-
Pretty in pink: Dallas World Cup venue chasing perfect pitch
-
Wordle heads to primetime as media seek puzzle reinvention
-
Eurovision: the grand final running order
-
McIlroy, back in PGA hunt, blames bad setup for lead logjam
-
Kubo vows to lead Japan at World Cup with Mitoma out
-
McNealy and Smalley share PGA lead at difficult Aronimink
-
Drake drops three albums at once
-
Boeing confirms China commitment to buy 200 aircraft
-
Knicks forward Anunoby trains as NBA Eastern Conference finals loom
-
American McNealy grabs PGA lead at difficult Aronimink
-
Substitute 'keeper sends Saint-Etienne into promotion play-off
-
Sinner's bid to reach Italian Open final held up by Roman rain
-
Aston Villa humble Liverpool to secure Champions League qualification
-
US says Iran-backed militia commander planned Jewish site attacks
-
Bolivia unrest continues despite government deal with miners
-
Scheffler slams 'absurd' PGA pin locations
-
New deadly Ebola outbreak hits DR Congo, 1 dead in Uganda
-
Democrats accuse Trump of stock trade corruption
-
'Beyond the Oscar': Travolta gets surprise Cannes prize
-
Israel, Lebanon say extending ceasefire despite new strikes
-
Potgieter grabs early PGA lead at difficult Aronimink
-
Prosecutors seek death penalty for US man charged with killing Israeli embassy staffers
-
Judge declares mistrial in Weinstein sex assault case
-
Canada takes key step towards new oil pipeline
-
Iranian filmmaker Farhadi condemns Middle East war, protest massacres
-
'Better than the Oscar': John Travolta gets surprise Cannes prize
-
Marsh muscle motors Lucknow to victory over Chennai
-
Judge declares mistrial in Weinstein case as jury fails to reach verdict
-
Eurovision finalists tune up as boycotting Spain digs in
-
Indonesia's first giant panda is set to charm the public
-
Cheer and tears as African refugee rap film 'Congo Boy' charms Cannes
-
Norwegian Ruud rolls into Italian Open final, Sinner set for Medvedev clash
-
Bolivia government says deal reached with protesting miners
-
Showdowns and spycraft on Trump-Xi summit sidelines
-
Smalley seizes PGA lead with Matsuyama making a charge
-
Acosta quickest in practice for Catalan MotoGP
-
Nuno wants VAR 'consistency' as West Ham fight to avoid relegation
-
Vingegaard powers to maiden Giro stage victory
-
Iran to hold pre-World Cup training camp in Turkey: media
-
US scraps deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland
-
Ukraine vows more strikes on Russia after attack on Kyiv kills 24
-
Bayern veteran Neuer signs one-year contract extension
-
Ukraine can down Russian drones en masse. But missiles are a problem
-
Israeli strikes wound dozens in Lebanon as talks in US enter second day
-
'Everybody wants Hearts to win', says Celtic's O'Neill ahead of title decider
-
Scheffler stumbles from share of lead at windy PGA
-
New deadly Ebola outbreak hits DR Congo
-
Farke calls for Leeds owners to match his ambition
-
Zverev pulls out of home event in Hamburg with back injury
-
Xi, Trump eke small wins from talks but no major deals: analysts
Reality has no allure for Mexico's Oscar-winning director at Venice
It is one of the most unforgettable opening scenes to play at the Venice Film Festival: a baby pushed back into its mother because, he informs the doctor, who would want to live in this screwed-up world?
That was the fantastical and audacious opening that marked Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's return to the big screen on Thursday, after a seven-year hiatus following back-to-back Oscars.
"BARDO, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths" is a deeply personal film that brings the director back to his home country of Mexico following two Best Director Academy Awards in 2015 and 2016 for "Birdman" and "The Revenant".
The film "wasn't developed by my mind, but by my heart", he told journalists, calling the nearly three-hour Netflix film an "emotional reinterpretation of a memory".
The film centres on journalist played by Daniel Gimenez Cacho about to accept a major prize in America -- success that sparks an existential, mid-life crisis and increasingly fuzzy lines between reality and memory.
"Every time, I'm less interested in reality in film," Inarritu said, calling it "limbo".
Featuring sweeping dreamscapes involving the parched Mexican desert, a post-apocalyptic Mexico City and the ruins of an Aztec citadel, the film is anchored by real-world relationships, between fathers and sons, husbands and wives, or even people and their homelands.
- Cortez and criminals -
We see Mexico's pained history in dreams -- scores of natives massacred by Cortes' 16th century invaders, or Mexican patriots desperately fending off US troops in the Mexican-American war -- as well as today's reality in the form of migrants making perilous attempts to cross the US border.
In one scene, heaps of plantains pile up in a deserted Mexico City street, as "desaparecedos" -- the tens of thousands of disappeared Mexicans abducted by criminal gangs or the state -- fall from the sky.
Racial and social inequalities within Mexican society are touched upon, but with a lighter touch than seen in "New Order" by Michel Franco, a violent, searing indictment of the gap between Mexico's rich and poor that won Venice's Grand Jury prize in 2020.
"Mexico is not a country, it's a mental state for me," said Inarritu, who said he wanted to examine the "longing" for one's country after having himself left Mexico for Los Angeles over two decades ago.
"But when you get far away from that place and when time goes by, this state of mind dissolves and changes."
D.Schneider--BTB