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World Bank lowers global growth forecast on Iran war impacts
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Bangladesh clinch first-ever ODI series win over Australia
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Renowned French solo yachtsman Charlie Dalin dies aged 42
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England cricket chief ponders booze ban after Stokes's nightclub incident
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Trump vows to take Iran oil terminals, launch new strikes
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Niger criminalises same-sex relations with jail terms
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Somali referee banned by US to officiate European Super Cup - UEFA
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Over 260 Nigerians fleeing xenophobic attacks in S. Africa return home
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ECB makes first rate hike since 2023 to tame Iran war inflation
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Pope condemns 'indifference' towards migrants on Canaries trip
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UK defence minister John Healey announces shock resignation in funding row
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Stocks diverge, oil falls as traders weigh Iran, rates outlook
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New Zealand's Conway jets home between Tests to attend birth of child
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McKeown eyeing world record after sizzling at Australian trials
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Carbon dioxide removal slow to take off, alarming scientists
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O'Neill confirmed as Celtic's permanent boss after double triumph
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Bangladesh chase 192 in 41 overs after Australia collapse in rain-hit ODI
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Relegated Wolves sack Edwards after seven months in charge
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Wimbledon prize money pot increased to £64.2 million
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Iran's World Cup team finds supporters in Mexico
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Sweden withdraws controversial proposal to jail 13-year-olds
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'Racist thuggery' condemned after second night of disorder in N.Ireland
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Economic pressures 'manageable': Indonesian deputy finance minister
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G7 allies seek to bridge divide with Trump at France summit
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Serena's comeback at Queen's over after Mboko injury withdrawal
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Pope arrives in Spain's Canary Islands to meet migrants
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Scientists warn of record heat, threats to climate monitoring
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Iran warns Mideast truce 'practically meaningless' after US strikes
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Russia unblocks Roblox after widespread child anger
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Sweden withdraws disputed proposal to jail 13-year-olds
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UK probes Ryanair over fees for parents to sit with children
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Small, efficient and revolutionary: The IPOP electric car from Alsace
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Solomon Islands says China security pact to remain secret
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Tharp, 20, breaks 110m hurdles world record at NCAA championships
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Thailand sentences Chinese Uyghurs to death in 2015 shrine bombing case
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'Victory' or 'peace': Russian Orthodox believers question Church's war stance
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Ukrainian mother's agony highlights abuse and weaponisation of draft
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Swiss to vote on stricter rules for conscientious objection
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'Resilient' Knicks on brink of NBA title after record rally
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From Cruz to Blanchett: Venice serves up film festival stars
The Venice Film Festival will welcome stars from Penelope Cruz to Cate Blanchett and host world premieres from directors Darren Aronofsky, Alejandro Inarritu and Luca Guadagnino, organisers said Tuesday.
A total of 23 movies are in competition for the Golden Lion, the top prize awarded to the best film on the final day of the "Mostra", the prestigious festival on the glitzy Venice Lido running from August 31 to September 10.
Calling the 79th annual festival an "open window on the world", Artistic Director Alberto Barbera, during his online presentation, denounced the arrest of three filmmakers in Iran earlier this month which sparked condemnation across the international film community.
One of them, award-winning dissident filmmaker Jafar Panahi, 62, will be competing this year at Venice with his film "Khers Nist" ("Bears Do Not Exist"), in which he also acts.
Panahi, who was ordered last week by a court to serve a six-year sentence for "propaganda against the system" originally handed down in 2010, won the Golden Lion in 2000 for "The Circle", a critique of women's treatment in Iran.
This year's red carpet should see no shortage of stars, with Julianne Moore presiding over the jury, and top talents Hugh Jackman, Timothee Chalamet, Don Cheadle and Colin Farrell all starring in films in competition.
Spain's Penelope Cruz -- who won Venice's best actress award last year for her work in "Parallel Mothers" -- returns in "Immensity", a family drama set in 1970s Rome by Italy's Emanuele Crialese.
Australian star Cate Blanchett is also expected to attend, for her work playing an orchestra conductor in "Tar", the third feature by US director Todd Field.
- Fictionalised Marilyn Monroe -
This year also marks the return of US director Aronofsky with "The Whale", a psychological drama in which Brendan Fraser plays an obese writer seeking to reconnect with his estranged daughter.
Aronofsky is 2008's Golden Lion winner for "The Wrestler", about a down-and-out fighter that won raves for lead actor Mickey Rourke.
"The collapse of the American Dream," said Barbera, is the theme of the highly anticipated "Bones and All" by Italian director Guadagnino. Starring Timothee Chalamet, Mark Rylance and Chloe Sevigny, the film follows a young woman and drifter confronting their cannibalism on a cross-country road trip.
A "most personal" film in the main competition, said Barbera, is "Bardo: The False Chronicle of some Truths" by Mexico's Inarritu, in which a journalist suffers an existential crisis.
British actress Tilda Swinton appears in mystery-drama "The Eternal Daughter" by Joanna Hogg, while Farrell plays one of two longtime Irish friends in "The Banshees of Inisherin" by Martin McDonagh.
In the biopic genre is "Blonde", Andrew Dominik's fictionalised look at Marilyn Monroe adapted from the novel by Joyce Carol Oates, starring Ana de Armas and Adrien Brody.
Nan Goldin, the US photographer and activist, is the focus of Laura Poitras' "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed", about the opioid epidemic in the United States.
Noah Baumbach's "White Noise", based on the 1985 Don DeLillo novel and starring Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig, will open the competition in Venice.
C.Hamad--SF-PST