Wide open race for Venice film fest prizes

The race was wide open ahead of awards night in Venice on Saturday, after a festival featuring a dark Marilyn Monroe biopic, an imprisoned Iranian director and a morbidly obese Brendan Fraser.. Venice is seen as a launchpad for Academy Award campaigns, eight of the last 10 Best Director Oscars having gone to films that premiered at the festival.

The race was wide open ahead of awards night in Venice on Saturday, after a festival featuring a dark Marilyn Monroe biopic, an imprisoned Iranian director and a morbidly obese Brendan Fraser.

Critics have been deeply divided on many of the 23 films in competition at the 79th Venice Film Festival, but it has been a stellar year for individual actors.  

There was a huge standing ovation for Fraser, who made an unlikely comeback from the Hollywood wilderness as a 600-pound (272-kilogram) English professor in "The Whale", sparking talk of Oscar nominations and a "Brendanaissance".

Cate Blanchett is also an awards frontrunner for her performance as a classical music conductor in "Tar", which takes a nuanced look at cancel culture.

And Hugh Jackman's performance as a father dealing with a depressed teenager in "The Son" has been labelled the best of his career.

While some reviewers found the Monroe biopic "Blonde" too relentlessly grim, most were bowled over by the "ferociously emotional" performance from Cuban star Ana de Armas. 

Sexual identity has been a recurring theme across the 11-day festival, with Trace Lysette becoming the first trans actress to star in a competition entry for "Monica".

Last year's best actress winner Penelope Cruz played the mother to a trans teen in "L'Immensita", whose director Emanuele Crialese admitted for the first time at its press conference that he was born a woman. 

- Politics and protest -

Picking the winners falls to a jury led by actor Julianne Moore, and also featuring Nobel-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro. 

A last-minute favourite for the top prize Golden Lion is "No Bears" by Iran's Jafar Panahi, who was imprisoned for "propaganda against the system" in July. That was the subject of a flash-mob protest Friday on the Venice red carpet, led by Moore.

Another political film to win rave reviews was the documentary "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed", which follows artist Nan Goldin and her fight against the Sackler family, held responsible for the opioid drug crisis in the United States. 

It is the latest from Laura Poitras, the journalist who first made contact with whistleblower Edward Snowden and won an Oscar for the resulting film, "Citizenfour". 

There has also been a lot of love in Venice for "The Banshees of Inisherin", a pitch-black Irish comedy-drama tracing the falling out of two friends played by Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson.

"Argentina 1985", the true story of the lawyers who took on the country's military junta, was also widely praised. 

Venice is seen as a launchpad for Academy Award campaigns, eight of the last 10 Best Director Oscars having gone to films that premiered at the festival.

Netflix had been hoping for a big year, but "Blonde" tested the patience of many critics, as did Mexico's two-time Oscar winner Alejandro Gonzalez Inarrituto, with his fantastical semi-autobiography "Bardo". 

The streamer is also behind "White Noise", a sharp satire of US consumerism and academia starring Adam Driver -- but that, too, got a mixed reception from reviewers. 

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© Agence France-Presse

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