
"Outside the Sala Grande, Eva H.D. stood up for Palestine, brandishing a sign that said, "We Are All an Audience to Genocide," amid a festival where the war on Gaza weighed heavily - and continues to after Alexander Payne's jury awarded the Palestine-centered drama " The Voice of Hind Rajab" the runner-up prize before Jim Jarmusch's Golden Lion winner "Father Mother Sister Brother" was announced."
"The next day after "The Smashing Machine" premiere in Venice, IndieWire sat down with Kaufman and Eva H.D. in a cramped, airless room in the Palazzo del Casinò on the Lido to discuss " How to Shoot a Ghost." It centers on a translator and a photographer, both of whom are dead, wandering Athens, Greece. They're played by Oscar nominee Jessie Buckley and discovery Josef Akiki."
How to Shoot a Ghost premiered at Venice as a short film directed by Charlie Kaufman and written by poet Eva H.D. The film centers on a translator and a photographer, both dead, wandering Athens, played by Jessie Buckley and Josef Akiki. The producing team included singer/songwriter Halsey and her company Umade. Eva H.D. protested outside the Sala Grande with a sign reading "We Are All an Audience to Genocide" as Gaza-related tensions weighed on the festival. Venice juries awarded the Palestine-centered drama The Voice of Hind Rajab a runner-up prize while Jim Jarmusch's Father Mother Sister Brother won the Golden Lion. Kaufman previously released the novel Antkind and the Netflix film I'm Thinking of Ending Things; Buckley performed Eva H.D.'s poem "Bonedog."
Read at IndieWire
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