re going to do. That’s just the way we live in our life but they’ll also exist in this form. And that was important for me, to make sure that happened. And I was the one who paid for it.

    AP: It’s an audacious release plan, with the second film opening two months after the first. What appealed to you about that?

    COSTNER: The studio wanted to try that. I knew this was going to come out fairy quickly, like every four or five months. That may have been easier. But this is something they feel like people can remember the first one and it can tie into the second one. I built into all of them a montage of what’s coming.

    AP: Since directing “Dances With Wolves,” you’ve directed “Open Range” and starred in “Wyatt Earp” and “Yellowstone.” What keeps bringing you back to the West?

    COSTNER: I like seeing behavior in men that makes sense. I make movies for men. I just make sure there’s great women characters because that’s really important to me. The backbone of our movie is actually women. I don’t like boys behaving stupid. I like the little boy who (fleeing an attack) takes the two horses and effectively saves his life. I like seeing people behave honestly in desperate situations. The heroism of a little boy saying “I’ll stay with you, Dad” is a really powerful moment. That’s my son (Hayes Costner) and it was very hard to watch.

    AP: In dramatizing the drive West of settlers, what was the Native American perspective you wanted to consider?

    COSTNER: Confusion about it. The colonel says, “If we salt the earth with enough of their dead, the wagons won’t come anymore.” When you’re that far out there, you can’t go. When people said goodbye in the East Coast, they didn’t come back. So the confusion for the Native American was they couldn’t make sense of that. Normally if you kill enough people they won’t bother you. But these Americans, these people were getting flyers saying you could have this land. There are salesmen in every century, every decade selling something they don’t really know what it is. It’s just America. It’s just this giant experiment of hope.

    AP: But America means different things to different people, right? You have Chinese immigrants in the film as well.

    COSTNER: When they weren’t useful, they were just cast away. And they had to create a sense of community and they came en masse. They came together and they were very industrious. They’ll be the wealthiest people in that town until there’s a tipping point and racism kicks in and suddenly they’re gone, too. You watch. That’s what would happen in real life.

    AP: What I’m getting at is there’s tragedy in this. Do you see westward expansion and your film as a tragedy?

    COSTNER: There’s inevitable tragedy to it. And there’s divisions. You see a whole tribe break in half. You see a father break from a son.

    AP: Have you already started shooting the third installment?

    COSTNER: I’ve shot three days and I continue to have to press for money to finish this. I have to figure out what else I can do to make this. But I’m not waiting to see how people feel. I know what this is, and I think if people love the movie experience, they have a really good chance of wanting to see the next one. That’s all I can believe. The prudent thing would be to wait, but I guess I’m not built for that wait.

    AP: Some of the issues on “Yellowstone” seemed to have to do with time and scheduling. What’s your feeling about your future with that series at this point?

    COSTNER: “Yellowstone” was really important in my life. I really loved that world and what we were able to do in five seasons. I only thought it would be one, but did five. I was willing to do three more – five, six and seven – but it just didn’t happen. Certain things were going on and it just didn’t happen. So the idea of going back, I’m open to that idea. But it’s based on everything that first three or four were based on, which is the scripts.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Jake Coyle, Associated Press

    Source link

  • Sienna Miller Boards Bull-Jumping Short Film ‘Marion’ as Executive Producer (EXCLUSIVE)

    Sienna Miller Boards Bull-Jumping Short Film ‘Marion’ as Executive Producer (EXCLUSIVE)


    Sienna Miller has boarded Joe Weiland and Finn Constantine’s short film “Marion” as executive producer.

    The film tells the story of Marion, France’s only female bull-jumper.

    “The short tracks the tense fifteen minutes before her first performance in a packed French arena,” reads the logline. “As she prepares, being the only woman in the team, the film explores her battle against misogyny and prejudiced attitudes. A journey of one woman through an all-male world – juggling motherhood and the contentious pursuit of her passion.”

    Caroline Larbère – a real French bull-jumper – plays Marion, who is struggling to reconcile her passion for the sport with her womanhood. Weiland and Constantine were inspired to write the short by Larbère herself.

    In France, La Course Landaise is an ancient form of bullfighting that involves no bloodshed. The film was shot last December in Bayonne, France.

    Radouan Leflahi, Manuel Severi and Laurent Fernandez also star.

    “Marion” is Weiland’s sophomore directorial effort after his debut, “Gorka,” which is a nominee in the short film category at the upcoming BAFTA awards. “Gorka,” which follows a French exchange student’s first visit to England, was also selected for the BFI London Film Festival.

    Constantine is a director and photographer working across fashion, art and music and has worked with brands including Gucci and Adidas.

    “I couldn’t be more excited to be executive producing Joe’s next film ‘Marion,’” said Miller. “It’s the beautiful story of Caroline and I’m feeling quite smug that I managed to join the Joe Weiland train as it’s leaving the station. ‘Gorka’ had me laughing then crying my eyes out. ‘Marion’ feels like the next step of an exciting journey.”

    Weiland and Constantine added: “’Marion’ is a film with real heart. A story of courage. When we met Caroline – we just couldn’t shake off her story. Her resilience in the face of adversity as the sole woman in this male-dominated French world. But we didn’t want to make a documentary. We wanted to bring this world to life through fiction – with Caroline playing herself.”

    “Marion” is a co-production between OB42 in the U.K. and Solab Pictures in France. Marija Djikic produces while DOP is Harry Wheeler.



    K.J. Yossman

    Source link

  • Sienna Miller Shuts Down Criticism Over 14-Year Age Gap With Boyfriend Oli Green

    Sienna Miller Shuts Down Criticism Over 14-Year Age Gap With Boyfriend Oli Green

    Source link

  • Sienna Miller Wore the Anti-Trend Summer Duo That *Everyone* Needs to Wimbledon

    Sienna Miller Wore the Anti-Trend Summer Duo That *Everyone* Needs to Wimbledon

    If you’ve been following the quiet-luxuryold-money aesthetic as closely as I have, you’re going to want to scroll through and keep on top of all of the outfits that celebrities have worn and will go on to wear to Wimbledon, the two-week long tennis tournament that’s going on right now at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club outside of London. Already, we’ve seen Phoebe Dynevor in a baby-blue striped matching set, Emma Corrin in an ecru shorts suit, and Anna Wintour in a polka-dot plissé dress. But of all the looks that’ve come out of the biggest event in tennis thus far, the one that’s most elite is Sienna Miller‘s.

    On Sunday, day nine of the tournament, Miller was spotted at the event alongside her boyfriend Oli Green wearing the summer duo that defies all trends and always looks expensive: a linen shirt and matching trousers. Specifically, the Anatomy of a Scandal star chose a blue-and-white striped set from Polo Ralph Lauren (which just so happens to be on sale right now) and a matching navy-blue wicker bag from Ralph Lauren Collection. To finish off the look, she added a pair of cat-eye sunglasses and platform sandals. Since her choice of Wimbledon attire is top tier to say the least, I rounded up a few equally buy-worthy linen sets below. 

    Eliza Huber

    Source link