The annual festival unveils a packed slate of fall premieres.

Is there a best picture winner in the bunch? The Venice Film Festival has unveiled its 2016 lineup, including both in competition and out of competition offerings, and with the festival’s strong track record of debuting recent best picture winners — from “Spotlight” to “Birdman” — there might be another big winner among the slate’s ranks.

As had been previously announced, the festival will open with Damien Chazelle’s “La La Land,” which will later hit Toronto (and, presumably, also Telluride). The festival will close with Antoine Fuqua’s “The Magnificent Seven,” which kicks off its own festival run days earlier, when it will open TIFF.

READ MORE: TIFF Reveals First Slate of 2016 Titles, Including ‘Magnificent Seven,’ ‘American Honey,’ ‘La La Land’ and ‘Birth of A Nation’

Other picks that will also do the Venice-TIFF two-step include Tom Ford’s “Nocturnal Animals,” Denis Villeneuve’s “Arrival,” Francois Ozon’s “Frantz,” Nick Hamm’s “The Journey” and Rebecca Zlotowski’s “Planetarium.”

Well-loved auteurs will also screen at the festival with new work, including Wim Wenders with his “The Beautiful Days of Aranjuez,” Terrence Malick and his long-gestating “Voyage of Time” and Kim Ki-duk debuting his latest, “The Net.”

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The festival will also play home to Ana Lily Amirpour’s “A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night” followup, the star-packed cannibal feature, “The Bad Batch.” Pablo Larrian’s Natalie Portman-starring Jackie O movie “Jackie” will also debut in competition. Venice regular James Franco will bring his “In Dubious Battle” to the fest. Also of note? Derek Cianfrance’s Michael Fassbender- and Alicia Vikander-starring romantic drama “The Light Between Oceans” will debut at the festival, though it will swiftly hit American screens, thanks to a set September 2 release date.

READ MORE: Damien Chazelle’s Ryan Gosling- and Emma Stone-Starring Awards Contender ‘La La Land’ Lands a Venice Premiere

Below are the first additions to the Venice 2016 lineup. Stay tuned for more programming announcements in the days to come.

The festival runs August 31 – September 10.

Opening Night Film

“La La Land,” dir: Damien Chazelle (in competition)

Closing Night Film

“The Magnificent Seven,” dir: Antoine Fuqua (out of competition)

In Competition

“The Bad Batch,” Ana Lily Amirpour (U.S.)

“Une Vie,” Stephan Brizé (France, Belgium)

“The Light Between Oceans,” Derek Cianfrance (U.S., Australia, New Zealand) Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures/Entertainment One “El ciudadano ilustre,” Mariano Cohn, Gaston Duprat (Argentina, Spain)

“Spira Mirabilis,” Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti (Italy, Switzerland)

“The Woman Who Left,” Lav Diaz (Philippines)

“La region salvaje,” Amat Escalante (Mexico)

“Nocturnal Animals,” Tom Ford (U.S.)

“Piuma,” Roan Johnson (Italy)

“Paradise,” Andrei Konchalovsky (Russia, Germany) Sky Atlantic “Brimstone,” Martin Koolhoven (Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, France, U.K. Sweden)

“On the Milky Road,” Emir Kusturica (Serbia, U.K., U.S.)

“Jackie,” Pablo Larrain (U.S., Chile)

“Voyage of Time,” Terrence Malick (U.S., Germany)

“El Cristo ciego,” Christopher Murray (Chile, France)

“Frantz,” Francois Ozon (France)

“Questi Giorni,” Giuseppe Piccioni (Italy)

“Arrival,” Denis Villenueve (U.S.)

“The Beautiful Days of Aranjuez,” Wim Wenders (France, Germany) Out of Competition Special Event

“The Young Pope” (episodes 1, 2), Paolo Sorrentino (Italy, France, Spain, U.S.) Fiction

“The Bleeder,” Philippe Falardeau (U.S., Canada)

“Hacksaw Ridge,” Mel Gibson (U.S.) “The Journey,” Nick Hamm (U.K.)

“A jamais,” Benoit Jacquot (France, Portugal)

“Gantz:O,” Yasushi Kawamura (Japan)

“The Age of Shadows,” Kim Jee woon (South Korea)

“Monte,” Amir Naderi (Italy, U.S., France)

“Tommaso,” Kim Rossi Stewart (Italy) Non-Fiction

“Our War,” Bruno Chiaravallotti, Claudio Jampaglia, Benedetta Argentieri (Italy, U.S.)

“I Called Him Morgan,” Kasper Collin (Sweden, U.S.)

“One More Time with Feeling,” Andrew Dominik (U.K.)

“Austerlitz,” Sergei Loznitsa (Germany)

“Assalto al cielo,” Francesco Munzi (Italy)

“Safari,” Ulrich Seidl (Austria, Denmark)

“American Anarchist,” Charlie Siskel (U.S.) Horizons

“Tarde para la ira,” Raul Arevalo (Spain)

“King of the Belgians,” Peter Brosens, Jessica Woolworth (Belgium, Netherlands, Bulgaria) Cinelicious Pics “Through the Wall,” Rama Burshtein (Israel)

“Liberami,” Federica Di Giacomo (Italy, France)

“Big Big World,” Reha Erdem (Turkey)

“Gukuroku,” Ishikawa Kei (Japan)

“Maudit Poutine,” Karl Lemieux, (Canada)

“Sao Jorge,” Marco Martins (Portugal, France)

“Dawson City: Frozen Time,” Bill Morrison (U.S., France)

“Reparer les vivants,” Katell Quillevere (France, Belgium)

“White Sun,” Deepak Rauniyar (Nepal, U.S., Qatar, Netherlands)

“Malaria,” Parviz Shahbazi (Iran)

“Kekszakallu,” Gaston Solnicky (Argentina)

“Home,” Fien Troch (Belgium) “Die Einsiedler,” Fien Troch (Germany, Austria)

“Il più grande sogno,” (Italy)

“Boys in the Trees,” Nicholas Verso (Australia)

“Bitter Money,” Wang Bing (China) Special Out-Of-Competition Screening

“Dark Night,” Tim Sutton (U.S.)

“Planetarium,” Rebecca Zlotowski (France, Belgium) Cinema In the Garden

“Inseparables,” Marcos Carnevale (Argentina)

“Franca: Chaos and Creation,” Francesco Carrozzini (Italy, U.S.)

“In Dubious Battle,” James Franco (U.S.)

“The Net,” Kim Ki-duk (South Korea) “Summertime,” Gabriele Muccino (Italy)

“The Secret Life of Pets,” Chris Renaud, Yarrow Cheney (U.S.)

“Robinu,” Michele Santoro (Italy)

“My Art,” Laurie Simmons (U.S.) Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.

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