It's that time of year! Here are my predictions for the Oscar submissions from the 24 countries of Eastern Europe.
The big question here is whether Russia will participate. There's been no word about them being disinvited from the Oscars the way they have for sporting events.....Georgia- where there have been reports of increasing artistic censorship, and Russia will have the most interesting races.
1. ALBANIA- “The Albanian Virgin” Bujar Alimani has represented Albania
3 out of 14 times, and is the only living Albanian director to have been
selected more than once. Considering that his Communist-era melodrama “The Albanian
Virgin” (Warsaw) is one of the best-reviewed Albanian films in years, it would
be foolish to bet against him. Set in the 1950s and 60s, "Virgin" is about a woman trying to live her
own life despite the extreme pressures of Communism and misogynistic Albanian traditions.
Upcoming drama “A Cup of Coffee and New Shoes On”, about two deaf-mute twins
who learn they are going blind, is a dark horse from the director they selected in
2017.
2. ARMENIA- “Aurora’s Sunrise” Armenia used to submit intermittently
but they have been a regular participant for the past six years. This year, they have
two good options- “Amerikatsi” (The American), a drama which opened the country’s Golden
Apricot Film Festival, and “Aurora’s Sunrise”, an animated documentary about a
woman who was the only person in her family to survive the Armenian genocide. These are two really strong contenders although I think the animated
documentary- which was recently featured in the prestigious Annecy festival of Animation- will beat the drama, also about an Armenian genocide survivor, this time a man who leaves his home in the United States to return to repressive Soviet
Armenia in 1947.
3. AZERBAIJAN- “Sughra & Her Sons” Azerbaijan
returned to the Oscar competition last year for the first time in four years with
quirky comedy “The Island Within”. Azerbaijani cinemas had been closed for most
of the pandemic but finally reopened in Fall 2021. I see three possible contenders,
including two by up-and-coming 35-year old director Hilal Baydarov. “Crane Lantern”
premiered at the 2021 Tokyo Film Festival, while “Sermon to the Fish” is
scheduled to premiere in the Main Competition at Locarno 2022 (quite an accomplishment
for the Azerbaijani film industry!). “Lantern” is co-produced by Danny Glover
and Mexican director Carlos Reygadas and is said to be a challenging, arthouse film
about a man accused of kidnapping four women, all of whom mysteriously decline to press
charges against him. “Sermon” is about a man who returns to his home village only to find
his dying sister is the sole survivor of a mysterious illness. There’s also “Sughra
& Her Sons”, about a band of Azeri women running a village while their menfolk are
away fighting during WWII. Director Ilgar Najaf directed two of Azerbaijani’s
eight Oscar submissions so far. It’s a tight race and may depend on what gets
released in Baku before the November 30th deadline. I predict the cliquey
Azeris go back to Najaf.
4. /
BELARUS- “Courage” I actually don’t expect Belarus to
enter the race this year and with international sanctions against the country,
I’m actually wondering whether they’ll even be invited. If the selection
committee is under the control of the government-in-exile, I predict they’ll send
one of the many documentaries on the protest movement that has sprung up in the
country since the rigged 2020 elections, including “Courage”, “Mara” and “When
Flowers are not Silent”. They could also opt for “Summer of ‘89”, a coming-of-age
drama about one of the last high-school classes in the former USSR. I’ll
predict “Courage” which has gotten the most play in Western Europe.
5. BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA “Not So Friendly Neighborhood Affair” Danis
Tanovic won Best Foreign Film for “No Man’s Land” and Bosnia has selected all
three of his locally-made films since. Black comedy “Not So Friendly Neighborhood
Affair”, a low-budget effort about two neighborhood restaurants feuding amidst
the COVID-19 outbreak, has gotten good reviews and is likely to continue his streak.
However, a few days ago, the Sarajevo Film Festival announced that Aida Begic (“Quo
Vadis, Aida”, which should have won the Oscar last year)
is premiering her latest, “A Ballad”, at Sarajevo in August. Bosnian films often take
a long time to hit theatres so “Neighborhood” is still my pick....But if “A
Ballad”, her first comedy, gets released, it could very well get the nod. Dark horses: “Die Before
Death”, about a successful young doctor who learns he is dying….and domestic
violence drama “So She Doesn’t Live”.
6. BULGARIA- “In the Heart of the Machine” Set during
Communist times, prison drama “In the Heart of the Machine” has dominated
Bulgarian critic’s prizes this year, winning Best Bulgarian Film at both
national film festivals. It’s also done well at the box office and has an all-star
cast of well-known actors. With Bulgaria mostly absent from festivals this
year, this should be enough to defeat its two main competitors, “Petya of My
Petya”, about a pair of similar suicides 30 years apart, and horror-drama “January”.
Very dark horses: comedy-drama “Humble” and big-budget (but not critically acclaimed)
biopic “Botev”.
7. CROATIA- “The Staffroom” Croatia has a history of making
strange decisions and although they haven’t been universally loved, I'm a big fan of their past two super-dark submissions. This year, I see this as a two-way
battle between “The Staffroom”, which won two awards at Karlovy Vary 2021, and “Sixth
Bus”, about the Vukovar tragedy during the 1991 Croatian War of independence. I
thought this would be a really tough battle but when “Sixth Bus” went home empty-handed
at the Pula Film Festival and “Staffroom” dominated the major awards, I think it’s a safe prediction. “The Staffroom”, which also
benefits from being a more universal story, is about an idealistic teacher struggling
to stay motivated within a corrupt school system. However, don’t count out “Bus”,
which is supposed to be one of the better war films and features an American protagonist.
Dark horse in 3rd place: Haneke-esque “The Uncle” (Karlovy Vary).
8. CZECH REPUBLIC- “The Last Race” The Czechs used to be a powerhouse in
this category but they haven’t been nominated since 2003. They almost
always choose a film from the Karlovy Vary Film Festival and this year they’d have eight choices.
The frontrunners are (1)- “The Word”, a family drama set against the backdrop of the
Prague Spring and one of only two Czech
features in the main competition of KVIFF (it won Director and Actor), and (2)- “The Last Race”,
a skiing drama set in 1913 (the Czechs have sent two sports dramas recently).
Jan Sverak, who won the Oscar for “Kolya”, has a new film called “Bethlehem
Light” about an author who talks to his fictional creations, although the Czech Academy hasn't sent a Sverak film in two decades. Other options: erotic comedy-drama “Borders
of Love”, which has done better with viewers than critics, murder-thriller “Shadowplay”
(whose Slovak director made the wonderful Holocaust drama “The Auschwitz Report”),
and “Somewhere Over the Chemtrails” (Berlin), a dramedy about racism. I’m
picking “Last Race” which has the best reviews.
9. ESTONIA- “The Sleeping Beast” Estonia, which in my opinion makes the best films in
the Baltic Republics, doesn’t have much to send this year. The two films
that I expected to be the frontrunners both have problems- “Deserted”, about a
Swedish journalist kidnapped by Palestinian terrorists, is directed by Kadri
Kõusaar, who made “Mother”, one of my favorite Estonian submissions. But it
appears to be almost completely in English. Elmo Nuganen is the Estonian
director with the biggest box-office draw, and his hotly anticipated medieval
mystery “Melchior the Apothecary” was my prediction last year…But reviews have
been mixed and there are three separate "Melchior" films being released in cinemas this year,
almost like a TV series. “The Sleeping
Beast”, a thriller about the misadventures of a group of neighborhood kids, could fill the gap, as could
romantic countryside drama “The Bog”. In the end, it’s probably between the high
production values of “Melchior” and the somewhat better reviews for “Sleeping Beast”, which is my prediction.
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12. KOSOVO- “Vera Dreams of the Sea” Last year,
tiny Kosovo had four films- all directed by women- at major film festivals. “Hive”
(Sundance) went to the Oscars and got Kosovo’s first-ever spot on the shortlist. Their
other three 2021 films- “The Hill Where Lionesses Roar” (Cannes), “Looking for
Venera” (Rotterdam) and “Vera Dreams of the Sea” (Venice/Tokyo)- don’t seem to
have premiered in Kosovo so they all could be eligible. I'm not sure. I
think “Vera”, which won the Grand Prize in Tokyo, is the frontrunner. Focusing
on a widow trying to overcome the patriarchy, it’s very similar to “Hive” and
Kosovo might hope that lightning will strike twice. When comparing the two films last year, Variety
opined that “Vera” was the more compelling of the two. But don’t count out “Venera”
(Jury Prize in Rotterdam) either, for its well-reviewed tale of female adolescent
angst.
13. LATVIA- “January” The favorite from Latvia is “January”,
a topical drama which won Best Feature at the Tribeca Film Festival in New
York City. Set in 1991 during the final years of the USSR, it’s about the life of a
jaded teenaged artist who joins the Latvian independence movement. Reviews have been good, although critics say the
political aspects work better than the personal ones. Perhaps most importantly,
director Viestur Kairish has been selected before (for “Chronicles of Melanie”)
and had a strong contender two years ago when “Blizzard
of Souls” defeated his buzzy “The Sign Painter”. However, there are a flurry of
releases coming up this year that could knock “January” off its pedestal, including
80s rock band biopic “Jumprava: The Big Happening”, adoption drama “Sisters”,
and Communist tragedy “Soviet Milk”. Of these, I’d say “Sisters” is in second place.
14. LITHUANIA- “Mariupolis 2” More than any other country in the world, the Lithuanian Academy is partial to documentaries. In the past four years, they’ve opted
for documentaries three times (although “The Jump” was disqualified and
replaced with a fiction feature). So, although I want to predict crime drama “Pilgrims”,
which just won Best Picture at the Silver Crane Awards, I think they’ll send “Mariupolis
2”. This documentary about the war in Ukraine was left unfinished when its Lithuanian
director, Mantas Kvedaravicius, was killed by Russian forces. Critics acknowledge
the power of the film, made in the virtually destroyed city of Mariupolis, while also noting that it’s basically a series of incomplete fragments- even though it was “finished” by the director’s fiancée and his
editor as a labor of love. But this would certainly be a symbolic and sentimental choice for the doc-loving
Lithuanians, who also have been the most vocal country in Europe condemning
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “Pilgrims” will likely come second. Other
options: political thriller “Generation of Evil”, Sergey Loznitsa’s 4-hour
documentary “Mr. Landsbergis”, and surreal comedy “Cinephilia”. Lithuania’s
biggest film of the year- sci-fi drama “Vesper”- is in English.
15. MACEDONIA- “Mimi” Macedonia has one of the more
confusing races in Europe this year and I’m not sure what they’ll send. Their
biggest film is “The Happiest Man in the World”, a Bosnian-language film about two people forced to confront the wars of the 1990s in the unlikely setting of a dating agency, which will
premiere later this summer in Venice Horizons. But although Teona Strugar Mitevska is one of Macedonia’s
most well-known international directors, they’ve snubbed her three times in a
row, including one year when they decided to send nothing
rather than the film she had submitted ("When The Day Had No Name" which had just screened in Berlin Panorama). Maybe they just don’t like her? In that case, I’m predicting “Mimi”, an
adolescent drama in the mold of what they sent last year, about two sisters
dealing with the death of their mother. All their other options seem even more unlikely, including
Tarantino-esque comedy “Snow White Dies at the End”, and Slovak-language co-production
“Piargy”, about the Antichrist….Or could they possibly send Macedonian-language horror
film “You Won’t Be Alone”, which isn’t really a Macedonian film? (I predict Australia will send it instead).
16. MOLDOVA- “Carbon” Moldova last sent a film in 2014, the second-longest absence in Europe (after
Greenland). This means they’d have to ask AMPAS to re-approve a selection
committee. Their only option is "Carbon", a black comedy about the discovery of a dead body in the chaotic 1990s, that is set to premiere in San Sebastian. However, I doubt it will get a cinematic release before November 30. It's likely to be Moldova's third submission, next year.
17. MONTENEGRO- “The Elegy of Laurel” I was confident
that Montenegro would send “The Face of Honour” but it looks like that is still
in post-production. That means
Montenegro will probably send weird fantasy-drama “The Elegy of Laurel”, which premiered at home in February. It's an tonally uneven film about an old man who gets lost in the woods with ghosts and spirits after his wife leaves him at a health spa. Also
possible: “The Stork”, a drama made by the country’s minority Albanian-language
community which is finished and scheduled to premiere in the autumn...but I'm skeptical they'd pick a film in a minority language.
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19. ROMANIA- “RMN” Romania typically goes with the obvious choice and rarely
surprises. They also tend to prefer films by well-known and established (male)
directors (they haven’t chosen a female-helmed film since 1973). All this
points to “RMN” by Cristian Mungiu (“4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days”, shortlisted
for “Beyond the Hills”) being selected after it was nominated for the Palme d’Or
this year. It’s topic- hostility against immigrants in a small Transylvania
town- is also a topical choice. Three other films- “Metronom” (Cannes Un
Certain Regard), about a young defector and his girlfriend in Communist-era
Romania, “Immaculate” (Venice), about a young woman in rehab, and “Miracle”
(Venice), a thriller about a nun who goes missing- wouldn’t entirely shock, but
I think “RMN” is safe.
20. RUSSIA- “Nuremberg” I’m
not sure if Russia will be competing this year. Since they began their brutal
invasion of their neighbors in Ukraine, they’ve been banned from a variety of cultural
and sporting competitions (though it appears they are still invited to the
Oscars). Russia and their Soviet predecessors have only missed one year since
1971 (1993, soon after the USSR fell apart) and they’ve been shortlisted five
of the past eight years. If Russia does send a film, I have a feeling they will
want to be strategic. They’re unlikely to pick a nationalist epic as they often
do, and are more likely to send something apolitical or something showing them
in a more positive light. If they go simply by critical acclaim, they’ll choose
“Captain Volkonogov Escaped” (Venice 2021) but this anti-Stalin thriller set in
1938 probably parallels too much to Putin (which is exactly what the directors
of the Karlovy Vary Film Festival said when they were criticized for screening
a Russian film). “Nuremberg” is a thriller scheduled for release in November,
set against the backdrop of the post-WWII Nuremberg trials when the U.S. and
USSR were still allies. If they want to show a U.S. connection, there’s also “First
Oscar”, the backstory of how a Russian documentary won the first-ever Best
Documentary Feature in 1943, during WWII, or Syria-set action movie “Infiltration”
which shows U.S. and Russian forces working together, and has already been bought
for a U.S. remake. U.S.-based Oscar nominee Sergei Bodrov (“Mongol” which he earned
for Kazakhstan) has a new (apolitical) drama “Breathe Easy”, about a man struggling
with stuttering, while “Nika”, about a Soviet-era poetess won Best Breakthrough
Performance at SXSW. If they want a costume drama, they have “Land of Legends”,
a big-budget action movie set in the 15th century, “Amanat”, set in
the exotic North Caucasus in the 19th century, or “December” about
defectors in the early 20th century. If they want something
completely apolitical, they have “Non-Orphanage” about the revolt of a group of
orphans, or “The One”, about the sole survivor of a plane crash. It’s a
confusing race…and they may not even enter. My predictions for Russia’s Top 5: “Nuremberg”,
“The One”, “Amanat”, “First Oscar” and “Captain Volkonogov”.
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24. UKRAINE- “Klondike” Some countries facing war and conflict
take a break from cultural competitions. Not Ukraine. They have sought to use
Ukrainian artists and athletes to highlight the plight of Ukrainians suffering
from the Russian invasion. Ukraine has a surprising number of films at
festivals this year (I wonder if that will continue next year?) and they’ll
definitely be competing. Last year, they
announced a shortlist of five films. This year, I think that list will include festival
favorites “Butterfly Vision” (Cannes), “How is Katia?” (Locarno), “Klondike” (Berlinale,
Sundance), and “Pamfir” (Cannes) plus maybe “The Narrow Bridge” or documentaries
“Boney Piles” or “A House Made of Splinters”. In the end, I think “Klondike”,
about a family living on the Russian-Ukrainian border during the 2014 invasion,
has the critical acclaim and subject matter to be the Ukrainian submission. Expect
“Pamfir” to come second.
2 comments:
Hi, first of all, it is always wonderful to check your reviews of the upcoming selections, I'm yet to watch most of them (hope to catch a few in the next month or so).
BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA - Jasmila Zbanic is the director behind "Quo vadis, Aida?" and not Aida Begic, who however was selected three times out of four possible.
I can't wait to see “Not So Friendly Neighborhood Affair”, I hope I would be able to (you never know with EX-Yu cinema, when and how it would be released). Both “Die Before Death” and So She Doesn’t Live” are both by previously submitted directors.
"So She Doesn’t Live” is "important", but terrible. The characters are badly developed and the actions are unreliable. The cinematography leaves a lot to be desired with static long-distance cinematography and VERY long shots including one with a woman crawling for 11 minutes.
Hungary - "The Exam" was fantastic so I would probably check "The Game" (though the director is different).
"Gentle" is a bit low-key being with its non-actors and weird sexual encounters (though nothing explicit).
Kosovo - For some reason, I thought that both "Venera" and "Lionesses" had already their premiers in 2021, but I don't see any information now on IMDB so I might be wrong.
2021 was indeed an outstanding year for Kosovarian cinema and I'm so glad about all of them being made by female directors featuring feminist themes.
Actually, out of the four "Looking for Venera" was my favorite (probably, "Hive" is a better cinema, but so generic), mainly due to its main actress - Kosovare Krasniqi. Also unlike the others, the film's main focus is its female character rather than men's evil deeds.
While "Vera" just didn't leave me with a strong impact.
"Lionesses" is too weird becoming a badass crime thriller out of the blue.
Latvia - "January" is a good film, but a bit forgettable. If the animated "My Love Affair with Marriage" by previously selected Signe Baumane would have a Latvian dubbed release, it can easily become a strong contender (though haven't watched it yet).
Poland - "Eo" is an over-artistic "parody" of Bresson's "Au Hasard Balthazar" with ridiculous characters. I've suffered throughout most of its short 86 minutes and most of the people I've spoken with told me that they had a hard time not falling asleep. Isabelle Huppert appears only for about five minutes and I would say that her character is a bit controversial.
I would not bet against "Sonata", I didn't particularly like it (or dislike it), but a real-based story about a man with hearing problems becoming a well-known pianist is Oscar-bait.
They can also easily submit "Silent Land", which is probably the most acclaimed Polish film of the year (besides "Eo", of course).
Serbia - A small remark on Serbian tendencies. Though "Father" was in my top 10 in 2020, I still find "Dara of Jasenovac" as a respectable submission being an extraordinary strong film about concentration camp experience and atrocities of WW2.
Slovenia - I've watched "Bitch, A Derogatory Term for a Woman” about 8 months ago and can hardly remember it. Though "Inventory" lost the Best Picture award, it has taken home Best Director and Best Debut so I think it can easily be submitted.
Thanks as always for your thorough comments. I look forward to them each year because you usually seem to know more about the films than I do!
Ah...Zbanic and Begic...What a stupid mistake.
For Kosovo, I simply have no idea what's eligible this year and what was eligible last year. It would be so sad if all four films were released last year because I'm not sure Kosovo has anything new.
Everyone is sure "EO" will represent Poland, but- like you say- reviews really haven't been that great so I'm starting to think they will choose one of the other films on their newly announced 7-film shortlist, e.g. "Silent Land" that you mentioned or the buzzy "Balcony Movie" documentary.
I'm now based in Bolivia and I think I will sadly be seeing far fewer of these films this year than usual!
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