Amy
Adams leads in sci-fi thriller as Oscar buzz builds in
Venice
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[September 02, 2016]
By Agnieszka Flak and Sarah Mills
VENICE (Reuters) -
Five-time Academy Award nominee Amy Adams may get closer
to finally landing an Oscar as two of her movies are
competing at the Venice film festival this year,
including Denis Villeneuve's sci-fi thriller "Arrival".
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In the film, premiering on Thursday, Adams plays a linguist
hired by the U.S. government to go inside one of 12 spaceships
that have touched down around the world. Her task: to establish
contact with the extra-terrestrials on board, develop a common
language and discover the purpose of their visit.
The movie, which also stars Forest Whitaker and Jeremy Renner,
is one of 20 U.S. and international films vying for the Golden
Lion that will be awarded on Sept. 10.
Various scenes in the movie are silent, with Villeneuve using
close-ups of Adams to convey that real communication does not
always require words.
"I was drawn in by the intimacy of it," Adams told Reuters.
She said she always asks directors why they want her for a part,
and turns down roles where they are looking for "someone to be
likeable".
"Denis said 'I need to know what she's thinking'... He trusted
the audience to go on this emotional journey," she later added
at a news conference.
"Arrival" is one of several movies in Venice that feature a
strong female lead. The character "felt like every woman I know
who is struggling with hard things, working through personal
issues while also heading out into the world", Adams said.
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After a period in the doldrums, the world's oldest film
festival is again seen as a launchpad for the industry's award
season after premiering Academy winners in its last three
editions.
Adams is doing double duty in Venice, also starring in fashion
designer Tom Ford's thriller "Nocturnal Animals". Asked whether one
of the two movies could earn her the long-awaited Oscar, she said
she was trying not to think about it too much.
"When you have Tom Ford, who's so great, and you have Denis
Villeneuve, I think you can't help but get excited about what the
potential for the films are going to be," she said.
"But I try not to concern myself with the result ... I am just lucky
enough to get to be in the films."
The other two competition films shown on Thursday were Derek
Cianfrance's drama "The Light Between Oceans" and Wim Wenders' "Les
Beaux Jours d'Aranjuez".
(Reporting by Agnieszka Flak and Sarah Mills; Editing by Mark
Trevelyan)
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