VENICE, Sept 9 — French cinema legend Jean-Paul Belmondo’s glittering career was recognised with an honorary Golden Lion at the Venice film festival yesterday.

 

“I never think about my past. Forward, forward, forward,” the 83-year-old told reporters, before reminiscing about his life on the silver screen.

Belmondo, who suffered a serious stroke in 2001, had to be helped onto the press conference stage and was visibly out-of-breath, yet still “very happy, very honoured to be here in Venice.”

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Among the memories he touched on were being asked to star alongside the young Sofia Loren in Vittorio De Sica’s 1960 film La Ciociara (Two Women), which helped make him a star in Italy.

“Then I played opposite Gina Lollobrigida, Claudia Cardinale and that is why I have always loved Italian cinema,” he joked.

The actor, whose films have been seen by 130 million cinema goers, also touched on his supposed rivalry with fellow French heart-throb Alain Delon, with whom he starred in the 1970 gangster film Borsalino.

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“I’m a mate of Alain Delon and when you’re mates it is for life,” he said.

Like Delon, Belmondo mixed arthouse productions with more box office-friendly fare over the course of his extraordinary career.

“I enjoyed both — it is like life; one day you laugh, the next you cry.”

Belmondo was accompanied by French actress Sophie Marceau, his son Paul — the director of a documentary about his father — and actor friend Charles Gerard as he received his award to a standing ovation.

“Jean-Paul Belmondo is a star, a complete, multi-faceted actor, a cinema producer, a theatre director and also the head of a big and beautiful family,” said Marceau, who acted alongside her compatriot in Georges Lautner’s Joyeuses Paques (1984).

“I remember when you took me in your arms and I also remember Claudia Cardinale, Sofia Loren, Ursula Andress, Jean Seberg .... Catherine Deneuve ... because even wearing a cassock you made them all fall for you.” — AFP