Syria Border Documentary at Venice Lays Bare 'Victims of History'

Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi (C), Italian producers Donatella Palermo (L) and Paolo Del Brocco (R), pose at a photocall for ‘Notturno’ during the Venice film festival, in Venice, Italy, Sept. 8, 2020. (EPA)
Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi (C), Italian producers Donatella Palermo (L) and Paolo Del Brocco (R), pose at a photocall for ‘Notturno’ during the Venice film festival, in Venice, Italy, Sept. 8, 2020. (EPA)
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Syria Border Documentary at Venice Lays Bare 'Victims of History'

Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi (C), Italian producers Donatella Palermo (L) and Paolo Del Brocco (R), pose at a photocall for ‘Notturno’ during the Venice film festival, in Venice, Italy, Sept. 8, 2020. (EPA)
Italian filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi (C), Italian producers Donatella Palermo (L) and Paolo Del Brocco (R), pose at a photocall for ‘Notturno’ during the Venice film festival, in Venice, Italy, Sept. 8, 2020. (EPA)

Waves of soldiers marching in double time open the new documentary by Gianfranco Rosi at the Venice film festival, but the Italian filmmaker's aim is not to depict war, but those caught in the crossfire.

Whether mothers mourning sons killed in prison, children drawing in crayon the horrors they've seen, or survivors left languishing in psychiatric wards, the suffering witnesses of decades of Middle East conflict are Rosi's interest, and their silence tells more than any battle scene could possibly convey.

Rosi spent three years in the borderlands of Syria, Iraq, Kurdistan and Lebanon, shooting 90 hours of footage that became "Notturno," a 100-minute documentary greeted by sustained applause at a press screening Tuesday.

The 56-year-old filmmaker said he was tired of the "breaking news" of war -- seeing people shot, bombs exploding or buildings collapsing.

"I said I want to do a film that doesn't cover this. I want to do a film of the people who somehow are the victims of all this," Rosi told AFP on Wednesday.

Just beyond the destruction, normal life ensues.

"But we never see that," said Rosi. "So I wanted to start this film where the breaking news stopped."

In 2013, Rosi's film about Rome's periphery, "Sacro GRA," won the prestigious Golden Lion, the first time the Venice competition had awarded a documentary its top prize.

Deserted prison
In "Notturno," a child in a classroom explains to his teacher that his colorful drawing of mountains, sun and a cluster of homes depicts the day the ISIS came to "exterminate" his Yazidi village.

The stuttering child then calmly explains his classmates' drawings taped to a wall: beheadings, hangings, women chained, or being burned alive.

In another scene, a line of black-clad women enter an abandoned building, silently exploring its empty rooms. Then a wail is heard, and a woman begins caressing the concrete wall: "Son, I feel your presence. My son, this prison is for the wicked and you were good."

Despite the pervasive suffering, Rosi finds intimate, transcendent moments of humanity in the lives of the people he called "archetypes".

A duck hunter paddles through reeds in his boat at nightfall as mortars illuminate the sky. A young mother and her children wordlessly set up mattresses and blankets on the floor in preparation for a night's sleep. A Kurdish tank gunner complains of back pain, jokingly accusing his comrade of deliberately driving over potholes.

Patience and time
Rosi said he spent months with his subjects before beginning to shoot, observing and understanding their daily rituals, so that his camera was ignored when it was time to film. Much time was spent waiting.

"Sometimes I'd wait one month to do one shot because the light was not right," said Rosi.

His patience paid off. Weeks spent at a psychiatric hospital yielded little before Rosi discovered that a doctor was putting on a play about current history with his patients as actors.

"I don't know our destiny, my Homeland," recites one of the actors in rehearsal, uttering the question the director himself leaves unanswered.

Rosi finds a silent protagonist in "Ali," a child who never utters a word while working to support his large family with a noticeably absent father (although we don't know why) -- fishing, shooting birds, or waiting for hunters before dawn to find work as a guide.

Ali and other "victims of history" are living in a world where the future is on hold, said Rosi, adding that the film's final moments lingering on Ali's solemn face should leave audiences wondering what fate has in store for him.

"Every time I put the camera in a close-up on him, it felt that moment was worth 100 interviews."



Louvre Heist to Be Turned into Film

 The Louvre Museum seen in Paris, France, November 17, 2025. (Reuters)
The Louvre Museum seen in Paris, France, November 17, 2025. (Reuters)
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Louvre Heist to Be Turned into Film

 The Louvre Museum seen in Paris, France, November 17, 2025. (Reuters)
The Louvre Museum seen in Paris, France, November 17, 2025. (Reuters)

Last year's brazen robbery of the Louvre -- when thieves made off with jewellery worth some $100 million -- is set to become a movie, a publisher said on Tuesday.

French director Romain Gavras -- whose work includes 2025 Hollywood film "Sacrifice" starring Anya Taylor-Joy and music videos including most recently a hypnotic schoolboy choreography for GENER8ION -- will draw inspiration from the investigative book "Main basse sur le Louvre" (literally "A grab at the Louvre").

Film rights to the book about the October 19, 2025 heist had been sold to the production company Iconoclast, the Flammarion publishing house said.

The book, written by three journalists, from French dailies Le Parisien and Le Monde, and weekly glossy magazine Paris Match, is to hit bookstores on Wednesday.

According to trade magazine Le Film Francais, the movie project is in development, though neither the title nor the cast has been announced.

The Louvre heist sent shockwaves around the world and sparked a security crisis within the world-famous museum that ultimately led to the replacement of its director, Laurence des Cars.

After seven months of investigation, and despite the arrests of the main suspects, the jewels have still not been found.

The authors said their apparent disappearance "has become a dense mystery, a puzzle that has plunged investigators into deep confusion".

The heist illustrates how "the theft of artworks has become a business like any other for many criminals", they say. "The criminal underworld has found a new cash cow."


'Spider-Noir' Brings a Mature Superhero to the Small Screen

Nicolas Cage stars in the new series "Spider-Noir". Michael loccisano / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
Nicolas Cage stars in the new series "Spider-Noir". Michael loccisano / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
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'Spider-Noir' Brings a Mature Superhero to the Small Screen

Nicolas Cage stars in the new series "Spider-Noir". Michael loccisano / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP
Nicolas Cage stars in the new series "Spider-Noir". Michael loccisano / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

While stars of the Spider-Man franchise have trended younger over the years -- from Tobey Maguire to Andrew Garfield to Tom Holland -- the new series "Spider-Noir" starring Nicolas Cage explores a more mature version of the web-slinging superhero.

Premiering on Amazon's streaming platform this week, the series follows Ben Reilly (Cage), a private investigator struggling to make ends meet in New York during the Great Depression, said AFP.

This marks the first time the superhero, whom Cage voiced in the first Spider-Verse film, has appeared on screen in live-action.

Karen Rodriguez, who plays Janet, Riley's loyal secretary, said that what sets "Spider-Noir" apart from other versions of the superhero is the era in which it is set.

"Normally, it's a coming-of-age story, and we're meeting Peter Parker in a youthful setting," she told AFP. "But what happens when you've done it and life has happened to you and you suffered loss?"

Reilly, a World War I veteran who can't even afford to pay his secretary, is burdened by personal tragedy.

"He's lost the love of his life. He's smack dab in the middle of the Great Depression. There's a lot of suffering," Rodriguez added.

For the actress, whose character maintains a constant push and pull with Reilly, working with Cage "was like a dream come true."

Rodriguez said she learned a lot from the 62-year-old Oscar-winning actor, who has over a hundred films to his credit.

"It's the type of job that you dream about because you want jobs that are going to make you better," said Rodriguez, who describes her character as a strong-willed woman who doesn't mince words.

"Spider-Noir," produced by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, among others, can be seen in color or black and white, in a nod to the film noir genre of the 1940s.

"It's a wholly unique perspective," said Rodriguez, who sees the style as an "exciting" alternative for telling a superhero story.

The genre is related to "what kind of danger is looking around the corner," she said. "And even the visual elements of noir, I think are so evocative, the way that the camera is framed."

"You understand that the world you're never really safe, and we really see it in the black and white, because we're seeing people in shadow or in light, and the shadow is always there."

"Spider-Noir" also features performances by Lamorne Morris, Li Jun Li and Brendan Gleeson, who plays a mobster villain.


Disney’s New ‘Star Wars’ Film Opens with an Estimated $165 Million Worldwide

Cast member Pedro Pascal attends a premiere for the film “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” at TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, US, May 14, 2026. (Reuters)
Cast member Pedro Pascal attends a premiere for the film “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” at TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, US, May 14, 2026. (Reuters)
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Disney’s New ‘Star Wars’ Film Opens with an Estimated $165 Million Worldwide

Cast member Pedro Pascal attends a premiere for the film “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” at TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, US, May 14, 2026. (Reuters)
Cast member Pedro Pascal attends a premiere for the film “Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu” at TCL Chinese theatre in Los Angeles, California, US, May 14, 2026. (Reuters)

New "Star Wars" film "The Mandalorian and Grogu" is expected to end the US Memorial Day weekend with roughly $165 million in worldwide ticket sales, distributor Walt Disney said ‌on Sunday.

About $102 ‌million of that ‌total ⁠will come from ⁠the United States and Canada, Disney said. The domestic total exceeds pre-weekend forecasts but is the lowest opening for any "Star Wars" ⁠movie released by Disney.

The ‌first "Star ‌Wars" movie in seven years ‌tells the story of a ‌helmeted bounty hunter and his sidekick, nicknamed Baby Yoda by fans. The duo debuted ‌on the small screen in the Disney+ streaming series "The ⁠Mandalorian" ⁠in 2019.

Disney's lowest-grossing "Star Wars" film, "Solo: A Star Wars Story," brought in $103 million over Memorial Day weekend in 2018 and was considered a flop. The "Grogu" movie, however, had a smaller budget than most other "Star Wars" movies, of about $165 million.