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Venice Film Festival Reveals 2025 Lineup

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Venice Film Festival artistic director Alberto Barbera has unveiled a rich mix of buzzy movies with big stars — as well as smaller titles with awards potential — that will be vying for the Golden Lion during the event’s upcoming 82nd edition. 
  
Hotly anticipated new works from Kathryn Bigelow, Guillermo Del Toro, Chloe Zhao, Noah Baumbach, Luca Guadagnino, Yorgos Lanthimos, Olivier Assayas, Park Chan-wook, Benny Safdie and more are set for Lido launches, making for a cornucopia of cinematic offerings. 
  
As anticipated by Variety, big-name films premiering at Venice include Safdie’s “The Smashing Machine” from A24, featuring Dwayne Johnson as two-time UFC heavyweight champ Mark Kerr and Emily Blunt as his wife Dawn; Focus Features’ “Bugonia,” the latest collaboration between Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone, who were last at the fest in 2023 with the Oscar-winning “Poor Things”; and Luca Guadagnino’s psychological drama “After the Hunt” starring Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield and Ayo Edebiri. Guadagnino’s latest feature film, which hails from Amazon MGM Studios, is in an out-of-competition slot. 
  
Mona Fastvold’s musical “The Testament of Ann Lee,” starring Amanda Seyfried as the titular founding leader of the Shaker Movement who was proclaimed as the female Christ by her followers, will bow in competition. The indie film, inspired by real events, was co-written by Fastvold and her partner Brady Corbet (“The Brutalist”). 
  
Netflix – as has been the case in the past – will have a robust Venice presence with a trio of high-profile movies, all in competition.  
  
The streaming giant’s Lido launches comprise Kathryn Bigelow’s politically charged “A House of Dynamite,” marking Bigelow’s first time behind the camera since 2017’s “Detroit.” Set during a fictional national security crisis at the White House, “House of Dynamite” stars Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Greta Lee, Gabriel Basso and Jared Harris.  
  
Then there is Noah Baumbach’s comedy-drama “Jay Kelly,” starring George Clooney as its enigmatic titular character, and Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein,” a new take on the classic monster movie with Jacob Elordi, Oscar Isaac and Mia Goth. They are all Netflix original films. 
  
But when it comes to streamers making a splash on the Lido, this year’s big novelty is repped by expanding arthouse platform Mubi.  
  
Mubi has the fest’s previously announced opener, Paolo Sorrentino’s love story “La Grazia,” which re-teams the Oscar-winning Italian director with “The Great Beauty” actor Toni Servillo. The specialty streamer is also on the Lido with Jim Jarmusch triptych film “Father Mother Sister Brother,” which stars Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Adam Driver and Charlotte Rampling. Mubi also has South Korean auteur Park Chan-wook’s 12th feature “No Other Choice,” marking 20 years since his “Lady Vengeance” made a major splash on the Lido. 
  
Also launching in the Lido competition from Asia are “The Sun Rises on Us All” by veteran auteur Can Shangjun, who won the Silver Lion for best director at Venice in 2011 with “People Mountain People Sea,” and “Girl,” the directorial debut of Taiwanese superstar Shu Qi, a frequent Hou Hsiao-hsien collaborator. 
  
Standout out-of-competition titles incude Julian Schnabel’s  star-studded crime mystery “In The Hand of Dante,” with an ensemble cast comprising Oscar Isaac, Gal Gadot, Gerard Butler and Martin Scorsese (who plays Dante Alighieri’s mentor); Gus Van Sant’s hostage thriller “Dead Man’s Wire” with Bill Skarsgård, Colman Domingo and Al Pacino; Sofia Coppola’s documentary tribute to fashion designer Marc Jacobs “Marc by Sophia”; Werner Herzog’s doc “Ghost Elephants,” which follows a mysterious herd of elephants in the jungles of Angola; and Lucrezia Martel’s “Nuestra Tierra,” about the murder of indigenous activist Javier Chocobar. 
  
Leading the crème de la crème French contingent in competition are two major auteurs backed by Gaumont. The venerable French studio will premiere Olivier Assayas’ big-budget political thriller “The Wizard of the Kremlin” which explores the rise of Vladimir Putin — played by Jude Law — and also stars Paul Dano, Alicia Vikander and Zach Galifianakis.  
  
Gaumont will also showcase Francois Ozon’s comeback to the Lido with “The Stranger,” his adaptation of the Albert Camus classic exploring themes of human cruelty, existentialism and post-colonialism in 1930s Algeria. 
  
Francois Ozon is back on the Lido with “The Stranger” his adaptation of the Albert Camus classic exploring themes of human cruelty, existentialism and post-colonialism in 1930s Algeria. 
  
Actor-director Valérie Donzelli is in competition with “The Infinite Present Ends,” a drama based on the fictionalized memoir of a psychiatric nurse. The film is co-written by Audrey Diwan (“Happening”), with whom Donzelli previously collaborated on “Just the Two of Us.” 
  
France also has the fest’s out-of-competition closer: Studiocanal’s dystopian thriller “Chien 51,” directed by Cedric Jimenez, starring two of the country’s most bankable actors: Adèle Exarchopoulos (“Beating Hearts”) and Gilles Lellouche (“The Stronghold”). The movie is produced by the Mediawan-owned Chi-Fou-Mi banner. 
  
From elsewhere in Europe, Oscar-winning Hungarian helmer László Names  (“Son of Saul”) is in competition with period drama “Orphan,” about a Jewish boy raised by his mother with idealized tales of his deceased father. Also competing from Hungary is the drama “Silent Friend” by Ildiko Enyedi (“On Body and Soul”), centered around a majestic tree in a botanical garden that observes humans, with an ensemble cast comprising Hong Kong’s Tony Leung Chiu-wai in his first role in a European film. 
  
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is repped in competition by Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s hot-button political drama “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” about the killing of a 5-year-old Palestinian girl who was left stranded in a car that had been attacked by Israeli forces in Gaza on Jan. 29, 2024 and later found dead. Saudi Arabian director Shahad Ameen, whose feminist fable “Scales” made a splash after launching from Venice in 2019, is back on the Lido with “Hijra,” a drama centered on the bond formed between different generations of Saudi women during a journey across the desert. “Hijra” will play in Venice’s new Venezia Spotlight section that replaces Horizons Extra. 
  
Opening the Horizons section dedicated to more cutting-edge works is “Mother,” which marks the English-language debut of North Macedonian filmmaker Teona Strugar Mitevska (“God Exists, Her Name Is Petrunya”) and stars Noomi Rapace as Mother Teresa. 
  
The robust Italian roster includes “Below the Clouds,” the new high-profile doc by Gianfranco Rosi whose “Sacro GRA” scooped the 2013 Venice Golden Lion and “Duse,” Pietro Marcello’s biopic of legendary Italian stage diva Eleonora Duse, played by Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, in competition. “A Year of School” by rising auteur Laura Samani, who made a splash with “Small Body” in 2021, is launching in Horizons, as is “The Kidnapping of Arabella,” the sophomore film by Carolina Cavalli whose “Amanda” was a standout in Orizzonti Extra in 2022. Italy’s Benedetta Porcaroli (“The Leopard”) and Chris Pine co-star in “Arabella”. 
   
Interestingly, Italian directors have secured three of Venice’s four slots dedicated to TV series. Veteran auteur Marco Bellocchio will launch a show titled “Portobello” that reconstructs one of Italy’s most clamorous travesties of justice, while genre specialist Stefano Sollima will bow Netflix original “The Monster of Florence,” about a harrowing string of sex-related murders that took place outside Florence from the late 1960s to the mid-1980s. Studiocanal series “A Prophet,” directed by Italy’s Enrico Maria Artale (“Django” the series), is an adaptation of Jacques Audiard’s 2009 film with a diverse new cast led by Mamadou Sidibé. 
  
The fourth TV series premiering at Venice is “Etty,” an adaptation of the diaries of Dutch author Etty Hillesum, who was murdered in Auschwitz. It’s directed by Hagai Levi, the creator of Israeli TV series “Be’Tipul,” which was adapted into HBO’s “In Treatment.” 
  
Two-time Oscar winner Alexander Payne will preside over the main jury. 
  
The 82nd edition of Venice will run Aug. 27-Sept. 6. 

See the full lineup below.

COMPETITION

“La Grazia,” Paolo Sorrentino (opening film)

“The Wizard of the Kremlin,” Olivier Assayas 

“Jay Kelly,” Noah Baumbach 

“The Voice of Hind Rajab,” Kaouther Ben Hania 

“A House of Dynamite,” Kathryn Bigelow 

“Ri Gua Zhong Tian” (“The Sun Rises on Us All”), Cai Shangjun  

“Frankenstein,” Guillermo del Toro 

“Elisa,” Leonardo di Costanzo 

“À Pied d’Oeuvre,” Valérie Donzelli 

“Silent Friend,” Ildikó Enyedi 

“The Testament of Ann Lee,” Mona Fastvold 

“Father Mother Sister Brother,” Jim Jarmusch 

“Bugonia,” Yorgos Lanthimos 

“Duse,” Pietro Marcello 

“Un Film Fatto Per Bene,” Franco Maresco 

“Orphan,” László Nemes 

“L’Étranger,” François Ozon 

“Eojjeol Suga Eopda” (“No Other Choice”), Park Chan-wook 

“Sotto Le Nuvole,” Gianfranco Rosi 

“The Smashing Machine,” Benny Safdie 

“Nühai” (“Girl”), Shu Qi 

OUT OF COMPETITION — FICTION

“Chien 51,” Cédric Jimenez (closing film)

“Boşluğa Xütbə” (“Sermon to the Void”), Hilal Baydarov 

“L’Isola di Andrea,” Antonio Capuano 

“Il Maestro,” Andrea di Stefano 

“After the Hunt,” Luca Guadagnino

“Hateshinaki Scarlet,” Mamoru Hosoda  

“Den Sidste Viking” (“The Last Viking”), Anders Thomas Jensen 

“In the Hand of Dante,” Julian Schnabel 

“La Valle Dei Sorrisi,” Paolo Strippoli 

“Dead Man’s Wire,” Gus Van Sant 

“Orfeo,” Virgilio Villoresi 

OUT OF COMPETITION — SERIES

“Portobello” (Ep. 1-2), Marco Bellocchio  

“Un Prophète” (Ep. 1-8), Enrico Maria Artale

“Etty” (Ep. 1-6), Hagai Levi

“Il Mostro” (Ep. 1-4), Stefano Sollima

OUT OF COMPETITION — NON-FICTION

“Kabul, Between Prayers,” Aboozar Amini 

“Ferdinando Scianna – Il Fotografo Dell’Ombra,” Roberto Andò

“Marc by Sofia,” Sofia Coppola 

“I Diari di Angela – Noi Due Cineasti. Capitolo Terzo,” Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi

“Ghost Elephants,” Werner Herzog 

“Baba Wa Al-Qadhafi” (“My Father and Qaddafi”), Jihan K

“The Tale of Sylian,” Tamara Kotevska  

“Nuestra Tierra,” Lucrecia Martel 

“Remake,” Ross McElwee 

“Kim Novak’s Vertigo,” Alexandre Philippe 

“Cover-Up,” Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus

“Broken English,” Jane Pollard and Iain Forsyth

“Zapiski Nastoyashego Prestupnika” (“Notes of a True Criminal”), Alexander Rodnyansky and Andriy Alferov    

“Director’s Diary,” Aleksander Sokurov 

“Hui Jia” (“Back Home”), Tsai Ming-liang  

OUT OF COMPETITION — FILM & MUSIC

“Nino. 18 Giorni,” Toni D’Angelo

“Piero Pelù. Rumore Dentro,” Francesco Fei

“Newport and the Great Folk Dream,” Robert Gordon and Joe Lauro

“Francesco de Gregori Nevergreen,” Stefano Pistolini 

OUT OF COMPETITION — SHORTS

“Origin,” Yann Arthus-Bertrand

“Boomerang Atomic,” Rachid Bouchareb

“How to Shoot a Ghost,” Charlie Kaufman

HORIZONS

“Mother,” Teona Strugar Mitevska

“Komedie Elahi” (“Divine Comedy”), Ali Asgari

“Hiedra,” Ana Cristina Barragan

“Il Rapimento di Arabella,” Carolina Cavalli

“Estrany Riu” (“Strange River”), Jaume Claret Muxart

“Hara Watan” (“Lost Land”), Akio Fujimoto

“Grand Ciel,” Akihiro Hata

“Rose of Nevada,” Mark Jenkin

“Late Fame,” Kent Jones

“Milk Teeth,” Mihai Mincan

“Pin de Fartie,” Alejo Moguillansky

“Otec” (“Father”), Tereza Nvotova

“En El Camino,” David Pablos

“Songs of Forgotten Trees,” Anuparna Roy

“Un Anno di Scuola,” Laura Samani

“The Souffleur,” Gastón Solnicki

“Barrio Triste,” Stillz

“Human Resource,” Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit

“Funeral Casino Blues,” Roderick Warich

VENICE SPOTLIGHT

“Hijra,” Shahad Ameen

“Un Cabo Suelto,” Daniel Hendler

“Made in EU,” Stephan Komandarev

“Motor City,” Potsy Ponciroli

“La Hija de la Española,” Mariana Rondón and Marité Ugás

“À Bras-Le-Corps,” Marie-Elsa Sgualdo

“Calle Malaga,” Maryam Touzani

“Ammazzare Stanca,” Daniele Vicari



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Kansas City Chiefs vs. Los Angeles Chargers Live Score and Stats – September 5, 2025 Gametracker

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Justin Herbert threw for 318 yards and three touchdowns in outdueling Patrick Mahomes, and the Los Angeles Chargers beat Kansas City 27-21 on Friday night in Sao Paulo, snapping a seven-game skid to the Kansas City Chiefs.

“It’s monumental,” Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said. “September 5th will go down in some Charger lore, in my opinion. It was a big win.”

The NFL’s second game played in South America was streamed on YouTube, with Brazilian soccer superstar Neymar in attendance. Newly engaged pop superstar Taylor Swift wasn’t there to watch fiancé Travis Kelce and see Colombian singer Karol G perform at halftime.

Herbert became just the third quarterback in Chargers history with 300 yards and three TDs in a season opener. His 19-yard run on third-and-14 dashed any comeback hopes the Chiefs had with 2:21 to play. He finished 25 of 34 and was sacked three times.

“We knew it was going to be a dogfight, so we showed up today with our best effort,” Herbert said. “It was fun to see.”

Mahomes was 24 of 39 for 258 yards, one touchdown and two sacks.

Herbert’s 23-yard TD pass to Quentin Johnston extended the lead to 26-18 with 5:02 remaining in the fourth. They hooked up for a 5-yard TD on the Chargers’ opening drive of the game.

Chased by Khalil Mack, Mahomes threw incomplete to Marquise Brown on first-and-goal at the LA 9. Two more incomplete passes brought on Harrison Butker, whose 27-yard field goal cut the deficit to 27-21 with 2:34 remaining.

The Chiefs closed to 20-18 on Mahomes’ 37-yard TD pass to Kelce early in the fourth. The 2-point conversion failed as Mahomes’ pass was incomplete to Noah Gray.

The Chiefs were coming off their first TD drive in the third when they gave one right back to their AFC rivals. Herbert’s short left pass to Keenan Allen for 11 yards extended the Chargers’ lead to 19-12. Herbert and Allen had over 300 receptions together before Allen left for Chicago last season. He returned to Los Angeles last month.

The Chargers beat the Chiefs for the first time since Sept. 26, 2021, in Kansas City.

The Chiefs were already down two receivers to start the game, with Rashee Rice suspended to start the season and rookie Jalen Royals out with a knee injury.

They lost another one three snaps into the game.

Xavier Worthy and teammate Kelce collided on a third-down pass. Worthy had to be helped off the field and was later ruled out with a right shoulder injury.

Chargers linebacker Denzel Perryman didn’t return after leaving with an ankle injury in the third.

The Chiefs host Philadelphia on Sept. 14 in a Super Bowl rematch.

The Chargers visit Las Vegas on Sept. 15 in the second of three straight against division rivals.

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Copyright 2025 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.





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Justin Herbert throws for 318, three TDs as Chargers hold off Chiefs 27-21

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The Chargers gave up a home game to open the season against the Chiefs in Brazil. Though they were 6,200 miles from home, playing in front of a large contingent of Chiefs fans, the Chargers made themselves right at home.

Justin Herbert threw for 300 yards and three touchdowns in a signature win, a 27-21 victory over the Chiefs.

After the Chiefs had closed to within 20-18 early in the fourth quarter, Herbert directed an 11-play, 74-yard drive that ate 7:02 off the clock. He went 8-for-8 for 73 yards on the 74-yard drive, throwing a 23-yard touchdown pass to Quentin Johnston with 5:02 left. That put the Chargers up two scores.

Herbert went 25-of-34 for 318 yards and three touchdowns, but his biggest play came with his legs.

With the Chiefs out of timeouts with 2:14 left — and back within 27-21 — the Chargers faced a third-and-13 from their own 34. Herbert ran for 19 on a designed run before sliding down. That allowed the Chargers to run out the clock, keeping the ball away from Patrick Mahomes.

Herbert threw touchdown passes of 5 and 23 yards to Johnston, and Keenan Allen caught an 11-yarder. Nine different receivers caught a pass led by Johnston’s five catches for 79 yards.

The Chargers never trailed, but the Chiefs kept it interesting.

Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker, who made field goals of 35 and 59 yards, missed an extra point in the third quarter, and Teair Tart knocked away a Patrick Mahomes’ pass on a 2-point attempt. That’s how the Chiefs fell behind by two scores.

In the fourth quarter, with the Chiefs trailing 27-18, they faced a fourth-and-7 from the Kansas City 42. Mahomes was nearly sacked by Khalil Mack as he ran for his life. As he neared the sideline with Mack in hot pursuit, Mahomes heaved a ball downfield to Hollywood Brown, who got behind the defense for a 49-yard gain to the Los Angeles 9. It led to a 27-yard Butker field goal with 2:34 left.

That made it a one-score game again at 27-21.

The Chargers, though, stayed aggressive, trusting Herbert, and he delivered one of the biggest victories of his career.

The Chargers outgained the Chiefs 394 to 347.

Mahomes was 24-of-39 for 258 yards and a touchdown, a 37-yarder to Travis Kelce. Mahomes also ran for 57 yards, and an 11-yard touchdown, on six carries. Brown caught 10 passes for 99 yards.

The Chiefs lost wide receiver Xavier Worthy to a shoulder injury on the third play from scrimmage.





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US Navy SEALs killed North Korean civilians during botched mission: Report | Kim Jong Un News

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US Navy SEALs killed several North Korean fishermen after encountering them by accident during a botched mission, US news outlet reports.

United States Navy SEALs shot and killed several North Korean civilians during a botched mission in 2019 to plant a listening device in the nuclear-armed country, reportedly approved by US President Donald Trump, a leading US news outlet reports.

The New York Times reported on Friday that the classified mission was carried out by the US Navy’s SEAL Team 6 during high-stakes diplomatic negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang in early 2019.

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The elite special forces unit – the same one that killed former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in 2011 – was tasked with covertly going ashore in North Korea and planting a listening device to spy on the country’s leadership.

But working in the dead of night with blackout communications, a series of errors led to civilians – several North Koreans reportedly diving for shellfish – inadvertently coming across the US special forces as they splashed ashore.

The SEALs opened fire, killing all those on board a small fishing vessel, the Times report said, without specifying the number of casualties.

Officials familiar with the mission told the Times that the US soldiers “pulled the bodies into the water to hide them from the North Korean authorities”. One source described how SEAL members “punctured the boat crew’s lungs with knives to make sure their bodies would sink”.

The Times said it gained knowledge of the botched mission through interviews with dozens of people, “including civilian government officials, members of the first Trump administration and current and former military personnel with knowledge of the mission”.

All spoke on condition of anonymity due to the mission’s classified status, the news outlet said. It added that several people said their decision to provide details was out of concern that the US military’s special operations failures are “often hidden by government secrecy”.

Sources said President Trump, during his first term in office, gave the mission its final go-ahead.

Trump denied any knowledge of the operations when questioned by reporters about the report on Friday.

“I could look, but I know nothing about [it],” Trump said.

“I’m hearing it now for the first time,” he said.

US officials said it was “unclear” whether Pyongyang ever pieced together what had happened in 2019.

North Korea did not make any public statements about the deaths of civilians at the time and has yet to comment on the story published by the Times.



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