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Hostess of the festival Serena Rossi attends the Patroness photocall during the 78th Venice International Film Festival on August 31 2021 in Venice, Italy. Picture: GETTY IMAGES/MARC PIASECKI
Hostess of the festival Serena Rossi attends the Patroness photocall during the 78th Venice International Film Festival on August 31 2021 in Venice, Italy. Picture: GETTY IMAGES/MARC PIASECKI

The Venice film festival opens on Wednesday with a rich line-up and the return of Hollywood stars most of whom deserted it last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, as cinema looks forward to shaking off the crisis triggered by the health emergency.

Organisers hope a strict coronavirus protocol will help keep the 11-day movie marathon trouble free. Theatres are operating at half capacity and a wall is blocking the view to the red carpet to stop crowds from gathering outside the main venue, Palazzo del Cinema, to get an autograph. Face masks and a health passport — or a negative Covid test — are required to attend screenings.

“Everybody everywhere is eager to come back, to reopen, to restart, to release the films that stayed on the shelf for a year-and-a-half or maybe two years,” festival director Alberto Barbera said before the opening ceremony.

Most of the world premieres to be screened at the festival were already sold out, and Barbera said there would be no shortage of celebrities — even though fans won’t be able to get anywhere near them.

“The red carpet will be one of the most crowded in years because everybody is here ... from Timothée Chalamet to Zendaya, from Jessica Chastain to Matt Damon, Ben Affleck. The list is so long I can’t remember everybody.”

Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar kicks off the festival, the oldest and a showcase for Oscar contenders as awards season approaches, with Parallel Mothers, starring Penelope Cruz as one of two single women about to give birth in the same hospital.

Other titles vying for the Golden Lion award for best film include Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog, with Benedict Cumberbatch as a ranch owner who torments a young widow (Kirsten Dunst), and Kristen Stewart’s turn as Princess Diana in Spencer.

Paolo Sorrentino, who will offer a highly personal film about the loss of his parents when he was 17, is one of five Italian directors in the main line-up.

Maggie Gyllenhaal presents her debut feature movie The Lost Daughter, based on an Elena Ferrante novel and starring Olivia Colman and Dakota Johnson.

Ridley Scott’s medieval epic The Last Duel, starring Damon and Affleck, and Denis Villeneuve’s hotly anticipated science-fiction tale Dune, with Chalamet and Zendaya, will both screen out of competition.

Chloe Zhao, the director of last year’s Golden Lion winner, Nomadland — which went on to scoop up Oscars for best picture, director and actress — is part of this year’s jury, led by another Oscar winner, South Korean Parasite director Bong Joon-ho.

Reuters

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