Venice Film Festival

9 09 2006

The 11-day Venice Film Festival winds up on Saturday after a red carpet award ceremony on the glamorous Lido beach front, with British entry “The Queen” and Hollywood’s “Bobby” favorites to take away the main prize.

When last year’s Golden Lion award went to
Ang Lee’s “Brokeback Mountain” it was an expected and popular choice at the world’s oldest film festival, but 2006 lacks such a clear frontrunner.

Film critics and the public alike have hailed
Stephen Frears’ “The Queen,” in which
Helen Mirren plays a monarch hopelessly out of touch with her people when Princess Diana dies in a Paris car crash in 1997.

British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, played by
Michael Sheen, struggles to convince the monarch to throw aside centuries of royal protocol and join in the nation’s grief.

“I liked ‘The Queen’ a lot and I think the real queen would like it too,” said Tullio Kezich, one of Italy’s leading film critics and a veteran of the Venice festival.

“I am sure one night she will put on a DVD at Buckingham Palace and she’ll be happy because she comes out of it as a nice person full of humor. Whoever sees this film will appreciate the queen more than they did before.”

He and other critics singled out Mirren as the frontrunner for best actress at the festival, although they added that France’s
Isabelle Huppert also excelled in “Nue Propriete.”

In the best actor category Belgian brothers Jeremie and Yannick Renier, also in Nue Propriete, Briton
Clive Owen in
Alfonso Cuaron’s “Children of Men” and Sergio Castellitto of Italy in “La Stella Che Non C’e” won warm praise.

BOBBY

Leading the chasing pack behind “The Queen” for best picture is
Emilio Estevez’s “Bobby,” about a dozen or so characters who are at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles the night Robert Kennedy was shot in 1968.

Sharon Stone,
Demi Moore,
Anthony Hopkins and
Lindsay Lohan all appear in a touching story that works real news footage from the day of the assassination into the movie.

Other U.S. entries in the 21-strong competition fared less well critically, with
Darren Aronofsky’s “The Fountain” booed at a press screening and “Hollywoodland,” starring
Ben Affleck,
Diane Lane and
Adrien Brody drawing mixed reviews.

“The Black Dahlia,” starring
Scarlett Johansson,
Hilary Swank and
Josh Hartnett, was also seen as a disappointment.

Other contenders for the best film Golden Lion include French veteran Alain Resnais’ “Private Fears in Public Places,” an intimate account of ordinary people searching for happiness in a snow-covered Paris.

Alfonso Cuaron won fans for his terrifying vision of London in 2027 in “Children of Men”; “Daratt,” Chad’s first competition entry about coming to terms with the horrors of civil war, is seen as an outside bet, and two Asian films are in the frame.

“I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone” by Tsai Ming-Liang explores the lives of migrant workers in Malaysia after economic collapse, while China’s “Still Life” by Jia Zhang-Ke is about how the giant Three Gorges Dam project affects ordinary people.