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    Venice Film Festival 2024: All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews

    By Pete Hammond, Damon Wise, Stephanie Bunbury, Dominic Patten and Matthew Carey,

    2024-08-29
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    The 2024 Venice Film Festival kicked off August 28 with the long-awaited Tim Burton-Michael Keaton sequel Beetlejuice Beetlejuice opening the 81th edition , which runs through September 7 on the Lido. Deadline is on the ground to watch all the key films.

    The lineup for the world’s oldest fest also includes world premieres of Todd Phillips’ Joaquin Phoenix-Lady Gaga pic Joker: Folie à Deux , Pedro Almodóvar’s The Room Next Door , Luca Guadagnino’s Queer , Pablo Larrain’s Maria Callas biopic Maria starring Angelina Jolie and new works from the likes of Alfonso Cuarón, Walter Salles, Harmony Korine, Thomas Vinterberg, Brady Corbet, Takeshi Kitano, Claude Lelouch, Errol Morris and others.

    Below is a compilation of our reviews from the fest, which last year awarded its Golden Lion for best film to Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things, starring Emma Stone, who went on the win the Best Actress Oscar . Isabelle Huppert heads the competition jury this year. Click on the movie’s title to read our full take.

    RELATED: Starry Venice Kicks Off Awards Season Scramble: What’s The Buzz On The Lido Movies?

    And Their Children After Them

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    ‘And Their Children After Them’

    Section: Competition
    Director-screenwriters: Zoran Boukherma, Ludovic Boukherma
    Cast: Paul Kircher, Angélina Woreth, Sayyid El Alami, Gilles Lellouche, Ludivine Sagnier, Louis Memmi
    Deadline’s takeaway: And Their Children After Them takes the Boukherma brothers into the verdant territory of literary romance, which weighs heavily on the long, repetitive result; however much of the original novel has been excised, the end result feels overstuffed, as if everything had to be included.

    Babygirl

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    ‘Babygirl’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Halina Reijn
    Cast: Nicole Kidman, Harris Dickinson, Antonio Banderas, Sophie Wilde, Esther McGregor
    Deadline’s takeaway: Nicole Kidman really goes the distance, imbuing Romy with a psychological vulnerability that is missing from the film it most obvious sounds like ( 50 Shades of Grey ) and presenting a unique reversal of the film it most obviously looks like ( Secretary ). Halina Reijn leaves so much up in the air that Babygirl lasts longer in the mind than you think it might.

    Battleground

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    ‘Battleground’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Gianni Amelio
    Cast: Alessandro Borghi, Gabriel Montesi, Federica Rosellini, Giovanni Scotti, Vince Vivenzio, Alberto Cracco, Luca Lazzareschi, Maria Grazia Plos, Rita Bosello
    Deadline’s takeaway: It’s a fascinating slice of history, but despite terrific performances from the leads, and especially Borghi, Battleground simply fizzles out, leaving us with the tantalizing thought of the more thorny, complex, relevant film it could have been.

    Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

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    ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’

    Section: Out of Competition
    Director: Tim Burton
    Cast: Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, Catherine O’Hara, Justin Theroux, Monica Bellucci, Jenna Ortega, Willem Dafoe, Arthur Conti
    Deadline’s takeaway: Michael Keaton is back as the compellingly horrible undead star, but it’s not so much a sequel — serving up more of the same — as a kooky, spooky school reunion where you find out what happened to the class weirdo. It’s also funny, all the time, and a blast to watch.

    RELATED: ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’: What The Critics Are Saying

    The Brutalist

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    ‘The Brutalist’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Brady Corbet
    Cast: Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy, Stacy Martin, Emma Laird, Isaach De Bankolé, Alessandro Nivola
    Deadline’s takeaway: The Brutalist is the story of a man who thinks big, from a director who also has a vision that doesn’t fit easily into the modest confines of American independent cinema. It falls somewhat short of its lofty target but casts a strange spell and often swells with imagination.

    Cloud

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    ‘Cloud’

    Section: Out of Competition
    Director: Kurosawa Kiyoshi
    Cast: Masaki Suda, Kotone Furukawa, Daiken Okudaira, Amane Okayama, Yoshiyoshi Arakawa, Masataka Kubota
    Deadline’s takeaway: A master of atmosphere in prize-winning films such as Wife of a Spy , Kiyoshi Kurosawa here grasps the thriller genre by the collar and gives it a good shake. Actually, Cloud manages to be many things — a social document about online communications and how radically they have reshaped the world, a snappy shoot-em-up, and a brooding moral tale.

    Disclaimer

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    ‘Disclaimer’

    Section: Out of Competition (TV)
    Director: Alfonso Cuarón
    Cast: Cate Blanchett, Kevin Kline, Lesley Manville, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Hoyeon, Sacha Baron Cohen, Louis Partidge, Leila George
    Deadline’s takeaway: Disclaimer is a study in confession by a filmmaker for whom perspective is the ultimate deconstruction that is less a work of towering originality but more a compelling and disturbing story within a comfort zone of discomforting tropes.

    Families Like Ours

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    ‘Families Like Ours’

    Section: Out of Competition (TV)
    Director: Thomas Vinterberg
    Cast: Amaryllis August, Albert Rudbeck Lindhardt, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Paprika Steen, Helene Reingaard Neumann, Magnus Millang, Esben Smed, David Dencik, Thomas Bo Larsen, Asta Kamma August
    Deadline’s takeaway: The destruction of an entire country by climate change is a huge, urgent prospect. Maybe it is just too huge to conjure in the confines of a television drama about a few individuals whose lifelong good luck – being born Danish – has run out.

    I’m Still Here

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    ‘I’m Still Here’

    Section: Out of Competition
    Director: Walter Salles
    Cast: Fernanda Torres, Selton Mello, Fernanda Montenegro
    Deadline’s takeaway: Salles has a purpose here. He is clearly not simply recording what happened; this is a film of political advocacy, warning against forgetting what tyranny did to the country and the stains it left behind.

    Kill the Jockey

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    ‘Kill the Jockey’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Luis Ortega
    Cast: Nahuel Pérez Biscayart, Úrsula Corberó, Daniel Giménez Cacho, Mariana Di Girolamo, Daniel Fanego, Osmar Núñez, Luis Ziembrowski
    Deadline’s takeaway: A subdued yet strange piece of work, it starts out like a deadpan Wes Anderson spoof of a Stanley Kubrick gangster movie and slowly mutates. Although it has panache and style, Kill the Jockey needs a rather more substantial narrative to get it, and us, to the finish line.

    Maria

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    ‘Maria’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Pablo Larraín
    Cast: Angelina Jolie, Pierfrancesco Favino, Alba Rohrwacher, Haluk Bilginer, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Stephen Ashfield, Valeria Golino
    Deadline’s takeaway: Somehow the portrait the film draws is curiously bloodless. Maria Callas the woman remains distant and unknowable; cunning to the end, she eludes us. Maria tells a fascinating story, but it lacks that rasping edge.

    The Order

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    The Order’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Justin Kurzel
    Cast: Jude Law, Nicholas Hoult, Tye Sheridan, Jurnee Smollett, Marc Maron
    Deadline’s takeaway: Australian director Justin Kurzel brings the same bleak sense of outsider thinking to his Venice competition title The Order that made Nitram , his portrait of the young misfit who carried out Australia’s worst mass shooting in 1996, so chilling.

    Separated

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    ‘Separated’

    Section: Out of Competition (Non-Fiction)
    Director: Errol Morris
    Deadline’s takeaway: For those who have forgotten what that the Trump administration’s child-separation policy looked like, Morris arrives to remind us with an incisive account of how it was devised and implemented, and for what purpose.

    September 5

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    ‘September 5’

    Section: Horizon Extra
    Director: Tim Fehlbaum
    Cast: Peter Sarsgaard, John Magaro, Ben Chaplin, Leonie Benesch, Corey Johnson, Georgina Rich
    Deadline’s takeaway: Taking a story that is now 52 years old and making it not just relevant but newly inspiring is no small feat. The acting across the board is superb, and September 5 succeeds on every level.

    Trois Amies

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    ‘Trois Amies’

    Section: Competition
    Director: Emmanuel Mouret
    Cast: Camille Cottin, Sara Forestier, India Hair, Grégoire Ludig, Damien Bonnard, Vincent Macaigne, Éric Caravaca
    Deadline’s takeaway: The French enjoy films like Emmanuel Mouret’s relentlessly middlebrow romantic comedy, but you’ll likely have forgotten this soul-sapping soap — or want to — long before it finishes.

    RELATED: Alberto Barbera Renewed As Venice Film Festival Artistic Director For 2025 and 2026

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