[attach id=209551 size="medium"]Pieta, inspired by Michelangelo’s famous sculpture, is a bleak morality tale about a brutal loan shark that has captured viewers’ hearts.[/attach]

South Korean director Kim Ki-duk’s Pieta and US director Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master are tipped as the critics’ favourites to win the coveted Golden Lion award tonight.

An extreme story of characters torn between revenge and compassion

The two are among the 18 movies in competition at the world’s oldest film festival in Venice where stars, auteurs and industry honchos have been rubbing shoulders at the seaside for nearly two weeks of art house cinema.

The selection is “the best around”, said festival director Alberto Barbera.

Among the other notable entries this year have been the poignant first feature by US-born Israeli director Rama Burshtein about a confused young girl coming of age in a tradition-bound Orthodox Hasidic community in Tel Aviv.

French director Olivier Assayas’s tribute to idealistic youngsters in the early 1970s in Après mai (Something in the Air) has also been winning rave reviews, along with cult US director Terrence Malick’s elegiac To The Wonder.

A major underlying theme of the festival this year has been the crisis of spirituality – the heart of Austrian director Ulrich Seidl’s entry Paradies: Glaube (Paradise: Faith), also causing ripples at the fest.

Fans crowded the festival area for Spring Breakers, starring former Disney stars Selena Gomez and Vanessa Hudgens, and for Bad 25, a documentary by Spike Lee about the music of the late king of pop Michael Jackson.

But by pooling the judgement of 23 film critics, the daily bulletin at the festival Venezia News is giving Pieta as the favourite so far.

With a title inspired by the famous, heart-wrenching statue by Michelangelo in the Vatican of the Virgin Mary holding the body of Jesus Christ, the bleak morality tale about a brutal loan shark has captured viewers’ hearts.

Kim said his movie was “dedicated to humankind in a situation of a deep crisis in extreme capitalism”, adding that for him there were three protagonists – the loan shark, the woman claiming to be his mother and money. Italian daily La Repubblica said Pieta was “the shock film” of the festival and had “conquered audiences with an avalanche of applause for this extreme story of characters torn between revenge and compassion”.

The 51-year-old Kim is no stranger to Venice, where he won the Silver Lion award for Best Director in 2004 for Bin-jip (3-iron) but the low-budget film-maker is still seen as a bit of an outsider in the Korean film industry.

The new movie by Oscar-winner Anderson, the man behind Boogie Nights and There Will Be Blood, is tipped to be a close second with a story inspired by the early days of Scientology and its founder L. Ron Hubbard in the 1950s.

The charismatic leader is played by Philip Seymour Hoffman but the stand-out performance in this film is by Joaquin Phoenix as his troubled disciple. Phoenix is seen as a possible best actor award winner on Saturday along with Italy’s Toni Servillo,who plays the part of a Sicilian father crushed by fate in É stato il figlio by Daniele Cipri about a family in crisis.

The Best Actress award is still seen as wide open at the festival, which organisers said has given women their rightful place in the cinema world by including 21 female directors out of the total of 52 films being shown.

The last word on the winners will of course be up to a nine-person jury presided this year by influential Hollywood director, screenwriter and producer Michael Mann, who has kept his preferences a closely guarded secret.

The award ceremony kicks off at 7.30pm tonight.

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