Venice Film Festival Announces Full Lineup: Our Most Anticipated Picks

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 07/28/2011 7:47 am Updated: 09/26/2011 5:12 am

The full line-up for the 68th annual Venice Film Festival was announced Thursday morning in Rome. Part of the Biennale, the festival will run from Aug. 31 to Sept. 10, featuring the world premieres of some of the year's most highly-anticipated movies.

Director Darren Aronofsky, who opened last year's Festival with Black Swan, will chair the grand jury. Last year, the jury awarded its top prize, the Gold Lion, to Sofia Coppola's "Somewhere."

Though most of the world won't get to see these films till they hit wide release, we've picked some of the films we're most excited for.

"Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" (in competition)
Based on the 1974 John le Carre novel of the same title, "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" follows British spy George Smiley as he leaves retirement to pursue a Soviet double agent who has infiltrated MI-6 during the Cold War. Starring the consistently superb Gary Oldman, the cast is rounded out by Oscar-winner Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong, Ciaran Hinds and Benedict Cumberbatch. The movie was directed by Tomas Alfredson, whose last film, "Let The Right One In," delivered a chilling, gorgeously shot vampire story stripped of cliches.

"Carnage" (in competition)
Roman Polanksi's best films leave you with the sense that evil is not just an abstract concept, but rather, a failure in ordinary people that leads inevitably to atrocity. Carnage, based on the Tony Award winning play "God of Carnage," portrays a single evening in which two bourgeois Brooklyn couples (played by Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz, Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly) meet to discuss their children's playground fight. Over the course of the night, civilization gives way to primal viciousness, as the characters attack each other brutally. Filmed in real-time, it's thrilling to think of how actors this good will work to break each other down on screen.

"Damsels in Distress" (closing film, out of competition)
Director Whit Stillman's first movie since 1998's "Last Days of Disco," "Damsels in Distress" will return to the twitchy, self-conscious twenty-somethings and rapid, erudite dialogue that made Stillman famous. Starring Greta Gerwig, Analeigh Tipton and Adam Brody, "Damsels" tells the tale of two perfume-loving girls at a New England college who decide to volunteer at the Suicide Prevention Center. In an interview with New York Magazine, Stillman said that the film is a ""a freewheeling comedy, full of musical numbers, failed love affairs, and Stillmanian bons mots on everything from Hacky Sack to the sexual proclivities of twelfth-century Cathars." While there are a lot of movies about neurotic intellectuals who talk too fast, few treat their characters with the tenderness Stillman manages.

"A Dangerous Method" (in competition)
Despite their 20-year age gap, Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung had an intense relationship, both personal and professional, that lasted for six years before dissolving abruptly -- supposedly because of ideological differences over the practice and theory of psychoanalysis. In "A Dangerous Method," director David Cronenberg turns to the story of Sabina Spielrein to explain the rift. Played by Keira Knightley, Spielrein is a young Russian patient who starts an affair with Jung (Michael Fassbender) while under his care, and later, turns to Freud (Viggo Mortensen) for support. Though the trailer plays up the sex and plays down the psychology, with Cronenberg in charge, it's likely the film will be more brutal than sentimental.

"Wilde Salome" (out of competition)
Combining documentary and movie, "Wilde Salome," Al Pacino's third turn as a director will explore Oscar Wilde's controversial play about the biblical temptress from multiple angles, in an attempt to better understand both Wilde and the play itself. Wilde Salome will contain a mixture of interview, filmed performance and more, as in Pacino's "Looking For Richard," which examined Shakespeare's "Richard III." Pacino, who has appeared as Herod in several productions of the play over the years, stars alongside Jessica Chastain as Salome and Kevin Anderson as John the Baptist. Pacino is also set to receive the Jaeger-Le Coultre Glory to the Filmmaker Award at the festival.

Other highlights:

"W.E." (out of competition): Madonna's first directed feature-length film tells the story of American divorcee Wallis Simpson, the woman who caused the abdication of Edward VIII alongside a contemporary romance.

"The Ides of March" (opening film, in competition): George Clooney stars and directs in a political drama about a presidential candidate on the trail in Ohio during the Democratic primary. With Ryan Gosling, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Evan Rachel Wood and Marisa Tomei.

"Contagion" (out of competition): A biothriller about the global spread of a lethal virus. With Matt Damon, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Demetri Martin, Marion Cotillard, Laurence Fishburne, and Sanaa Lathan. Directed by Steven Soderbergh.

"Shame" (in competition): Michael Fassbender plays a sex-addicted thirty-something man living in New York whose younger sister, played by Carey Mulligan, comes to stay with him, throwing his life into disarray. Directed by Steve McQueen.

"Poulet aux Prunes, or "Chicken With Plums" (in competition): The latest from author of "Persepolis," Marjane Satrapi, the animated film tracks the last days of violin player Nasser Ali Khan in 1958 Tehran.

Full lineup of films in competition:

ā€œTinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy,ā€ Tomas Alfredson
ā€œWuthering Heights,ā€ Andrea Arnold
ā€œTexas Killing Fieldsā€ Ami Canaan Mann
ā€œThe Ides of March,ā€ George Clooney
ā€œQuando la notte,ā€ Cristina Comencini
ā€œTerraferma,ā€ Emanuele Crialese
ā€œA Dangerous Method,ā€ David Cronenberg
ā€œLast Day on Earth,ā€ Abel Ferrara
ā€œKiller Joe,ā€ William Friedkin
"Un Ete Brulant," Philippe Garrel
"Taojie (A Simple Life)," Ann Hui
ā€œHahithalfut (The Exchange),ā€ Eran Kolirin
"Yorgos Lanthimos - Alpeis (Alps)," Yorgos Lanthimos
ā€œShame,ā€ Steve McQueen
ā€œL’ultimo terrestre,ā€ Gian Alfonso Pacinotti (Gipi)
ā€œCarnage,ā€ Roman Polanski
ā€œPoulet aux prunes (Chicken With Plums),ā€ Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud
ā€œFaust,ā€ Alexander Sokurov
ā€œDark Horse,ā€ Todd Solondz
ā€œHimizu,ā€ Sion Sono
ā€œSeediq Bale,ā€ Wei Te-sheng


Full lineup of films out of competition:

"Collectif Abounaddara - The End"
"Colleftif Abounaddara - Vanguard"
"La Folie Almayer," Chantal Akerman
"In the Name of the Father," Marco Bellocchio
"Evolution" (Megaplex)(3D), Marco Brambilla
"Baish Echuanshuo (The Sorcerer And The White Snake)," Tony Ching Siu-Tung
"Giochi D’estate (Summer Games)," Rolando Colla
"Tamer Ezzat - Tahrir 2011," Ahmad Abdalla, Ayten Amin, Amr Salama (documentary)
La Desintegration, Philippe Fauchon
The Moth Diaries, Mary Harron
"Mildred Pierce," Todd Haynes
"Duvidha," Hands Kaul
"Vivan las Antipodas!", Victor Kossakovsky (documentary)
"Alois Nebel," Tomas Lunak
"W.E.," Madonna
"Eva," Kike Maillo
"Pietro Marcello," Marco Bellocchio (documentary short)
"La Meditazione Di Hayez," Mario Martone (short)
"Scossa," Francesco Maselli, Carlo Lizzani, Ugo Gregoretti, Nino Russo
"La Cle Des Champs," Claude Nuridsany, Marie Perennou
"Il Villaggio Di Cartone," Ermanno Olmi
"Wilde Salome," Al Pacino
"Questo Storia Qua," Alessandro Paris, Sibylle Righetti (documentary)
"We Can't Go Home Again," Nicholas Ray
"Don't Expect Too Much," Susan Ray (documentary)
"India, Matri Bhumi," Roberto Rossellini (documentary)
"Tormented," Takashi Shimizu
"Contagion," Steven Soderbergh
"Damsels in Distress," Whit Stillman
"Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel," Lisa Immordino Vreeland (documentary)
"Joule" (3D), David Zamagni, Nadia Ranocchi
"Spell. The Hypnotist Dog" (3D), David Zamagni, Nadia Ranocchi
"Suite" (3D), David Zamagni, Nadia Ranocchi


For a full list of films showing at the festival, visit the Venice Biennale website.

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Thisbeautifulplanet
omnia vincit amor
08:02 AM on 08/06/2011
Excellent line up. I am looking forward to seeing "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy".
A combination of John Le CarrƩ's, Colin Firth's and Ciaran Hinds' names is enough to catch my interest and have me rush to the movie theater.

Hinds is one of the finest and most underrated thespians in the movie field - his acting is simply brilliant. He played Julius Caesar to perfection in HBO's "Rome" - so convincingly that it seemed the real Gaius Julius Caesar had risen from the dead to grace the screen.
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Highball
In Blackest Night
04:10 PM on 07/30/2011
All I can say is, "Wow!" Some of these look truly remarkable.

Both "A Dangerous Method" and "Carnage" are absolutely must sees for me. I really cannot wait to see both.
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3Nox
Turns into a hedgehog when messed with
05:42 PM on 07/29/2011
I can't wait for that Jung and Freud movie!
08:39 PM on 07/28/2011
I am looking forward to seeing Carnage. But there are several that's listed that I would love to see as well.
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kidjudas
My Governor is not smarter than a 5th grader
05:17 PM on 07/28/2011
Contagion looks like a great date movie
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Steelsil
Warren/Grayson 2016! Yes We Can!
04:49 PM on 07/28/2011
Polanski's 'Carnage' just sounds like one more attempt to prove that he is ordinary, rather than vile.  This is the man who drugged and sodomized a 13 year old girl against her will.  I'll pass.
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Highball
In Blackest Night
04:14 PM on 07/30/2011
Oh give it a break. You should really acquaint yourself more intimately with what actually happened in the Polanski case.

What he did wasn't right, but it was 34 years ago. And it is a lot more complicated than what you describe.

Anyways, I don't see how it has anything to do with his art.
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Trudy Trejo
Corporation = People = Romney = Obama = Perry = Cl
04:32 PM on 07/28/2011
Yawn
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Thisbeautifulplanet
omnia vincit amor
07:47 AM on 08/06/2011
A case of domestic ennui or no taste for the seventh art?
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shirlyujest
02:11 PM on 07/28/2011
I remember the TV adaption of Tinker Tailor...it was like six or seven hours long.  I wonder how they'll compress this convoluted book into a little bitty movie and make it understandable.  As I recall, the storyline is very complex.  Will wait to see how they do.
01:38 PM on 07/28/2011
So, did the author get to the end of the article before realizing she'd written about only English language films with big name actors and directors at an international film festival, so she threw in a token French one?
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allier10
01:33 PM on 07/28/2011
Viggo + Kiera = AWESOME!!!
12:58 PM on 07/28/2011
After reading the following "Last year, the jury awarded its top prize, the Gold Lion, to Sofia Coppola's "Somewhere." I have found that I have lost all credibility in this festival. Has anyone seen this film? I would call it a poorly executed trudge through celebrity narcissism. I don't think good directing is genetic.
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07:24 PM on 07/28/2011
Did you see "Lost in Translation?"

Fabulous movie.
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j-anthony
gravity's gone, and I'm just floating
12:39 PM on 07/28/2011
"Carnage" sounds really, really good.
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Emine1113
12:17 PM on 07/28/2011
The Ides of November...
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LanceLee
12:11 PM on 07/28/2011
I can't remember the last time I wanted to see a movie in the theatre(Well Harry Potter, but that was because of my daugther), but I'll need to see Tinker, Tailor. That looks fantastic. The Smiley vs. Karla trilogy gets better with every reading. I love how it it looks like the 70's/80's, but it doesn't try to hard, it is subtle.

Now if they would do a movie of the Bernard Samson series by Len Deighton.
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GibbsSlap
04:04 PM on 07/28/2011
Sadly, I rarely go to the theatre, people bring their TV manners to the films. This is not acceptable, so I go only when the movie demands a big screen and then only after the first rush and during quieter times.
11:54 AM on 07/28/2011
...plays a sex-addicted thirty-something man... How about
plays a thirty-something sex addict"? Turning a compound noun or at best a noun and an adjective into a hyphenated adjective is just bogus. And, unless he's playing a woman, adding man as the modified noun is redundant and ridiculous.
deborahjoybrat
The more I know people, the more I love my cats
03:59 PM on 07/28/2011
What are you, an english professor. OCD maybe? Your post is ridiculous.
07:04 PM on 07/28/2011
It's not a bad thing to expect that an article be written accurately, even if it is only on the internet.