The Fort Worth Press - War in all its horrors looms large over Venice festival

USD -
AED 3.67291
AFN 68.291665
ALL 93.057229
AMD 389.770539
ANG 1.808359
AOA 912.000012
ARS 1002.451844
AUD 1.547628
AWG 1.795
AZN 1.700526
BAM 1.855228
BBD 2.025868
BDT 119.90021
BGN 1.85709
BHD 0.376614
BIF 2963.296747
BMD 1
BND 1.345185
BOB 6.933055
BRL 5.799496
BSD 1.003315
BTN 84.297531
BWP 13.716757
BYN 3.283486
BYR 19600
BZD 2.022453
CAD 1.408855
CDF 2864.99969
CHF 0.887399
CLF 0.035506
CLP 979.709842
CNY 7.240204
CNH 7.24739
COP 4425.67
CRC 510.64839
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 104.59491
CZK 23.97015
DJF 178.66544
DKK 7.07737
DOP 60.456292
DZD 133.234044
EGP 49.338899
ERN 15
ETB 121.511455
EUR 0.948905
FJD 2.27595
FKP 0.789317
GBP 0.791645
GEL 2.734986
GGP 0.789317
GHS 16.027888
GIP 0.789317
GMD 71.00031
GNF 8646.941079
GTQ 7.74893
GYD 209.812896
HKD 7.784805
HNL 25.339847
HRK 7.133259
HTG 131.909727
HUF 386.667501
IDR 15859.1
ILS 3.73008
IMP 0.789317
INR 84.38745
IQD 1314.3429
IRR 42092.491627
ISK 137.68954
JEP 0.789317
JMD 159.351136
JOD 0.709102
JPY 154.479018
KES 129.250097
KGS 86.501543
KHR 4053.579729
KMF 466.574978
KPW 899.999621
KRW 1394.505002
KWD 0.30754
KYD 0.836179
KZT 498.615064
LAK 22046.736197
LBP 89848.180874
LKR 293.122747
LRD 184.608672
LSL 18.253487
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.900375
MAD 10.002609
MDL 18.230627
MGA 4667.201055
MKD 58.441866
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.999946
MOP 8.045323
MRU 40.054641
MUR 47.394249
MVR 15.450173
MWK 1739.868711
MXN 20.363405
MYR 4.469011
MZN 63.891011
NAD 18.253747
NGN 1666.780195
NIO 36.921442
NOK 11.085865
NPR 134.880831
NZD 1.707577
OMR 0.38465
PAB 1.003296
PEN 3.808919
PGK 4.034511
PHP 58.724501
PKR 278.580996
PLN 4.09455
PYG 7828.648128
QAR 3.65762
RON 4.722101
RSD 110.989157
RUB 99.929029
RWF 1378.077124
SAR 3.755961
SBD 8.390419
SCR 13.840097
SDG 601.502368
SEK 10.97414
SGD 1.343225
SHP 0.789317
SLE 22.600406
SLL 20969.504736
SOS 573.447802
SRD 35.315497
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.779169
SYP 2512.529858
SZL 18.247358
THB 34.767504
TJS 10.695389
TMT 3.51
TND 3.165498
TOP 2.342099
TRY 34.458925
TTD 6.812749
TWD 32.557494
TZS 2655.000397
UAH 41.44503
UGX 3682.325879
UYU 43.055121
UZS 12842.792233
VES 45.743553
VND 25385
VUV 118.722009
WST 2.791591
XAF 622.255635
XAG 0.032728
XAU 0.000387
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.755845
XOF 622.229073
XPF 113.127366
YER 249.874969
ZAR 18.144225
ZMK 9001.193911
ZMW 27.546563
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

War in all its horrors looms large over Venice festival
War in all its horrors looms large over Venice festival / Photo: © AFP

War in all its horrors looms large over Venice festival

The roots of war, its harrowing realities and aftermath are explored in a host of offerings at the Venice Film Festival this year, including a remarkable documentary going behind the lines with Russian soldiers.

Text size:

Gaza and Ukraine, the two World Wars, and a Benito Mussolini biopic series figure among the subjects of documentaries and features, in what festival director Alberto Barbera has called "an expressive, artistic and also political force".

Barbera told AFP he hoped the war films did not become "hostage to ideological prejudices and polemical claims that are useless".

Among the most topical are two documentaries on the Ukraine war, seen from starkly opposing points of view.

For "Russians at War", Russian-Canadian filmmaker Anastasia Trofimova embedded with a Russian battalion in Ukraine's east, while "Songs of Slow Burning Earth" is a "visual diary" of the war's effect on ordinary Ukrainians, according to Ukrainian filmmaker Olga Zhurba.

The young Russian soldiers in Trofimova's film struggle to understand why they are fighting. Sent into the Lugansk region, their battalion has been decimated, with only 300 soldiers remaining out of 900.

"It's so confusing here, I don't even know what we're fighting for," says one soldier, a sentiment shared by many comrades.

Another puts it more bluntly: "While the politicians work out who has the biggest balls, there will be many victims."

At a press conference, Trofimova said the soldiers she lived with for seven months were "absolutely ordinary guys" who belied the notion in the West that all Russian soldiers are war criminals.

"I think in the Western media that's what Russian soldiers are associated with at this point, because there were no other stories. This is another story and this was the reality they lived," she said.

"Russian soldiers are not someone whose voices are heard."

Zhurba's film portrays the war's effect on civilians, from desperate telephone calls made to emergency services about nightime bombings to mothers identifying their slain sons.

Zhurba told journalists she deliberately chose not to show battles or bodies in her film.

She said that keeping "the horrors of war" out of the frame "is more powerful because it evokes your imagination as a viewer".

- Roots of war -

A more cerebral study of conflict comes from the prolific Israeli auteur Amos Gitai in the film "Why War", inspired by an exchange of letters between Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud.

Even though the film contains no images of war, it has nevertheless sparked controversy, as has Dani Rosenberg's feature "Of Dogs and Men", in which a teenage girl returns to her kibbutz after the October 7 Hamas terrorist attack in search of her dog.

Around 300 film professionals signed an open letter last week protesting both films' inclusion at the festival, accusing their production companies of being "complicit in whitewashing Israel's oppression against Palestinians".

At a press conference, Gitai noted that none of the signatories had seen his film.

He criticised both sides in the conflict, saying that one-sided, slanted depictions of the war on both Israeli and Palestinian television were fuelling it.

"The iconography has prolonged the war," Gitai said. "So we decided to make an anti-war film without images of war."

Another documentary, "Israel Palestine on Swedish TV 1958-1989", from Sweden's Goran Hugo Olsson, taps three decades of Swedish public broadcasting archives to show over time how "one country's media perceived one of the world's longest conflicts".

- No bombs or battles -

The two World Wars feature in two out of the four Italian films in the main competition, whose top Golden Lion prize will be awarded Saturday.

"In Campo di Battaglia" by Gianni Amelio, injured soldiers are arriving daily at a military hospital in Italy's northeast, where doctors patch them up to return them to the front.

A military doctor, played by Alessandro Borghi ("Suburra: Blood on Rome"), chooses to save lives by deliberately maiming them to prevent their return to war, bringing him into conflict with his by-the-book colleague and friend.

In "Vermiglio", from Maura Delpero, we see the effects of war on an isolated mountain village at the end of World War Two after a fleeing soldier arrives with a secret.

It is "a war story without bombs, or big battles", whose effect is no less powerful, Delpero said.

Yet to premiere is "M: Son of the Century" by "Atonement" director Joe Wright, an eight-part Italian-language series on Mussolini's rise to power that Wright has said will recall modern-day populists.

G.George--TFWP