Venice
Film Festival to host Netflix movies, unfinished Orson
Welles work
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[July 26, 2018] ROME
(Reuters) - From westerns to the space race and the
latest offerings from Oscar-winning directors, this
year's Venice Film Festival will present a rich line-up
of premieres, including a host of Netflix movies and an
unfinished Orson Welles work, organizers said.
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The 75th edition of the world's oldest film festival kicks off
in late August, with some 20 movies competing for the Golden
Lion Award.
Unlike May's Cannes Film Festival, which Netflix Inc pulled out
of after organizers banned its films from competition for its
refusal to release them in cinemas, the Venice event will show
several movies by the streaming platform.
"We must come to terms...with these new production realities,"
Venice Film Festival director Alberto Barbera told a news
conference on Wednesday.
"We cannot ignore these realities, we cannot pretend they do not
exist."
Among the Netflix films in competition are the Coen brothers'
western "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" and black and white
family drama "Roma" by Oscar winner Alfonso Cuaron.
"Jason Bourne" director Paul Greengrass will present his Netflix-distributed
work "22 July" - about the aftermath of the 2011 massacre of 77
people in Norway by far-right militant Anders Breivik.
The organizers of the 11-day festival, which usually offers a
first peak at Oscar contenders, have already announced "La La
Land" director Damien Chazelle's space drama "First Man",
chronicling Neil Armstrong's mission to become the first man to
walk on the moon, as the opening film.
Highly anticipated western dark comedy "The Sisters Brothers" by
Jacques Audiard, and Yorgos Lanthimos' period piece "The
Favourite" with Oscar winner Emma Stone and new "The Crown"
actress Olivia Colman are also in competition.
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Other contenders include "Peterloo" about the 1819 massacre in
Manchester by Mike Leigh and "Napszallta" (Sunset) by Laszlo Nemes,
who directed the Oscar winning "Son of Saul".
A film about Vincent van Gogh, "At Eternity's Gate", and "What You
Gonna Do When The World's On fire?" about a black community in the
southern United States last summer will also vie for the top prize.
"It's a particularly rich season, we had to make choices and that is
often painful," Barbera said.
Out of competition, a remake of romantic musical drama "A Star is
Born" with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga as well as crime film
"Dragged Across Concrete", starring Mel Gibson and Vince Vaughn will
screen.
Netflix is also bringing Orson Welles' unfinished "The Other Side of
the Wind" to the festival out of competition. The film about a movie
director making a comeback was first shot in the 1970s and recently
completed.
Organizers have also said veteran British actress Vanessa Redgrave
will be presented with the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement
honor.
(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian;
Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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