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Darren Aronofsky, Laura Poitras, Olivia Wilde, Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Florian Zeller Take New Movies to Venice – Full Lineup

New works by Darren Aronofsky, Andrew Dominik, Alejandro J. Iñárritu, Luca Guadagnino, Joanna Hogg and Laura Poitras are among the rich roster of titles that will launch from the Lido and compete for a Golden Lion at the upcoming Venice Film Festival, which is set for a standout stellar 79th edition.

Artistic director Alberto Barbera has unveiled a luscious, politically infused lineup comprising a slew of hotly anticipated pics from the U.S. and elsewhere around the world, featuring scores of stars.

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Olivia Wilde, Penelope Cruz, Ana de Armas, Cate Blanchett, Timothée Chalamet, Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, Christoph Waltz, Sigourney Weaver and Mia Goth are just some top talents now expected to be on the Palazzo Del Cinema’s red carpet during the Aug. 31-Sept. 10 event. Chris Rock may be coming to Venice to promote a short titled “Look at Me” directed by Sally Potter.

But fest director Alberto Barbera at the presser made it clear that he has a lot more on his mind than sparking paparazzi and fan frenzies on the Lido.

“It’s often said that film festivals are a window on the world,” said Barbera, noting that “From this window we are witnessing things that we would rather not see, such as the war of aggression on Ukraine.”

Barbera added that he and the Venice team are also horrified by the arrests in Iran and the incarceration “for no reason” of filmmakers, Jafar Panahi Mohammad Rasoulof, Mostafa Al-Ahmad, “guilty only of having exercised their right to freedom of expression,” he noted. He also denounced the incarceration in Turkey of producer Cigdem Mater, “who is guilty only of having planned a doc — that was never made — on the 2013 Gezi Park anti-government protests,” Barbera said.

Aronofsky, a Venice aficionado whose “Black Swan” was the Lido’s opener in 2010, is back with “The Whale,” an adaptation of Samuel D. Hunter’s play about a morbidly obese recluse, played by Brendan Fraser and also starring Sadie Sink and Samantha Morton.

Meanwhile, Dominik’s Marilyn Monroe drama “Blonde” starring de Armas as the Hollywood icon is one of four Netflix original films in the 23-title competition section.

Also getting a Venice launch from the streaming giant — which is clearly gunning for more Oscars after “Power of the Dog,” which premiered on the Lido last year — is the fest’s previously announced opener, Noah Baumbach’s “White Noise,” with Greta Gerwig, Adam Driver and Jodie Turner-Smith, which is based on the 1985 novel of the same name by Don DeLillo. “White Noise” marks the first time a Netflix film has landed in Venice’s opening slot.

As anticipated by Variety, other Netflix originals in the Venice competition are Iñárritu’s “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths,” which chronicles the story of a Mexican journalist and documentary filmmaker who returns home and works through an existential crisis as he grapples with his identity and family relationships, and Romain Gavras’ modern tragedy “Athena,” co-written by the French “The World is Yours” director with “Les Miserables” filmmaker Ladj Ly.

Netflix will also be bowing Nicholas Winding Refn’s “neon-noir “Copenhagen Cowboy” TV series, which will screen out of competition during the second half of the festival.

Guadagnino, who first made a splash in Venice with Tilda Swinton-starrer “I Am Love,” is back on the Lido with “Bones and All” featuring “Call Me By Your Name” star Timothée Chalamet and Taylor Russell as cannibal lovers on a road trip across America in the 1980s. “Bones” is from Amazon-owned MGM.

“L’Immensita”
“L’Immensita”

Amazon is also bowing its first Argentinian original film from Venice, the political drama “Argentina, 1985,” directed by auteur Santiago Mitre whose “Paulina” and “The Summit” went to Cannes. “1985” is the true story of how public prosecutor Julio Strassera, a young lawyer, and his inexperienced legal team dared to prosecute the heads of Argentina’s bloody military dictatorship in a battle against odds and a race against time, braving bomb and death threats.

Elsewhere, Florian Zeller’s “The Son,” from Sony, which segues from the director’s Oscar-winning “The Father” and stars Vanessa Kirby, Laura Dern and Hugh Jackman, is also vying for a Golden Lion, as is Wales-set “The Eternal Daughter” starring Tilda Swinton, which is directed by her old friend, “The Souvenir” helmer Joanna Hogg.

Focus Features will be on the Lido with Todd Field’s “Tár,” which teams the “In the Bedroom” director with Cate Blanchett as the fictional Lydia Tár, one of the world’s greatest conductors and the first female conductor of a major German orchestra. Blanchett is a Venice regular who presided over the festival’s main jury in 2020.

Searchlight has Martin McDonagh’s “The Banshees Of Inisherin,” the Irish director’s follow-up to “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.” “Banshees” centers on the dynamics of lifelong friends on a remote Irish island and reunites McDonagh with his “In Bruges” stars Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell.

Oscar winner Laura Poitras (“Citizenfour”) is in competition with her new under-the-radar documentary titled “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” about photographer Nan Goldin’s battle against the notorious big-pharma Sackler family. Also competing is veteran documentary master Frederik Wiseman who will bow narrative film ”A Couple,” his collaboration with French multi-hyphenate Nathalie Boutefeu, about Leo Tolstoy and his wife.

Hollywood titles bowing in Venice’s out-of-competition section comprise steamy psychological thriller “Don’t Worry Darling” which is Olivia Wilde’s second directorial effort and stars Florence Pugh and Harry Styles, from Warner Bros. Wilde, who also stars in “Don’t Worry,” will be on the Lido with Styles, Pugh and their co-stars Gemma Chan (“Crazy Rich Asians”) and Chris Pine (“All the Old Knives”).

Among other Venice out-of-competition bows are the A24 slasher film “Pearl” by cult U.S. director Ti West, starring Mia Goth, and serving as a prequel to his film “X” about a group of amateur filmmakers making a porno in ’70s Texas.

Walter Hill is in the section with his Western “Dead For a Dollar” starring Christoph Waltz as a bounty hunter and also featuring turns by Willem Dafoe and Rachel Brosnahan. Elsewhere, Paul Schrader, who is being honored on the Lido with the 2022 Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement, will bring his new feature “The Master Gardener.” “Gardener” tells the story of horticulturist Narvel Roth, played by Joel Edgerton, who tends to a beautiful Louisiana estate owned by a wealthy widow played by Sigourney Weaver. Things take a dark turn when the widow’s troubled great niece arrives on the scene.

U.S. director Bill Pohlad will be launching his indie biopic “Dreamin’ Wild,” about real-life musical duo Donnie and Joe Emerson and the tumult that followed the success of their self-recorded pop-funk album of the same name. It stars Casey Affleck, Zooey Deschanel and Walton Goggins.

“Living,” a re-imagining of Akira Kurosawa’s classic meaning-of-life story directed by Oliver Hermanus and written by Nobel Prize-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro, who is a Venice juror, is the only film in the selection that is not a world premiere, said Barbera, who noted that the film bowed at virtual Sundance in January. Adapted from Kurosawa’s 1952 film “Ikiru,” “Living” takes place in 1950s Great Britain and follows a veteran civil servant portrayed by Nighy.

Israeli-American director Evgeny Afineevsky, who was in Venice in 2015 with “Winter on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom” is now back with “Freedom on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight For Freedom.”

Late South Korean auteur Kim Ki-Duk’s posthumously edited work “Call of God,” which is a three-way co-production between Estonia, Kirghizistan, and Lettonia, is also ensconced in an out-of-competition berth.

Besides “Copenhagen Cowboy,” this year Venice will premiere another TV series by a name auteur, the third and final instalment in Lars von Trier’s cult “The Kingdom” TV series trilogy, set in the neurosurgical ward of Denmark’s main hospital.

Back to the competition, similar to Cannes, Iran has a strong Lido presence with four films across the selection. Among them is a new film from recently re-incarcerated auteur Jafar Panahi, whose drama “No Bears” reportedly interweaves two parallel love stories both thwarted by obstacles that reflect life in Iran these days. Also screening is “Beyond The Wall” by Vahid Jalilvand whose “No Date, No Signature” was in Venice Horizons in 2017.

Italian director Andrea Pallaoro is looking to be lionized with his Ohio-set English-language drama “Monica” starring transgender actor Trace Lysette (“Transparent”) as a woman who returns home to the Midwest to care for her dying mother, played by Patricia Clarkson.

Also from Italy, Emanuele Crialese (“Respiro”) will be on the Lido with Penelope Cruz-starrer “L’Immensità,” a family drama set in 1970s Rome in which Cruz plays the mother of a twelve-year-old named Clara who wants to be a boy.