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Tag: Venice Film Festival

  • Emma Stone Gives Her Richest Performance Yet in ‘Poor Things’

    Emma Stone Gives Her Richest Performance Yet in ‘Poor Things’

    Most of the films by the Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos couldn’t exactly be called sentimental. Not the grim shock of Dogtooth, certainly not the family murder drama The Killing of a Sacred Deer, not even the sci-fi romance (of a sort) The Lobster. It’s a surprise, then, that Lanthimos’s new film Poor Things, which premiered here at the Venice Film Festival on Friday, takes a long, strange trip toward something like sweetness. 

    Based on Alasdair Gray’s 1992 novel, Poor Things is a sci-fi fairytale Bildungsroman about a Frankensteinian monster as she makes her way in the world. Emma Stone plays Bella Baxter, who is the ward of a mad scientist professor, Godwin (Willem Dafoe), and whose very existence is a freakish abnormality. Inside Bella’s skull fizzles away the brain of an infant belonging to the woman whose body Bella has, in essence, inherited. So she is both child and mother at once, a staggering and language-less toddler housed, bizarrely, in an adult woman’s body. 

    Godwin, whom Bella comes to call simply God, has other curious inventions filling the house—perhaps most notably a chicken with the head of a bulldog—but his prize creation is Bella, a daughter figure whose development he watches with a mix of pride and protectiveness. As observed by one of Godwin’s students, Max (Ramy Youssef), Bella is growing up quite fast, acquiring about 15 new words a day, ever steadier on her feet (though still moving in an amusingly jaunty herky-jerk), and increasingly curious about all the wonders teeming just outside her home.

    It’s vaguely 1880s Europe, the film journeying from London to Lisbon to Paris, all done up in a fanciful style reminiscent of Terry Gilliam’s work. Steampunk elements dot the picture occasionally, backdrops are deliberately false and theatrical, the costumes (a fascinating array done by Holly Waddington) are at times Victorian puffiness mixed with 1960s go-go mod. It’s an arresting film to behold, though its relentless style risks exhaustion. 

    As do a few moments of corny indulgence, when Lanthimos inserts a pop-feminist applause line that almost seems to break the fourth wall and mug to the audience. Otherwise, though, the movie’s politics are agreeably pointed. Bella’s trek across a landscape of sex and men sees her gaining ever more mettle and sharp perspective. She becomes a sex-worker philosopher, asking questions of the systems she sees arrayed before her with a directness, a bluntness that is understood to be a part of her whole post-brain-transplant psychological makeup. If Bella doesn’t like an answer, she goes about reordering her environment—it’s something like praxis.

    Much of her discovery comes in the form of sex, which Lanthimos stages in vivid detail without a hint of bashfulness. Stone gamely commits to these scenes, as she does to the entirety of this huge, demanding role that carries her from infant to woman in full. It’s a marvelous turn, witty but not overly arch. Stone seamlessly shifts between the film’s comedy and its mounting wistfulness, as Bella comes of age with a keen and hard-won appreciation of her improbable place in the world. This is where Lanthimos gets almost mushy, though he maintains just enough oddball edge to keep the saccharine at bay. 

    Stone has sturdy support from her costars. Dafoe remains a master of eccentricity, while Youssef is winsome, sincere but not saintly. Arriving late in the picture, Christopher Abbott does an appropriately slimy villain turn and the great Kathryn Hunter is a prickly mix of motherly and menacing as a heavily tattooed Parisienne madam. Only Mark Ruffalo, as a sleazy hustler who sweeps Bella off her feet (as much as she can be swept; she mostly just enjoys the sex), overdoes it, tipping the scales toward daffy farce.

    Which, to be fair, may simply be how he was directed. Lanthimos definitely wants to make us laugh—Poor Things is a comedy above all else. At its best, the film is indeed piercingly clever, proud of its peculiarity to a degree just shy of smugness. Though, the 140-minute film does begin to wear out its welcome in the last third, when the jokes have mostly all been made before and the only fresh additions are cumbersome matters of plot. The epic dimensions of the film—Bella’s Odyssean trek from one place to the next, one lesson to another—are appreciated. Still, Poor Things loses some of its vigor as Lanthimos tries to draw his themes together into a satisfying conclusion.

    Which isn’t to say that things don’t end nicely. A kindness and a sense of accomplishment animate the film’s closing scenes; we feel the contented tiredness of arriving home after a long time out in the formative wilds. In making a film about growing up (among other things), Lanthimos seems to have matured some too. He’s still a mischievous provocateur daring people to wince in the face of uncomfortable matter, but in Poor Things he finds grace in the profane and the squalid. He shows us a heart to complement all the whirring of his singular brain.

    Richard Lawson

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  • Join George Clooney, Emma Corrin, and More Stars in Venice

    Join George Clooney, Emma Corrin, and More Stars in Venice

    The show-stopping sights of Venice once again have competition right now, as talent from around the world gathers for the annual Venice Film Festival. Saskia Lawaks has captured one-of-a-kind moments with many of them, exclusively for Vanity Fair and our partners at Vanity Fair Italia.

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  • Inside Ava DuVernay’s ‘Origin’, a Global Investigation With a Personal Touch

    Inside Ava DuVernay’s ‘Origin’, a Global Investigation With a Personal Touch

    Caste was a literary phenomenon in 2020, spending 55 weeks on the US bestseller lists and reportedly selling more than 1.5 million copies. Wilkerson, the Pulitzer –winning, bestselling author of The Warmth of Other Suns, presents a bold and convincing premise, that racism in America is a caste system similar to those in India and Nazi Germany.

    When DuVernay first reached out to Wilkerson, the author thought DuVernay wanted to make a documentary like she had with 13th, or perhaps a film focused on the history in the book, as she did in Selma. But DuVernay pitched her on the idea of centering the film on her own journey in actually writing the book, which would require that her personal life become a part of the story. “I explained that it would be important for folks to feel emotionally connected to someone in order to take us through the explanation of what Caste is,” she says. “It has to be personal.”

    DuVernay says Wilkerson was quick to agree, and they would talk on the phone as DuVernay worked on the script. “I want the film to be a salute to the reverence that she has for life, the rigor that she has for her work, and to try to put that in this motion picture that would tell the story as I interpreted it through her sharing with me,” says DuVernay.

    Shortly before she began work on the book, Wilkerson lost both her husband and her mother; DuVernay captures her grief onscreen in symbolic and tactile ways that make the film feel deeply personal. “Well, I could only tap into my own experiences with grief,” says DuVernay. “What I rendered was what it felt like to me, just using my own personal experiences.”

    Jon Bernthal plays her husband, Brett Kelly Hamilton; the actor and DuVernay first met for a long dinner in Savannah, Georgia. She remembers after they closed down the restaurant that night, Bernthal suggested they walk back to their hotels. “It got us into a really interesting conversation about what it’s like to walk down the street in a city you don’t know as a white man, and what it’s like to walk down the street in a city you don’t know as a Black woman,” says DuVernay. She describes him as “a whole vibe. But he’s also insanely talented, and can do a lot more than I think the things that he’s usually thought up for.”

    Rebecca Ford

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  • Richard Linklater’s ‘Hit Man’ Gets Inside the Mind of a Faux Killer for Hire

    Richard Linklater’s ‘Hit Man’ Gets Inside the Mind of a Faux Killer for Hire

    “In law enforcement circles, he is considered to be one of the greatest actors of his generation, so talented that he can perform on any stage and with any kind of script,” Hollandsworth writes in his article. He describes Johnson as a chameleon who is able to shift his characters based on the type of client he’s meeting. The sting was simple: Johnson would meet with a potential client and get the client to verbally confirm they were hiring Johnson to murder someone. Their entire conversation would be recorded, and used as evidence. After Johnson left the meeting, the client would be arrested.

    For Powell, who cowrote the script with Linklater, the dark comedy, which is set in New Orleans, was an opportunity to play a character who was often playing a character. Sometimes “there was just a whole blurry line between Gary and Ron, which increased over time,” says Linklater.

    In the film, “Ron” is one of Johnson’s personas that he uses when meeting a potential client. He’s Ron when he meets a beautiful woman (Adria Arjona) who wants her controlling husband killed. But Gary feels sympathetic toward her, and advises her to leave him rather than have him killed. From there, Gary—still pretending he’s Ron—is pulled into a complicated ruse when he continues to interact with the woman and their lives get more and more entangled.

    Ron, a charismatic, confident man with a dark side, couldn’t be more different than Gary, a mild-mannered teacher in his real life, when he’s not moonlighting as a cold-blooded killer. “Glen, the thorough professional he is, was reading books on body language and he thought Ron would walk a little different than Gary, and he also had a lot of fun with the accents,” says Linklater. “Every movie needs something that’s kind of difficult to pull off or something that seems especially challenging.”

    As research, Linklater and Powell listened to the recordings of Johnson’s sting operations, meeting a cast of unbelievable characters who felt almost too strange to be real—and perfect for film. “We could have done a lot more of those,” says Linklater of capturing the wide range of clients hoping to take out a hit. “There’s an alternate movie that’s just all these people at that moment. These rich society ladies, with their nice dresses, sitting down in a nice hotel room talking about how to kill their rich husband they’re sick of.”

    Linklater found the conversations fascinating because the clients were having these life-and-death discussions “so matter of factly,” he says. “It’s almost like they’re all acting in their own little crime movie when someone’s suddenly working with a mobster. I thought it was all so dark and funny in the strangest way.”

    Rebecca Ford

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  • Michael Mann and Adam Driver Keep ‘Ferrari’ Firing on All Cylinders

    Michael Mann and Adam Driver Keep ‘Ferrari’ Firing on All Cylinders

    Two years ago, the actor Adam Driver starred in a heavily accented film about a great Italian house of industry, a movie delineating a famed family’s squabbles and successes, its difficult wrenching into modernity. That film was, of course, House of Gucci, Ridley Scott’s much anticipated film that delivered some of the desired luxe camp, but was ultimately an uncompelling portrait of European dynasty.

    Driver is now taking another crack at the form, in Michael Mann’s Ferrari, which premiered here at the Venice Film Festival on Thursday. This would seem an apt setting for the film’s debut, where audiences can cheer on a home country hero. But Ferrari, being a Mann film, is not prone to rousing celebration. It’s a moodier, more idiosyncratic picture than that, a study in pride and heedless male drive shaped in entirely human dimensions. It’s far more successful than House of Gucci.

    The film takes place in 1957, when founder Enzo Ferrari is in his late 50s and is at risk of losing his company. He’s too focused on racing to pay much attention to the company’s commercial output. Some of that distraction may be owed to the recent death of Ferrari’s son, Dino, felled by muscular dystrophy in his 20s and now intensely mourned by Ferrari and his semi-estranged wife, Laura (Penélope Cruz). Driver is, obviously, not in his 50s himself, but some subtle makeup and hair work do a good enough job of convincing us. And anyway, he’s otherwise such a force in the role—in a taciturn, half-gentlemanly way—that one doesn’t much care about a little age fudging.

    Ferrari is a story divided in two, balancing Ferrari’s tense determination to have one of his cars win the notoriously demanding, dangerous Mille Miglia road race (and thus, hopefully, giving the company a crucial sales boost) and his tricky domestic life. He’s got a mistress, Lina (Shailene Woodley), stashed away at a country house his wife knows nothing about, as well as a young son, Piero, of whom Laura is most certainly not aware. As the film unfolds, Mann binds these disparate threads into something like one conclusion: an acceptance of error and its consequences is, in life’s pursuits, the only way forward. 

    Initially, it’s vaguely disappointing how decidedly un-Mann-ishly the film comports itself. The director’s signature cool slickness has been traded for period glow, as characters talk in rooms with little panache. But gradually, Mann’s familiar tics reveal themselves: in pleasingly chunky bits of dialogue (Mann co-write the screenplay with Troy Kennedy Martin), in roaring chase scenes filmed with blunt vigor, and of course in the sunglasses. Driver wears his shades well, and is otherwise a great vessel for Mann’s trademark masculine glide, competence and sharp edges carried with a purposeful grace.

    Mann lets the film’s women shine, too. Cruz gets more fire to play with than Woodley—when we first meet Laura, who shrewdly manages the company’s finances, she’s angrily wielding a pistol—but both make their characters register as something like peers of the man at the center. Ferrari is careful to make its people real: complex and capable of change. Just as, say, the smooth operators of Heat were rounded with personal detail. In all that nuanced portraiture, Ferrari may not be as vroom-vroom gung-ho as 2019’s Ford v Ferrari, but Mann’s film is all the more pleasurable for its thoughtfulness and restraint.

    Cars do go zoom though, toward triumph and, on more than one occasion, hideous calamity. (One crash is especially gruesome, arriving as a dreadfully invigorating shock.) Ferrari, who is grieving lost friends along with his son, has grown hardened to such tragedy, but the film doesn’t paint him as some unfeeling, tunnel-visioned monster. He simply respects that the men under his command have entered into such risk willingly; the loss is felt, but guilt rarely enters the room. That psychology is credibly mapped by Mann and Driver, the latter so adept at communicating pain dwelling somewhere under a stolid exterior. 

    Though he has ventured into television recently, Mann’s last film was 2015’s curious, perhaps unfairly maligned hacker thriller Blackhat. It’s been a long wait to see another of Mann’s muscular visions on the big screen, and while Ferrari is perhaps more muted than some might hope for, it’s a pleasure to watch the filmmaker explore some new styles and timbres. Now 80 years old, Mann has made a film that’s more rueful, contemplative than those in his past. Ferrari the man—who was charged with manslaughter for an accident depicted in the film—is neither venerated nor condemned. But he is perhaps understood, as framed by an old master who himself knows a thing or two about building elegant, sophisticated machines. 

    Richard Lawson

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  • Josh O’Connor Thinks “Tennis Is the Sex” in ‘Challengers’

    Josh O’Connor Thinks “Tennis Is the Sex” in ‘Challengers’

    Luca Guadagnino’s buzzy tennis ménage à trois film, Challengers, briefly broke the internet after releasing a sexy trailer that contained a sensual scene between Zendaya, The Crown’s Josh O’Connor, and West Side Story breakout Mike Faist. However, in a new interview with Empire, O’Connor makes it sound like most of the action in the film happens on the court: “The tennis is the sex,” he said.

    Challengers stars Zendaya as Tashi Duncan, a rising tennis star who gets intimately familiar with fellow tennis prodigies Patrick (O’Connor) and Art (Faist), both on and off the court. In interviews conducted before the SAG-AFTRA strike, the three stars shared their experience working with Guadagnino, who apparently was far from a tennis superfan. “He had no knowledge of tennis going into this,” said Faist. “And I think he had only a vague interest in certain tennis specificities. He was more interested in the bodies and sweat.”

    The steamy trailer for Challengers certainly depicts a healthy mix of bodies and sweat via a sensual hotel scene of the threesome, as well as plenty of terrific tennis shots. “What Luca’s really good at is finding sensuality and desire,” Zendaya told Empire. “There’s so much in just glances. The tension builds. Not having the release is a good thing sometimes.”

    But for those expecting a film rife with carnal scenes between Zendaya, Faist, and O’Connor, you may want to temper your expectations a bit. “The tennis is the sex,” said O’Connor in the story. “Those moments are so sexy. The film is dealing with the tension before and after. The sex they’re all desperate for is on the court.”

    Challengers was initially scheduled to premiere at this year’s Venice Film Festival, where Guadagnino won the best-director prize last year for his cannibal romance Bones and All. However due to the strike—which prevents actors from promoting their films via press tours, social media, or attending festivals—distributor MGM withdrew Challengers from Venice and pushed its release date to April 26, 2024. So we’ll all have to wait a bit longer to see whether Guadagnino aces his next project. 

    Chris Murphy

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  • Venice and TIFF Lineups Tease a Promising Oscar Season

    Venice and TIFF Lineups Tease a Promising Oscar Season

    Rebecca Ford: It’s fair to say there was more anticipation for this year’s festival lineup announcements than there is in most years, due to many questions about how the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes might affect turnout this fall. It wasn’t a great sign when Venice’s already announced opening film—Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers, starring Zendayabacked out of the festival last week. Would that mean that other distributors would follow suit, holding their films for after the strikes have been resolved?

    But now that both the Venice and Toronto Film Festival lineups have come out, I think we’re all breathing a sigh of relief, as we discuss on this week’s episode of Little Gold Men. A lot of our most anticipated films have landed on lineups—so even if the stars can’t be there, most studios seem to be moving forward with their planned fall festival debuts. What stood out to you the most about Venice, which you’ll attend, Richard?

    Richard Lawson: Even without American movie stars on the red carpet this year (beyond maybe those promoting a beauty or fashion brand, rather than a movie), this year’s Venice is an array of bold names. They’re mostly members of a union that did reach a deal with the AMPTP: the Directors Guild. Just look at this lineup! David Fincher, Michael Mann, Sofia Coppola, Ava DuVernay, Yorgos Lanthimos, Richard Linklater, William Friedkin, and Pablo Larraín are all premiering new films on the Lido. Which is to say nothing of Bradley Cooper, who will be debuting his second feature, the Leonard Bernstein biopic Maestro, five years after A Star Is Born opened to raves at Venice. (And to say nothing of Woody Allen, Roman Polanski, and Luc Besson, who have films on the slate too.)

    My guess is that Cooper, who also cowrote and stars in his film, won’t appear at the festival in a show of support for two of his unions. But Maestro, from Netflix, still promises to be one of the big premieres of Venice—or any other fall festival. So, too, could be Fincher’s The Killer, with Michael Fassbender and Tilda Swinton; Coppola’s accidental Elvis companion piece, Priscilla; and Mann’s Ferrari. I know less about DuVernay’s film, Origin, which is inspired by Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, and about Linklater’s film, which is called Hit Man, a title that suggests some kind of . . . action movie? Which would be a swerve for that master of mellow.

    Venice has somehow (for the time being, anyway) found a way to make their festival feel big even with the likely absence of actors—and the absence of a few massive films that were rumored to be bowing there, Ridley Scott’s Napoleon and Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part 2 chief among them. I am finding myself suddenly cautiously optimistic about a festival that did, just last week, feel pretty tenuous.

    Toronto also has big stuff to offer, David. What do you think are that festival’s biggest programming coups?

    David Canfield: TIFF’s main attraction this year appears to be in the unproven filmmaker category—which is to say, the festival was still able to court big stars who happen to have directed movies. Tony Goldwyn (Ezra), Michael Keaton (Knox Goes Away), Kristin Scott Thomas (North Star), Chris Pine (Poolman), Viggo Mortensen (The Dead Don’t Hurt), Ethan Hawke (Wildcat), and Anna Kendrick (Woman of the Hour) all helmed films that will world premiere in Toronto, and all titles are up for sale (Poolman has some rights available), meaning that any big hits—and potential awards plays—could make for a particularly exciting moment this season. Since a distributor isn’t attached to most of these films, one presumes at least a handful of these directors will also attend to support their films at the beginning of their journeys. That’s huge for TIFF, a major event on the annual film calendar that usually sees celebrities from all over the world attend.

    That is not happening this year, unless the SAG-AFTRA strike miraculously resolves itself. And that’s a shame for some of these other TIFF premieres, which are major gets and likely pivotal launch points for Oscar campaigns. We can talk about the films seemingly hitting other festivals beforehand, particularly Telluride, but let’s stay for a moment on the world premieres. TIFF will be launching starry new films from Taika Waititi (Next Goal Wins), Craig Gillespie (Dumb Money), and David Yates (Pain Hustlers). TIFF is relatively mainstream, meaning when a movie hits there, it tends to portend a significant theatrical life. If the reviews are also good, that can make for a very potent awards combination.

    Rebecca Ford, David Canfield, Richard Lawson

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  • Venice Film Festival Director Defends Invites to Woody Allen, Roman Polanski, and Luc Besson

    Venice Film Festival Director Defends Invites to Woody Allen, Roman Polanski, and Luc Besson

    Despite ongoing strikes in Hollywood that led to the exodus of Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers from its opening slot last week, the Venice Film Festival will proceed—but not without a wave of early backlash.

    When the prestigious festival unveiled its lineup on Tuesday, alongside films from Sofia Coppola, David Fincher, Ava DuVernay, and Bradley Cooper were works from a trio of men accused of sexual misconduct. Woody Allen’s Coup de Chance and Roman Polanski’s The Palace each scored out-of-competition slots, while Luc Besson will debut his new feature, DogMan, in competition at the fest.

    “Luc Besson has been recently fully cleared of any accusations. Woody Allen went under legal scrutiny twice at the end of the ’90s and was absolved. With them, I don’t see where the issue is,” Venice Film Festival artistic director Alberto Barbera told Variety in defense of their inclusion in the lineup.

    Allen, whose next film is his first entirely in French, has been accused of sexual abuse against his adopted daughter in 1992, allegations for which he was never charged and which he has denied. Since 2018, multiple women have alleged sexual misconduct against Besson, who denies any wrongdoing and was cleared of rape accusations by a French court last month.

    Polanski is the lone filmmaker in this group to be criminally charged for a sex crime. In 1977, he pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. He’s been living mostly in France since 1978, when he fled the United States on the eve of receiving his sentence because he believed the judge was going to send him to prison. He has since been accused of sexual abuse in 2010, 2017, and 2019, totaling six allegations altogether. Polanski denies all the claims and even reportedly threatened to sue his most recent accuser.

    “In Polanski’s case, it’s paradoxical,” Barbera argued. “It’s been 60 years. Polanski has admitted his responsibility. He’s asked to be forgiven. He’s been forgiven by the victim. The victim has asked for the issue to be put to rest. I think that to keep beating on Polanski means seeking a scapegoat for other situations that would deserve more attention,” he continued, adding, “I am on the side of those who say you have to distinguish between the responsibilities of the individual and that of the artist.”

    Polanski will not be attending the festival, which runs from August 30 to September 9. Barbera is “not sure” that Allen “will be doing press,” but “he is coming to the film’s premiere for sure.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Zendaya’s Sexy Tennis Drama ‘Challengers’ Will Open the Venice Film Festival

    Zendaya’s Sexy Tennis Drama ‘Challengers’ Will Open the Venice Film Festival

    The world has a little over a month to prepare for photos of Zendaya, The Crown’s Josh O’Connor, and West Side Story’s Mike Faist waving from gondolas and gracing the lido of the Venice Film Festival. Their sexy tennis drama Challengers, from Call Me By Your Name filmmaker Luca Guadagnino, will open the fest’s 80th edition, it was announced Thursday. The film will screen out of competition.

    From first-time screenwriter Justin Kuritzkes, Challengers tells the tale of Tashi Donaldson (Zendaya), a top-of-her-game tennis prodigy who begins a love affair with two fellow pros on the circuit—Art (Faist) and Patrick (O’Connor). After an injury ends her professional playing career, Tashi marries and becomes a coach for Art, a partnership that is thrown into chaos when Art and Patrick are forced to play against one another years later.

    “I am so thrilled for audiences to experience my new film Challengers at the Venice Film Festival,” Guadagnino said in a statement. “It’s a modern bold story of youthful energy, love and power. Zendaya, Josh and Mike are totally original and fresh, bringing a new energy like you’ve never seen before. I can’t wait for the Lido audience to dance across the notes of the soundtrack of Trent [Reznor] and Atticus [Ross] at the opening night of the 80th edition of the Mostra. As a filmmaker, it is a dream come true and I am grateful to [Venice artistic director] Alberto [Barbera] and the whole Venice family for this wonderful recognition for the film.”

    Challengers has snagged a prime spot at a festival that’s known to debut awards contenders. Last year, that list included Tár, The Banshees of Inisherin, and The Whale, not to mention the Don’t Worry Darling of it all. Guadagnino himself was at the fest just last year with Bones and All, starring Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell. In years past, he has used the fest to premiere other works as well, including I Am Love (2009), A Bigger Splash (2015), and Suspiria (2018). Zendaya last walked the Venice red carpet in 2021 alongside Chalamet for the premiere of Dune: Part 1.

    Challengers will kick off the 2023 Venice Film Festival on Aug. 30, before debuting theatrically on Sept. 15.


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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Review: A portrait of an artist in Venice-winning doc

    Review: A portrait of an artist in Venice-winning doc

    Nan Goldin, the subject of Laura Poitras’ Venice Film Festival-winning documentary “ All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” is a name you probably either know well or not at all. In the art world, she is unequivocally famous. Her photographs depicting downtown life in the late 1970s and ’80s and the vibrant, glamorous bohemians she encountered on the scene, like John Waters It-Girl Cookie Mueller, have been displayed at the Whitney, the Tate and MoMA.

    To look at any of the photos in her most well-known work, the ever-evolving slideshow “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency,” you can see how influential she was on generations to come with her raw, public-private snapshots of parties that didn’t end until dawn, beautiful “queens” and even her face, one month after a “dope-sick” boyfriend beat her so badly she almost lost her eye. The New York Times review of a collection of those photographs at the time said that “The Ballad” was to the 1980s what Robert Frank’s “The Americans” was to the 1950s. And it would become a devastating document of many of the young lives lost in the AIDS epidemic.

    This is only part of Goldin’s story, as you’ll learn in “ All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” which begins its theatrical run this week in New York before expanding to more markets in the coming weeks. Poitras, the Oscar-winning filmmaker behind “ Citizenfour,” started filming Goldin to document her protest efforts against museums accepting money from the Sackler family. Their company, Purdue Pharma, developed and marketed the widely prescribed and widely abused painkiller OxyContin, the brand name for the opioid oxycodone. Opioids, which also include fentanyl, have been linked to more than 500,000 deaths in the U.S. over the past two decades.

    Goldin several years ago found herself addicted to opioids which she was prescribed for a surgery and took according to instructions. But, she said, she became addicted overnight. When she got out of treatment, she started reading about Purdue and the Sacklers, a name she associated with museums and philanthropy. Sackler-run foundations have given many millions of dollars to some of the world’s most prestigious museums and universities, from the Guggenheim to Oxford. And her mission became clear: To use her status in the art world to get museums to stop accepting money from the Sacklers, take down their name from galleries and to change how we think about addiction and treatment. And partially as a result of her efforts, many museums from the Louvre to the Met, have distanced themselves from the Sacklers.

    Poitras smartly saw that there was a very clear through-line from what Goldin did in the ’80s, when she came out of rehab and saw all her friends dying of AIDS, and what she was doing now. The documentary weaves together these threads to make a holistic portrait of an artist’s battle cry.

    Though the Sackler protests are the hook, the film’s strongest portions are its historical ones. Poitras artfully overlays Goldin’s heartbreaking eloquence with her photographs and a camera shutter soundtrack. Goldin speaks about everything from her stifling childhood in suburbia to the ripple effect of her older sister Barbara’s teenage institutionalization to her death by suicide at age 18 that left Nan, then Nancy Goldin, bouncing between foster homes. It wasn’t until she found a camera that she found her voice and her true family (her friends).

    There are some particularly devastating family realizations that Poitras and Goldin save for last. It’s trite to call that an origin story, but with Goldin, everything stemmed from those confusing days. She’d been told early on never to let the neighbors know about their troubles. Brushing it under the rug, not talking about it and not dealing with it would destroy them, though.

    Goldin might not have known it when she started photographing her LGBTQ friends, but her work has always been about looking at the so-called fringe cultures in society, about showing the problems that the masses would rather just ignore and making them so urgent that you can’t look away anymore. It is an act of hope in the idea that things could be better because the alternative, the silence, is infinitely worse. Goldin would know.

    As Goldin says at the start, “It’s easy to make your life into a story. But it’s harder to sustain real memories.”

    “The real memories are what affect me now,” she continued. “Even if you don’t actually unleash the memories, the effect is there, it’s in your body.”

    “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” a NEON release in limited release now, expanding on, has not been rated by the Motion Picture Association. Running time: 117 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

    ———

    In a story published Nov. 25, 2022, reviewing “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” The Associated Press erroneously reported that OxyContin had been responsible for more than 500,000 overdose deaths in the U.S. That death toll is attributed generally to opioids, which include oxycodone and fentanyl.

    ———

    Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ldbahr.

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