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Golden Lion

Highest prize of the Venice Film Festival

Golden Lion

Highest prize of the Venice Film Festival

FieldValue
nameGolden Lion
subheaderit
imagesize261px
presenterVenice Film Festival
locationVenice
countryItaly
former nameGolden Lion of Saint Mark (1949–1953)
year[1949](10th-venice-international-film-festival)
holder*Father Mother Sister Brother* ([2025](82nd-venice-international-film-festival))
website
Note

the film award

The Golden Lion () is the highest prize given to a film at the Venice Film Festival. The prize was introduced in 1949 by the organizing committee and is widely regarded as one of the film industry's most prestigious and distinguished prizes. In 1970, the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement was introduced, an honorary prize for people who have made an important contribution to cinema.

The prize was introduced in 1949 as the Golden Lion of Saint Mark, which was one of the best known symbols of the ancient Republic of Venice. In 1954, the prize was permanently named the Golden Lion.

History

A Golden Lion trophy

The first Golden Lion was awarded in 1949. Previously, the equivalent prize was the Gran Premio Internazionale di Venezia (Grand International Prize of Venice), awarded in 1947 and 1948. No Golden Lions were awarded between 1969 and 1979. According to the Biennale's official website, the hiatus was a result of the 1968 Lion being given to the radically experimental Die Artisten in der Zirkuskuppel: Ratlos; the website says that the awards "still had a statute dating back to the fascist era and could not side-step the general political climate. Sixty-eight produced a dramatic fracture with the past".

Fourteen French films have been awarded the Golden Lion, more than to any other nation. However, there is considerable geographical diversity in the winners. Nine American filmmakers have won the Golden Lion, with awards for John Cassavetes and Robert Altman (both times the awards were shared with other winners who tied), as well as Ang Lee (Brokeback Mountain was the first winning U.S. film not to tie), Darren Aronofsky, Sofia Coppola, Todd Phillips, Chloé Zhao, Laura Poitras, and Jim Jarmusch.

Prior to 1980, only three of 21 winners were of non-European origin. Since the 1980s, the Golden Lion has been presented to a number of Asian filmmakers, particularly in comparison to the Cannes Film Festival's top prize, the Palme d'Or, which has been awarded to five Asian filmmakers since 1980. The Golden Lion, by contrast, has been awarded to ten Asians during the same time period, with two of these filmmakers winning it twice. Ang Lee won the Golden Lion twice within three years in the 2000s, once for an American film and once for a Chinese-language film. Zhang Yimou has also won twice. Other Asians to win the Golden Lion since 1980 include Jia Zhangke, Hou Hsiao-hsien, Tsai Ming-liang, Trần Anh Hùng, Takeshi Kitano, Kim Ki-duk, Jafar Panahi, Mira Nair, and Lav Diaz. Russian filmmakers have won the Golden Lion several times, including since the end of the USSR.

To date, 33 of the 54 winners were European men, including Soviet/Russian winners. Since 1949, seven women have won the Golden Lion for directing: Margarethe von Trotta, Agnès Varda, Mira Nair, Sofia Coppola, Chloé Zhao, Audrey Diwan, and Laura Poitras. In 1938, German director Leni Riefenstahl won the Festival when its highest award was the Coppa Mussolini. In 2019, Joker became the first movie based on original comic book characters to win the prize.

Controversies

From 1934 until 1942, the highest award of the festival was the Coppa Mussolini for Best Italian Film and Best Foreign Film. Even though other awards were attributed to Nazi propaganda films, such as Jud Süß (Suss, the Jew), an antisemitic production made at the behest of Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, won the festival's Golden Crown award in 1940.

''Gran Premio Internazionale di Venezia''

After the end of the WWII during the reestablishment of the festival, The Southerner, directed by Jean Renoir, won the main prize at the 1946 edition. In 1947 and 1948, the equivalent prize for the Golden Lion was the Gran Premio Internazionale di Venezia (Grand International Prize of Venice), awarded to Karel Steklý's The Strike in 1947 and Laurence Olivier's Hamlet in 1948.

Winners

These films received the Golden Lions or the major awards of the Venice Film Festival:

1940s

YearTitleDirectorProduction Country[1949](10th-venice-international-film-festival)
France

1950s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[1950](11th-venice-international-film-festival)[1951](12th-venice-international-film-festival)[1952](13th-venice-international-film-festival)[1953](14th-venice-international-film-festival)No award given, the jury was unable to decide the winner and the prize was declared void[1954](15th-venice-international-film-festival)[1955](16th-venice-international-film-festival)[1956](17th-venice-international-film-festival)No award given, the jury was unable to decide the winner and the prize was declared void[1957](18th-venice-international-film-festival)[1958](19th-venice-international-film-festival)[1959](20th-venice-international-film-festival)
France
Japan
France
United Kingdom
Denmark
অপরাজিতIndia
Japan
France, Italy

1960s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[1960](21st-venice-international-film-festival)[1961](22nd-venice-international-film-festival)[1962](23rd-venice-international-film-festival)[1963](24th-venice-international-film-festival)[1964](25th-venice-international-film-festival)[1965](26th-venice-international-film-festival)[1966](27th-venice-international-film-festival)[1967](28th-venice-international-film-festival)[1968](29th-venice-international-film-festival)[1969](30th-venice-international-film-festival)No award given, this edition of the festival was not competitive
sortnameAndré CayatteFrance
Italy
Soviet Union
Italy
Algeria, Italy
France
West Germany

1970s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production CountryRef.[1970](31st-venice-international-film-festival)No award given, the editions of the festival were not competitive[1971](32nd-venice-international-film-festival)[1972](33rd-venice-international-film-festival)1973No award given, the festival was not organized during these years1974197519761977No award given, the festival was not organized this year1978No award given, the festival was not organized this year[1979](36th-venice-international-film-festival)No award given, this edition of the festival was not competitive

1980s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[1980](37th-venice-international-film-festival)[1981](38th-venice-international-film-festival)[1982](39th-venice-international-film-festival)[1983](40th-venice-international-film-festival)[1984](41st-venice-international-film-festival)[1985](42nd-venice-international-film-festival)[1986](43rd-venice-international-film-festival)[1987](44th-venice-international-film-festival)[1988](45th-venice-international-film-festival)[1989](46th-venice-international-film-festival)
Canada, France
United States
West Germany
France
Poland
France
France, West Germany
Italy, France
{{sortnameHouHsiao-hsienHou, Hsiao-hsien}}Taiwan

1990s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[1990](47th-venice-international-film-festival)[1991](48th-venice-international-film-festival)[1992](49th-venice-international-film-festival)[1993](50th-venice-international-film-festival)[1994](51st-venice-international-film-festival)[1995](52nd-venice-international-film-festival)[1996](53rd-venice-international-film-festival)[1997](54th-venice-international-film-festival)[1998](55th-venice-international-film-festival)[1999](56th-venice-international-film-festival)
United Kingdom, United States
Soviet Union
{{sortnameZhangYimouZhang, Yimou}}China
United States
France, Poland
Macedonia
{{sortnameTsaiMing-liangTsai, Ming-liang}}Taiwan
Vietnam, France
Ireland, United Kingdom
Japan
Italy
{{sortnameZhangYimouZhang, Yimou}}China

2000s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[2000](57th-venice-international-film-festival)[2001](58th-venice-international-film-festival)[2002](59th-venice-international-film-festival)[2003](60th-venice-international-film-festival)[2004](61st-venice-international-film-festival)[2005](62nd-venice-international-film-festival)[2006](63rd-venice-international-film-festival)[2007](64th-venice-international-film-festival)[2008](65th-venice-international-film-festival)[2009](66th-venice-international-film-festival)
Iran
India
Ireland, United Kingdom
Russia
United Kingdom
United States
{{sortnameJiaZhangkeJia, Zhangke}}China
Taiwan, China, United States
United States
לבנוןIsrael

2010s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[2010](67th-venice-international-film-festival)[2011](68th-venice-international-film-festival)[2012](69th-venice-international-film-festival)[2013](70th-venice-international-film-festival)[2014](71st-venice-international-film-festival)[2015](72nd-venice-international-film-festival)[2016](73rd-venice-international-film-festival)[2017](74th-venice-international-film-festival)[2018](75th-venice-international-film-festival)[2019](76th-venice-international-film-festival)
§United States
§ФаустRussia
피에타{{sortnameKimKi-dukKim, Ki-duk}}South Korea
Italy
*En duva satt på en gren och funderade på tillvaron*Sweden
Venezuela
Philippines
United States, Mexico
Mexico, United States
United States

2020s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleDirector(s)Production Country[2020](77th-venice-international-film-festival)[2021](78th-venice-international-film-festival)[2022](79th-venice-international-film-festival)[2023](80th-venice-international-film-festival)[2024](81st-venice-international-film-festival)[2025](82nd-venice-international-film-festival)
United States
§France
United States
Ireland, United Kingdom, United States
Spain
*Father Mother Sister Brother*Jim JarmuschUnited States, Ireland, France

;Notes : § Denotes unanimous win

Multiple winners

Four directors have won the award twice:

Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement

Main article: Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement

YearWinner(s)1970197119721982198319851986198719881989199019911992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
Orson Welles
Ingmar Bergman, Marcel Carné, and John Ford
Charlie Chaplin, Anatoli Golovnya and Billy Wilder
Alessandro Blasetti, Luis Buñuel, Frank Capra, George Cukor, Jean-Luc Godard, Sergei Yutkevich, Alexander Kluge, Akira Kurosawa, Michael Powell, Satyajit Ray, King Vidor, and Cesare Zavattini
Michelangelo Antonioni
Manoel de Oliveira, John Huston, and Federico Fellini
Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani
Luigi Comencini and Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Joris Ivens
Robert Bresson
Marcello Mastroianni and Miklós Jancsó
Mario Monicelli and Gian Maria Volonté
Jeanne Moreau, Francis Ford Coppola, and Paolo Villaggio
Steven Spielberg, Robert De Niro, Roman Polanski, and Claudia Cardinale
Al Pacino, Suso Cecchi d'Amico, and Ken Loach
Woody Allen, Monica Vitti, Martin Scorsese, Alberto Sordi, Ennio Morricone, Giuseppe De Santis, Goffredo Lombardo, and Alain Resnais
Robert Altman, Vittorio Gassman, Dustin Hoffman, and Michèle Morgan
Gérard Depardieu, Stanley Kubrick, and Alida Valli
Warren Beatty, Sophia Loren, and Andrzej Wajda
Jerry Lewis
Clint Eastwood
Éric Rohmer
Dino Risi
Dino De Laurentiis and Omar Sharif
Stanley Donen and Manoel de Oliveira
Hayao Miyazaki and Stefania Sandrelli
David Lynch
Tim Burton and Bernardo Bertolucci (for the last 75 years of the history of cinema)
Ermanno Olmi
John Lasseter, Brad Bird, Pete Docter, Andrew Stanton, and Lee Unkrich
John Woo
Marco Bellocchio
Francesco Rosi
William Friedkin
Thelma Schoonmaker and Frederick Wiseman
Bertrand Tavernier
Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jerzy Skolimowski
Jane Fonda and Robert Redford
David Cronenberg and Vanessa Redgrave
Julie Andrews and Pedro Almodóvar
Ann Hui and Tilda Swinton
Roberto Benigni and Jamie Lee Curtis
Catherine Deneuve and Paul Schrader
Liliana Cavani and Tony Leung Chiu-wai
Peter Weir and Sigourney Weaver
Werner Herzog and Kim Novak

Notes

References

References

  1. (2018). "25 Must-See Films That Won the Venice Film Festival". IndieWire.
  2. Maestro, B. B. C.. (2022-08-12). "The different types of film and TV awards".
  3. (2008). "Biennale Cinema History of the Venice Film Festival: The Forties and Fifties". La Biennale di Venezia.
  4. (2008). "Biennale Cinema History of the Venice Film Festival: The Sixties and Seventies". La Biennale di Venezia.
  5. Donaldson, Kayleigh. (September 11, 2019). "Joker's Insane Venice Film Festival Win Explained". [[Screen Rant]].
  6. Friedländer, Saul. (2009-10-06). "The Years of Extermination: Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939–1945". Harper Collins.
  7. Kahn, Lothar. (1975). "Insight and action : the life and work of Lion Feuchtwanger". Rutherford, N.J. : Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
  8. Friedländer, Saul. (2008). "The years of extermination: Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939-1945". Harper Perennial.
  9. Kahn, Lothar. (1975). "Insight and action: the life and work of Lion Feuchtwanger". Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
  10. Etlin, Richard A.. (15 October 2002). "Art, culture, and media under the Third Reich". University of Chicago Press.
  11. "Golden Lions and major awards of the Venice Film Festival". labiennale.org.
  12. "14. Mostra Internazionale d'Arte Cinematografica di Venezia". Archivio Storico delle Arti Contemporanee.
  13. Zacharek, Stephanie. (September 5, 2013). "Venice update: Kelly Reichardt's Night Moves, James Franco's Child of God, and more". [[LA Weekly]].
  14. Roos, Fred. (Spring 1957). "Venice Film Festival, 1956". University of California Press.
  15. "30. Mostra Internazionale d'Arte Cinematografica di Venezia". Archivio Storico delle Arti Contemporanee.
  16. (7 December 2017). "Venice Film Festival History 1932-2019: The 70s".
  17. (August 28, 1979). "Venice Film Fete in Quest of Glamour". [[The New York Times]].
  18. Vivarelli, Nick. (2020-07-20). "Venice Film Festival to Honor Tilda Swinton, Ann Hui With Golden Lions for Career Achievement".
  19. (1 June 2022). "Venezia 79. Leone d'oro alla carriera a Catherine Deneuve: "È una gioia"".
  20. (4 May 2022). "Venezia Cinema: Leone d'Oro alla carriera a Paul Schrader".
  21. (27 March 2023). "A Liliana Cavani il Leone d'oro alla carriera dalla Mostra di Venezia".
  22. (2023-03-27). "Biennale Cinema 2023 {{!}} Director Liliana Cavani and actor Tony Leung Chiu-wai Golden Lions for Lifetime Achievement".
  23. (9 May 2024). "Peter Weir Leone d'Oro alla carriera della Biennale Cinema 2024".
  24. (2024-06-28). "Biennale Cinema 2024 {{!}} Sigourney Weaver Leone d'Oro alla carriera".
  25. (8 April 2025). "Werner Herzog Leone d'Oro alla carriera".
  26. Vivarelli, Nick. (9 June 2025). "Kim Novak to Be Honored at Venice Film Festival With Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement".
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