Mostra 2025 – Final days + ciao ciao Venezia

The two last days of the Mostra, we took it slow: we skipped Day 9 screenings (honestly, enough of Italian movies!) – apparently, looking at the reviews, we did well; and we gave a 1h chance to yesterday’s Chinese movie “The Sun rises on Us All” (Cai Shangjun). Though it was still more pleasant to watch compared to “Jay Kelly” (to which I give my special “2025 Disaster Award”), it was not worth having a short night. Even more as hospital stays and cancer patients are not really on the top of the list of topics I am very excited about currently – on that front, we deserve a break.

So, what do I take out of this year’s Mostra? I would say it was a pretty good one but missing the “magical discovery”. With one remaining unknown though: until the screening of “The Voice of Hind Rajab”, everyone was talking about a Korean movie, “No Other Choice” that had all the chances of winning this year’s Golden Lion. For some reason, the Mostra organizers thought it best to put some “Out of Competition” movies in our abbonamento programme, rather than to allow us to see this one. I won’t complain though. Our programme was high level enough, with some jewels to spot, such as Sorrentino’s “La Grazia” and Jarmusch’s “Father, Mother, Sister, Brother” (not to forget my crazy Lanthimos’ “Bugonia”).

We were discussing yesterday and reached the agreement that most probably the Golden Lion will eventually go to “The Voice of Hind Rajab” (to be confirmed later tonight). Maybe not for its perfect cinematic quality, but for all the other possible reasons in the world. Allow me a bad word game: unless there is a big surprise, it seems that the Jury has No Other Choice.

It was a special year for us, filled with nostalgia and emotions but also with the huge satisfaction of one very important promise kept. From now on, Venice will not only be my usual yearly cinema rendezvous, but it will also the place where the full spot in my papa’s story has been put. A place where I will return to wave at him and remember.

Ciao Venezia, ciao papa, ci vediamo in 2026 ❤️

Mostra 2025 – Day 8: “Duse” (Pietro Marcello) and “The Voice of Hind Rajab” (Kaouther Ben Hania)

Yesterday’s first film was one of the (as usual, too many) Italian movies in the official selection (just for the record, 5 out of 21 films are Italian productions). With all due respect to my many Italian friends, I do not think that it is representative of Italian cinema’s actual quality (and again, no particular grudge about Italy, I would say the same about France).

Given the fact that we had already seen a jewel in this ocean of Italian movies (Sorrentino’s “La Grazia”), the odds that another jewel would swim out of it were quite low. Low they were, low they remained. They were even smashed to pieces for me after two minutes, when I understood that I would be spending the next two hours with Valeria Bruni Tedeschi. As I am a sadly partial human being, this fact killed all the potential for me to enjoy the projection. I just can’t.

Now, to try and provide you at least with some useful information without dwelling too much on my VBT allergy, “Duse” tells us the story of a renowned Italian theatre diva from the end of the 19th/beginning of 20th century, Eleonora Duse. She seems to be quite a myth in here and used to be called the “divina”. My fellow watchers who do not suffer from the same VBT allergy as me, would tell you that it’s quite watchable (though my VBT allergy made me sleep through part of it as a coping mechanism) and that Bruni Tedeschi is quite a fit for such a diva role (my VBT allergy makes me see hysteria everywhere). So I would leave it to this as, let’s face it, I’m really not the right person to comment on this one.

The second movie, “The Voice of Hind Rajab” had been flagged by Alberto Barbera (the festival’s Director), at the official selection announcement press conference, as extremely powerful. This had triggered my curiosity as Barbera usually barely gives any opinion on the selection, or at least not in such an “engaged” manner. Reading a bit about it ahead of the festival, I understood what could have sparked such an unexpected attitude: the movie uses the real red crescent’s recordings of their calls with a 5 year old little girl who has remained as the only one alive in a car in Northern Gaza. The four other members of her family who were in the car with her are dead. The night is falling (the child is scared of the dark), the Israeli tank that shot at the car is approaching and the little girl is calling for help – desperately begging the rescuers on the phone to come and get her.

The recordings are dreadful and speak for themselves. The screening lead to a 23min standing ovation in the Sala Grande (in the presence of some of its very renowned producers: Joaquin Phoenix and Ronney Mara). Some say it’s the most important movie of the year.

What do I personally make of it? It is actually really hard for me to tell as I am still debating with myself and with my movie buddies. To give you a hint, I will present some of the questions that we are still debating and for which I might not have an answer: aren’t the real life recordings sufficient to speak for this tragedy? Would a documentary format have been better? Does the acting (sometimes overly dramatic) around these real recordings strengthen or weaken the message? Was it the movie that “deserved” the 23min standing ovation or the dreadful context behind it? But isn’t it good if such a movie can at least generate a shock wave, maybe that, as such, justifies for its existence?

As said, I have no answer yet and will leave it for you to see. We can chat about it once it is out and distributed around the globe. I can at least say that the silence that followed the end of the screening (prior to unusually long applauses in the Palabiennale screening hall) confirms the movie’s efficiency. I had to wait for 5mins before I could say a word. The voice of Hind Rajab kept on resonating in my head. It deserved a moment of meditation for all the lost lives in the past years.

Mostra 2025 – Day 7 (following a break on Day 6): “A House of Dynamite” (Kathryn Bigelow) and “L’étranger” (François Ozon)

One could not imagine a more contrasted evening than yesterday’s one: on one side an American thriller about a missile attack on the US and, on the other side, a French adaptation of Camus’s famous “L’étranger”. As both movies were pretty decent, it somehow ended up working well for us. I am however not sure that it would have been the same if the screenings were inverted (meaning first the French, than the American one). Indeed, Bigelow’s film is a tensed, nervous and very rythmic film, that might have been slightly too “agressive” if it had been screened after the slow paced “L’étranger”.

Anyhow, things turned out well and our evening started with Bigelow’s race against time. A missile launch is detected by the US intelligence services. The movie retraces the 20mins following the first alert – the moment what seems to be a nuclear missile is detected – until it is about to erase the city of Chicago from the surface of the earth. It follows the same 20mins but from three different places: a military command, the office of the Secretary of State for Defence and the office of the President of the USA.

The persons in these three places follow a similar mental path: first disbelief (all are convinced that it is a false alert), then realization, finally followed by dread and panic. 

It is extremely well constructed, efficient and breathless. The pace of the movie never slows down and holds you alert on the edge of your chair until the end.

Now. Does this mean that I would have given it 5 stars as The Guardian did? Definitely not. Why? Because, for me construction and efficiency are not enough. I also need a sense, a meaning, a purpose. When the lights turned back on, I however could not come up with such a meaning for my own self. I mean, we all know that the world is not doing great and that politicians have to take tough decisions (and might have to take even harder ones in a – potentially near – future). Do I need a movie to remind me of this and add additional anxiety to my life? Not really.

The second movie was a risky adaptation of Camus’s “Létranger” by François Ozon. To be honest, I had my doubts. Not an easy one to adapt as a movie. 

However, against all odds, it ended up being a pretty good surprise: Ozon’s black and white picture (that did not work for me at all in “Frantz” back in 2016) beautifully renders the city of Alger, its heat, its sea, its atmosphere. 

Add to it a wonderful young French actor (Benjamin Voisin, whom I had already spotted in “Illusions perdues” a few years ago) who really surpasses himself in a tricky role, and what you get is a quite faithful to the book and pretty enjoyable film.

I have difficulties explaining why I am not more enthusiastic than this. Maybe because I did have a feeling that, unlike the first movie, this one looses a bit of its rythm in its second part..

Conclusion: still, it was overall a surprisingly enjoyable evening!

Mostra 2025 – Day 5: “Father, Mother, Sister, Brother” (Jim Jarmusch)

Since the Mostra’s selection has been released at the official press conference in July, this particular screening has been marked in all my agendas with a big exclamation mark. All possible reminders have been set and friends have been instructed to aim first at the tickets for this specific film, preferably at the Sala Grande. Four computers have been mobilized to try and enter the vivaticket booking system on time to reach the target. 

This seems to be the right moment to have a loving thought for my booking buddy, Evghenka, and to express my eternal gratitude for helping me out fulfilling one of my dreams: attending a Jim Jarmusch film projection with Jim Jarmusch in the room.

This also seems to be the right moment to have a loving thought for my mom who dragged me to see “Dead Man” when I was a 15 year old grumpy teenager and who forever changed my perspective on cinema (it was definitely not only my papa’s deed).

As it is repeatedly recited in the already mentioned “Dead Man”: “Some are born to endless nights, some are born to sweet delights” (or the other way around, I don’t exactly remember). Well, yesterday, we all agreed that we were definitely more on the sweet delights side of things. If I have to be honest, I would say that I was even on the total euphoria side of things (and this stayed as is before, during and after the screening).

Prior to the screening, my movie buddies seemed pretty excited as well, but mostly due to Cate Blanchett’s presence on the red carpet. Hence we all got our childish/back to adolescence groupie moment – them with Cate, me with Jim. Everyone happy.

Now, “what about the movie?” will you ask. Well, would I have been selected as a jury member, I would tell you that I have found my 2025 Golden Lion. Looking at the previous jury decisions, I however doubt it will be the case: it is a too discrete, too delicate and too apolitical movie to attract the attention of jury members. But what a delight it still was. 

As Jarmusch has already done several times, it is a movie divided in three parts, each of them giving us a short insight into different family relationships (one in the USA, one in Ireland and one in France). It is a movie made of hints. Characters are caught at a particular moment (without any information given on the wider context) and the spectator is granted only a few clues (short sentences, looks, silences) to put together the puzzle of these (sometimes extremely tensed or weird) relationships. It is funny, it is chilling, it is moving. And it is supported by great actors (Adam Driver, Cate Blanchett, Tom Waits, Charlotte Rampling – you basically name them) with all of them performing at the same level of excellency. I do however have a personal soft spot for Tom waits’ eccentric father character, which is absolutely delicious.

Conclusion: it was worth coming to Venice just for that one!

Allow me to end this one with a special pic because aaaaaaaaaaaaah I saw Jiiiiiim Jaaaaaarmusch!!! :)))