Festival’s reputation as a predictor of award-winning fare seems set with films from Denis Villeneuve, Jane Campion, Edgar Wright, Paolo Sorrentino and Pedro Almodóvar

Spencer, the much anticipated film about Diana, Princess of Wales, starring Kristen Stewart, is due to receive its world premiere on Friday at the Venice film festival – one of a string of high-profile debuts that the film industry is hoping will herald a return to some sort of normality after 18 months of pandemic.

Along with the near-simultaneous Toronto film festival, Venice has traditionally marked the end of the summer blockbuster film season and the arrival of films aiming for critical praise and subsequent awards recognition. Spencer is due to be joined at Venice by Dune, the long-gestating adaptation of Frank Herbert’s mammoth sci-fi novel directed by Denis Villeneuve; Ridley Scott’s medieval drama The Last Duel, starring Matt Damon, Adam Driver and Jodie Comer; horror-thriller Last Night in Soho, directed by Edgar Wright; and Parallel Mothers, the latest from Spanish auteur Pedro Almodóvar.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Fears grow that UK is preparing to quit Brexit talks

Concern grows as top EU official arrives in London for emergency talks…

Labour records first poll lead over Tories since January

Starmer’s party is 1 point ahead in new poll, following Tory sleaze…

Man charged with murder of four family members in London, says Met

Joshua Jacques of Hither Green in south-east London is charged with fatally…

Record number of school leavers in England snap up university places

Number of students accepting a place outstrips last year, with some taking…