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'Monsoon Wedding' for main competition section at Venice film festival
By Gautaman Bhaskaran
TOKYO, SEPT. 3. India's Ms. Mira Nair has made it to the Venice
International Film Festival, currently on at Lido, an island just
off the city made famous by Shakespeare's play of love and
revenge.
Ms. Nair's `Monsoon Wedding', starring Mr. Naseeruddin Shah and
Ms. Lillete Dubey, comes from the maker of `Salaam Bombay.'
Returning to her origins, Ms. Nair has made, this time, a movie
closer to traditional Indian cinema. `Monsoon Wedding'
interweaves five stories which unfold during a grand wedding in
New Delhi.
Ms. Nair's work is one of the 20 entries in the Festival's main
competition section, and this is the second consecutive year that
India has found a place in this prestigious slot.
Last year, Mr. Buddhadeb Dasgupta's `Uttara' in Bengali was not
only part of the competition, but also took home the Golden Lion
for Best Direction.
This year's competition will also include names like Mr. Walter
Salles (the man who made the much-talked about `Central Station')
with his `Behind the Sun', Mr. Larry Clark (who made the
controversial `Kids') with his `Bully', Mr. Amos Gitai (`Eden'
from Israel), Mr. Andre Techine (`Far Away' from France), Mr. Ken
Loach (we remember his superb `Bread and Roses') with his `The
Navigators' and Mr. Richard Linklater (`Waking Life' from the
U.S.).
Movies from Iran (`Void Votes'), Mexico (`Y Tu Mama Tambien'),
Austria (`Dogdays'), Italy (`Light of My Eyes') and Hong Kong
(`Hollywood Hong Kong') will also figure in the competition.
Of course, for every work that finds a berth in this category,
there are ten others, maybe equally good, which cannot be
accommodated because there really is no space. Some of these are
taken in, but outside competition.
But as the Director of the Venice Festival, Mr. Alberto Barbera,
says, ``if the films in the so-called sidebars are not made by
heavyweight directors or do not have A-grade stars to guarantee
media attention, even the most original pictures outside the
competition can struggle to be noticed...I can mention titles
like `Boys Do Not Cry', `Being John Malkovich' and `Pollock'...''
To avoid this, Mr. Barbera has this time introduced a major
innovation. In what many consider to be a radical departure from
an international festival format, Venice's competition has been
coupled with a ``second competition.'' The movies for these have
been drawn from a selection that is more experimental, usually
from younger directors bold enough to risk their stakes.
Here, one finds newcomers like Mr. Zhang Yang from China
(`Quitting'), Mr. Akihiko Shiota from Japan (`Harmful Insect'),
Mr. Werner Herzog from Germany (`Invincible'), Mr. Jefrey
Jeturian from the Philippines (`Larger than Life'), Ms. Sandra
Goldbacher from the U.K. (`Me without You') and others.
What Mr. Barbera hopes to achieve by this feature is to try and
demolish the rigid division between established auteurs and those
who are not.
``Our aim is to break down barriers and oblige audiences to
rethink their critical values and determine their own
distinctions...We have tried to go against expectations, to play
around the two competitions and the differences between them, and
create an element of surprise and curiosity,'' Mr. Barbera said
in Venice at the start of the event.
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