Sunday, January 25, 2015

OSCAR foreign film short-list screwed up again

I should have posted this at the time (but you know, the holidays!).

Whittled from a list of 83 submissions this year -- a record -- the Academy has begun the tradition of announcing a 'shortlist' of nine before the actual five nominees are announced. Usually, the list is met with howls of outrage over the significant films that were left off (Anyone remember the controversy surrounding Romania's submission in 2007: 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days?) This year is no exception.

Here are the nine that did make the cut:

*Argentina, Wild Tales, dir: Damián Szifrón
*Estonia, Tangerines, dir: Zaza Urushadze
Georgia, Corn Island, dir: George Ovashvili
*Mauritania, Timbuktu, dir: Abderrahmane Sissako
Netherlands, Accused, dir: Paula van der Oest
*Poland, Ida, dir: Pawel Pawlikowski
*Russia, Leviathan, dir: Andrey Zvyagintsev
Sweden, Force Majeure, dir: Ruben Östlund
Venezuela, The Liberator, dir: Alberto Arvelo

*these films are the final five OSCAR nominees.

The overlooked film's from these four countries (respectively, TURKEY, CANADA, HUNGARY and BELGIUM) are described in the following quote:

"Many of the year’s most significant films were left off: Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s Winter Sleep, which was this year’s Palme d’Or winner at Cannes, didn’t make the cut. Nor did Mommy by Xavier Dolan, also a Cannes prize winner, taking the Jury Prize; or Kornel Mundruczo’s White God; or the Dardenne brothers’ Two Days One Night." Source: http://www.slashfilm.com/best-foreign-film-shortlist-2015/

I would add to this list of surprising omissions these three films which have had U.S. releases: ITALY (Human Capital); GERMANY (Beloved Sisters); ISRAEL (Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem); and the PHILIPPINES (Norte, the End of History).
I am all for expanding the reach of this category to include the likes of Estonia, Georgia and Mauritania (the country's first submission in this category EVER!), but to ignore the talents of Nuri Bilge Ceylan and the Dardenne brothers (who by all accounts are all at the peak of their creativity) is a damn shame.

To make matters worse, the critically-acclaimed entry from SWEDEN (Force Majeure), which was on the shortlist, did not make the final five. Below I leave you with the mosive poster of MY favorite foreign film of the year.