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Laura Poitras, Venice Winner With ‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,’ to Be IDFA Guest of Honor - variety.com - USA - city Amsterdam
variety.com
20.09.2022 / 16:03

Laura Poitras, Venice Winner With ‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,’ to Be IDFA Guest of Honor

Leo Barraclough International Features Editor U.S. director-producer Laura Poitras, who won an Oscar and an Emmy with Edward Snowden film “Citizenfour,” and recently took the Golden Lion at Venice with opioid epidemic pic “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” will be the Guest of Honor at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. The 35th edition of the festival takes place from Nov. 9 to 20. Poitras will be honored at IDFA with the Retrospective and Top 10 programs, in which she curates 10 films. The Top 10 program includes reflections on political imprisonment (“Hunger” by Steve McQueen; “This Is Not a Film” by Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb), incarceration and psychiatry (Frederick Wiseman’s “Titicut Follies”), and genocide (Claude Lanzmann’s “Shoah”). As part of the Top 10, Poitras will be in conversation with several of her selected filmmakers during the festival’s public talks program.

Laura Poitras Announced As Guest Of Honor At Doc Fest IDFA - deadline.com - New York - USA - city Amsterdam - city Venice
deadline.com
20.09.2022 / 14:53

Laura Poitras Announced As Guest Of Honor At Doc Fest IDFA

Oscar-winning director Laura Poitras will be guest of honor at the 35th International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), running from November 9 to 20.

Poitras, Poitier, Pipelines & ‘Patrick’: TIFF’s Documentary Premieres Throw Awards Race Into Focus - deadline.com - New York
deadline.com
17.09.2022 / 00:55

Poitras, Poitier, Pipelines & ‘Patrick’: TIFF’s Documentary Premieres Throw Awards Race Into Focus

The Oscar race came into sharper focus at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival, with actors like Brendan Fraser and Michelle Yeoh cementing their lead contender status, and big-budget studio efforts like The Fablemans and Glass Onion premiering to raves.

New York LGBTQ+ Film Festival Lineup: HBO’s Dustin Lance Black Docu ‘Mama’s Boy’ Set For Opening Night - deadline.com - New York - New York - Manhattan - city Brooklyn
deadline.com
15.09.2022 / 19:15

New York LGBTQ+ Film Festival Lineup: HBO’s Dustin Lance Black Docu ‘Mama’s Boy’ Set For Opening Night

NewFest said Thursday that HBO’s upcoming Mama’s Boy, the documentary about the life of Oscar-winning Milk screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, will be the opening-night film for the New York LGBTQ+ Film Festival. The fest, which also announced its full lineup, kicks off its 34th edition October 13.

Oscar Winner Laura Poitras Bashes Toronto, Venice For Programming Hillary Clinton Docs, Accuses Festivals Of “Kind Of Whitewashing” Clinton’s Record - deadline.com - USA - Iraq - Afghanistan - county Clinton
deadline.com
14.09.2022 / 02:35

Oscar Winner Laura Poitras Bashes Toronto, Venice For Programming Hillary Clinton Docs, Accuses Festivals Of “Kind Of Whitewashing” Clinton’s Record

Oscar-winning filmmaker Laura Poitras sharply criticized the Toronto and Venice film festivals today for programming documentaries connected with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, suggesting the decision bordered on a “whitewashing” of history.

Laura Poitras Slams TIFF, Venice for Supporting Clinton ‘Whitewashing’ - variety.com - New York - Iraq - Afghanistan - county Clinton
variety.com
13.09.2022 / 23:01

Laura Poitras Slams TIFF, Venice for Supporting Clinton ‘Whitewashing’

Adam Benzine Guest Contributor Oscar-winning documentarian Laura Poitras slammed the heads of the Venice and Toronto film festivals for “engaging in a kind of whitewashing” by programming glossy documentaries from the Clinton family. Her comments come as TIFF this week hosted the Canadian premiere of Poitras’s “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” a documentary about the artist and activist Nan Goldin, and just days after the film won Venice’s top prize, the Golden Lion. It is the rare doc to land slots at the superfecta of Venice, Telluride, Toronto and New York, and Poitras said she thought “long and hard” about whether or not to voice criticism at the same venues feting her latest work. Nevertheless, she said, “journalists need to ask hard questions.”

‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Wins Venice 2022 Golden Lion [Full List Of Winners] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
10.09.2022 / 23:18

‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Wins Venice 2022 Golden Lion [Full List Of Winners]

For critics and audiences alike, the Venice Film Festival is an important first look at the films that will shape the award season and year-end conversations. That puts added emphasis on the Venice Film Festival awards – including the Golden Lion, the festival’s top prize – as the first step towards canon-building for the rest of the year.

Venice Review: Soudade Kaadan’s ‘Nezouh’ - deadline.com - Syria - city Venice - city Damascus
deadline.com
10.09.2022 / 16:49

Venice Review: Soudade Kaadan’s ‘Nezouh’

A Syrian war film with a difference, Nezouh is a delicate and engrossing entry in Venice’s Horizons Extra section. Director Soudade Kaadan won Lion of the Future for 2018’s The Day I Lost My Shadow, and she continues to impress with this empathetic story of life under siege. 

HBO Lands Streaming Rights to Laura Poitras’ ‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed’ - thewrap.com - New York - New York
thewrap.com
08.09.2022 / 19:21

HBO Lands Streaming Rights to Laura Poitras’ ‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed’

Neon snapped up theatrical rights on Aug. 18 prior to the documentary’s world premiere at Venice Film Festival.

HBO Documentary Films Acquires Laura Poitras Oscar Contender ‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Ahead Of TIFF North American Premiere - deadline.com - New York - USA
deadline.com
08.09.2022 / 19:09

HBO Documentary Films Acquires Laura Poitras Oscar Contender ‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Ahead Of TIFF North American Premiere

HBO Documentary Films has acquired U.S. television and streaming rights to Oscar winner Laura Poitras’s film All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, fresh from its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival and sneak preview at Telluride.

Venice Review: Carolina Cavalli’s ‘Amanda’ - deadline.com - Italy - city Venice
deadline.com
06.09.2022 / 10:59

Venice Review: Carolina Cavalli’s ‘Amanda’

An eccentric 20-something tries to make friends in Amanda, a first feature for Italian writer-director Carolina Cavalli. Premiering in Venice’s Horizons Extra section, it’s a comical, stylized character portrait with a strong central turn from Benedetta Porcaroli. 

Venice Review: Brendan Fraser In Darren Aronofsky’s ‘The Whale’ - deadline.com - Britain - city Venice - county Fountain
deadline.com
04.09.2022 / 22:43

Venice Review: Brendan Fraser In Darren Aronofsky’s ‘The Whale’

Who would have thought that, of all the top-shelf auteurs in Venice’s big comeback year, the most constrained would be Darren Aronofsky? His new competition film The Whale opens with that very intent — the screen is cropped to 1:33 — which turns out to be most appropriate for a small and intimate movie about a very big man.

Venice Review: Georgia Oakley’s ‘Blue Jean’ - deadline.com - Britain - city Venice, county Day
deadline.com
03.09.2022 / 18:33

Venice Review: Georgia Oakley’s ‘Blue Jean’

A lesbian gym teacher navigates Margaret Thatcher’s Britain under the “Section 28” law in Blue Jean, Georgia Oakley’s debut feature premiering in the Venice Days section of the Venice Film Festival.

‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Review: Laura Poitras’ Portrait of Nan Goldin is a Powerful Rumination On Grief [Venice] - theplaylist.net - New York
theplaylist.net
03.09.2022 / 18:03

‘All The Beauty And The Bloodshed’ Review: Laura Poitras’ Portrait of Nan Goldin is a Powerful Rumination On Grief [Venice]

“Photography was always a way to walk through fear,” says Nan Goldin in her raspy voice as photos fill the screen. Nuzzled within the textures of the snapshots live friends, lovers, and drifters, all eternally preserved through the eyes of the consecrated artist who rose to prominence in the 80s thanks to her visual chronicling of queer life and culture in New York at the height of the AIDS epidemic.

‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed’ Review: Laura Poitras’s Film About How Nan Goldin Turned Her Art of Transgression Against the Sackler Family - variety.com - New York
variety.com
03.09.2022 / 14:59

‘All the Beauty and the Bloodshed’ Review: Laura Poitras’s Film About How Nan Goldin Turned Her Art of Transgression Against the Sackler Family

Owen Gleiberman Chief Film Critic In “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” the photographer Nan Goldin tells a woeful, revealing, and in its way rather funny anecdote about how in the 1980s, when she first gathered up her photographs — casually transgressive images of her and her friends, who were often drag queens and addicts, along with shots of the assorted other people and situations she experienced as part of the hummingly squalid East Village New York subculture — and tried to shop them around to galleries and museums, they were roundly rejected, because the arbiters of taste, who were inevitably men, favored photographs that were black-and-white and composed in elegant meticulous ways. Goldin’s photographs were in garish verité color, set in environments that were so scruffy (messy bohemian apartments, ordinary people just lolling around) that it looked, to the gallery mavens, like there was no visual organization to them, no art.

Venice Review: Isabelle Huppert In Jean-Paul Salomé’s ‘The Sitting Duck’ - deadline.com - France - China - city Venice
deadline.com
02.09.2022 / 19:15

Venice Review: Isabelle Huppert In Jean-Paul Salomé’s ‘The Sitting Duck’

Maureen Kearney’s story is unbelievable. It is a story of unbelief, in fact — of denial, cover-ups, corruption and injustice directed at a small woman who was just doing her job. She’s played with an electric stillness by the great Isabelle Huppert in Jean-Paul Salome’s Venice Film Festival Horizons title The Sitting Duck (La Syndicaliste). There are still plenty of people who openly doubt her story, including people on her own side of politics. Perhaps it would be easier all round if it weren’t true.

Venice Review: Shia LaBeouf In Abel Ferrara’s ‘Padre Pio’ - deadline.com - Italy - city Venice, county Day
deadline.com
02.09.2022 / 18:09

Venice Review: Shia LaBeouf In Abel Ferrara’s ‘Padre Pio’

Shia LaBeouf plays the title character in this period piece, and his face dominates the promotional material, but the latest film from the ridiculously prolific Abel Ferrara, now into his 70s, is really more of an ensemble with a supporting cast that’s near-unknown outside Italy.

Women Filmmakers Make Steady Progress in France - variety.com - France - London - New York - city Venice
variety.com
31.08.2022 / 23:35

Women Filmmakers Make Steady Progress in France

Ben Croll As Unifrance’s Daniela Elstner sees it, the wealth of talent in this year’s Venice slate imparts a good bill of health for the French industry writ large. “Today, festival directors look to France in a slightly different way,” Elstner says. “We can find eminences like Frederick Wiseman alongside [emerging talents] like Alice Diop. That’s the strength of a good selection: You need names, you need surprises, you need to mix it up.” Alongside Diop and Wiseman (whose “A Couple” is in French, if not a majority French production), this year’s Venice roster also includes “Other People’s Children” from Rebecca Zlotowski and “Our Ties” from Roschdy Zem — together forming a delegation perhaps more notable for the fact that none had competed in Venice before than for the almost incidental gender parity of the mix.

Venice Review: Roberto De Paolis’ Horizons Opener ‘Princess’ - deadline.com - Britain - Italy - Nigeria
deadline.com
31.08.2022 / 17:33

Venice Review: Roberto De Paolis’ Horizons Opener ‘Princess’

Roberto De Paolis’ second film has such a heightened sense of the absurd — a playful, almost naïve tone that’s completely at odds with its subject matter — that it can only come from real life. That turns out to be very much the case in the Venice Film Festival’s Horizons section opener Princess, a story based on the true-experiences of Nigerian sex workers, many of them trafficked, in contemporary Italy. The result is a curiously queasy mix of comedy and drama that, while taking an admirable view of its lead character as a complex heroine rather than a victim to be pitied, falls into many of the same tropes in more cliched depictions of prostitution.

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