/ricerca/ansaen/search.shtml?any=
Show less

Se hai scelto di non accettare i cookie di profilazione e tracciamento, puoi aderire all’abbonamento "Consentless" a un costo molto accessibile, oppure scegliere un altro abbonamento per accedere ad ANSA.it.

Ti invitiamo a leggere le Condizioni Generali di Servizio, la Cookie Policy e l'Informativa Privacy.

Puoi leggere tutti i titoli di ANSA.it
e 10 contenuti ogni 30 giorni
a €16,99/anno

  • Servizio equivalente a quello accessibile prestando il consenso ai cookie di profilazione pubblicitaria e tracciamento
  • Durata annuale (senza rinnovo automatico)
  • Un pop-up ti avvertirà che hai raggiunto i contenuti consentiti in 30 giorni (potrai continuare a vedere tutti i titoli del sito, ma per aprire altri contenuti dovrai attendere il successivo periodo di 30 giorni)
  • Pubblicità presente ma non profilata o gestibile mediante il pannello delle preferenze
  • Iscrizione alle Newsletter tematiche curate dalle redazioni ANSA.


Per accedere senza limiti a tutti i contenuti di ANSA.it

Scegli il piano di abbonamento più adatto alle tue esigenze.

Napolitano, Franceschini at Venice fest

Napolitano, Franceschini at Venice fest

Italian trio including Leopardi pic in competition,Birdman opens

Venice, 27 August 2014, 18:52

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano and Culture Minister Dario Franceschini will be in the front row cheering on Italian cinema as the world's oldest cinema fest opens in Venice Wednesday night.
    Napolitano, a noted cinephile, has gone on record as supporting domestic movies against the onslaught of Hollywood.
    Another cheerleader is Franceschini, who on Wednesday recalled recent government moves to increase tax breaks for cultural cinema and keep historic cinemas open.
    Arriving in Venice Franceshini said he was optimistic about the future of Italian cinema.
    "It's a bright season, and after a string of international successes we have no fewer than three Italian films in competition, by Martone, Monzi and Costanzo". Relentlessly upbeat, the minister added: "Italian cinema does not has just a glorious past, but also a very glorious present and future".
    He also stressed that the Venice fest was a "virtuous model" of exemplary integration between the public and private sectors. The trio vying for the Golden Lion at the 71st fest have been touted as the most impressive Italian offering in years, giving Italy a chance to have a two-year winning streak for the Lido's highest prize.
    They include a keenly awaited biopic of Italy's greatet poet after Dante, Giacomo Leopardi.
    Following Italy's win last year for the film Sacro GRA, this year's competition from Italy unfolds between Mario Martone's 19th-century drama about Leopardi, Il Giovane Favoloso (The Fabulous Young Man) starring Elio Germano; a screen adaptation of the book Black Souls directed by Francesco Munzi; and Saverio Costanzo's Hungry Hearts, starring Adam Driver and Alba Rohrwacher.
    Martone's film centres on Marche-born poet Giacomo Leopardi, known for his legendary pessimism and immortal odes, and Italy's most anthologised poet after the Divine Comedy bard, played here by Germano in the spirit of an anti-conformist rebel.
    The title comes from a short story about the precocious and prodigiously gifted Leopardi, born in the Marche village of Recenati, by Anna Maria Ortese.
    Hungry Hearts takes place in New York City, where a couple battles over their son's diet.
    In the film, the mother, played by Rohrwacher, insists on vegan fare, but the father, played by Driver, has to intervene when their son eventually becomes ill.
    The third film in the Italian lineup, Black Souls, tackles the contemporary state of the Calabrian mafia, known as the 'Ndrangheta.
    Black Souls is based on the eponymous book by Gioacchino Ciriaco, and tells the tale of a farmer's three sons, each of whom crosses paths with the life of crime in a different way.
    Luigi is an international drug trafficker, Rocco is an adopted son from Milan who is also a businessman with Mafia money, and the third and oldest brother Luciano stays home, raising the family's goats.
    Each of the three competing films is said to have a good chance at the prize.
    A win would place Italy halfway to another four-year winning streak like the one from the heyday of 1960s Italian cinema, when films by the likes of Michelangelo Antonioni and Luchino Visconti took a Golden Lion home every year from 1963 to 1966.
    Among the other highlights from Italy is the premiere of Italy In a Day, a "collective cinema experiment" put together by Italian Oscar-winning director and screenwriter Gabriele Salvatores.
    Festival director Alberto Barbera has admitted to not knowing much about the younger generation of talent that will grace the red carpet.
    "The young people ask for actors like Adam Driver or Emma Stone, that few adults know about. Meanwhile, having Catherine Deneuve here is something that the kids certainly won't even notice," said Barbera.
    At the 71st edition of the film festival, running through September 6th, paparazzi will clamor at the Lido for shots of Stone with beau Andrew Garfield, her costar in Spiderman, star of the much-anticipated film 99 Homes by director Ramin Bahrani.
    Other stars with films at the festival this year include Pacino, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Ethan Hawke, Viggo Mortensen, Frances McDormand, and Owen Wilson.
    Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's black comedy Birdman will kick off this year's fest. Starring Michael Keaton as a washed-up actor who made his name playing an iconic superhero but is currently struggling to stage a Broadway play, Birdman premieres in competition on August 27. The star-studded cast also includes Edward Norton, Zach Galifianakis, Stone and Naomi Watts. Like last year's festival opener, Gravity, which was directed by Inarritu's pal Alfonso Cuaron, Birdman is pegged as an early Oscar contender.
    In a sneak press preview Birdman was greeted with waves of applause. Napolitano, from his front-row perch, was already said to be rubbing his hands at the prospect of a great festival curtain-raiser. Among the other highlights at the festival will be Abel Ferrar's biopic on iconic Italian writer and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini starring brooding American actor Willem Dafoe; and a celebration of Sophia Loren in her 80th year.
    Hong Kong director Ann Hui's 'The Golden Era', a story of a radical writer living in a period of Japanese imperialism in China, will close the Lido-based festival on September 6.
    French film composer Alexandre Desplat will head the main jury panel that includes British actor Tim Roth, Palestinian director Elia Suleiman, Italian actor-director Carlo Verdone, and Chinese actress and director Joan Chen.
    The international lineup also includes Swedish director Roy Andersson's A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence while David Oelhoffen's 'Loin des Hommes' stars Viggo Mortensen as a teacher who becomes friendly with a dissident during Frances war with Algeria.
    Offerings from the United States include 'Good Kill' by director Andrew Niccol and starring Ed Harris and Ethan Hawke as a drone operator in Afghanistan; and David Gordon Green's 'Manglehorn', starring Al Pacino, Holly Hunter and Chris Messina.
    Several films will also be shown, apart from the competitors, including 'The Sound and The Fury' by Hollywood actor-director James Franco, an adaptation of the novel by American writer William Faulkner; 'She's Funny That Way' from Peter Bogdanovich; and The Humbling from Barry Levinson.
    Danish director Lars Von Trier will present an extended director's cut of his 'Nymphomaniac Volume II', which follows up on the original presented last year at the Berlin Film Festival.
   

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA

Not to be missed

Share

Or use

ANSA Corporate

If it is news,
it is an ANSA.

We have been collecting, publishing and distributing journalistic information since 1945 with offices in Italy and around the world. Learn more about our services.