Here are my predictions for the 21 nations of Western Europe. Though they traditionally dominate the Oscars, last year they only secured two spots on the shortlist (for overrated Oscar nominee "The Square" and underrated Golden Globe winner "In the Fade") so their dominance has slippel;d.
5. FRANCE- "Custody" France is nominated so frequently that it's easy to forget that they've only won once in the past 40 years (for "Indochine" in 1992/93). To put that into context, out of all the countries that have won the Oscar, almost all of them have managed a win since the victory of "Indochine" (all except Algeria, Sweden and Switzerland). "Custody" almost seems too obvious. It's been to dozens of festivals since it debuted at Venice 2017, winning the Silver Lion. It's gotten excellent reviews from critics and audiences. It's very much a thriller disguised as a family drama. Most importantly, as we learned from Iran's "A Separation", it's a subject that American audiences can easily relate to. I actually was pretty sure that France would select one of two glossy period dramas set to debut in September, namely "Mademoiselle de Joncquières" (Toronto) and "One Nation, One King" (Venice). The trailer for the expensive, all-star drama of "One Nation, One King" looks beautiful, but I worry that the French history lesson will be perceived as being over the heads of American audiences. France wants to win. As for "Mlle. de Joncquières", the plotline sounds like a totally luscious, vengeful "Dangerous Liaisons", but the trailer looked a bit too light to compete for France. However, both of us will definitely have a chance if they win awards in Venice/Toronto. Obviously, France has a dozen films that could proudly fly the French colors. Three others to look out for: crime drama (1)- "See You Up There", set in the 1920s, won five Cesar Awards including Best Director, (2)- "C'est la vie" is a crowdpleasing comedy about a chaotic wedding from the team that brought you "Les intouchables". Critics haven't loved it but audiences have, and it managed a Best Pic nomination at the Cesars (People often forget that "Les intouchables" made the Final Nine) and (3)- "To the Ends of the World", about French soldiers fighting the unwinnable war in Indochina. Others titles mentioned as possibilities: "Climax", "La douleur", "Freres ennemis", "Promise at Dawn", "La villa" and "Sorry Angel", though I don't think they'll get very far.
POSSIBLE DEBUT:
1. AUSTRIA- “The Murer Case” With three nominations (two wins) in eleven years, Austria usually has quite a few options to choose from. This year, I see five major contenders: (1)-
“Angelo” (San Sebastian/Toronto), about an 18th century West
African slave brought to Europe and educated to be an elite servant,
(2)- "Joy" (Venice Days), about a West African woman brought to Austria and
forced into prostitution, (3)- “Mademoiselle Paradis”, an 18th century
period drama about a young blind, piano prodigy, and the
doctor trying to heal her sight, (4)- “The Magician” (Zauberer), a thriller
telling a number of interlocking stories, and (5)- “The Murer Case”, a
courtroom drama about an Austrian SS officer who killed thousands of Lithuanian Jews during WWII but did not go on trial until the 1960s. A sixth contender- “Styx”-
is a mostly wordless film, but the spoken dialogue is mostly in English so I
think it would be disqualified if selected. It’s a very even race; I give the
edge to “The Murer Case” due to AMPAS’ affection for Holocaust dramas, but
the sumptuous costumes and period pieces of “Mademoiselle Paradis” make that
film a very strong contender. “Joy” and “Angelo” don’t have domestic
release dates yet, so they may contend for next year.
2. BELGIUM- “Insyriated” Last
year, I was somewhat surprised that Belgium did not select acclaimed
Arabic-language drama “Insyriated” (Audience Award, Berlin Panorama 2017). This year, most Oscar watchers are
expecting that Belgium will send “Girl”, easily the most acclaimed local film
of 2018. However, if you pay attention to the release dates, “Insyriated”
debuted in Belgian cinemas on October 11, 2017 and “Girl” (Cannes) isn’t set to
premiere until October 17th, 2018. So, for now, “Insyriated” is
eligible and “Girl” isn’t, though Belgium could easily do an early qualifying release
if they wanted to (they did it last year for “Racer and the Jailbird”). I think “Insyriated”, the story of a Syrian family trapped in their home when their neighborhood comes under attack, will ultimately
represent Belgium and “Girl”, about a trans girl going through adolescence, will
contend for next year. As you may know, Belgium has two independent film
industries catering to its French-speaking (Walloon) and Dutch-speaking (Flemish) populations.
“Insyriated” dominated the 2018 Maigritte Awards in the French sector. The nominations for the Flemish
Ensor Awards were announced this week and the winners will be announced on
September 15th. Ironically, the frontrunner from the Flemish side is
another Middle Eastern drama- “Zagros”, the story of a Kurdish family that
emigrates to Belgium, where the wife adjusts easily to her newfound freedoms
while her husband fails to assimilate. Rounding out this year's Top Five are some more movies showcasing Belgian multiculturalism: “The Faithful Son” (La part
sauvage; in French), about a Belgian convert to Islam, "Bitter Flowers” (in Chinese),
about a Chinese woman who emigrates to Paris, and murder mystery-thriller “Control”
(in Dutch), directed by Jan Verheyen.
3. DENMARK- “The Guilty” Denmark typically announces a three-film
Oscar shortlist, which is likely to consist of Oscar winner Bille August’s upcoming
“A Fortunate Man”, critical darling thriller “The Guilty”, and family drama “Winter
Brothers” which won both Best Picture awards at Denmark’s two national film
awards this year. We could also see “The Charmer” (about an Iranian gigolo) or “While We
Live” (after the aftermath of a tragic accident) sneak into the final three, but the Danish nominee is almost certainly
going to be one of the above three films. I’m
going to predict “The Guilty” (the only film on this list of predictions that I’ve
actually seen) which has by far the strongest buzz. It’s the story of a police detective
on 911 call duty who gets a
phone call from a woman who says she has been kidnapped by her abusive husband. He has to figure out how to save the woman, and locate her children who
have been left at home. It’s a great mystery and an even better thriller, and it easily has
the credentials both to appeal to discerning film critics and to a mainstream American audience. Bille August won an Oscar for “Pelle the Conqueror” but nobody
has yet seen the nearly three-hour “A Fortunate Man”, about a successful man
trying to avoid making the same mistakes with his own family that his conservative, religious family made when raising him.
It’s likely to make the list, but August’s best days seem to be behind him. As
for Icelandic co-production “Winter Brothers”, despite great reviews it’s at a disadvantage
having been released so early. I think “The Guilty” will beat “A Fortunate Man”,
while “Winter Brothers” will be relegated to third.
4. FINLAND- “Laugh or
Die” Looking over my blog,
I’ve only predicted Finland correctly once in ten tries
(“Letters to Father Jacob”, way back in 2009). So statistically speaking, my prediction- “Laugh or Die”- is a long shot.
With shades of both “Life is Beautiful” and “Land of Mine”, “Laugh or Die” is a
jet-black comedy-drama about a troupe of Finnish actors condemned to death
during the Finnish Civil War. The men are given one last chance, and are promised that they will be allowed to live if they can make a visiting German commander laugh. Finland’s Oscar
committee does sometimes go “historical”, though they rarely select big war
movies. With no frontrunner, I think “Laugh or Die” will get this. If they want
to go for a more contemporary film, they could select Aleksi Salmenperä a third time for his
B&W dramedy “Void”, which will premiere at the end of September. It’s the
story of a writer married to an actress and their obsession with furthering
their own careers at the expense of their marriage. Finland has chosen B&W
movies two of the past four years. In third place: 3-hour war epic “The Unknown
Solider” by Aku Louhimies, who directed my favorite Finnish film (“Frozen
Land”) and who I’ve incorrectly predicted twice. In fourth place: documentary “Wheels
of Freedom”. In fifth: heavy metal comedy “Heavy Trip”.
6. GERMANY- "Never Look Away" Germany
announced this week that they would be considering eleven films. As with many
countries, this is primarily a race between an acclaimed film that has already
been released (“The Captain”) and a hotly anticipated film set to debut soon
(“Never Look Away”). It would be foolish to bet against “Never Look Away”, the
first German-language film from director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck since he won
an Oscar for “The Lives of Others”. It will debut in Venice and screen in
Toronto and will apparently arrange a qualifying release (as did “In the Fade” last year)
before it debuts in German cinemas on October 3. Focusing on an artist whose
work is influenced by the traumas of living under both the Nazi and East German
Communist regimes, it co-stars Sebastian Koch (“Lives of Others”, “Bridge of
Spies”) and checks a lot of boxes. The only negative? von Donnersmarck’s
last film (“The Tourist”, with Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie) was a big
critical flop and he still has to prove he’s not a one-hit wonder. “The Captain”
is the true story about a 19-year Nazi deserter who became involved in a series
of atrocities in the final days of WWII, after putting on an abandoned Nazi uniform to stay warm. It’s
cerebral, it’s gotten a small US release, and Germany may wish to
choose it symbolically to showcase their displeasure with far-right movements in both
the US and Europe. There are three other films on the list to keep your eye on:
(1)- “Ballon” (co-starring David Cross of “The Reader”) is an upcoming thriller
set in 1979 about an East German family trying to escape to West Berlin, (2)- “In
the Aisles” (Berlin 2018) is a quirky romantic drama set in a superstore and (3)-
“Transit” (Berlin 2018), directed by Christian Petzold, is about a man who
flees Nazi Germany to France, assuming a dead man’s identity. There seem to be lots of people fleeing
Nazis and Communists this year. As for the others, they’re either too unusual (Persian-language
animated film “Teheran Taboo” and docudrama “The Invisibles”), too German, i.e.
inaccessible to American audiences (Lola winner “3 Days in Quiberon” and “The Silent
Revolution”) or reviews haven’t been strong enough (“My Brother Simple” and “Mackie
Messer”). My Top Five: “Never Look Away”, “The Captain”, “Ballon”, “Transit”
and “In the Aisles”.
7. GREECE- “The Last Note” Traditionally, the Greeks select either
the winner of the Greek competition at
the Thessaloniki Film Festival (this year was B&W indie comedy “Too Much
Info Clouding Over My Head”) or the winner of the national film awards (this
year was “Son of Sofia”). However, I think these two abstract films will be
overshadowed by historical drama “The Last Note”, about the Nazi execution of
200 Greek resistance fighters, or “Pity”, a black comedy written by the man
who brought us “Dogtooth” and “Chevalier”. Factor in the two films that lost to
“Sofia” at the National Film Awards in the Picture, Director and Screenplay categories- inheritance drama
“Polyxeni” and geriatric comedy “Women Who Passed My Way”, and you have a
potential six-way race. Pantelis Voulgaris’ “The Last Note” is the most likely
to appeal to Oscar voters (he was rumored to have come close to a nomination with his previous film, “Little
England”) and it was the #2 Greek of 2017, so that's my final prediction. I think
“Pity” will come second, “Sofia” third, and “Women Who Passed My Way”, made by
an 82-year old director who last represented Greece nearly thirty years ago, in
fourth.
8. GREENLAND- “The Raven
and the Seagull” Massive Greenland has a
tiny population (56,000) so they rarely have an eligible film to send. This
year, they could return for the first time since 2012 with documentary “The
Raven and the Seagull” (Lykkelænder) about the ordinary lives of Greenlandic
Inuits living on the Danish territory’s remote West coast.
9. ICELAND- “Woman at War” Despite a population of just 350,000,
Iceland has about ten eligible releases. The odds-on favorite is Cannes comedy-drama
“Woman at War”, which Variety called
“near-perfect”. It’s an unusual film with elements of comedy, musical and drama
and it’s easily the best reviewed Icelandic film of the year. Director Benedikt
Erlingsson has been chosen once before for "Of Horses and Men". “Woman” faces competition from
refugee drama “And Breathe Normally” (Best Director, Sundance), about the
friendship between an Icelandic woman and an asylum seeker from Guinea-Bissau. Given the visibility of the global refugee crisis and last year's shock pick of the late release "Under the Tree" over favorite "Heartstone", it's definitely got a chance. In third: “Let Me Fall”, about two young women who re-connect 15
years after a drug-fueled adolescent friendship.
10. IRELAND- “Penance” English-speaking Ireland submits a film whenever they have
something eligible, and they’ve managed to send a film three of the past four
years. This year, there’s little doubt it will be Tom Collins’ “Penance”, a
historical thriller about a nationalist young priest who encourages his
parishioners to violently rise against the English in 1916, causing an
unforeseen tragedy. 50 years later, the priest is reunited with the boy at the center of the tragedy. Tom Collins has been selected twice before for Irish-language films and this
has a bigger budget and more important subject matter than “Kings” or “The
Gift”. A very safe bet.
11. ITALY- “Happy as Lazzaro” Italy has won more Foreign Film Oscars
than any other country so they always have a very competitive race. Most people
see this as a battle between two films that won awards at Cannes,
namely Mafia drama “Dogman” (Best Actor) and quirky “Forrest Gump”-esque “Happy as Lazzaro” (Best
Screenplay). Matteo Garrone has been selected before for “Gomorrah” (which I
hated) while Alice Rohrwacher has come close twice. “Dogman”, a gritty realist
drama about a mild-mannered man who becomes involved with the Italian
mafia, has been critically divisive. Nobody dislikes “Lazzaro”, but this drama
about a peasant and a nobleman is weird and a bit risky. Italy has made a fairly surprising choice three years in a row, and they usually announce a long “shortlist”,
so they’ll be looking beyond these two films. Other options include “The Armadillo Prophecy”, based on a graphic novel about two slacker guys which will debut in Venice and
premiere right before the deadline, “Daughter of Mine” (Berlin), about a
daughter torn between her adopted and biological mothers, Paolo Sorrentino’s “Loro”,
a biopic of Italy’s flamboyant politician Silvio Berlusconi that was released
in two installments, two weeks apart, “Love and Bullets”, an ultra-Neapolitan “Mafia
musical” that won Best Picture at the Donatello Awards, and “The Place”, a
multi-character drama and crowdpleaser that was one of the biggest local hits
of 2017. Crime drama “On My Skin” looks like total Oscar bait and landed a plum
slot in Venice but the film’s partnership with Netflix and its controversial online VOD release has upset a lot of people in the Italian film
industry, so I think that’s out. My Top Five: “Lazzaro”, “Dogman”, “Loro”, “The
Place” and “Daughter of Mine”. Next year, keep an eye out for “Capri-Revolution”
set to debut in Venice and premiere in Italy in December.
12. LUXEMBOURG- “Gutland” Luxembourg just announced the seven eligible
finalists for their Luxembourg Film Prize, which is given out every two years
and which will be awarded on September 22. Films must be majority Luxembourg
productions. Two were released too early, two are in English and two are
cartoons. That makes quirky “Gutland” (Toronto 2017) the obvious frontrunner. Starring Vicky Krieps (the breakout star of last year’s “The
Phantom Thread”), this is a “Twin Peaks”-esque drama about a German thief who
tries to hide out in a strange little Luxembourgian town. Luxembourg has chosen
documentaries and animated films to represent them before. So, you can’t
entirely count out the animated “White Fang” (based on the Jack London novel)
which was made in both French and English versions (the English version features the voices of Paul Giamatti, Rashida Jones and Nick Offerman) or “Sixty8”, by Andy Bausch
(possibly Luxembourg’s most popular local director), a documentary about the
Grand Duchy in the counterculture 1960s.
13. MALTA- “Fate” Tiny Malta has only submitted a film once but they have a number
of Maltese-language films in the can scheduled to premiere over the course of
the next year. I was hoping to predict quirky comedy “Limestone Cowboy”, about an eccentric old man obsessed
with America, who decides to run for town mayor. Unfortunately, it looks like
it never got a domestic release. So, I’m predicting “Fate” (Id-Destin), a new
crime drama.
14. THE NETHERLANDS- “Rafael” The Netherlands was the
first European country to announce a shortlist, naming nine potential
contenders. With the Dutch absent from nearly every major film festival this
year, it was a list of films and directors that were relatively unknown outside
of Holland. Three of these films can be eliminated right off the bat-
three-hour medieval action movie “Redbad” has gotten terrible reviews at home,
“Life is Wonderful” looks like an entertaining but silly rom-com and “Thirst”,
a comedy-drama about a girl and her terminally ill mother, has no buzz and is a clear non-starter. Two others- gritty adolescent drama “Cobain” (Berlinale 14+) and
Spanish-language road movie “Messi and Maud” (aka “La Holandesa”)- would also
make surprising choices. The two frontrunners on the list are box-office hit
historical drama “The Resistance Banker” and Ben Sombogaart’s upcoming
“Rafael”. The Netherlands has always done best in this category when they choose historical dramas but the Dutch Academy insists on sending in modernist films, often
showcasing social issues. That bodes well for “Rafael”, a drama by Ben Sombogaart
(who directed the last Dutch Oscar nominee- “Twin Sisters”- more than a decade
ago) about a Tunisian man imprisoned in a refugee camp while trying to
get home to his pregnant Dutch wife. It’s doing an early release to get
selected for the Oscars, which bodes well for its chances. “The Resistance
Banker”, a true story about how two brothers helped bankroll the Dutch
resistance during the Nazi occupation- might be a better choice, but it’s
probably going to come second. The other two Dutch films on the shortlist-
Middle Eastern drama “Brothers” and upcoming thriller “Catacombe”- are dark horses but they are unlikely to beat these Top Two.
15. NORWAY- “The 12th Man” Since 2011, the Kingdom of
Norway has announced a three-film shortlist. This year, Erik Poppe’s “U-July
22” and Iram Haq’s “What Will People Say” are almost guaranteed to take two of
those spots. Both directors have been selected before and they faced off at
last weekend’s Amanda Awards in the Best Picture, Director and Screenplay categories. “What Will People Say” won all three (it also beat the favorite- last year’s
Oscar submission “Thelma”). I think the final shortlist spot will go to “The 12th Man”,
creating an exciting three-way race. “What Will People Say” may have dominated
the Amanda Awards, but this small drama about a Norwegian teenager forced to
move to Pakistan by her immigrant parents is the least likely to appeal to
American audiences. They’ll clearly prefer big-budget WWII resistance drama
“The 12th Man”, about a Norwegian saboteur on the run from the Nazis. It co-stars Jonathan Rhys-Meyers but the trailer appears to be mostly in Norwegian and German. Erik Poppe’s “U-July 22” is a dramatization of Norway’s worst terrorist attack, by far-right terrorist Anders Breivik in 2011.
Told from the point of view of one student looking for her sister amidst the
carnage, this will resonate with American audiences horrified by the recent
spate of school shootings. It would be a divisive choice, and will likely place
third, but all three of these films are incredibly close. Disaster movie “The Quake”, family
drama “Blood Brothers” and eclectic music documentary “The Monkey and the
Mouth” could theoretically “upset” one of those three to get onto the shortlist, but they wouldn’t have any chance at being selected.
16. PORTUGAL- “Soldier Millions” Portugal holds the record for the most
Oscar submissions without a nomination (34) and is the only regularly
submitting Western European country never to have made the Oscar
shortlist. That looks unlikely to change this year. I originally thought
Portugal would select one of two big historical dramas. Alas, splashy royal
drama “Pedro & Ines” won’t premiere until October and the exotic 16th
century “Pilgrimage”, about a Portuguese explorer travelling in the Far East has gotten fairly negative reviews. So, I predict Portugal will send WWI drama “Soldado
Milhoes” (Soldier Millions), about a decorated war hero who fought
off German troops to protect a squadron of Portuguese and British soldiers. That seems somewhat more likely than “Al Berto”, an LGBT-themed
historical drama about a gay writer whose freedoms remain curtailed evenb after Portugal’s 1975 democratic revolution. It’s the only Best Picture nominee from Portugal’s
Sophia Awards that is eligible this year. Also possible: Teresa Villaverde’s Berlinale
drama “Colo”, about the country’s economic crisis, “Ruth”, a crowdpleasing
football drama, popular action comedy “Bad Investigate” and talky crime drama
“Leviano”, featuring a series of interviews shedding light on a complex
murder plot. They could also choose a documentary like “In the Interstices of
Reality” (Best Doc at the Sophia Awards) or “Saudade’s Labyrinth”, a
documentary about the Portuguese psyche by the director of “Jose and Pilar”. Oscar watchers will remember that "Jose" was selected over potential
nominee “Mysteries of Lisbon” a few years ago. My predictions for the Top Five: “Soldier
Millions”, “Colo”, “Al Berto”, “Pilgrimage” and “Ruth”.
17. SPAIN- “Todos lo saben” (Everybody Knows) Spain announced its three-film shortlist on August 14th,
making this much easier for me. Spain is going through its worst-ever Oscar
drought- 7 years without making the semifinals, and 14 years without getting an actual Oscar nomination. That means they are going to be less willing to take risks. This bodes well for two-time Oscar winner Asghar Farhadi, whose “Everybody Knows”
starring Penelope Cruz, Javier Bardem and Ricardo Darin, is the safest bet and
the acknowledged frontrunner. Though some are saying that this melodrama about
secrets being revealed at a family reunion isn’t Farhadi’s best, that didn’t
stop “The Salesman” from winning an Oscar two years ago. Will the Spanish
Academy choose a foreign director? That’s the only question mark, leaving the
door open a crack for Basque-language drama “The Giant” and heartwarming comedy “Champions”. “Champions”, about a coach sentenced to do community service with a group
of mentally challenged athletes, has arguably gotten better reviews than
“Everybody Knows”, but Oscar rarely picks comedies. And Spain knows that. “The Giant”
was the most awarded Spanish movie of 2017, but Western critics weren't as kind as Spanish ones. Many criticized the screenplay and said it’s very old-fashioned. Spain wants to win this,
so Farhadi is the one.
18. SWEDEN- “Becoming Astrid” Sweden
has made it to the shortlist five of the past ten years and has been nominated
two years in a row. They only have a few contenders this year, and the two most
likely options are weird Un Certain
Regard winner “Border” and a more traditional biopic, “Becoming Astrid”.
Lately, Sweden has tended to go more arthouse- in the past ten years, they’ve
picked two old-fashioned dramas, three films that are more or less mainstream,
and five somewhat pretentious arthouse flicks. I wouldn’t describe “Border” as
pretentious like Roy Andersson or Ruben Östlund, but it’s a weird supernatural
thriller about two Swedes with caveman-like features and an extraordinary sense
of smell. It’s certainly original and the Cannes win is a big
one. It's also the only Swedish-language film on the longlist for the European Film Awards. However, “Becoming Astrid” is less divisive, has overall stronger reviews and is definitely
more likely to appeal to
Hollywood voters. It’s a biopic of Pippi
Longstocking author Astrid Lindgren and Variety just called it a “gorgeous piece of heritage filmmaking”. Three other Swedish films
could be selected- “Amateurs”, a comedy about multiculturalism in Sweden
directed by a previously submitted director, “Jimmie”, a weird alternate reality drama that imagines Swedish refugees fleeing a domestic conflict, and “Ravens”, a family drama about a hardscrabble farmer family
in the 1970s. Of these, the comedic “Amateurs” is most likely to break through.
I predict “Astrid” reps Sweden with “Border” an incredibly close second.
19. SWITZERLAND- “Eldorado” Switzerland became the
first Western European nation to announce their Oscar pick on August 3rd.
Unlike Turkey (see below), there's no way I would have predicted Switzerland
correctly. The Swiss chose “Eldorado”, a documentary about the European migrant
crisis contrasting current batch of African and Middle Eastern asylum seekers with director Markus Imhoff’s own
memories of European refugees coming to neutral Switzerland during WWII. The
Swiss Academy seems unusually attached to documentaries, as they’ve now
selected four documentaries (plus one animated film) in
the past six years. I probably would
have predicted “With the Wind” (Le vent tourne) about a peasant couple living in an
isolated community whose relationship is disturbed by an unexpected visitor. I also might have considered “Blue My Mind”,
about a girl’s unusual journey through puberty, which won Best Picture at the
Swiss Film Awards, or maybe LGBT football love story “Mario” which lost Best Picture but got stronger overall reviews.
20. TURKEY- “The Wild Pear Tree” So,
Turkey jumped the gun and announced “The Wild Pear Tree” before I had a chance
to make my prediction, but this was an easy one to guess. This is Nuri Bilge
Ceylan’s fifth time representing Turkey (more than any other director) and he’s
the only Turkish director ever to get Turkey to the Final Nine. “Wild Pear
Tree” was nominated for the Palme d’Or at Cannes, and has gotten very good
reviews. Although I have no desire to see this three-hour film about a prodigal
son writer who returns to his home village, there was little doubt in my mind it
would be selected. That was bad news for likely runner-ups “Butterflies”
(Sundance), “Debt” (Winner of Best Turkish Film at the Golden Tulips) and “Yol
Ayrimi” (the latest from semi-retired director Yavuz Turgul). Some expected Semih Kaplanoğu's "Grain", but that film is in English.
21. UNITED KINGDOM- “I Am Not A Witch” After a six-year absence, the UK returned to the Oscar
competition in 2008 and has submitted films eight of the past ten years,
representing a panoply of cultures ranging from Africa (2008) to the Middle
East (2014 + 2016), from East Asia (2013) to the Subcontinent (2009, 2017)
and from Latin America (2011), back to Britain itself (2015, set in Wales).
This year, they are likely to send “I Am Not A Witch”, directed by Zambia-born,
Wales-raised Rungano Nyoni, which played at Cannes Director’s Fortnight last
year and shares the same innovative cinematographer with Oscar nominee “Embrace of the Serpent”.
Set in Zambia, and mostly in the Bemba and Nyanja languages, it’s the story of
a little girl accused of witchcraft in a traditional Zambian community. It has
a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and would represent Britain proudly. As for its
competition, I don’t know of any Welsh-language features this year, and its
main competitor on paper- Persian-language “Ghulam” starring Shahab Hosseini-
(star of “A Separation”, “The Salesman”)- hasn’t been so well-received.
22. CYPRUS- "Smuggling Hendrix" Cyprus is the only EU
Member State and the only filmmaking country in Europe that has never entered
the Oscar race. They produce about four films per year and this year, no less
than three have received critical acclaim. They include drama
“Pause” (Karlovy Vary) and two comedies about the absurdity of the island’s
40-plus year division into independent Greek and Turkish mini-states. Hopefully, this will be the year that Cyprus joins the competition with “Smuggling Hendrix” (Sarajevo) which won Best International Film at the
2018 Tribeca Film Festival. It’s about a man whose dog runs away from the Greek
side to the Turkish side a few meters away, forcing him to launch a Kafkaesque mission to smuggle him back. The third film- “Sunrise
in Kimmeria” probably has too much English, but I’m not certain.
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