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Hollywood strikes take some of the shine off Venice Film Festival

The view from the other side of the red carpet - Venice is the world's longest-running film festival
The view from the other side of the red carpet - Venice is the world's longest-running film festival

Historic Hollywood strikes have robbed the Venice Film Festival of some of its usual glitz as it launched its 80th edition, but a raft of big-name - and controversial - directors are keeping the film world buzzing.

The world's longest-running film festival was due to start with Challengers, a tennis romance with one of the biggest stars of her generation, Zendaya.

But it was replaced at the last minute by an Italian war drama, Comandante, due to the ongoing strikes by Hollywood actors and writers - primarily over pay and the threat of AI - that has barred them from publicity work.

The rest of the line-up was largely unaffected: the festival will see Emma Stone as a Frankenstein-like creature in Poor Things and Bradley Cooper as the legendary conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein in Maestro, among several Oscar contenders.

But the strikes mean those stars will not be lighting up the red carpet.

Adam Driver has been given an exemption to show up for Ferrari on Thursday because the biopic by Michael Mann (Heat) was made outside the studio system.

Jessica Chastain is also expected for the premiere of Memory at the end of the festival, according to Variety. It is her first outing since her Oscar-winning turn in The Eyes of Tammy Faye.

All are competing for the top prize Golden Lion, to be awarded on 9 September by a jury led by Damien Chazelle, director of La La Land, with The Banshees of Inisherin writer-director Martin McDonagh also on the jury.

Chazelle told AFP he understood the anxiety around AI - which many fear could lead to computer-generated actors and scripts replacing humans - but said some of the fears may be overblown.

"People have some apocalyptic ideas about it," said Chazelle a few hours before the festival opening.

"I agree it's a major technological change like the internet or radio, and it will overturn a lot of things, but the art will survive."

Other attention-grabbing entries include Sofia Coppola's Priscilla, about Elvis Presley's wife, and The Killer by David Fincher, who returns to the Lido two decades after Fight Club was famously booed at the festival only to become a cult hit later.

But with less star gossip, a lot of attention risks being absorbed by the inclusion of Woody Allen with Coup de Chance - his 50th film and first in French - and Roman Polanski with The Palace, both in the out-of-competition section.

Allen, 87, was investigated for an alleged assault on his adopted daughter in the 1990s. Though cleared by police, he has been effectively blackballed by Hollywood.

Polanski, 90, remains a fugitive from the United States over a conviction for raping a minor in the 1970s. The victim has long since forgiven him, but he faces other assault allegations.

The festival says he is not attending.

There are also out-of-competition premieres for a 40-minute Wes Anderson film, The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, based on a Roald Dahl tale, and a new feature from indie favourite Richard Linklater, Hit Man.

The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, the final film from William Friedkin (The Exorcist), who died this month at 87, is also playing out of competition.

Source: AFP

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