Entertainment News
2005-09-13
Brokeback Mountain wins Golden Lion in Venice
Ang Lee's
Brokeback Mountain , a tale of homosexual
love in the mountains of Wyoming, won Venice's Golden Lion
Ang Lee's
Brokeback Mountain, a tale of homosexual
love in the mountains of Wyoming, won Venice's Golden Lion
on Saturday, beating film festival favorite George
Clooney in the race to take the top prize. The latest
movie by the director of Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon and Hulk is adapted from a story by
Annie Proulx and stars Heath Ledger and Jake
Gyllenhaal as love-struck cowboys whose forbidden affair
begins in 1963 and ends 20 years later.
Taiwan-born Lee
described Brokeback Mountain as a story of love
against adversity. Independent and low-budget, like
several U.S. entries at the festival, it was filmed in
Canada to save money. "After two big movies, I decided
to make a small movie that really moved me," said Lee,
who flew back from the Toronto Film Festival to take
the award. "I have the impression this is the most
auteur-specialist of all film festivals, and I never thought
I would come here. I can't tell you how proud I am."
Critics had
predicted Clooney's black-and-white tale of 1950s
broadcasting courage, Good Night. And, Good
Luck, would win the Golden Lion, beating the 19 other
films in competition. Clooney, adored in Venice, did
not go home empty-handed, winning an award for best
screenplay with cowriter Grant Heslov. His star, David
Strathairn, won the best actor prize for his intense
portrayal of journalist Edward R. Murrow, who used
television to expose the bullying tactics of Sen.
Joseph McCarthy in his anti-communist crusade. "This
film is a tribute to the reporters who are in
Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Africa, in our poor city of New
Orleans, to bring us the truth," Clooney told a news
conference. "I don't believe it is a political
statement per se. I felt that if I kept this in a
historical context, you could make your own decision."
Italy took home a
consolation prize thanks to Giovanna Mezzogiorno, who
won the best actress award for her role in Cristina
Comencini's La Bestia nel Cuore (Don't Tell),
a moving tale of adult siblings scarred by child
abuse. She beat France's Isabelle Huppert, a
front-runner for her role in the emotionally intense
Gabrielle, and Gwyneth Paltrow, a contender for
her performance as the daughter of a mentally unstable
mathematician in John Madden's Proof. Huppert
was instead given a rarely awarded special Lion for
her "outstanding contribution to cinema," her third
accolade at Venice.
Asia was feted as
the honored guest of the 62nd edition of the Venice
festival, but its productions won none of the top prizes.
Korean director Park Chan-wook was seen as a
front-runner for his beautifully shot Sympathy for Lady
Vengeance. Instead, U.S. director Abel Ferrara
took the special jury prize for Mary, starring
Juliette Binoche as an actress haunted by the figure
of Mary Magdalene after having played her on-screen.
Ferrara told reporters this week that his film was possible
thanks to the interest in religion generated by Mel Gibson,
who struck gold with the ultra-realist The Passion
of the Christ.
France's Philippe
Garrel won the Silver Lion prize for best director with
his nouvelle vague-inspired Les Amants
Reguliers (Regular Lovers), an austere
story of love between disaffected young people in bohemian
Paris after the May 1968 riots. The moody three-hour
film with only bare dialogue was well received by
critics but got mixed reactions from the public at the
Lido. It also won an accolade for its striking photography.
Another French offering, Laurent Cantet's gritty
Heading South took home an acting prize for
best newcomer thanks to Haitian Menothy Cesar, cast as
the lover of white women paying for affection in 1970s
Port-au-Prince. (Clara Ferreira-Marques, via Reuters)
Click here to follow The Advocate on Twitter.
Page 1 of 1