VENICE (REUTERS, AFP) – Nomadland, a United States movie about a community of van dwellers traversing the vast American West, won the Golden Lion award for best film at the Venice film festival on Saturday.

The film, by US-based Chinese director Chloe Zhao, stars Frances McDormand as a widow in her 60s in a depressed Nevada mining town who turns her van into a mobile home and sets out on the road, taking on seasonal jobs along the way.

The festival on the Lido waterfront was the first such event to go ahead in front of live audiences since the Covid-19 pandemic all but shut down the world of showbiz.

"Thank you so much for letting us come to your festival in this weird, weird, weird world and way," McDormand said in a video message with Zhao.

The jury led by Australian actress Cate Blanchett gave two runner-up Silver Lion awards, one to Mexican director Michel Franco's thriller New Order and the other to Japanese historic drama Wife Of A Spy, by Kiyoshi Kurosawa.

Veteran Russian director Andrei Konchalovsky was also awarded a special jury prize for Dear Comrades!, a film about the 1962 massacre of striking workers in Novocherkassk which had been tipped as a front-runner for the top prize.

The best actor prize went to Italy's Pierfrancesco Favino.

British actress Vanessa Kirby won the best actress award for her performance as a woman reeling from the grief of losing her newborn daughter during a home birth in Pieces Of A Woman.

Her win confirms her ascension to Hollywood royalty after breaking through playing a real royal in Netflix's The Crown.

The 32-year-old British star was the rebellious Princess Margaret, the British queen's younger sister, in the streamer's flagship series. Kirby had two films vying for the Golden Lion in Venice, the lesbian love story The World To Come and Pieces Of A Woman. Both made big demands on a woman that VaRead More – Source

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