and
Mario Monicelli winning the Golden Lion in 1959 for
General Della Rovere and
The Great War, respectively 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 have been 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. From 2026, the non-English language winners will also be automatically eligible for the
Academy Award for Best International Feature Film.
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 ==