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Venice Movie Pageant 2022: What to Watch For

Though Sundance debuted last year’s Academy Award best-picture winner, “CODA,” and Cannes can be counted on to launch major international films like “Parasite” and “Drive My Car,” when it comes to the real kickoff for Oscar season — the mad crush of prestige films, A-list cocktail parties and awards show buzz that churns all fall and winter — it’s the Venice Film Festival that fires the starting pistol.

On Wednesday, as stars begin to land on the Lido (and Hollywood’s Aperol Spritz consumption increases tenfold), Venice’s 79th edition will officially get underway, and a jury led by Julianne Moore will begin watching some of the most anticipated films of the year. During the week and a half that Venice is in progress, major film festivals in Telluride and Toronto will commence, too; by the time these three fests are over, nearly every prestigious film meant to bow in late 2022 will have been screened.

Venice can certainly be counted on to provide its fair share of memorable, meme-able moments: When Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain nuzzled on a Venice red carpet last year, or Lady Gaga perched atop a speedboat styled like a retro siren, those images ricocheted around the world because of the romantic, old-world glamor Venice delivers. (It’s no wonder that Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez chose Venice to make their public debut as a couple last year.) Still, its real value is as an awards-season launchpad where best-picture winners like “Nomadland,” “The Shape of Water” and “Birdman” first found their footing.

The festival’s opening-night movie is the dark comedy “White Noise,” which stars Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig and was adapted from the Don DeLillo novel by the writer-director Noah Baumbach, whose previous film, “Marriage Story,” scored a best -picture nomination and a supporting-actress Oscar win for Laura Dern. But Baumbach is far from the only auteur on the Lido this year to have directed a performer to Oscar glory.

Darren Aronofsky, who opened Venice in 2010 with his feverish Natalie Portman thriller “Black Swan,” will be back with “The Whale,” starring Brendan Fraser as an obese man attempting to reconnect with his teenage daughter. There’s also “The Banshees of Inisherin,” starring Colin Farrell, the writer-director Martin McDonagh’s follow-up to the Oscar-laureled “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”

Alejandro González Iñárritu, who scored back-to-back best director wins for “The Revenant” and “Birdman,” is returning to Venice with the mystical drama “Bardo.” And after director Florian Zeller pushed Anthony Hopkins to a best-actor win for “The Father,” pundits will be eager to take the measure of Hugh Jackman in Zeller’s latest family drama, “The Son.”

This year’s Venice lineup is also filled with major female-led films, and since Penélope Cruz won the Volpi Cup for best actress at Venice last year — a victory that pushed her “Parallel Mothers” performance into Oscar’s final-five — the Lido could provide an auspicious debut for several of the actresses expected to attend.

Among those anticipated films are “Tar,” which casts Cate Blanchett as a conductor facing controversy; Netflix’s drama “Blonde,” featuring Ana de Armas as Marilyn Monroe; Luca Guadagnino’s “Bones and All,” with “Waves” breakout Taylor Russell in a cannibal romance with Timothée Chalamet; and the Tilda Swinton vehicle “The Eternal Daughter.”

And then there’s the thriller “Don’t Worry Darling,” which has already been earning headlines for director Olivia Wilde’s romance with star Harry Styles, a casting controversy involving Shia LaBeouf — Wilde said he was fired from the film, while LaBeouf claimed he quit — and the notably minimal press participation of lead Florence Pugh, who is rumored to be limiting her Venice promotion to a red-carpet appearance at the film’s premiere. After Venice, will Wilde’s worries cease or multiply? We’ll know soon.

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Little Island Unveils Free Monthlong Competition With Over 450 Artists

Little Island was dreamed up as a haven for the performing arts on the Hudson River, and in its first months, it is also being put forward as a playground for artists who have been kept from the stage for far too long.

The operators of the island announced on Tuesday that it would host a free monthlong arts festival starting in mid-August that would feature more than 450 artists in more than 160 performances.

There will be dance, including works curated by Misty Copeland, Robert Garland and Georgina Pazcoguin. There will be music, including the pianists Jenny Lin and Adam Tendler, the composer Tyshawn Sorey and the saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin and her band. And there will be live comedy, with television stars like Ziwe and Bowen Yang in the lineup.

The festival — which is being produced by Mikki Shepard, formerly the executive producer of the Apollo Theater — is another major effort by New York’s performing arts community to revive the arts after the pandemic darkened theaters and concert halls for over a year. For the performers, it is an opportunity to get paid to create new work and explore where their art is heading after months of pandemic restrictions, and in the wake of racial justice protests that swept the country.

“We wanted artists to have a voice in terms of, where are they now?” Shepard said. “Coming out of this pandemic, where do they want to be?”

By offering free performances, the festival’s objective is to host an audience that combines typical arts patrons with people who might not normally buy tickets to see live music or dance. The performances in Little Island’s 687-seat amphitheater will be ticketed, but shows located elsewhere on the island will not be, allowing tourists and other park visitors to stumble upon them as they’re walking around the 2.4-acre space.

“Nothing about it is refined,” said George C. Wolfe, a senior adviser working on the festival, which is called NYC Free. “It’s to give people a place to play.”

Copeland and Garland are co-curating a performance on Aug. 18 that features eight Black ballet dancers from three major companies: American Ballet Theater, New York City Ballet and the Dance Theater of Harlem, where Garland is resident choreographer. During the performance, Copeland will read aloud from American history texts on top of hip-hop, soul and funk music.

Other dance performances include Ballet Hispánico performing an evening of new works by Latina choreographers on Aug. 18, an evening of dance curated by the choreographer Ronald K. Brown on Aug. 25 and a performance by the tap dancer Dormeshia on Sept. 1.

As for music, the first day of the festival on Aug. 11 will feature John Cage’s work “4’33”” — in which the score instructs that no instruments be played. It will be performed by students of the Third Street Music School Settlement, led by Tendler. Other musicians include the jazz duo Cécile McLorin Salvant and Sullivan Fortner; Flor de Toloache, an all-women mariachi band; and Ali Stroker, the Tony-winning “Oklahoma!” performer, who will sing and tell stories onstage. The final night of the festival includes an all-women jazz performance, curated by the drummer and composer Shirazette Tinnin.

The comedy lineup features a stand-up show hosted by Michelle Buteau and a live show called “I Don’t Think So, Honey!,” hosted by Yang and Matt Rogers, that grew out of a segment on their podcast.

The festival is funded by Barry Diller, the mega-mogul who paid for Little Island and whose family foundation will bankroll the first two decades of the park’s operations. It will run from Aug. 11 to Sept. 5.

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‘Dune’ and Princess Diana Biopic to Debut at a Starry Venice Movie Pageant

Five of the 21 films in the competition are directed by women, Barbera said – up from eight last year. “It may seem like a step backwards, but that’s only part of the story,” he added. Female directors appeared to be more affected by the coronavirus pandemic than their male counterparts, he said, adding, “I really hope they make a comeback.”

Bong Joon Ho, the director of “Parasite,” will chair the competition jury, which will include British actress Cynthia Erivo and Chloé Zhao, the director of “Nomadland,” which won the Golden Lion and the Oscar last year Movie.

This year’s festival may see the blockbusters return to Venice, but it will still be far from normal. Roberto Cicutto, the festival’s president, said at the press conference that the rules introduced last year to limit the spread of the coronavirus, such as:

According to Italian government regulations coming into effect on August 6th, anyone attending screenings or even eating indoors on the festival site must provide evidence that they have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, a recent negative test result or a certificate of recovery from the disease in the past six months.

Italy’s government announced the requirements this month as the number of viruses increased across the country. Health officials reported 4,742 new cases on Sunday. That’s well below this year’s high of over 25,000 new daily cases in March, but the surge in cases has caused concern in a country hit hard by the pandemic last year.

“This year we were hoping we could be more relaxed,” said Cicutto. “It is not so for the time being. But we continue to hope. “

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Music competition within the Netherlands results in over 1,000 Covid infections

Members of the public walk at Vondelpark in Amsterdam on a sunny day on March 30, 2021.

EVERT ELZINGA | AFP | Getty Images

A festival in the Netherlands shocked officials after 1,000 coronavirus infections were linked to the event despite requiring an “entry test”.

The Verknipt outdoor festival, which took place in Utrecht at the beginning of July, was attended by 20,000 people over two days. Each participant had to show a QR code stating that they had been vaccinated, had recently had a Covid infection or had a negative Covid test.

The organizers insisted that the event was carefully planned and controlled, but despite this, 1,050 people who attended the festival have since tested positive for Covid, according to the Utrecht Regional Health Authority.

“We can’t say that all these people infected themselves at the festival, it could also be that they got infected on the trip to the festival or the evening before the festival or an after party. re (the cases) are all connected to the festival, but we cannot 100% say that they were infected at the festival, “said Lennart van Trigt, a spokesman for the Utrecht Health Department (GGD).

Nonetheless, he said the number of cases was “pretty staggering” and could increase slightly in the coming days.

The event highlighted problems with the “entry test,” added van Trigt, which allowed people to take Covid tests up to 40 hours before the event, which opened up the possibility of contracting Covid in the meantime.

“We have now found out that this deadline is too long. We should have had 24 hours [period], that would be much better because in 40 hours people can do a lot of things like visit friends and go to bars and clubs. So in a 24-hour period, people can do fewer things and it’s safer, “he said.

Another problem was that people in the Netherlands could get a Covid pass for the festival immediately after vaccination, while in reality it takes several weeks for immunity to build up after a Covid vaccination.

“We were a little too happy with the trigger,” said Van Trigt, noting that there were lessons to be learned from.

The mayor of Utrecht, Sharon Dijksma, was particularly condemned while attending the ill-fated festival.

The Netherlands has seen a staggering increase in Covid cases in recent weeks, especially after lifting bar and club restrictions in late June and subsequently increasing Covid among younger people.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and his Health Minister Hugo de Jonge apologized on Monday, saying the government made a “misjudgment” of lifting restrictions too early.

De Jonge also apologized for his “Dansen met Janssen” (“Dancing with Janssen”) campaign, which promoted the unique Janssen Covid vaccine to young people so that they could go out to party.

After the government admitted that “the coronavirus infection rate in the Netherlands has increased much faster than expected since the society was almost completely reopened on June 26,” the government announced last Friday that nightclubs and live performances would be at least until August 13th to be closed again.

The country’s “R” number is now 2.17, meaning any person with Covid-19 is likely to infect at least two other people.

An additional 10,492 cases were reported in the country on Wednesday, more than the average number of daily cases (8,395) over the past seven days. The majority of new cases affect people between the ages of 20 and 29 years.

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Cannes Movie Pageant: The Director of ‘Showgirls’ Takes on Lesbian Nuns

CANNES, France – Forgive them, Father, for they have sinned. Repeated! Creative! And wait to hear what they did with this statuette of the Virgin Mary.

The bad girls I mean are Benedetta and Bartolomea, two 17th century lesbian nuns who are the focus of the new drama Benedetta, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday. It’s a delicious, sacrilegious provocation from Paul Verhoeven, director of Basic Instinct, Showgirls and Elle, and at the age of 82, Verhoeven proves to be as playful as ever.

Based on the non-fiction book “Immodest Acts: The Life of a Lesbian Well in Renaissance Italy” by Judith C. Brown, the film follows Benedetta (Virginie Efira), a young nun who is so convinced that she is the bride of Christ she even dreams of a handsome shirtless Jesus who is flirting with her. And why shouldn’t he? Benedetta is a blonde bombshell who looks less like a pious nun from the 17th century and more like a disguised angel for Charlie, and when the pretty peasant woman Bartolomea (Daphne Patakia) arrives at the monastery, she also begins to close Benedetta’s eyes do.

Nun versus nun action happens a lot faster than you might expect as this monastery is run by a strict superior (Charlotte Rampling) and Benedetta is prone to visions that end with the manifestation of stigmata. But as her religious ecstasy grows more orgasmic, Benedetta eventually finds a steamy, more earthbound way to chase that high. “Jesus gave me a new heart,” she says to Bartolomea, baring a breast. “Feel it.” (Look, in the 17th century they played foreplay very differently.)

Once their sexual relationship heats up, these nuns find it easy to break their habits, but difficult to break. Finally, a statue of the Virgin Mary is carved into a sex toy and after Benedetta and Bartolomea have, uh, accepted it, the audience at the press screening in Cannes applauds the blasphemous nerve of the film. Verhoeven has always had the gift of making the ridiculous divine, and now the opposite is also true.

Even so, at the press conference for “Benedetta”, Verhoeven insisted that the scene wasn’t blasphemous at all.

“I don’t really see how to gossip about something that happened in 1625,” he said, offering excerpts from Brown’s book. “You can’t change history, you can’t change the things that happened, and I based them on things that happened.”

Maybe, but Verhoeven’s version still gives the truth a bit of a makeover, as Benedetta and Bartolomea always seem to wear eye makeup, foundation, and lipstick. While their faces are never bare, their bodies are often, and would you be surprised to learn that when these lithe nuns undress, they are as toned and well-groomed as a Playboy centerfold? God may be watching in the monastery, but Verhoeven’s gaze trumps everything.

If any spectator rang “Benedetta” because they were serving religious commentary with a side dish of cheesecake, Verhoeven was unmolested. “When people have sex, they generally undress,” said Verhoeven soberly. “I’m basically stunned how we don’t want to look at the reality of life.”

His actresses raised no concerns about their sex scene. “Everything was very happy when we undressed,” said Efira, while Patakia told the news media that when Verhoeven is directing, “You forget that you are naked.”

Even so, they have never lost sight of how much they need to push the boundaries.

“I remember reading the script to myself and thinking, ‘There isn’t a single normal scene,'” said Patakia. “There is always something destabilizing.” She added, “So I said yes right away.”

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Processing the Pandemic on the Manchester Worldwide Competition

Gregory Maqoma’s varied choreography for these dancers (as well as Thulani Chauke on two large screens on the sides of the stage – a nod to travel problems during Covid-19) and Garratt’s ventriloquism were the best parts of the uneven show that meandered from one set to another.

Join The Times theater reporter Michael Paulson in conversation with Lin-Manuel Miranda, see a Shakespeare play in the park, and more as we explore signs of hope in a transformed city. The “Offstage” series has been accompanying the theater through a shutdown for a year. Now let’s look at his recovery.

Surprisingly, the strongest performance piece was a film installation. In the huge Manchester Center (a former train station), flashing lights and buzzing, breathy electronic surround sound (by Aaron and Bryce Dessner and Jon Hopkins) pervaded the cavernous space before the start of “All of This Unreal Time,” a collaboration between the Actor Cillian Murphy (“Peaky Blinders”) and writer Max Porter directed by Aoife McArdle.

Murphy and Porter previously worked on the stage adaptation of Grief Is the Thing With Feathers, and like that work, the lyrics here are a strange and wonderful collection of narrative, reflection, self-talk, myth and poetry. “I came here to apologize,” says the screen before we see Murphy trudging through a dark, dripping tunnel.

As he walks through the night, through dilapidated streets and past fluorescent cafes, Murphy’s character speaks of his shame, anger and fears as he confesses his flaws as a man (“Sisterhood, that’s one thing to be envied “). “I’m sorry that I took and took and took and took and took and enriched myself without a break and left deep scars on the skin of the earth,” he says towards the end as he walks through a field outside the city , the sky brightens, trains go by, birds flock.

McArdle keeps the pace high, the focus on Murphy, her cutaway shots are fleeting and pointed. Seen on a giant screen that swells and fades like the echoes of nature itself, along with the musical rhythms of the lyrics, All of This Unreal Time (available online) is a captivating, truly immersive journey that – like all good art – keeps the possibilities of the meaning completely open.

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Vail Pageant to Return This Summer time With Stay Performances

Calvin Royal III will be the artist in residence at this year’s Vail Dance Festival, which was announced on Wednesday. Royal, a lead dancer for the American Ballet Theater, was announced as artist in residence last year but didn’t take his appointment when the pandemic forced the festival to cancel live performances and show work online.

This year’s festival will take place from July 30th to August 30th. 9, will take place completely outdoors in Gerald R. Ford’s amphitheater and comply with current Covid protocols, said Damian Woetzel, the festival’s artistic director, in an email.

Royal will appear in new plays by Jamar Roberts, the choreographer based at Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. and Tiler Peck (to a score commissioned by Caroline Shaw, the festival’s composer in residence). He will also play Merce Cunningham’s role in a production of Cunningham’s “Rebus”.

In addition, Royal will appear in UpClose – a rehearsal-style performance that demonstrates a stylistic range of works – starring Isabella Boylston, director of the ballet theater, Unity Phelan of the New York Ballet, and ex-Cunningham dancer Melissa Toogood.

“I started working with Calvin as a young dancer and I am honored to continue with him as he both extends his reach and refines his highly personal voice,” said Woetzel.

Other new works shown at the festival include a collaboration between Lil Buck and Lauren Lovette; a piece by New York City Ballet-based choreographer Justin Peck on a score commissioned by Shaw; and new works by Michelle Dorrance, Cleo Parker Robinson and James Whiteside.

Vail has long mixed and mixed ballet, street, contemporary and tap dance artists on often unusual assignments and collaborations. This year’s guest artists include Herman Cornejo, Robert Fairchild, Joseph Gordon, Maria Kowroski, Roman Mejia, Ron Myles and Dario Natarelli.

Companies visiting include City Ballet’s touring troupe, Moves, the Philadelphia contemporary ballet company, BalletX and Cleo Parker Robinson Dance, who are showcasing a new work by Robinson to celebrate their company’s 50th anniversary.

Woetzel, who has run the festival since 2007, said that while the past year has been difficult, he is proud of a fund created to help artists and staff from previous seasons. “After the profound experience we’ve all shared, there will be an explosion of energy and appreciation for what we can do together when we gather again in the Rockies,” he said.

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La MaMa Pageant Is Nonetheless Shifting, if Considerably in Place

A New Year is underway and theaters across the United States will remain closed. Vaccines are finally being distributed, but the virus is still spreading. Given this uncertain situation, many dance artists and dance hosts seem to be on hold – done with the 2020 makeshift projects but unsure of what, if anything, to try next.

That could be responsible for the tentative feel of this year’s La MaMa Moves! Dance festival. The year scheduled for May has been canceled, but some of the artists have been invited to contribute to a virtual replacement, rotating programs and artist discussions that will be streamed on the La MaMa website on Tuesday and Wednesday, and January 26th and 27th. Solos, short videos and works in progress create a picture of the moment: Not much that is finished or substantial, but with promising flashes all around.

Kevin Augustine’s “Body Concert” is the work-in-progress camp. The Artistic Director of the Lone Wolf Tribe, Augustine, is an experienced puppeteer and puppet maker. His most recent project includes foam rubber body parts – hands, legs, eyes, all skinless like anatomical models without flesh – which he manipulates in a black body suit and face mask. Instead of presenting this project in video form, he gives us a kind of “making of” advertisement for it.

Many of the performance fragments are unsettling. It is both delicate and disturbing to watch fingers attached to a skinned arm palpate a skinned leg, especially when the exposed bones touch like a compressed forehead. But the conversation behind the scenes and unnecessary reminders of how difficult the current circumstances are keep suppressing the illusion. It’s a 30 minute teaser.

Anabella Lenzu’s “The Night You Stopped Acting”, similarly discursive, is disturbing in another way. Lenzu speaks directly to the camera and shares some favorite music and pieces of old dances performed in the present with footage of her younger self over her shoulder. She jokes about the virtual assistant Alexa who doesn’t understand her Argentine accent. It alludes to the dictatorship in Argentina and the story of the disappearance of the people. What dominates, however, is her self-satisfied person, who breaks out in wiggling eyebrows and crazy grins. The video appears to be mistakenly the portrait of someone who can’t stop acting. Is that an answer to time or is it always like that?

The most dance-centered selection comes from the Norwegian choreographer Kari Hoaas. Instead of presenting a complete work, she has converted an earlier one, “Heat”, into several short solos, which she calls dance haikus. Individual shots in visually striking locations – a former Oslo airport that has been converted into now empty offices; a parking lot with a puddle that doubles as a reflecting pool – the films are each titled with a single word and are evidence of a haiku-like economy.

Or they almost do. The pieces consist mostly of slow, crumpled movements and usually end well: the dancer in “Grow”, framed on a staircase, finally descends from the frame as if in water; the dancer in “Lot”, who wriggles like on a wire rope on a flat floor and steps out with a proud strut. However, the essential effect of each piece is diluted or not strong enough to echo through reduction.

“The Yamanakas at Home” by Tamar Rogoff and Mei Yamanaka is another work that is presented without explanation. It’s a quiet, 10-minute film about a Japanese couple who are haunted by a character in camouflage suits. Although shots of this character on the stairs reminded me of the creepy bob in “Twin Peaks,” the ultimate impression is a kinder ghost that just seems to want to get down and dance.

This is a wish shared by the protagonist of Rogoff’s other contribution “Wonder About Merri”, a short film from 2019 that serves as the inspirational coda for the festival. Merri Milwe has dystonia, a neurological disorder characterized by involuntary convulsions. We learn this, useful to us, if implausible to her, when she looks up her condition in the dictionary.

At the end of the five-minute film, after Merri responded to music from a car by getting out of her wheelchair and dancing on the sidewalk, an episode the film treats as a miracle, she crosses out the definition and writes in a rejoinder : “Then why can I dance?”

Without further explanation, the question feels a little forced. Who said she can’t? But the implicit answer is one that not only dancers could hear. Just as a condition does not define a person, Merri seems to show it so that circumstances cannot completely limit a dancing mind.