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VENICE FILM FEST

FILM

Depp tipped for Oscar at Venice film festival

Johnny Depp's portrayal of James 'Whitey' Bulger was tipped on Friday as a potential Oscar winner after Black Mass, an account of the Boston mobster's life of crime was unveiled to a warm reception at the Venice film festival.

Depp tipped for Oscar at Venice film festival
Johnny Depp was greeted by thousands of fans in Venice. Photo: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP

Greeted by thousands of fans, some of whom had been camped out all night, the American star kicked off an at-times rambling press conference with a joke acknowledging that he may appear to be slightly the worse for wear.osc

“This is non-alcoholic,” he said after sipping from a water bottle. “I'm being responsible. So if I slur it's your fault,” he said.

Barely recognisable after having been given the Irish-American gangster's severely receding hairline, sallow Celtic complexion and piercing blue eyes, Depp features in almost every scene of Scott Cooper's movie.

It is a biopic that could almost be classed as a buddy movie since at its core is the relationship between Bulger and John Connolly, a childhood friend from the tough, Irish-dominated area of South Boston, who has become an FBI agent.

Connolly persuades his bosses that he can bring down the Italian mafia in the city, if they offer Bulger a degree of protection as an incentive to help provide the leads and evidence they need.

The Faustian pact initially yields rewards, allowing Connolly's career to blossom in parallel with Bulger's development of an empire that grows to eventually include illicit gambling, extortion rackets and much of the city's drug trade.

But as it becomes clear that Connolly has little, if any, control of his supposed informant, Bulger's eventual downfall becomes only a matter of time. The film ends with Connolly's arrest on charges which eventually lead to him being jailed for life for corruption and for knowingly causing the death of one of Bulger's many victims.

Bulger became a fugitive in 1994 and evaded capture for 17 years. For much of that time he was classed as second only to Osama bin Laden as the United States' most wanted man. He was finally captured in 2011. Two years later he was convicted of involvement in 11 murders and sentenced to spend the rest of his lift in prison, where he turned 86 on Thursday.

A complex character

Cooper's account spares viewers the worst incidents of extraordinary brutality that punctuated Bulger's criminal career while still providing ample testimony of the sociopathic, sadistic core of his personality. In one scene culled from real life, he strangles a friend's girlfriend to death in front of him after discovering she knew more than she should about their affairs.

But the Bulger portrayed by Cooper is also a man bestowed with a natural charisma who lets his elderly mother cheat at cards – a world away from the Bulger-based monster played by Jack Nicholson in Martin Scorsese's The Departed.

Without overlabouring the point, the film includes a reference to the fact that Bulger had taken LSD repeatedly for experiments conducted during an earlier stint in prison. It also depicts how badly Bulger was affected by the sudden death, from Reye's syndrome, of his six-year old son, overtly suggesting the loss helped to explain what followed.

“I just had to approach him as a human being,” Depp said. “Nobody wakes up and looks in the mirror and thinks 'I'm evil, today I'm going to do something evil.'

“One side to Bulger was his business and in that business he did what he had to do. But there was also a side to him that was a very loving family man. He was a very complicated man.”

Cooper revealed that Bulger's lawyer, on a visit to the set, had described Depp's incarnation of his client as “uncanny and chilling,” and some influential critics were also impressed. Variety called his “mesmerising” performance as the best of his career and hailed the film as “one of the fall's first serious awards-caliber attractions.”

The Hollywood reporter was not so gushing about the production, branding it “derivative” in places because of its many nods to classic gangster films The Godfather and Goodfellas, but concurred that Depp's performance had been “one of his best.”

Depp has been nominated for a Best Actor Oscar three times before but has never won.

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VENICE

Italy to pay €57m compensation over Venice cruise ship ban

The Italian government announced on Friday it would pay 57.5 million euros in compensation to cruise companies affected by the decision to ban large ships from Venice's fragile lagoon.

A cruise ship in St Mark's Basin, Venice.
The decision to limit cruise ship access to the Venice lagoon has come at a cost. Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP

The new rules, which took effect in August, followed years of warnings that the giant floating hotels risked causing irreparable damage to the lagoon city, a UNESCO world heritage site.

READ ALSO: Venice bans large cruise ships from centre after Unesco threat of ‘endangered’ status

Some 30 million euros has been allocated for 2021 for shipping companies who incurred costs in “rescheduling routes and refunding passengers who cancelled trips”, the infrastructure ministry said in a statement.

A further 27.5 million euros – five million this year and the rest in 2022 – was allocated for the terminal operator and related companies, it said.

The decision to ban large cruise ships from the centre of Venice in July came just days before a meeting of the UN’s cultural organisation Unesco, which had proposed adding Venice to a list of endangered heritage sites over inaction on cruise ships.

READ ALSO: Is Venice really banning cruise ships from its lagoon?

Under the government’s plan, cruise ships will not be banned from Venice altogether but the biggest vessels will no longer be able to pass through St Mark’s Basin, St Mark’s Canal or the Giudecca Canal. Instead, they’ll be diverted to the industrial port at Marghera.

But critics of the plan point out that Marghera – which is on the mainland, as opposed to the passenger terminal located in the islands – is still within the Venice lagoon.

Some aspects of the plan remain unclear, as infrastructure at Marghera is still being built. Meanwhile, smaller cruise liners are still allowed through St Mark’s and the Giudecca canals.

Cruise ships provide a huge economic boost to Venice, but activists and residents say the ships contribute to problems caused by ‘overtourism’ and cause large waves that undermine the city’s foundations and harm the fragile ecosystem of its lagoon.

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