<p><em>Nomadland</em>, a film written and directed by Chloé Zhao, won this year’s Golden Lion, the top prize, at the 77th edition of the Venice Film Festival.</p>.<p>The drama stars Frances McDormand as a woman living as a nomad across America after the Great Recession. It is based on a book by journalist Jessica Bruder.</p>.<p>The festival, which opened September 2 and closed Saturday, was the first major international film event since the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> pandemic began. It had strict social distancing measures in place, and visitors were required to wear face masks both indoors and outdoors on the festival site.</p>.<p>This year, the festival jury chose the Golden Lion winner from a slightly smaller roster of films in the main competition. The lineup lacked the festival’s usual Hollywood blockbusters (last year, Todd Phillips’ <em>Joker</em> took home the Golden Lion), and for the first time in a decade, an Italian film opened the festival — Daniele Luchetti’s <em>Lacci</em>, a marriage drama set in Naples.</p>.<p>Also in competition for the festival’s top prize were Mona Fastvold’s <em>The World to Come</em>, starring Vanessa Kirby and Casey Affleck, which explores the love between two farmers’ wives in 19th-century America, and <em>Pieces of a Woman</em>, a family drama directed by Kornel Mundruczo and starring Shia LaBeouf.</p>.<p>The festival has made 15 of the films that premiered on the Lido available to stream online, for a fee, until September 22.</p>.<p>The lifetime achievement award was given to filmmakers Tilda Swinton and Ann Hui. Accepting her award, Swinton said that to be in “a room with living creatures and a big screen” was “pure joy.”</p>
<p><em>Nomadland</em>, a film written and directed by Chloé Zhao, won this year’s Golden Lion, the top prize, at the 77th edition of the Venice Film Festival.</p>.<p>The drama stars Frances McDormand as a woman living as a nomad across America after the Great Recession. It is based on a book by journalist Jessica Bruder.</p>.<p>The festival, which opened September 2 and closed Saturday, was the first major international film event since the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> pandemic began. It had strict social distancing measures in place, and visitors were required to wear face masks both indoors and outdoors on the festival site.</p>.<p>This year, the festival jury chose the Golden Lion winner from a slightly smaller roster of films in the main competition. The lineup lacked the festival’s usual Hollywood blockbusters (last year, Todd Phillips’ <em>Joker</em> took home the Golden Lion), and for the first time in a decade, an Italian film opened the festival — Daniele Luchetti’s <em>Lacci</em>, a marriage drama set in Naples.</p>.<p>Also in competition for the festival’s top prize were Mona Fastvold’s <em>The World to Come</em>, starring Vanessa Kirby and Casey Affleck, which explores the love between two farmers’ wives in 19th-century America, and <em>Pieces of a Woman</em>, a family drama directed by Kornel Mundruczo and starring Shia LaBeouf.</p>.<p>The festival has made 15 of the films that premiered on the Lido available to stream online, for a fee, until September 22.</p>.<p>The lifetime achievement award was given to filmmakers Tilda Swinton and Ann Hui. Accepting her award, Swinton said that to be in “a room with living creatures and a big screen” was “pure joy.”</p>