All Venice articles – Page 47
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Reviews
'Vox Lux': Venice Review
Brady Corbet takes the stage for his second film, with Natalie Portman starring in this ’intellectually-charged spectacle’
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Reviews
'The River': Venice Review
Five brothers begin to break free of constraints in a remote Kazakh village
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Reviews
'The Accused (Acusada)': Venice Review
A young woman stands trial for a sensational murder in Buenos Aires
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Reviews
'Jinpa': Venice Review
Pema Tesden’s fifth feature from Tibet is backed by Hong Kong’s Wong Kar-wai
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Reviews
'Monrovia, Indiana': Venice Review
Frederick Wiseman heads to Trump’s heartland for another probing documentary
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Reviews
'Dragged Across Concrete': Venice Review
Mel Gibson and Vince Vaughn team up for S. Craig Zahler’s latest bone-cruncher
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Reviews
'Carmine Street Guitars': Venice Review
Absorbing documentary about legendary New York guitar maker Rick Kelly
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Reviews
'At Eternity's Gate': Venice Review
Willem Dafoe plays Vincent Van Gogh for the artist-turned-director Julian Schnabel
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Reviews
'Sunset': Venice Review
‘Son Of Saul’ director László Nemes returns with a complex drama set in Hungary on the eve of the First World War
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Reviews
'El Pepe: A Supreme Life': Venice Review
A portrait of Uruguay’s political hero and former president José Mujica, by Emir Kusturica
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Features
Venice Q&A: Gastón Solnicki on his doc tribute to Viennale director Hans Hurch
Introduzione all’oscuro chronicles the director’s trip to Vienna after the death of his friend Hurch.
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News
'Benjamin Button' writer Robin Swicord to direct Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' (exclusive)
Call Me By Your Name production outfit plot adaptation of playwright’s final work.
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Features
Venice Q&A: Errol Morris on his Steve Bannon documentary 'American Dharma'
”At the heart of a lot of what he says is an inherent contradiction.”
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Reviews
'The Sisters Brothers': Venice Review
John C Reilly and Joaquin Phoenix play hitmen siblings operating in the 1850s American West
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Reviews
'The Announcement': Venice Review
Comedy of the absurd relates a long-forgotten attempted coup in Turkey
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Reviews
'Charlie Says': Venice Review
Mary Harron returns with a story about Charles Manson’s acolytes
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Reviews
'What You Gonna Do When The World's On Fire?': Venice Review
A change of tone for Roberto Minervini as he continues his odyssey through the American South
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Reviews
'Tel Aviv On Fire': Venice Review
A fictional TV soap opera is the backdrop for intelligent commentary on Israeli-Palestinian relations
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Features
Venice Q&A: Amos Gitai, "our minister of culture will destroy the fabric of Israeli cinema"
Gitai is screening his new feature A Tramway In Jerusalem in Venice accompanied by a new short.