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Ayo Edebiri Marked Her First Venice Film Festival By Going Full Hollywood Glamour
Fashion

Ayo Edebiri Marked Her First Venice Film Festival By Going Full Hollywood Glamour

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

For most A-list movie stars, having any movie premiere at the Venice Film Festival would be enough excitement. But for Ayo Edebiri, she can really cash in on the thrills this week. Not only is it her first time attending the lauded, star-studded event, but she’s also marking the occasion by being a part of one of the buzziest and most-anticipated films of the whole festival.

Today, the star attended the official premiere for her new, Luca Guadagnino-directed film, After the Hunt, co-starring Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield, and Chloë Sevigny. (Just a small, unknown cast—no pressure.)

“It’s pretty surreal,” Edebiri tells Vogue. “Venice is a truly beautiful city with such deep history, and the film festival is such a massive part of that, of course. To know that I’ve now gotten to be a part of that, even a little bit, with a project that I love so much and am so grateful to have been a part of, is really moving and humbling.”

Photo: Courtesy of Chanel

Given this is such a momentous milestone for the star and a true narrative arc for her career, she knew she needed an exceptional red carpet look for the film debut. For the more formal premiere this evening, Edebiri and her go-to stylist Danielle Goldberg worked with Chanel to conjure up a striking gown that embodied true, Old Hollywood glamour—and not in a stuffy or tired way, but rather, articulating the energy of the most promising and in-demand new stars. “We went through archival images of Chanel couture shows, and this gown really felt like a moment we have been wanting to have,” says Goldberg.

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Venice 2025: 'The Tale of Sylian' is One of the Best Docs of the Year
Hollywood

Venice 2025: ‘The Tale of Sylian’ is One of the Best Docs of the Year

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Venice 2025: ‘The Tale of Sylian’ is One of the Best Docs of the Year

by Alex Billington
August 29, 2025

This is the story of a man and a bird. But it is also a story about a family and their farm; about a town and the people who live there; about storks and humans; about nature and men and their synergy; about how the world is changing (for the worse); about how we must reconnect with nature to heal the planet again. It is a film about how humanity is trashing this planet, ruining the world, and how we really need learn to go back and reconnect with the earth and appreciate all life on this planet again. The Tale of Sylian is the latest documentary creation by the acclaimed North Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, following her first feature film Honeyland (which was nominated for two Oscars back in 2020). This time her focus is on a humble farmer living in a small village in the south of North Macedonia, a place which also has one of the largest white stork populations in Europe. These giant birds have established themselves as residents of this town and the locals live in harmony with them. But it is also the inspiring story of a man named Nikola who befriends a stork after his family moves away in hopes of earning more money and finding a better life.

Much like Honeyland before this, Kotevska’s The Tale of Sylian is such a spectacularly cinematic creation it’s almost completely unbelievable that it’s actually a documentary and these are all real people and this is a real story. It’s all so perfectly shot and crafted that it feels like a fictional film with actors in it giving precise performances. But that’s just not the case! Every single shot in this film is astonishing. It’s mind boggling how many perfect shots are in here. How long it must’ve taken, how many days they must’ve waited for that perfect moment, how many thousands of hours of footage they had to comb through to find that shot for this scene, how much work it was to the edit all this together into this beautiful 80 minute feature. Every shot of the storks is, and I really mean this, perfect. Whether it’s a sunset shot of them taking flight, or a silhouette of them standing in their nests above the town, or a how-did-they-get-that-zoom-shot peek at them cackling and bickering. These big carnivorous birds use their beaks to clap and create a chattering noise as their way of communicating and they’ve captured so many funny and beautiful moments of these birds doing this. I kept gasping at every new shot that appears as the story goes on. My goodness it’s so exhilarating to watch.

In addition to all these perfect shots, The Tale of Sylian is an especially moving story about a love for nature and nature’s love for us. Nikola’s relationship with a stork isn’t about their friendship, it’s about humanity’s relationship with animals, and how we appreciate and take care of each other. It’s about loving the natural world, and respecting it; and it’s about recognizing we can live in balance with nature. After establishing the characters and the story with the family, I knew something bad would happen. I knew this film would be about humans trashing earth, and indeed it is about literally this. However, unlike so many other films that show how humans are destroying this planet, there is a hopeful side to this. It’s a wholesome and heartfelt story. It takes the time to actually show us that we can return to & respect nature again. It is possible. They start growing again, they start trying again, and that’s more beautiful than simply saying it’s all bad and we need to do something and that’s it. Give me a great story about animals, and learning to return to harmony, and I will be shouting about it from the rooftops. This is one film I won’t be able to stop raving about. It’s a cinematic experience that will leave anyone who watches it changed for the better & completely rejuvenated.

Alex’s Venice 2025 Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride
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Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

While Venice and TIFF (at least this year) don’t have dedicated film markets for packages, there are still plenty of indies debuting at the festival that will have theatrical prowess or awards potential for the right buyer.

At the start of the fall film festival season, we identified 15 films that we believe could sell and tried to match them to their perfect distributors. See what else sells and how many we got right below, and on the next page, check out a full scorecard of every film acquired so far and those that came into the fests with distributors already in place.

Both the below and the final scorecard on the next page will be updated as sales come in.

AFTER THE HUNT, Julia Roberts, 2025. ph: Yannis Drakoulidis /© Amazon MGM Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection

“Ghost Elephants”
Distributor
: Nat Geo
Director: Werner Herzog
Festival: Venice Out of Competition
The latest introspective doc from the German master Werner Herzog is about elephants in the “mist-covered highlands of Angola.” Specifically Herzog is fascinated with the elusive “ghost elephants of Lisima,” potential living descendants of the largest land mammal ever recorded, whom Nat Geo’s own Steve Boyes is determined to prove actually exist.

The film netted Herzog a lifetime achievement award from Venice this year for the film that he directed, wrote, and narrated, and Nat Geo is planning a theatrical release for “Ghost Elephants” prior to it launching on Disney+ and Hulu in 2026.

“Man on the Run”
Distributor
: Amazon MGM
Director: Morgan Neville
Festival: Telluride
Though there’s no shortage of Beatles documentaries, this one about Paul McCartney follows Macca after he broke up from The Beatles and how he reinvented himself into the world’s biggest pop star yet again. Any Beatles-head like yours truly will tell you that it didn’t always go well early on and McCartney was arguably in third place behind John Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band and George Harrison’s “All Things Must Pass” triple album full of under-appreciated bangers.

The film will be released theatrically before landing on Prime Video on February 25, and the documentary’s release will coincide with a new book by McCartney, “Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run,” releasing November 4, as well as with McCartney’s Got Back tour dates across North America.

“Palestine 36”
Distributor
: Watermelon Pictures
Director: Annemarie Jacir
Festival: TIFF Gala Presentations
Director Annemarie Jacir’s period historical drama about the occupation of Mandatory Palestine by the British is the filmmaker’s fourth film that will be submitted to the Best International Feature race at the Oscars by Palestine, and it’s also the first Arab film to land in the Gala section at TIFF.

“Scarlet”
Distributor
: Sony Pictures Classics
Director: Mamoru Hosoda
Festival: Venice Out of Competition
The anime feature from the director of “Mirai” is described as a time-bending adventure about a medieval warrior princess fighting to avenge the death of her father. SPC is releasing it for an awards-qualifying run at the end of 2025 followed by a wider release in early 2026.

Continue Reading: Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride: Amazon MGM Lands Paul McCartney Doc ‘Man on the Run,’ Nat Geo Buys Werner Herzog’s ‘Ghost Elephants’
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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film 'At Work' and Next Projects
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Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film ‘At Work’ and Next Projects

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Alain Goldman, who produced “La Vie en Rose,” which earned Marion Cotillard an Oscar, and most recently produced ”An Offer and a Spy,” is having a milestone 2025.

After delivering Alain Chabat’s hit Netflix series “Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight,” Goldman is at the Venice Film Festival with the world premiere of Valerie Donzelli‘s “At Work,” one of the three French movies in competition. He’s also about to kick off filming on two massive projects, Laszlo Nemes‘ (“Son of Saul”) period project “Moulin” and prestige TV series “The Lost Paradise” in Eastern Europe. He’s the doing the latter two with Patrick Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary.

“At Work,” an adaptation of Franck Courtès’s 2023 novel “A Pied d’oeuvre,” marks Goldman’s first collaboration with Donzelli, an acclaimed French filmmaker best known for the Cesar award-winning “Declaration of War” and “Just the Two of Us.” The film tells the true story of a successful photographer (Bastien Bouillon, recently seen in Cannes’ opening movie “Leave One Day”), who gives up everything to devote himself to writing, and ultimately faces financial hardships and poverty.

“I read this book and was recently struck with it because it says something profound about our vulnerability and the violence of capitalism,” said Goldman, adding that the book’s themes are even more palpable now “for artists and authors who are seeing the value of their work downgraded or threatened by technology.”

“Valerie Donzelli was equally moved by this novel and she gave the story an immense sincerity, but also some fantasy and unpredictability,” said Goldman. “The film could have been a depressing drama but that’s not the case; it’s uplifting, intellectual and cinematic because [Donzelli] directed it.”

The film, co-written by Donzelli and Gilles Marchand, received support from France’s National Film Board (CNC) and the Ile de France region, but Goldman said it’s “likely the smallest budget of the Venice competition.” While he’s best known for producing epic, big-sized movies and TV shows such as “La Vie en Rose,” “HHhH” with Jason Clarke, “An Officer and a Spy” with Jean Dujardin, Martin Scorsese’s “Casino” (as a co-producer), “Babylon AD” with Vin Diesel and “The Spy” with Sacha Baron Cohen, Goldman says he’s always been drawn to social themes due to his own upbringing as the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland. “Social justice has always been important to me,” he says.

Goldman pointed out he’s always had the ambition to work with auteurs who have a vision, but is also conscious of audiences. “I’ve never understood filmmakers who make movies only for themselves, like two-million-euros-therapies,” he quipped.

On working with Donzelli, he said he found her understanding of the book compelling and universal because “she didn’t want to focus too much on the pure economic hardship of the story since ‘Souleymane’s Journey’ [Boris Lojkine’s film that won four Cesar awards this year] has just done it, but rather zoom in on the experience of an artist who sacrifices everything for his craft,” Goldman said.

“At Work” is being represented internationally by Kinology, who is on the ground in Venice, alongside Goldman, Donzelli and the film’s cast.

Next up, Goldman’s companies Pitchipoï Productions and Montmartre Films, which are part of Banijay Group, will be filming Nemes’ “Moulin,” starting on Sept. 15. The movie will mark Nemes’ French-language debut and will star Gilles Lellouche as the French Resistance hero who is captured and tortured by Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie (Lars Eidinger).

Penned by Olivier Demangel (“November”), “Moulin” will be distributed in France by Studio TF1 and has been pre-bought by TF1, Disney+ and HBO. Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary is repping global sales. The project will be Nemes’ follow up to “Orphan” which competes at this year’s Venice.

Goldman says he had long wanted to work with Nemes whose Oscar-winning « Son of Saul » is « one of the films about the Holocaust that gets the closest to the hell that it was, » the producer says. 

“Moulin” is an “immense project that resonates strongly today because it will remind everyone what it means to resist,” Goldman argues. After having shed light on Alfred Dreyfus in “A Soldier and a Spy,” Moulin will also celebrate “one of greatest French heroes,” he says, describing the tone of the film as “very intense.” Rather than a biopic of Moulin, the film revolves around the relationship between Barbie and Moulin.

TF1 Studio came on board and brought a “massive support” to the film whose budget is €14 million, the producer points out.

Goldman is also about to start shooting “Lost Paradise,” an ambitious and highly personal eight-part thriller series written by Yehonatan Indursky (“Shtisel,” “Autonomies”). Directed by Alon Zingman (“Shtisel”), the saga, which will shoot in Yiddish, Hebrew and English, starts off in Lithuania in 1860, charting the lives of Ashkenazi Jews. It stars “Shtisel’s” Michael Aloni.

Darren Aronofsky serves as executive producer on the series while Goldman is producing with Wachsberger. The latter is also handling sales via 193 Legendary. “Lost Paradise” is backed by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Alcon Media Group and the Gesher Film Fund. It has been commissioned by Canal+ in France.

“Lost Paradise” has been in development for five years, says Goldman, who is a co-author on the series which starts shooting in September in Bucarest in Romania. 

“It aims to tell the story of the Ashkenazi people from the mid-19th century to, I hope, the present day. The first season ends in 1880, just before a pogrom that led to the exodus of a large part of the community, but unfortunately not everyone,” Goldman says, adding that “If everyone had left, they would still be alive today, either in America or Israel.” His hope, he explains, is that the series will become the benchmark fictional work in the history of the Ashkenazi people, like “Fiddler on the Roof” has been for more than half a century. 

The title of the series, “Lost Paradise” is “a little ironic,” he says, “because life was so hard where they lived, but they didn’t lose their desire to remain Jewish in almost an esoteric sense.”

Goldman says the series will also hopefully allow audiences to “visualise what these communities were like and how they threatened no one, and that they became the target of all kinds of violence, as they are today, because suddenly, when the world is not doing very well, we become the answer to the world’s problems.”

Reflecting on the difficulties to finance the series, Goldman says the “very fact that this series exists is a miracle, because it goes so much against the current state of mind, which is quite hostile to Jews in general, and I am very, very happy to have succeeded, with everyone’s help, in making this project a reality.” 

Goldman is also about to see his film “The Incredible Shrinking Man” which he produced with Patrick Wachsberger get released in France by Universal Pictures on Oct. 29. The movie, starring Jean Dujardin, the Oscar-winning actor of “The Artist,” is a modern adaption of Richard Matheson’s science fiction novel.

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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | “Kim Kardashian wore quite an ensemble in Venice this week” links
Celebrity News

bitchy | “Kim Kardashian wore quite an ensemble in Venice this week” links

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Programming Note: We’re enjoying the three-day Labor Day weekend, so we won’t be back until Tuesday unless a big story breaks. Enjoy the holiday and stay safe!

This is what Kim Kardashian wore to the DVF Awards in Venice. Yikes. She also criticized Donald Trump & all of the ICE raids while she was in Italy. [Just Jared]
Breaking down the timing of Travis Kelce’s American Eagle campaign, which… I agree, it wasn’t specifically timed with the engagement. [LaineyGossip]
Heidi Gardner is also leaving SNL. [Pajiba]
Ariana Grande is going on tour next year! [Hollywood Life]
Antoni Porowski hard-launched a new relationship. [Socialite Life]
Noomi Rapace accessorizes in Venice. [Go Fug Yourself]
I’m very happy not knowing what happens at Burning Man. [OMG Blog]
Shailene Woodley’s Venice ensemble. [RCFA]
I am begging people to move on from Harry Potter. [Seriously OMG]
Is Leida Margaretha separated? [Starcasm]
A list of popular things which aren’t worth the hype… and why is The Godfather catching strays on this list??? Open the film schools! [Buzzfeed]

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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At 'Jay Kelly' Venice Press Conference, Adam Sandler Enters Oscar Race
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At ‘Jay Kelly’ Venice Press Conference, Adam Sandler Enters Oscar Race

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

In the absence of George Clooney at some of the events of this year’s Venice Film Festival (he is recovering from a sinus infection), it’s fitting that one of co-star Adam Sandler’s favorite lines in “Jay Kelly,” his third film working with director Noah Baumbach is “You’re Jay Kelly, but I’m Jay Kelly, too.”

While it is said in a wildly different context in the film, the line does speak to the already fast-moving awards narrative surrounding “Jay Kelly,” even before the film first screened at the 82nd Venice Film Festival. It may be Clooney who stars as the titular “Jay Kelly,” but it is Sandler who is already getting the most Oscar buzz for his supporting role as Ron, Kelly’s longtime manager and friend.

Star Wars: Starfighter

While the film sees the fictional Jay Kelly, an A-list actor and major Hollywood icon, try to process why he did not initially feel very conflicted about choosing his career over his family, Sandler’s Ron is having a lot more of a struggle not being around for his children, in a way that mirrors how the actor functions in real life.

“Adam does have such grace and such loyalty and generosity of heart around people. He works with his family. He really does make an effort to involve [them] that’s different from Jay Kelly. He really has found a way to successfully navigate this whole thing and do it so beautifully,” said Baumbach during the film’s Venice press conference on Thursday. “To have him play somebody that, to me, represents Adam and that generosity of spirit, and also that loyalty and love that I see that comes from him, that the character feels for Jay.”

Though the role is not totally against type, as Sandler has played plenty of family men over the past decade, it does allow the comedian to lead from love instead of anger, in a way that likely will tug on Academy voters’ heartstrings more than “Uncut Gems” ever could.

And “Jay Kelly” is really an actors’ film, shedding a positive light on Oscar winners Clooney and Laura Dern as well, who said, “Noah Baumbach had me at hello, so I’ll go wherever he asks.” The Netflix film is her first collaboration with Baumbach since she won Best Supporting Actress for her role in his 2019 film “Marriage Story.”

The most likely prospect for “Jay Kelly” is for Sandler to follow suit, with a big Best Supporting Actor push, though Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress nominations for Clooney and Dern are not out of the cards.

“I could not be more proud. … The feeling it gives you. You lock in. You’re invested. Your heart is broken. You get relief,” said Sandler of working with Baumbach. “He knows how to do everything, and he finds places to make you laugh. And all our characters have ways of you if you watch them, to laugh at any new moment, to feel pain. And as an actor, all of us, you read a script like this, you say, ‘Holy shit, I can’t believe that I’m getting this gift.’”

Netflix will release “Jay Kelly” in theaters on Friday, November 14 with a streaming release to follow on Friday, December 5. 

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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George Clooney ‘forced to scale back commitments at Venice Film Festival after falling ill on opening day’
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George Clooney ‘forced to scale back commitments at Venice Film Festival after falling ill on opening day’

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

28 August 2025

George Clooney is said to have been forced to scale back his commitments at the Venice Film Festival after falling ill on the opening day.

George Clooney is said to have been forced to scale back his commitments at the Venice Film Festival after falling ill on the opening day

The Oscar-winning actor, 64, who is starring in Noah Baumbach’s competition film Jay Kelly, ended his Wednesday (27.08.25) press junket early and did not attend a private dinner with cast, crew and Netflix executives, it has now emerged,

Insiders told The Hollywood Reporter George began to feel unwell in the afternoon and was advised to return to his accommodation to rest ahead of Thursday’s press conference and world premiere.

The actor was photographed leaving the Hotel Excelsior by boat at around 4pm.

His absence meant he missed a dinner with director Noah Baumbach, 55, and co-stars Adam Sandler, 58, and Laura Dern, also 58.

The nature of his illness has not been disclosed, but sources have stressed it was “nothing to worry about”.

Hours earlier, George had been seen arriving at the Lido with Laura, dressed in a navy suit, striped shirt and tinted sunglasses.

George’s health scare comes after he recently discussed his future plans in acting.

In March, he told CBS News programme 60 Minutes he would no longer appear in romantic comedies.

He said: “Look, I’m 63 years old. I’m not trying to compete with 25-year-old leading men. That’s not my job. I’m not doing romantic films anymore.”

He was speaking ahead of his Broadway debut in Good Night, And Good Luck, an adaptation of his 2005 Oscar-nominated film of the same name.

George plays journalist Edward R Murrow in the stage production, which recounts Murrow’s televised confrontation with Senator Joseph McCarthy during the “Second Red Scare” of the 1950s.

He said: “It’s exciting to be (on Broadway.) Let’s not kid ourselves. It’s nerve-wracking. And there’s a million reasons why it’s dumb to do.

“It’s dumb to do because you’re coming out and saying, ‘Well, let’s try to get an audience to take this ride with you back to 1954’.”

Reflecting on the relationship between government and the press, George said: “We’re seeing this idea of using government to scare or fine, or use corporations to make journalists smaller.

“Governments don’t like the freedom of the press, they never have. And that goes for whether you are a conservative or a liberal or whatever side you’re on. They don’t like the press.”

The lifelong Democrat also spoke about his decision to call on Joe Biden, 82, to step aside from the last U.S. presidential race after his debate with Donald Trump, 79.

George said: “I was raised to tell the truth. I had seen the president up close for this fundraiser, and I was surprised. And so, I feel as if there was a lot of… cowardice in my party, through all of that, and I was not proud of that, and I also believed I had to tell the truth.”




August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Mihai Mincan Talks Venice Film 'Milk Teeth' Inspired by Daughter
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Mihai Mincan Talks Venice Film ‘Milk Teeth’ Inspired by Daughter

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Romanian filmmaker Mihai Mincan is back at the Venice Film Festival‘s Horizons competition with “Milk Teeth,” a deeply personal drama set during the final days of Nicolae Ceaușescu’s dictatorship.

The film marks Mincan’s second Venice selection after his 2022 debut feature “To the North.” It will next play at the Toronto International Film Festival. Variety is exclusively debuting the film’s trailer.

Set in Romania in 1989, “Milk Teeth” follows 10-year-old Maria as she becomes the last witness to her sister’s mysterious disappearance in a small, isolated town. The story explores how a child processes trauma and loss against the backdrop of a collapsing political system.

For Mincan, the project represents both a departure from and continuation of his cinematic journey. “I wanted this really free approach,” the director tells Variety, describing how he abandoned his meticulously planned shooting style from “To the North.” “We had a list of shots, but we basically gave it up pretty soon after a few days of shooting.”

The shift in approach was partly practical and partly philosophical. Working with child actors, Mincan knew he “didn’t want to rehearse with that child a lot.” Instead, he wanted “the girl would have, like, a lot of freedom to act and to move the way she wanted, and the camera must follow her, not the other way around.”

The story draws heavily from Mincan’s own childhood experiences. “I was the same age as… I mean, I was nine, she’s 10, actually in the film. So I know that world. I know I know the way it looked, I know the way it smelled, I know how it sounded,” he says. The film was also inspired by a police dossier about a missing girl from 1989, though Mincan discarded most elements except for one haunting image: “a girl disappearing with a bucket going to the garbage.”

That image resonates personally. “It’s such a familiar image to myself. My parents used to send me the same way, you know, with the bucket through the blocks of flats down to the garbage.”

But the film’s deeper inspiration comes from Mincan’s own daughter, who “had two or three years in which she found it really difficult to connect with the world.” This personal experience led him to create “a story of a girl who is like living in a box all the time. So the world is always out there in the background, but the connection of her with that world is very difficult at times.”

The narrative approach deliberately maintains a child’s perspective throughout, creating what Mincan calls “a fragmented narrative.” He explains: “If you go into a child’s perspective, you stay there. And that means, creatively, it’s almost shocking, because it basically needs it means that all the narrative process kind of becomes very fragmented.”

The film, featuring Emma Ioana Mogos, Marina Palii, Igor Babiac, and Istvan Teglas, is structured in two distinct parts. The first half follows the immediate aftermath of the disappearance, while the second “would be like going down inside the mind, completely inside the mind of a child.” Mincan notes this latter section is “the part that I’m most proud of in the film.”

Despite the perid setting, Mincan believes the themes remain relevant. “Romania hasn’t changed a lot since that time,” he observes. “There’s one thing in the film and also in real life today that hasn’t changed is the silence of the system… This country was built wrong.”

When editing began, Mincan and his editor worked under a simple but powerful directive written on a large piece of paper: “This is a film about loneliness.”

The production itself was an international collaboration, involving partners from Romania, France, Denmark, Greece, and Bulgaria. “Milk Teeth” is produced by deFilm (Romania), in coproduction with Remora Films (France), Ström Pictures (Denmark), StudioBauhaus (Greece), and Screening Emotions (Bulgaria). The project participated in TorinoFilmLab 2023, where it received both a Production Award and Green Filming Award.

Cercamon is handling world sales on “Milk Teeth.”

Watch the trailer here:

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony
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Francis Ford Coppola Honors Werner Herzog at Venice Opening Ceremony

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Francis Ford Coppola doesn’t have a film premiering in Venice this year, but the 86-year-old Oscar winner is duly present for the 82nd edition. His pal Mike Figgis’ behind-the-scenes portrait “Megadoc,” about the production of Coppola’s 2024 cinematic cause célèbre “Megalopolis,” debuts out of competition this week. And at the festival’s opening ceremony Wednesday night, Coppola took to the dais to champion his longtime friend, the German filmmaker Werner Herzog, recipient of the festival’s honorary Golden Lion for lifetime achievement. (“Vertigo” icon Kim Novak will also receive one later this week.)

Herzog’s new film “Ghost Elephants,” about an elusive herd of the Angolan creatures, debuts in Venice this week as part of the festival’s robust documentary slate, which also includes new films from Laura Poitras and Sofia Coppola.

La Grazia

“One must celebrate that someone like him can exist,” said Coppola of Herzog, the 82-year-old documentary and fiction auteur whose films have spanned everywhere from the Caves of Lascaux in “Cave of Forgotten Dreams” to pushing a steamboat up the Andes with Klaus Kinski in “Fitzcarraldo,” or alongside conservationist Timothy Treadwell in his last days for “Grizzly Man.”

“His work burst into my life with ‘The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser’ [from 1974], ‘Aguirre, the Wrath of God,’ and ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ I have never seen such films as these, all unique and very different from one another, and all magnificent,” said Coppola, who put up a penniless Herzog at his San Francisco house to finish the script for “Fitzcarraldo.”

“He’s written operas, he’s directed roles, he’s acted. He not only can fill the pages of an encyclopedia — Werner is one so, so filled with exuberant creativity. … We all joined together at my home in San Francisco, where there was always fun conversations and much learning and enthusiastic discoveries. I was working on a play at that time, and remember introducing one of the cast members, Lena, who eventually became his wife. So when it comes down to is this: If Werner has limits, I don’t know what they are. Werner’s life and his very existence send a challenge to everyone out there: copy, if you can. And all of us truly wonder if anyone ever will. Werner, I will eat my hat if anyone comes [along] who can do it.”

VENICE, ITALY - AUGUST 27: Werner Herzog poses with Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement Award after the opening ceremony during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 27, 2025 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)
Werner Herzog poses with the Golden LionGetty Images

A tearful Herzog took to the stage at the Sala Grande on the Lido di Venezia. “Francis has been extremely kind and generous to me,” Herzog said. “We know each other for half a century by now. He’s been generous, inviting me at a time when I didn’t have money to pay for a hotel room. I stayed at his house in San Francisco and wrote my screenplay of ‘Fitzcarraldo.’ Both of us came very close to making a very big film about the conquest of Mexico together, seen from the perspective of the Aztecs, a film project that did not materialize, but it’s a wonderful time when we plotted about it. And, of course, without Francis, I would not have met my wonderful wife, Lena. In fact, it is not true that we are 30 years together. Now it is to be correct: 29 years, 11 months, and nine days.”

Herzog — whose “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans” and “My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done?” both played Venice in competition in 2009 — concluded, “I have always tried to strive for something that goes deeper beyond what you normally see in movie theaters. Go into a deep form of poetry that is possible in cinema, searching for truth in unusual ways. Truth is always somehow in cinema. It’s mysterious and elusive, and I always try to do something which was sublime or something transcendental. This may sound a little bit lofty. So in fact, I do believe that all this has similar reasons. I always wanted to be a good soldier of cinema.”

Later in the opening ceremony, competition jury president Alexander Payne took to the stage hours after navigating questions about Gaza during the jury press conference. Protests surrounding the ongoing genocide in Gaza are roundly expected to dominate event space and news chatter throughout the fest.

The jury also includes filmmakers Stéphane Brizé, Maura Delpero, Cristian Mungiu, and Mohammad Rasoulof, and actors Zhao Tao and 2025 Best Actress Oscar nominee Fernanda Torres, who together will look at 21 films from the likes of Paolo Sorrentino (whose “La Grazia” opened the festival), Yorgos Lanthimos, Noah Baumbach, Park Chan-wook, Kathryn Bigelow, Guillermo del Toro, Olivier Assayas, Mona Fastvold, Benny Safdie, Jim Jarmusch, and more.

“My fellow jurors and I express our great honor of being asked to serve on the jury of this year’s Venice Film Festival, and we offer our greatest respect and warmest congratulations to all the superb filmmakers whose work we have the privilege of seeing with virgin eyes,” Payne said following a tribute reel montaging moments from his career, from “Sideways” to “The Descendants.” “I encourage my fellow jury members and myself to consider that we know something about cinema, but also nothing at all, to look at each movie simultaneously with the eyes of a professional but also with the eyes of a child who is perhaps seeing a film for the very first time. We know that each of the films will be some kind of miracle, as the existence of cinema itself is a miracle, and we approach our work with the spirit of great joy.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Paolo Sorrentino's 'La Grazia' Lands Standing Ovation at Venice Opening Night
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Paolo Sorrentino’s ‘La Grazia’ Lands Standing Ovation at Venice Opening Night

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The Italians love Paolo Sorrentino.

His latest drama “La Grazia,” which kicked off the 82nd Venice Film Festival, was met with a four-minute standing ovation on Wednesday night on the Lido.

The story of an aging politician dealing with his own mortality — and deciding two challenging clemency cases in his final days in office — brought the Venice crowd to their feet as Sorrentino clutched his chest and waved to his fans inside the Sala Grande Theatre. The audience was made largely of Italian officials and members of the industry with some star power in the form of Tilda Swinton and Cate Blanchett.

“La Grazia” re-teams the Oscar-winning Sorrentino with his male muse and “The Great Beauty” star, Toni Servillo, who has appeared in seven of the director’s last 10 feature films to date. Servillo plays a fictional Italian president named Mariano De Santis, who is torn by doubts about whether he should sign a draft law that would allow euthanasia in the Catholic country.

Ahead of the premiere, Sorrentino – who made his debut at Venice in 2001 with Servillo-starrer “One Man Up” – told Variety about his decision to portray a positive example of a politician in the film.

“Every day in the news we read about decisions made by politicians that stem from impetuosity, show of force and strange twisted ideas about how the economy works,” he said. “Instead of this, I wanted to depict what a politician should be like.”

During the opening night ceremony, Francis Ford Coppola presented Werner Herzog with a Golden Lion for lifetime achievement. Coppola called the German cinema giant, known for films such as “Signs of Life,” “Nosferatu the Vampyre,” “Aguirre, the Wrath of God” and “Fitzcarraldo,” an “unlimited phenomenon working in every nook and corner in cinema.” The event marked Coppola’s first public appearance since undergoing a heart procedure in Rome earlier this month.

Over the next 10 days, boatloads of A-list talent will disembark for what is set to be the most high-wattage celebration of cinema on the Lido in recent memory. Among the premieres on schedule are Luca Guadagnino’s thriller “After the Hunt,” starring Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield and Ayo Edebiri; “Jay Kelly,” a comedic drama from director Noah Baumbach and stars George Clooney and Adam Sandler; Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” with Jacob Elordi and Oscar Isaac; as well as the latest Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone collaboration, “Bugonia.”

“If all these movies are here, it’s because they were rejected by Cannes” joked the opening night ceremony’s host, actor and comedian Emanuela Fanelli, of the other most prominent European film festival.

Earlier in the day, the ongoing war in Gaza dominated the festival’s jury press conference where jury president Alexander Payne dodged a question about the conflict and how the festival should address it.

“I feel a little bit unprepared for that question,” Payne said. “I’m here to judge and talk about cinema.”

 In his brief speech during the ceremony, Payne said he encouraged his fellow jurors “to consider that we know something about cinema, but also nothing at all. To look at each movie simultaneously with the eyes of a professional, but also with the eyes of a child who is perhaps seeing a movie for the very first time.”

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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