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Day 4- September
2: Brother Bedazzles Venice Crowd
More
celebrities sailed into Venice this weekend, keeping the star-gazing lively
here in Lido. Cate Blanchett, Christina Ricci, and Johnny Depp are in
town for Sally Potter's The
Man Who Cried; Michelle
Pfeiffer and Harrison Ford arrived yesterday to
promote What
Lies Beneath, a thriller about a seemingly perfect couple
who are haunted by an infidelity. Many of the cast and crew from The
Isle took some time to unwind last night at the lavish party thrown
by the Korean group Coalition for Cultural Diversity in Moving Images.
The
Isle is the hot topic here at Lido and the film received some
extra attention when, in one screening, a woman passed out during a graphic
scene.
Harrison Ford, Robert Zemeckis, and Michelle Pfeiffer were cool and relaxed
at the press conference today, a sign of their years of industry experience.
Ford chatted about last month's "rescue mission," in which he flew his
private helicopter to save a girl trapped in the mountains near his summer
home. He joked that he had already sold the rights to the story, and that
his part would be played by a "much younger and better looking" actor.
When one journalist called Ford an artist, he was quick to correct: "I've
always considered what I do to be a craft or a skill and if there is art
involved, it's on the part of the writer or director. I consider myself
to be fortunate to be working with so many artists." Pfeiffer was equally
gracious and said that she was inspired by Drew Barrymore's performance
in Scream, noting that Barrymore reached a level of fear
she herself had not tried to match until this project.
Takeshi
Kitano's first English language film,
Brother, screened last night out of competition and
people are still discussing its gritty violence. Set in Los Angeles, the
film depicts a Japanese gangster (Takeshi Kitano) who heads to LA to find
his brother, and there befriends a crook (Omar Epps). Nearly one gunshot
per minute is the norm in this film, not to mention a few gory scenes
without guns (one in which a man's finger is chopped off). Epps called
his work with Kitano a "blessed experience" and he and British producer
Jeremy Thomas (The Last Emperor) both mentioned how team-oriented
the Japanese film crew were.
The Italian film Denti,
from Gabriele Salvatores, also screened yesterday. Denti
is a love story between Antonio (Sergio Rubini), whose jealousy causes
a terrible fight with his lover Mara (Anita Capriola) that sends him on
a journey of self-discovery. Although there are five Italian films here
in competition (compared to none at this year's Cannes), so far no Italian
film has caused a stir.
In the Cinema del Presente section, theatre director Gregroy Mosher made
his film debut with The Prime Gig, starring Julia Ormond.
He credited his smooth transition from stage to screen with his cinematographer
- "all my friends told me to make sure I got a good one," he said, noting
that Sam Mendes secured legendary Conrad Hall for American Beauty
-- a choice which clearly did not hurt the film. He praised Ormond's drive
to be in the picture, explaining that "she fought for this part, she tested
for the part, and she is not an actress who needs to screen test."
Also screening today in competition is
The Goddess of 1967, from Clara
Law with Rose Byrne. Goddess
is the story of a Japanese man who goes to Australia to buy a 1967 Citroen
ds - the goddess -- only to discover that its owners have been killed.
Tonight, The
Man Who Cried screens along with What Lies Beneath;
festival-goers await tomorrow's screenings of Merci pour le chocolat
from Claude Chabrol and
Before Night Falls (also starring Johnny Depp) from
Julian Schnabel. So far no film seems the clear contender for the Golden
Lion. Seom (The Isle) and Dr.
T and the Women should have strong hopes, but with more than
a week to go, it is still too early to tell.
Kerry
Shaw
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