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Venice Film Festival opens with tribute to coronavirus victims

By Agencies - RFI
Europe  ReutersYara Nardi
SEP 3, 2020 LISTEN
© Reuters/Yara Nardi

The Venice Film Festival has opened with a tribute to those who lost their lives due to the coronavirus. The Italian festival has maintained this year's event, from 2 to 12 September, amid continuing Covid-19 precautions.

The Venice Film Festival, rolling out on the Lido beachfront, is the first major international festival to take place since Covid-19 shuttered theatres.

Although the scaled-down event will offer less red-carpet glamour this year, with most of Hollywood's A-listers staying away due to travel restrictions, organisers hope the movies themselves will take centre stage as the film industry makes tentative steps to regain its footing.

President of the jury, Australian actress Cate Blanchett, saluted the work of the festival's organisers at the opening ceremony.

"We are here and we did it," said Blanchett in Italian, before switching into English.

“Being here tonight seems like some kind of wondrous miracle," said the Academy Award-winning actress, her jury seated in the theatre's first row of seats due to coronavirus regulations.

Italian actress Anna Foglietta, host of the ceremony, gave an impassioned tribute to the victims of coronavirus and the doctors, nurses and medical professionals who sought to save lives during the pandemic, which has killed over 35,000 people in Italy.

18 films in competition  
The festival held annually on the Lido -- which over the decades has attracted celebrity heavyweights from Sophia Loren to George Clooney -- will this year award its top prize, the Golden Lion, to one of 18 films in the main competition.

Earlier in the day at a news conference, Blanchett saluted the "infinite creativity and resilience" of film-makers during the coronavirus lockdown.

"Over the last few months... in our isolated bubbles we've been sustained by streaming images and stories into our living rooms, but I think there has been a vital component that's been missing and that's back here tonight," she said.

"Strangers gathering in the dark in anticipation of a collective experience, an event."

British actress Tilda Swinton garnered a standing ovation as she received a lifetime achievement award from the festival.

"Cinema is my happy place, it's my true motherland," said Swinton.

Opening the festival, but out of the main competition, was Lacci by Italian director Daniele Luchetti, the story of a family unravelling and the ties that nevertheless continue to bind and wound.

Sanitary measures
Organisers of the festival are taking a high-risk bet that they can safely run the festival despite coronavirus cases on the rise in Italy and neighbouring European countries.

Strict safety measures are in place, from mask wearing to social distancing within cinemas, to the decision to ban fans from the red carpet.

"I'm excited and I'm a little bit anxious," said Festival Director Alberto Barbera to French news agency AFP on the eve of the opening ceremony.

In May, Barbera made the decision to go ahead with "La Mostra" -- now in its 77th year -- despite film festivals around the world opting to cancel, including Venice's French rival, the Cannes Film Festival.

"We feel a responsibility to be the first. We knew Venice will be sort of a test for everyone," he said.

About 6,000 people are expected to turn out this year -- about half the festival's usual number -- as border restrictions around the globe have limited the ability of many to travel.

Fans hoping to get an autograph or snap a selfie with their favourite stars are likely to be disappointed, however.

The red carpet now includes a newly erected wall in the spot where fans have always congregated behind barriers to watch the parade of celebrities.

(with AFP)

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