I didn't have a chance to make my predictions this year and there are now exactly 50 submissions.....I decided to write up the countries that haven't made up their mind yet.
Afghanistan- “I Am You” "Drowning in Holy Water" Sonia Nassery Cole successfully overcame a
disqualification in 2010 for “Black Tulip”, the first film in a series of
strong feminist submissions from the world’s most famous conservative country.
Her new film- “I Am You”- is about Afghan refugees trying to make their way to
Europe. It should be the obvious candidate but it premiered in Kabul in
September 2019. I’m unsure if this was a special premiere, or whether it
actually spent a week in cinemas. If it’s the latter, then they could send
“Seven and a Half”, an Iranian co-production about girls and young women forced
into marriage. UPDATE: I'm switching my vote to "Drowning in Holy Water", a new drama from Navid Mahmoudi that premiered at Busan. It's about an Afghan couple trying to illegally emigrate to Europe via Iran and it will probably be able to qualify due to the looser screening requirements in place this year.
Albania- “Open
Door” I was going to
predict “My Lake”, but the Albanian Academy beat me to it.
Algeria-
“Heliopolis” I never would have gotten this….I had predicted
“South Terminal”
Argentina- “Crimes That
Bind” I really, really want
to predict acclaimed LGBT drama “End of the Century” but the fact is that
Argentina likes to nominate big names (like Cecilia Roth) and, although they use
to spread the wealth by nominating different films to the Goyas and Oscars, the
fact is that they have sent the same movie to both award ceremonies eight years
in a row. So, it seems very likely they will send “The Crimes That Bind”, a
psychological thriller already on Netflix about a mother whose son may or may
not be a violent rapist.
Armenia- “Should the
Wind Fall” Armenia sent only four films between 2001-2015 but since then they have
nominated films four years in a row. With Armenia in national mourning and
political disarray after suffering territorial losses in a month-long war, it’s
unclear whether they will be able to send a film or not. The front-runner looks
like “Should the Wind Fall” (aka “Should the Wind Drop”), a drama about a
French visitor to Nagorno-Karabakh (the subject of the recent war) which was an
official selection for the now-canceled Cannes 2020 as well as Toronto. That
seems like it would have the edge over “Songs of Solomon” a historical drama
culminating in the Armenian Genocide.
Australia- “A Lion
Returns”
Like with a lot of Australian films, they’ll have to get out the stopwatches
for “A Lion Returns” which (based on the trailer) seems to be about 50% in
English and 50% in Arabic. It’s about a Muslim-Australian who returns
from 18 months in Syria. “High Ground” (Berlinale), a period western about the
manhunt for an Aboriginal warrior in English and the Aboriginal YolNgu Matha
language, probably has too much English to qualify.
Austria- “What We Wanted” Austria selected
the Netflix infertility drama “What We Wanted” which wasn’t on my radar. I was expecting
refugee drama “Oskar & Lilli”.
Azerbaijan- “In Between
Dying” My new home country for
the next year! Azerbaijan only submits intermittently (they submitted most
years between 2007-2014 but just once since) but they had two major releases at
international festivals this year- “In Between Dying” (Venice) and “The Island
Within” (Best Director, Sarajevo). The international cache of “In Between Dying”
(which counts Mexican director Carlos Reygadas as a producer) gives this tale
of a day in the life of a young man haunted by death an edge over chess drama
“Island Within”. It’s unclear whether the euphoria of winning the war with
neighboring Armenia will make them more or less likely to submit this year.
Bangladesh- “The Salt in Our Waters” This
feature debut by Rezwan Shahriar Sumit, who won a Spike Lee writing fellowship
a few years back, is likely to rep Bangladesh this year. It’s a drama about an
artist who visits a remote, rural part of the country. However, Bangladesh’s
nominees almost always come from the Impress Telefilm studio rather than indies
like “Salt”, which means that “Beauty Circus” or “Holud Bani” might get
selected instead.
Belarus- “Exclusion Zone” Despite
political unrest and coronavirus, Belarus confirmed last week that it would be
sending a film for the third year in a row (after a 22-year absence).
Information about their film industry is pretty scarce but I predict they send “Exclusion
Zone”, a thriller about secrets that are slowly revealed when a group of hikers
accidentally enter the Chernobyl no-go zone. It was supposed to be the main
Belarusian feature at their national Listapad Film Festival (which was
canceled). Other options: comic documentary “Strip and War” (about the
generation gap between a Soviet army veteran and his stripper grandson) and
“1986” a drama made by a German director in Minsk.
Belgium- “Filles de joie” This wasn’t
on my radar at all….but I can confirm it's a great little movie.
Bhutan- “Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom” So
happy to see Bhutan back in the race 21 years after their wonderful 1999 debut
“The Cup”! Bhutan makes some great films (“Travellers & Magicians” is the
best) and this film looks delightful.
Bolivia- “Santa Clara” I’m a little confused about the eligibility of
a quartet of films. Drama “Karnawal” and feminist mountain climbing documentary
“Cholitas” would be among the frontrunners but they have foreign directors from
Argentina and Spain respectively. “Blood Red Ox” and “Pseudo” are by previously
submitted directors but it’s unclear if they are finished and ready to screen
(“Ox” is also largely in English). But Bolivia has four other options that are
definitely eligible, namely sci-fi drama “Anomalia” (a Bolivian “Upload”?), 19th century
war drama “Chaco”, football drama “Fuertes” and western “Santa Clara” (which
Bolivia elected to send to the Goyas). All four have middling ratings on IMDB.
This is a tough race to predict. I want to predict “Pseudo” but because I don’t
think it will be ready, I’m going for “Santa Clara”, with “Karnawal” the
runner-up.
Bosnia-Herzegovina- “Quo Vadis, Aida?” Said to be a front-runner
for a nomination, Bosnia was one of the first European countries to announce.
Brazil-
“Memory House” So Brazil announced that it would consider 19
films this year. Brazil has picked two Cannes premieres the past two years, and
two Berlinale premieres in 2014-2015 (two commercial features were picked in
between). Most people are predicting “Memory House” (Cannes), a quirky period drama
about a black Brazilian man living amidst racial tensions in a mostly Austrian
immigrant community. One reviewed called it “bizarre and ambitious”. I really
don’t think this will do well with AMPAS but it’s not a very strong list and
I’m not sure what else they would choose. Brazil was well-represented at pre-COVID
Berlinale (one film in competition, two in Panorama, one in 14+ and one in
Encounters) and three of them are on the list and somewhat competitive (“All
the Dead Ones”, “Alice Junior” and “Shine Your Eyes”). There’s also the
controversial biopic “Marighella”. Don’t let the 3.2 IMDB rating fool you. This
film has gotten fairly strong reviews, but it is reviled by supporters of
President Bolsonaro who accuse it of historical revisionism. If the committee
wants to send an anti-government message, this could an option. I thought Brazil
would select some new release that nobody had heard of yet but the list doesn’t
have any shocking new releases. My prediction for the Top Five: “Memory House”,
“Marighella”, transgender dramedy “Alice Junior”, “All the Dead Ones”, and
experimental western “Sertania”.
Bulgaria- “The
Father” A disappointing choice.
I absolutely loved Kristina Grozeva and Petar Valchanov’s last film- “Glory”-
which deserved a first-ever nomination for Bulgaria three years ago. But
although “The Father” has a great premise, it’s a far less accomplished and
surprisingly dull film. I was going to predict “Rounds”.
Burkina Faso- “Djandjou” Burkina Faso tried
to rejoin the Oscar race last year for the first time since 1989, with Apolline
Traore’s “Desrances”. However, they were told that they had applied too late to
get an Oscar committee approved and that they would be treated like a
first-time entrant because it had been so long since they participated. Instead
of wasting time defending the English-language “Lionheart”, Ava du Vernay would
have done better to help out Burkina Faso. Burkina Faso releases of its top
films in odd years (2019/2021/2023) because of the FESPACO Film Festival. They
don’t have anything Oscar worthy but could send “Djandjou”, about a poor young
man who falls in love with his boss.
Cambodia- “Fathers” I predict the Kingdom of Cambodia will send
“Fathers”, a drama about two fathers- one rich and the other living in dire
poverty- trying to give a good life to their children. The film was produced
specifically to raise money for a children’s hospital and so should garner some
sympathetic votes from the Cambodian Academy. Of course, there’s also Oscar
nominee Rithy Panh’s latest documentary- “Irradiated”- though that hasn’t been
as acclaimed as some of his other work.
Cameroon- “Innocent(e)” Cameroon hasn’t sent a film since 1980 but they
technically do have French-language courtroom drama “Innocent”.
Canada- “Funny Boy” I wouldn’t have thought that Deepa Mehta’s Sri
Lanka-set LGBT drama would be eligible because so much of it in English. But
Canada should know what it’s doing.
Chad- The African country only submits when Mahamat-Saleh Haroun has a
film….and not always even then. I really don’t think they have anything
eligible.
Chile- “The Mole Agent” Chile has an exceptionally competitive race this
year, with three films that I know of actively lobbying for the nomination-
prison escape thriller “Jailbreak Pact” (Pacto de Fuga), musical drama “Lina
from Lima” (Lina de Lima), and critical darling documentary “The Mole Agent”
(El agente topo). But they’ve also got a bunch of great new LGBT films of which
the strongest is “My Tender Matador” (Tengo miedo torero) by a previously
submitted director, and a Cannes doc by an 80-year old auteur director
(“Cordillera of Dreams”) who may be seen as overdue….And that’s only the top
five in a hyper-competitive year. “The Mole Agent” went to the Goyas and is
really gaining a lot of buzz. I think it’s peaking at the right time so that’s
my prediction, followed by “My Tender Matador”
China- "The 800" China used to have a history of sending beautiful arthouse films but now they prefer quantity over quality. For the past three years, they have sent big box-office hits.....including action sequel "Wolf Warrior 2" which cannot really be said to be a good movie in any way other than stuntwork. Anyway, that means that movies like crime drama "Wild Goose Lake" (Cannes 2019) likely won't be considered. This is probably a race between the technological achievement of anti-Japan WWII epic "The 800" and the big-name recognition of Zhang Yimou and his new crime drama "Under the Light". As "The 800" is much bigger (and also has better reviews than "Wolf Warrior 2" or "Hidden Man") and boasts revolutionary IMAX effects, this (unfortunately) will be China's submission. Colombia- “Forgotten We’ll Be” Colombia announced a 9-film shortlist in
October. Hmmm…..Let’s see…..The list includes four obscure documentaries (two
aren’t even on IMDB), a comedy, a weird Antichrist horror drama, a period soap
opera, and a low-budget experimental movie that looks like it was shot on home
video.…..The final film is a well-reviewed new film by the Oscar-winning
Spanish director of “Belle Epoque”, so it’s difficult to see Colombia choosing
any movie on the list that isn’t “Forgotten We’ll Be” (El olvido que seremos),
a drama set amidst three decades of Colombian conflict.
Congo DR- “Downstream to Kinshasa” Congo hasn’t sent a film since 1997 but if they
were to return, it would surely be with documentary “Downstream to Kinshasa”
(Toronto), about a theatrical troupe on a long journey to seek reparations for
a brutal attack on their village.
Costa Rica- "Land of Ashes" My least favorite submission so far, I saw this in September because I expected it to be selected.
Cote d’Ivoire- “Night of the Kings” They had an easy decision this year with
Philippe LaCote’s sophomore effort about the life of a young thief
Croatia- "Extracurricular" I'm very excited to see this comedy-thriller, although I wouldn't have gotten it right.
Cuba- “August” Cuba only submits about half the time but there’s
a good chance they’ll submit coming-of-age drama “August” (Toronto) about a teenager
growing up in the economically troubles 1990s when the Soviet Union collapsed
and Cuba lost most of its foreign assistance and subsidies. The boy witnesses
his neighbors trying to flee Cuba while trying to care for his irascible
grandmother….all while going through the typical traumas of adolescence. Cuba
sent “Buscanado a Casal”, a rather artsy “pretentious”costume drama about a
revered poet Julian del Casal, to the Spanish Goya Awards. They could send that
but it seems very unlikely to please American audience. Two other possible
options: freewheeling comedy “Habana Selfies” will show a more positive side of
Cuba (and Cuba got their only Oscar nom for a comedy-drama) and “Mambo Man” is
a story about a man from the proletariat.
Czech Republic- "Charlatan" They announced early with this Agnieszka Holland biopic of a traditional healer living during the Communist era.
Denmark- “Another Round” Denmark has made the semi-finals seven times in the past ten years (including
five nominations and one win), probably the best record of any country in the
world. They announced a three-film shortlist in October and are likely to
continue their streak with acclaimed comedy-drama “Another Round” directed by
Thomas Vintenberg starring Mads Mikkelsen (the same team behind the
Oscar-nominated “The Hunt”). It’s about four friends who try an experiment to
remain drunk at all times. The other two films- crime drama “Shorta” and
transgender drama “A Perfectly Normal Family”- haven’t won any major awards and
are way out of their league.
Dominican Republic- “A State of Madness” This is probably a two-way race between period
dramas “A State of Madness”, set during the Trujillo dictatorship and “Hotel
Coppelia” set during the 1965 U.S. invasion. Leticia Tonos, who has already
been selected twice, will probably get chosen because “A State of Madness” has
already premiered. The uber-prolific Jose Maria Cabral (age 32; has been
selected three times since 2012) has “Coppelia”, about friends working in a brothel,
which is completed but hasn’t premiered. It will probably be picked next year.
Ecuador- "Vacio" Ecuador was the first Latin American country to announce, with this Chinese-language human trafficking drama.
Egypt-
Estonia- "The Last Ones" I wouldn't have even considered this one, as it's all in Finnish.
Ethiopia- “Simet” Ethiopia doesn’t seem to have any international
releases in Amharic this year (“Sweetness in the Belly” is almost entirely in
English). I think they’ll skip this year, though they could decide to send
“Simet”, a period piece about a dying king who takes his two sons with a
mission that will decide which of them will ascend the throne.
Fiji- Nothing. Fiji submitted a film once in 2005 but they’re
not going to send anything this year.
Finland- “Dogs Don’t Wear Pants” Finland has a wide-open race with five equally
likely contenders. “Any Day Now” is a topical drama about Iranian immigrants
awaiting a decision on their asylum claim. “Dogs Don’t Wear Pants” is a quirky
S+M drama that is the most well-known and which represented Finland at this
year’s Nordic Film Prize. “Goodbye Soviet Union” is a fun comedy set in
neighboring Estonia during the final days of the USSR, and would make a fun
choice since Estonia selected a film in Finnish. “Life and Death” is a
father-son drama by Klaus Haro, who has been selected to represent Finland four
times, including Finland’s most recent shortlist spot in 2013. Last is
frontrunner “Tove”, a biopic about the author of Finland’s acclaimed Moomins
children’s books (which are not as well known in the USA as they are in
Europe). All five stand a good chance but the Finnish Academy has shown a
naughty indie streak the last few years so I think that “Dogs Don’t Wear Pants”
will be the eventual nominee. With the Moomins a bit obscure for Americans, I
rank “Any Day Now” in second place.
France- "Gagarine" France narrowed things down last week to five films....Maiwenn's identity drama "DNA", lesbian romance "The Two of Us" and Ozon's gay 80s drama "Summer of 85" were widely expected to make the list. "Cuties", the Netflix drama that has caused controversy in the US for sexualizing minors, was not. But it's the surprise entry on the list- urban coming-of-age drama "Gagarine"- which seems most likely to represent France this year. Unfortunately, that's mostly because the others have problems....."Cuties" is extremely divisive and powerhouse France wants a nomination. "Summer of '85" is not universally loved. "The Two of Us" is too small. Maiwenn's "DNA" was long the official frontrunner but it has lost steam and Maiwenn has made some controversial remarks about sexual harassment. "Gagarine" has solid reviews, no controversy and topical subject matter. It's the new frontrunner, with "DNA" in second.
Georgia- "Beginning" This was always the clear frontrunner on their three-film shortlist.
Germany- "And Tomorrow the Entire World" This was quite a surprise. I expected they'd probably send Caroline Link's new film.
Ghana- "Gold Coast Lounge" Though Ghana and Nigeria are multi-lingual, most of their big national releases are in English to ensure that they can be viewed throughout the country. Last year, we saw that Ghana understood the Oscar rules while Nigeria did not. This year, Ghana is likely to send "Gold Coast Lounge" a stylish B+W film noir about a family running an illegal club in the capital. Greece- "Apples" Yet another quirky comedy from Greece, this time about a bizarre global pandemic (made before COVID!)
Greenland- “The Fight for Greenland” Greenland no longer has an active selection
committee (the territory of 60,000 people sent films in 2010 and 2012) but if
they decided to form another, they could send “The Fight for Greenland” a
documentary about Greenlandic youth and their views for the future of their
country.
Guatemala- "La Llorona" This was the obvious frontrunner on their three-film shortlist though it's great that they had three qualified, well-reviewed films to send! It's a great film.
Haiti- “Overtures” They’ve only submitted once (in 2017) and I doubt they’ll enter this yer. If they do, it could be “Ouvertures”, a Berlinale documentary about a Haitian artists collective translating a French play about Haiti’s founding father Toussaint L’Ouverture into Creole.
Honduras- “90 Minutes” The front-runner from Honduras is clearly “90
Minutes”, an entertaining film with four separate stories of men dealing with
modern (and violent) Honduran society, all tied together with the Honduran
obsession for futbol.
Hong Kong- "Better Days"
Hungary- “Final Report” While I’d love to predict Hungary will go with a
wild and crazy choice like gonzo vampire comedy “Comrade Drakulich” (which won
four awards at Hungarian Film Week), they’re almost certainly going to honor
82-year old Istvan Szabo who netted Communist Hungary four Oscar nominations
(and one win) between 1980 and 1988. “Final Report”, an old-fashioned drama
about a village doctor and very possibly Szabo’s final film. If the
unenthusiastic reviews for that film make them want to choose something else,
it will probably be Communist-era drama “The Inventor” (by a previously
submitted director) or Transylvanian murder mystery “Valan: Valley of Angels”,
a co-production with neighboring Romania.
Iceland- “Echo” This seems to be a two-way rematch between the
two main contenders for the 2020 Edda Awards- Runa Runarsson’s “Echo” and Silja
Hauksdottir’s “Agnes Joy”. “Agnes Joy”, about the relationship between a
harried mother and her adopted daughter, won the Edda Award but “Echo”, an
artsy series of vignettes about Iceland at Christmastime, has better reviews
internationally. Runarsson has an Oscar nod for Best Short Film under his belt,
but progressive Iceland hasn’t chosen a woman director since 1999 (surely the
longest of any Western European country???). So it’s going to be close. I’m a
big fan of Iceland’s quirky comedies and I’d love if they surprised everyone
with a film about gay vampires (“Thirst”), welfare fraudsters (“The Garden”),
elderly bank robbers (“Amma Hofi”) or the Hangover-esque antics of drunken
friends (“The Last Fishing Trip”)…..but it’s pretty certain to be one of those
two dramas.
India-
Indonesia- "Impetigore"
Iran- "Children of the Sun"
Iraq- “Haifa Street” Iraq submitted films every year from 2014-2018
but took last year off even though they did have at least one eligible film. Most
of their submissions are Kurdish films and their annual Duhok Film Festival for
Kurdish cinema was cancelled this year due to COVID. I know of two films they
could send- drama “Haifa Street” and documentary “The Fifth Story”, both of
with focus on the wars of the 2000s. I think “Haifa Street” (Cairo, Busan), about
a man on his way to propose to his fiancƩe and the sniper who shoots him in
central Baghdad, has the edge.
Ireland- “Monster” (Arracht) Few countries have an easier decision than
Ireland, which is sure to send Irish Potato Famine drama “Monster”, one of a
very small number of Irish-language feature films made in the country (though
they produce plenty of Irish-language television programs). This year it was
the Irish-language film to be nominated for Best Picture at the Irish Film
Awards in years.
Israel- "Asia" The winner of this year's Ophir Award for Best Picture.
Italy- “The Life Ahead” Italy announced that 25 films had registered to
be represent Italy at the Oscars but really only a few have any chance of being
selected. I’m pretty sure that Italy will go with starpower and choose Sophia
Loren’s “The Life Ahead” which has the backing of Netflix and which has been
touted as a frontrunner for Best Actress. Reviews have been okay….but with
plenty of room for improvement. This
film, about a Holocaust survivor who befriends a child thief/refugee, is a
remake of “Madame Rosa” which won this award for France decades ago. For
starpower, they also have Dustin Hoffman who co-stars in “Into the Labyrinth”….but
that film hasn’t been so well-received. Three previous Oscar-nominated
directors are also in the mix- Gianfranco Rosi (Doc nominee “Fire At Sea”) has refugee
documentary “Notturno”, Cristina Comencini (who somehow was nominated for Best
Foreign Film for the forgettable “Don’t Tell”) has “Tornare”, about a woman trying
to remember a tragedy that occurred years before, and Gabriele Salvatores
(Oscar winner for “Mediterraneo”) has “All My Crazy Love” about a boy trying to
reconnect with the father he never knew. All of these seem unlikely this year
(their IMDB ratings are in the high ‘5’s). A lot of other people are talking
about Matteo Garrone’s retelling of “Pinocchio”. Roberto Benigni (and Italy)
were lambasted 18 years ago when the middle-aged actor played Pinocchio and
submitted the film to the Oscars (the English dub was terrible but the Italian
version really wasn’t bad at all) and Benigni now plays Gepetto in the new
version. I don’t think Italy wants to go there again but Garrone has been
picked twice before and many people are predicting this. I love black comedy and
I’m a big fan of the prolific Ferzan Ozpetek (who enters the race for Italy
nearly every year but has never been picked), so I’d love to see “Bad Tales”, “The
Predators” or “The Goddess of Fortune” considered. But I think this is “The
Life Ahead”’s to lose. I predict “Bad Tales” in second place, Salvatores’ “Crazy
Love” in third and upcoming Netflix comedy “Rose Island”, about an Italian man
who declares an independent nation, in fourth.
Japan- "True Mothers" They went with Kawase's new film even though her movies are always better received internationally than at home.
Jordan- "200 Meters" They picked "200 Meters" which I had assumed would be in the running for Palestine, not Jordan.
Kazakhstan- “The Crying Steppe” Last year, Kazakhstan had a competitive race but
ended up selecting an obscure costume drama that appears to have been re-edited
into a TV series instead of released in cinemas. The Kazakhs are at their best
when they send more intimate stories, and that’s what has gotten them shortlisted
twice in the past ten years. In the past ten years, they’ve sent three films by
Akan Satayev and three by Ermek Tursunov so they definitely play favorites.
Satyev has the biggest film of the year so far- “The Legend of Tomiris”, another
big splashy costume drama, this time about a warrior queen, which already has a
US release on Amazon. That makes it the obvious front-runner. Most people are
predicting arthouse darling Adilkhan Yerzhanov for “Yellow Cat” (Venice) which
would probably be a great choice….but he has been a favorite before, and Kazakhstan
has never picked him. Ultimately, I think Kazakhstan will choose upcoming
historical drama “The Crying Steppe”, about one family trying to survive a little-known
Soviet-engineered famine that killed half the country. It’s timed to be released at the end of the
year and submitting it to the Oscars would boost the film. Marina Kunarova is
likely to be the first Central Asian woman ever to be selected for the
International Oscar competition. Expect Queen “Tomiris” to finish second.
Kenya- "The Letter" They selected a documentary for the first time.
Korea- "The Man Standing Next" After winning the Oscar last year, Korea had a pretty quiet year. They announced a 13-film shortlist over the summer which included a K-pop musical, an alien horror-comedy, a legal drama about a sexual assault on an elderly woman, and a thriller starring Kim Yun-jin ("Lost"). But they decided to select one of the least interesting options- the political intrigue of "The Man Standing Next".
Kosovo- "Exile"- They picked this before I made my predictions. I'll see it in December.
Kyrgyzstan- “Shambala” Year after year, Kyrgyzstan produces some of the
loveliest Oscar submissions but they never ever get nominated. This year, they
have three new dramas they could contend to represent the country, namely “The
Road to Eden” (Tallinn Black Nights), about a dying writer seeking to protect
his legacy, and rural dramas “Running to the Sky” (Busan 2019) and “Shambala”
(Shanghai). The Abdykalykov family has
made 5 of Kyrgyzstan’s 12 submissions which bodes well for coming-of-age drama
“Running to the Sky”, though I think they may have to sit this year out. I predict
“Shambala”, mostly because it’s based on a beloved national work by the
country’s most famous author, who discussed plans for the film with the
director before his death in 2008. “Road to Eden” is a very, very close second.
Kuwait- “In Paradox” Kuwait submitted two films in the 1970s but has
been absent ever since….longer than any other country. If they chose to return
this year, they could send “In Paradox”, a surreal dreamy thriller about a man
plagued by mysterious visions and unknown memories….but that seems highly
unlikely.
Laos- “The Long Walk” Lao-American director Mattie Do helped coax Laos
to the Oscars with the delightfully creepy horror flick “Dearest Sister”, one
of the most entertaining of the Oscar submissions in 2017. She’s back this year
with “The Long Walk”, an odd time travel fantasy that played at Venice Days in
2019. I think Laos is likely to enter.
Latvia- “The Sign Painter” Latvia has its most competitive race in years,
with three films that ordinarily would be a default nominee. “Blizzard of
Souls” is a big-budget nationalist World War I epic that broke box office
records. “Oleg” is a critical darling with a topical subject (immigration) that
has played at numerous festivals over the past year, including Best Picture at
the 2019 Latvian Film Awards and the Brussels Film Festival. But I think this
is going to “The Sign Painter”, a tragicomedy about the events of the mid-20th
century (WWII and the Soviet occupation of independent Latvia) seen through the
eyes of a young artist. The director was selected once before and its main
rival “Blizzard” has gotten far weaker reviews internationally than among
patriots at home. Last night’s Latvian Film Awards had “Blizzard” defeating “Sign
Painter” and underdog comedy “What Silence Gerda Knows” for the top award.
Lebanon- "All This Victory" Fresh off its Audience Award in Venice, Lebanon
seems likely to send “All This Victory”, about the 2006 war with Israel (last
year they sent a film about their 1982 war with Israel). This seems like a lock to me.
Lithuania- “Isaac” Lithuania has three period dramas contending to
represent the country, all with their pluses and minuses. Sharunas Bartas’ “In
the Dusk” (set in 1949) has the festival pedigree- it was selected for Cannes
(which was canceled) and San Sebastian. But nobody likes Bartas’ heavy-handed
films. The quirky B&W “Nova Lituania” (set in 1939) is an alternative
history in which a geographer plans to move the people of Lithuania to a new
colony to avoid German/Soviet occupation. But the film requires some general
knowledge about Lithuania that Americans are unlikely to have. Last is the
much-delayed “Isaac” (I predicted it two years ago) set in 1941 and also in
B+W, about a Lithuanian man’s guilt over the murder of a Jewish Lithuanian
named Isaac. It has the best reviews and is the most accessible, but may not
please Lithuanians who see themselves as a WWII victim. I’m predicting the
reviews catapult “Isaac” to the top of the heap. “Isaac” and “Nova Lituania”
are competing against each other (and three other films at the Lithuanian Silver
Crane Awards, due to be held sometime before the end of the year.
Luxembourg- "River Tales"
Macedonia- “Willow” Director Milcho Manchevski got Macedonia their first Oscar nod for
“Before the Rain” and the small Balkan republic has selected all his subsequent
Macedonian-language films to go to the Oscars. Therefore, it’s difficult to see
Macedonia choosing anything other than his new film “Willow” about the lives of
three Macedonian women at different points in history seeking to become
mothers. Variety called it “powerful,
evocative and beautifully played” and it’s certain to be the national
submission, despite other well-reviewed films like “Grandfather and Grandson”
Malawi- “Fatsani: Tale of Survival” Malawi was an unexpected debutante two years
ago. The only film I know of this year is “Fatsani”, about the life of a young
girl from an impoverished family. It’s a mixture of English and Chichewa but,
based on the trailer, probably has too much English to qualify.
Malaysia- "Roh" There are signs that they are going to submit more regularly from now on.
Malta- Nothing. Tiny Malta submitted a film once in 2014 but haven’t
entered since despite a number of Maltese-language features in the late 2010s.
I don’t think they have anything eligible this year. The Valletta Film Festival
was canceled, the erotic drama “Merjen” on IMDB is actually a TV mini-series
and noir thriller “Vanishing Wake” is finished but hasn’t been released yet.
Mauritania- Nothing. Though they got an Oscar nomination for the wonderful
“Timbuktu” in 2015, they haven’t had another international release since.
Mexico- "Ya no estoy qui"
Moldova- “Baptism” Last year was Moldova’s fifth year absent from
the Oscars and I believe that means they have to apply again to form a
committee. That’s a shame because they actually have a strong contender this
year, namely “Baptism” about a long-suffering wife who returns from working abroad
to find that her abusive husband has started a new family with a new wife with
her remittances.
Mongolia- “Veins of the World” It would be silly to bet against Byambasuren
Davaa’s new film (her first in eleven years), the director of “Story of the Weeping
Camel”, and Mongolia’s only Oscar nominee. Like her other films, “Veins” is
about a family living in the remote steppe and their culture clash between
traditional life and modernity. In this film, a YouTube and TV-obsessed 11-year
old from a nomadic family is forced to grow up quickly when his father dies in
an accident. Davaa is based in Germany and they didn’t send her last film. So
it’s possible they may send one of their four premieres from the Ulaanbaatar
Film Festival (“Khokho”, “Black Milk”, “The Woman” and “Gergiy”) or large-scale
historical drama “Marked Man”, about a WWII battle against Japan. I think
“Veins” should get this easily, but “Khokho” is the one to beat if they want
something more local.
Montenegro- “Reach the Sky” As I see it, tiny Montenegro has two eligible
films about illness- “Breasts” (Grudi) about a group of four friends who come
together when one of them is diagnosed with cancer, and “Reach the Sky”
(Dohvati Nebo), about a man whose wife is paralyzed in an accident. I think
“Sky” has the edge.
Morocco- “The Unknown Saint” Morocco seems to have a wide-open race this year.
In the running are “The Unknown Saint”, the only Moroccan feature in
competition at Marrakech, “Autumn of the Apple Trees”, which won the Tangier
Film Festival (beating “Unknown Saint” and last year’s nominee “Adam”), “Zanka
Contact”, which won Best Actress at Venice Horizons, and “Sand and Fire” which
has not made a blip at any festivals but which is directed by Soheil Ben Barka,
who came out of retirement to make it and who directed Morocco’s first-ever
submission in the 1970s. I think this will go to “Saint” simply because it has
the best overall reviews. It’s an absurdist comedy about a thief who returns to
claim his long-buried treasure only to find that the place where he buried it
is now the site of a holy shrine. If not “Saint”, count on “Autumn”, about a young
village boy whose mother has disappeared and whose father disowned him. Mozambique- Nothing. Mozambique sent a film once in 2017. They had a very good
option last year (“Redemption” which just became the first-ever Mozambican film
on Netflix) but didn’t send it, so I really don’t see them having any contenders
in 2020.