Hollywood stars, Oscar-winning directors, Asian heavyweights, and European auteurs will vie for top honours at this year's stellar Venice Film Festival, all looking to make a splash at the start of the awards season.
Running from 27 August to 6 September, the 82nd edition of the world's oldest film festival will showcase a rich array of movies that spans psychological thrillers, art-house dramas, genre-bending experiments, documentaries, and buzzy studio-backed productions.
Among the leading A-listers expected to walk the Venice Lido's red carpet are Julia Roberts, Emma Stone, George Clooney, Dwayne Johnson, Emily Blunt, Andrew Garfield, Oscar Isaac, Cate Blanchett, and Amanda Seyfried.
Netflix
A who's-who of global directors will also be premiering their latest pictures at the 11-day event, including the US filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow, Jim Jarmusch, Noah Baumbach, and Benny Safdie, alongside top Europeans Yorgos Lanthimos, Paolo Sorrentino, and László Nemes, and Asia's Park Chan-wook and Shu Qi.
Netflix, which skipped Venice last year, returns in full force in 2025 with a trio of headline-grabbing titles, including Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein, a new take on the classic horror tale starring Oscar Isaac, Jacob Elordi, and Mia Goth.

Noah Baumbach's comedy-drama Jay Kelly, starring George Clooney, Adam Sandler, and Laura Dern, is also in the main competition and on the Netflix slate.
It is alongside Netflix's geopolitical thriller A House of Dynamite, starring Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and directed by Kathryn Bigelow, who won an Oscar in 2010 for The Hurt Locker.
Venice fires the starting gun for the awards season, with films premiering on the Lido in the last four years collecting more than 90 Oscar nominations and winning almost 20, making it the place to be seen for actors, producers, and directors.
In the past nine editions of the Oscars, the award for Best Actress or Best Actor has gone eight times to the protagonists of films first seen in Venice, including Emma Stone for her role in Poor Things in 2024.
Fighters and families
Emma Stone returns to Venice this year, teaming up again with Poor Things director Yorgos Lanthimos in an offbeat satire, Bugonia, produced by the Dublin-based Element Pictures.
Watch: The trailer for Bugonia
The indie icon of US cinema, Jim Jarmusch, will be showing his Father Mother Sister Brother, a three-part tale exploring fractured families with a cast that includes Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver, and Tom Waits.
Another US film receiving its first outing at Venice is the MMA fighter biopic The Smashing Machine, starring Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt, and directed by Benny Safdie.
A very different biopic is The Testament of Ann Lee - a musical take on the life of the radical 18th-century Shaker leader, which stars Amanda Seyfried and is directed by Norway's Mona Fastvold.
European auteurs are well-represented, with Paolo Sorrentino's La Grazia, starring Toni Servillo, selected as the festival's opening film, while Hungary's László Nemes presents the family drama Orphan, and France's François Ozon showcases his retelling of Albert Camus's celebrated novel The Stranger.
Another French director, Olivier Assayas, will premiere The Wizard of the Kremlin - a political thriller about the rise of Vladimir Putin, starring Paul Dano and Alicia Vikander, with Jude Law playing the Russian leader.
Tragic story of a Palestinian girl
One film that looks certain to raise emotions is Kaouther Ben Hania's The Voice of Hind Rajab, which uses original emergency service recordings to tell the story of a five-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in Gaza in 2024 after being trapped for hours in a vehicle targeted by Israeli forces.
"I think it is one of the films that will make the greatest impression, and hopefully [won't be] controversial," said the festival's artistic director, Alberto Barbera, his voice trembling as he recalled the movie.

Among the battery of films being shown out of competition is Luca Guadagnino's MeToo-themed psychological drama After the Hunt, starring Ayo Edebiri, Andrew Garfield, and Julia Roberts, who will be making her red-carpet debut at Venice, Barbera said.
The jury for the main competition will be chaired by the American director Alexander Payne. He will be joined by fellow directors Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu, and Mohammad Rasoulof, and the actresses Fernanda Torres and Zhao Tao.
Source: Reuters