Talking cats, magic brooms and robot bar staff – welcome to the future of storytelling
The Venice film festival section Venice Immersive is dedicated to extended reality', where visitors can explore new narrative worlds. Our intrepid correspondent gets lost
I'm at the Venice film festival, in a hyper-real city square, surrounded by lapping blue water and tourists who move in mysterious ways. There is a ginger cat here called Dorian who walks on his hind legs and speaks with a French accent. Dorian is showing us how to walk and turn and jump and crouch. He's concerned by the tourist who can't get herself off the ground. Dorian explains that if we ever get lost we should press the respawn" button which will put us right back where we began. He sighs heavily and says: Sooner or later everybody gets lost."
It is the fear of getting lost - this terror of the unknown - that scares many punters away from Venice Immersive, which sits behind the big Mussolini-era casino that hosts the film festival proper. That and the boat ride, the headsets, the schedule, the stress. The movies on the main programme: they're largely a known quantity. Whereas the extended reality" exhibits out on VI island are almost too much to process; we lack even the grammar and the language to frame them. To misquote Bob Dylan, something is happening here - but no one, it seems, can definitively say what it is.
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