Hollywood strike casts shadow on 80th Venice Film Festival

The festival, which kicks off on Wednesday, has become a key launchpad for Oscar campaigns but the biggest industry walk-out in more than 60 years means most actors and writers are banned from publicity work.

The golden lion, symbol of the Venice Film Festival, is silhouetted against the sun in Venice. / Photo: Reuters Archive
Reuters Archive

The golden lion, symbol of the Venice Film Festival, is silhouetted against the sun in Venice. / Photo: Reuters Archive

The Venice Film Festival will celebrate its 80th edition next week, but a Hollywood strike means many stars may be missing, leaving the spotlight to controversial directors like Roman Polanski and Woody Allen.

The festival, which kicks off on Wednesday, has become a key launchpad for Oscar campaigns, helped by glamorous shots of stars arriving by gondola.

But an ongoing strike by Hollywood actors and writers, the biggest industry walk-out in more than 60 years, means most are banned from publicity work.

Hollywood actors went on strike in July after talks to reach a new deal with studios failed, joining writers who have been striking since May.

Their demands focus on dwindling pay in the streaming era and the threat posed by artificial intelligence.

Missing from their Venice premieres will be Emma Stone, who plays a Frankenstein-like creature in "Poor Things", and Bradley Cooper, who directs and stars in "Maestro" about the legendary conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein.

Adam Driver and Penelope Cruz, who play the leads in the biopic "Ferrari" from director Michael Mann ("Heat"), have an exemption from the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG-AFTRA) because the film was made outside the studio system, but may still stay home in solidarity.

Nonetheless, the films are still showing and many top-name directors are due to attend as they compete for the top prize, the Golden Lion, to be announced on September 9.

Sofia Coppola presents another biopic, "Priscilla", about Elvis Presley's wife, while David Fincher returns to the Lido with "The Killer", more than 20 years after "Fight Club" was loudly booed at the festival only to become a cult hit in the following years.

The only major casualty of the strikes has been "Challengers", starring Zendaya that was set as the opening night film but has been delayed to next year.

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Assault allegations ignored

A lot of attention risks being absorbed by the inclusion of Woody Allen and Roman Polanski in the out-of-competition section.

Allen, 87, was investigated for an alleged assault on his adopted daughter and cleared by police in the 1990s, but he has still been effectively blackballed by Hollywood.

Polanski, 90, remains a fugitive from the US over a conviction for raping a minor in the 1970s. The victim has long since forgiven him, but he faces other assault allegations. The festival says he is not attending.

French director Luc Besson ("The Fifth Element"), who was recently cleared of rape allegations, is in the main competition with "Dogman".

Festival director Alberto Barbera defended their inclusion, telling Variety that Besson and Allen had been cleared by investigators: "With them, I don't see where the issue is."

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