The Reluctant Fundamentalist, a big-screen adaptation of Mohsin Hamid’s acclaimed 2007 novel, has opened the 69th Venice Film Festival.
Actress Kate Hudson trod the red carpet with her partner, Muse singer Matt Bellamy, while co-star Liev Schreiber attended with his partner Naomi Watts.
The star-studded premiere followed reports claiming this year’s festival had struggled to attract big “names”.
The film, directed by Mira Nair, got a mixed reception from critics.
Nair won the festival’s top prize, the Golden Lion, for Monsoon Wedding in 2001. Her triumph came three days before the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
In her new film, Britain’s Riz Ahmed plays a young Pakistani man who becomes a high flier on Wall Street prior to those events before being radicalised.
Time magazine praised it as a “tense, thoughtful and truly international” film that “raises questions meant to test America’s conscience”.
Ahmed – who previously played an incompetent bomber in Chris Morris’s satire Four Lions – stood out in “a star-making role”, it added.
The 29-year-old was also singled out by Screen International, whose critic said he gives “a finely nuanced performance that carries the film”.
Overall, though, reviewer Mark Adams concluded that the film “never finds the right pacing or structure to satisfy the dramatic arcs”.
Variety said the film “saddles itself with a laborious narrative structure and half-baked thriller elements”.
But the Hollywood Reporter described it as “a serious-minded film whose politics demand soul-searching and attention”.
Hamid’s book was nominated for the Booker Prize in 2007.
Speaking on the red carpet, Nair said she wanted to reflect the fact that “the modern Pakistan is nothing like what you read in the papers”.
She added that she hoped to bring “some sense of bridge-making, some sense of healing, basically a sense of communication that goes beyond the stereotype”.
This year’s line-up also includes To The Wonder, the latest from Tree of Life director Terence Malick, and Robert Redford’s The Company You Keep.
Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix star in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master, the story of a religious cult that some have suggested bears a resemblance to Scientology.
Alberto Barbera, the event’s new artistic director, has cut the number of films being screened and has faced criticism over the relatively small number of stars attending.
Venice has come under increasing competition from the Toronto Film Festival in Canada, which overlaps with its Italian rival.