Marco Bellocchio, Sally Wainwright Win Big at Italian Global Series Festival Which Celebrated ‘Star Trek’ and ‘Lost’ and Lamented Industry Crisis
In honors, Richard Gadd (“Half Man”) and Natasha Lyonne (“Poker Face,” “Russian Doll”) were among the big winners at this year’s Italian Global Series Festival, which wrapped July 11. The two received
In honors, Richard Gadd (“Half Man”) and Natasha Lyonne (“Poker Face,” “Russian Doll”) were among the big winners at this year’s Italian Global Series
Read Full Story at Variety →Why This Matters
The festival's recognition of Bellocchio and Wainwright underscores a pivotal moment for European cinema, where traditional auteurs and rising television voices converge under one competitive banner. Their wins signal not just artistic validation but a broader industry shift toward hybrid storytelling—where film and television blur distinctions, challenging conventional awards hierarchies.
Background Context
Italy’s Global Series Festival, now in its third iteration, emerged as a response to the global content glut, aiming to carve out a niche between Cannes and Berlinale by celebrating serialized narratives. The festival’s dual focus on cinematic heritage (Bellocchio’s career spans seven decades) and contemporary genre reinvention (Wainwright’s *Happy Valley* redefined cop dramas) reflects Europe’s struggle to remain competitive against Hollywood’s streaming dominance.
What Happens Next
The festival’s growing profile may pressure traditional film awards to adapt their criteria, particularly for genres long dismissed as "television." Meanwhile, Bellocchio’s win—following his Venice Golden Lion—could reignite debates about funding gaps for European auteurs, while Wainwright’s success might embolden more showrunners to pursue cinematic ambitions.
Bigger Picture
This year’s winners highlight a paradox: while streaming platforms fuel fragmentation, festivals like this one are rediscovering the unifying power of serialized storytelling. The industry’s lament over crisis masks a deeper evolution, where borders between mediums dissolve—and the real competition may soon be between creators, not formats.

