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Rome Inaugurates Star-Studded Film Festival Friday

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  • Rome Inaugurates Star-Studded Film Festival Friday

    ROME INAUGURATES STAR-STUDDED FILM FESTIVAL FRIDAY
    by Katia Dolmadjian

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 11, 2006 Wednesday

    Rome kicks off the first edition of its film festival on Friday with
    16 movies in competition, several high-profile world premieres and a
    galaxy of stars including Nicole Kidman, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo
    di Caprio.

    Despite demure denials by the organizers, the event is seen as a
    potentially serious rival to the venerable Mostra of Venice.

    Kidman will be on hand to unveil "Fur, An Imaginary Portrait of
    Diane Arbus," a film expected to make waves with its departure
    from biographical fact and the sheer originality of director Steven
    Shainberg's approach to the life of the controversial photographer
    of freaks.

    To run from Friday until October 21, the RomeFilmFest will also
    feature appearances by Monica Bellucci, George Clooney, Robert De Niro,
    Harvey Keitel, Sean Connery and Luc Besson.

    Rome Mayor Walter Veltroni, the festival's mastermind, said he wants it
    to be "a great popular fete entirely dedicated to the cinematic art."

    The ardent cinephile has rejected any talk of a rivalry between the
    RomeFilmFest and the decades-old Mostra, saying the two cities and
    their respective festivals "help each other with reciprocal love
    and respect."

    The Rome program is in fact less flamboyant than the Mostra, but it
    enjoys a much larger budget -- by several million euros (dollars) --
    thanks to private donations.

    Many big stars jumped at the invitation to attend.

    The feature-length films in competition include French director Robert
    Guediguian's "Armenia", "Primo Levi's Journey" by Italy's Davide
    Ferrario, "A Casa Nostra" (At Our House) by Francesca Comencini, also
    Italian, and Georgian filmmaker Otar Iosseliani's "Gardens in Autumn".

    Three Asian films are in the running: "Nightmare Detective" by Shinya
    Tsukamoto of Japan, "After This Our Exile" by Patrick Tam of Hong Kong,
    and "The Go Master" by Tian Zhuangzhuang of China.

    Another point of pride for the organizers is the amount of space
    offered to the public: some 40,000 seats with affordable tickets
    ranging from five to 10 euros (6.20 to 12.50 dollars) on sale at
    kiosks.

    This "democratization" will also see screenings both in the city
    center and on Rome's periphery.

    What is more, the organizers have put together a unique jury made up
    of 50 ordinary moviegoers, headed by Italian filmmaker Ettore Scola.

    On October 21 they will bestow three awards: best picture (for 200,000
    euros), best actress and best actor.

    On Saturday Bellucci will offer "Napoleon and Me" alongside Frenchman
    Daniel Auteuil, retracing Bonaparte's life in exile on Elba.

    Scorsese, the US director with Sicilian roots, will on Sunday present
    "The Departed," a drama from the Boston underworld teaming Di Caprio
    with Jack Nicholson and Matt Damon.

    The weekend will see Rome's Via Veneto -- setting of Rome's iconic
    "La Dolce Vita" -- turned into "Business Street", where films and
    screenplays will be showcased for industry clients.
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