Russian director’s Faust wins top prize
Highbrow trumped Hollywood at the Venice film festival this year, with Russian director Alexander Sokurov’s demanding German-language Faust taking top prize and Roman Polanski and George Clooney overlooked.
Most prizes at Saturday’s closing ceremony went to less-than-familiar names and faces, with the exception of rising Irish star Michael Fassbender’s best actor award for Shame.
The Silver Lion for best director was awarded to China’s Shangjun Cai for his gritty People Mountain People Sea, best actress went to Hong Kong’s Deanie Ip and the jury prize went to Italian immigration drama Terraferma.
Surprisingly overlooked was Roman Polanski’s Carnage, a comedy of manners featuring a stellar cast of Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz and John C. Reilly.
Based on a play and set in real time in a single apartment, Carnage is a stinging critique of middle class mores, but also has plenty of humour including Winslet’s memorable projectile vomit scene.
Polanski was not able to travel to Venice to present the movie, given the threat of extradition to the United States where he is still wanted for sentencing in a 1977 sex crime case. “Many feel that jury head Darren Aronofsky and his compatriot Todd Haynes, both Americans, lacked the courage to give the victory to a colleague who is not liked in the US,” said a commentary in the La Stampa.
While Venice is not a platform for blockbusters, it has proved an effective launchpad for US Oscar contenders like Ang Lee’s Brokeback Mountain and Aronofsky’s own Black Swan and The Wrestler.
Festival director Marco Mueller succeeded in attracting a string of A-listers to the red carpet this year after a low-key 2010, although all were bypassed when it came to the prizes.
Among the overlooked contenders was Clooney’s political thriller The Ides of March, which was well received and starred Clooney himself as a governor embroiled in scandal during an election race.
Post new comment