The 82nd Venice Film Festival may be over, but the conversations on the films that premiered, the things people said, the clothes they wore, and how it affects the Oscar race are still going.
Hereâs a rundown of the big moments and takeaways from this yearâs edition.
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What won big at the Venice Film Festival?
Jim Jarmuschâs quiet film âFather Mother Sister Brotherâ took the top prize, the Golden Lion. It was a surprise to many who expected that honor to go to âThe Voice of Hind Rajab,â which ended up with the runner up award, or âNo Other Choice.â
Aside from Benny Safdieâs best director win for âThe Smashing Machine,â Hollywood players were largely shut out of the awards in favor of a diverse, international selection. Chinese actor Xin Zhilei won best actress for Cai Shangjunâs âThe Sun Rises on Us All,â Italian icon Toni Servillo won best actor for âLa Graziaâ and Swiss actor Luna Wedler took the up-and-comer prize, the Marcello Mastroianni Award, for âSilent Friend.â
Who might be an Oscars player?
The awards didnât give many hints, but Venice has been known to launch several best actor campaigns including Joaquin Phoenix in âJoker,âBrendan Fraser in âThe Whaleâ and Adrien Brody in âThe Brutalist.â This year the most obvious heavyweight to follow is Dwayne Johnson for his turn as MMA fighter Mark Kerr in âThe Smashing Machine.â
Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons were also strange and fierce as kidnapped and kidnapper in Yorgos Lanthimosâs provocative âBugonia.â Oscar Isaac portrayed Victor Frankenstein as a romantic madman and Jacob Elordi was naĂŻve and raw as the monster. Amanda Seyfried put a human, feminist, face to the religious sect the shakers in âThe Testament of Ann Lee,â and Julia Roberts flexed her acting muscles as a Yale philosophy professor in the midst of a misconduct accusation against a colleague in âAfter the Hunt.â
Filmmakers like Kathryn Bigelow and previous Golden Lion winners Guillermo del Toro and Yorgos Lanthimos will also likely be in the conversation for months to come.
Why was Seth Rogen everywhere?
Thereâs always some unexpected Hollywood person at the Venice Film Festival who doesnât seem to be associated with any one film. Sometimes theyâve come in for amfAR, sometimes theyâve been invited by one of the festivalâs sponsors. But text chains started blowing up when Seth Rogen started popping up everywhere: Red carpets, press conferences, parties. Donât be surprised if thereâs a Venice episode of âThe Studioâ in the works: This trip was research, and maybe even a little more.
Julia Roberts and Amanda Seyfriedâs sisterhood of the traveling Versace?
In a cute, unexpected (possibly highly staged) moment during the festival, Amanda Seyfried commented on Julia Robertsâ Instagram asking to âplease let me wear the same outfit.â Three days later, Seyfried was also rocking the Versace blazer, jeans, button up and belt, just with different shoes. It helps that they share a stylist, Elizabeth Stewart.
There was a record standing ovation
First, letâs just make clear that entertainment trade publications only started tracking Venice standing ovations recently. This year, audiences at the premiere of âThe Voice of Hind Rajabâ applauded for 22-minutes, surpassing the 18-minute record set last year by âThe Room Next Door,â which went on to win the Golden Lion. Even with a limited data set, thatâs a long time to clap after a movie.
Other standing ovation times from the 82nd festival: âAfter the Huntâ ((tilde)5 minutes), âBugoniaâ ((tilde)6 minutes), âNo Other Choiceâ ((tilde)7 minutes), âJay Kellyâ ((tilde)9 minutes), âThe Wizard of the Kremlinâ ((tilde)10 minutes), âA House of Dynamiteâ ((tilde)11 minutes), âFrankensteinâ ((tilde)14 minutes), âThe Testament of Ann Leeâ ((tilde)15 minutes), âThe Smashing Machineâ ((tilde)15 minutes).
Politics and war on the big screen
The festival might not take political stances, but politics, and filmmakers grappling with the state of the world, from the Israel-Hamas conflict to nuclear weapons, were clearly top of mind. Kathryn Bigelow set off a warning shot about nuclear weapons and the apparatus of decision making with her urgent, and distressingly realistic, thriller âA House of Dynamite.â Tunisian filmmaker Kaouther Ben Hania made an essential document of the human toll in Gaza with âThe Voice of Hind Rajab.â And Olivier Assayas charted the rise of Vladimir Putin in âThe Wizard of the Kremlin.â
Gaza also dominated conversations off screen too, from a protest that drew an estimated 10,000 people, to awards speeches.
Best quotes from the 2025 Venice Film Festival
âThe real monsters are the men in suits.â â Jacob Elordi, who plays Frankensteinâs monster in a big budget Netflix film.
âIâve been very fortunate to have the career that Iâve had and make the films that I have, but there was just this voice inside of me, this little voice, like what if I can do more.â â Dwayne Johnson on his transformative, serious turn as MMA fighter Mark Kerr in âThe Smashing Machine.â
âI consider pretty much all corporate money is dirty money.â â Filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, when asked about Mubiâs relationship with Sequoia Capital.
âHow is annihilating the world a good defensive measure? I mean, what are you defending?â â Filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow on the nuclear stockpiles.
âHumanity is facing a reckoning very soon. People need to choose the right path, otherwise, I donât know how much time we have.â â Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos on the relevance of âBugonia.â
âEveryone comes out with all these different feelings and emotions and points of views. And you realize what you believe in strongly and what your convictions are because we stir it all up for you. So, youâre welcome.â â Julia Roberts on the debates stirred by âAfter the Hunt.â
âItâs time at the end of your life to put the puzzle pieces together and make them fit.â â Kim Novak, 92, on receiving the festivalâs lifetime achievement award.
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For more coverage of the Venice Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival.