Here are the 34 countries from Africa and the Middle East. Many of these countries have only sent films once or twice. Last year, 17 of these countries sent films.
ALGERIA- “Nos frangins” Algeria seems to have three options. The two true Algerian films are “La vie d’apres”, about a widow and her son who are driven from their village by a series of vicious rumors, and “Argu”, a film set in the ethnically unique Kabylia region, about a young man whose carefree, bohemian lifestyle leads the village elders to place him in a mental institution. I give “La vie d’apres” the edge. But watch out- three-time Oscar nominee Rachid Bouchareb had a new film at Cannes and- as far as I know- Algeria has never failed to send one of his eligible films. “Nos frangins” (Our Brothers) represented France at Cannes and is about the 1986 death of a French-Algerian student due to police violence.
BURKINA FASO- “The Crossing” Burkina Faso sent a film just once in 1989. They tried again in 2019 and were rejected for not having an approved committee. This year, they could return with “Massoud!”, about the radicalized son of a respected imam, although that faces some nationality issues (The director is Burkinabe but the film was made in Chad). More likely would be “The Crossing”, a drama about a man who returns home to Burkina Faso after ten hard years working in Italy, who agrees to help six young people migrate to Europe.
CAMEROON- “Kankan” Cameroon has sent films the past two years. The only film I’ve heard of this year is a biopic of one of their most acclaimed comedians called “Kankan”. The poster says it will premiere in Cameroon on October 21.
CHAD- “Massoud!” Director and former Minister of Culture Mahamat-Saleh Haroun has made five features in Chad since 2002 and Chad has sent three of them to the Oscars. My favorite was “Grigris”. Chad doesn’t have any other international directors so they’ll probably have to wait until he makes another film. Dark horse: “Massoud!”, about the radicalized son of a respected imam, was filmed in Chad by a Burkinabe director who has worked as crew on at least one of Haroun’s films.
CONGO-KINSHASA- “Alone in A Strange World” Congo-Kinshasa submitted a film just once in 1997, even though they’ve had some strong contenders (“Viva Riva”, “Benda Bilili”) since. In the unlikely event that they return this year, they could send “Alone in a Strange World”, about a Congolese family that sends their seven-year old son to Germany to escape the civil wars of the 1990s. It’s played at some African film festivals and has German production partners. Congo-born Rafiki Fariala had a documentary in Berlin (“We Students”), but that film was about his life in the neighboring Central African Republic.
COTE D’IVOIRE- “Ticket At Any Cost” Côte d’Ivoire (aka Ivory Coast) is another one of those African countries that enters only when their premiere international director makes a movie, in this case Philippe LaCote. LaCote has a new thriller in development (“7 Gold Thieves”) which is scheduled to start filming in Africa and the United States in 2024. This year, I doubt they will enter, although they do have comedy “Ticket At Any Cost”, a comedy about a young man in need of cash who wins the lottery…but I fear it may have been released too early.
EGYPT- “Kira & El Gin” Of course, everyone knows Egypt should send “Feathers”, possibly their best chance at getting their first Oscar nomination since they began submitting films in 1958. Of course they probably won’t. There has been a weird backlash against the film in Egypt (vague allegations that it "highlighted poverty" which is ridiculous if you've seen prior submissions like "Poisonous Roses" or "Lust") despite its excellent reviews. I believe the film is in fact eligible because of new COVID-19 rules saying a film can qualify with a 2022 cinematic run in another country. In the past, the Egyptian Academy has made bold, controversial choices so I hope I’m wrong. Egypt doesn't have many other options. “Kira & El-Gin” is a nationalist, three-hour box-office hit about Egyptian history, namely overthrowing the British in 1919. “The Crime” is about a cold case disappearance (murder?) from the 1970s. Both films are by previously selected directors (Marwan Hamed made “The Yacoubian Building”, which I loved) and geared more towards Egyptian audiences. “You Resemble Me” is a drama about Islamic radicalization directed by New York-based Egyptian Dina Amer, and executive produced by three Oscar winners- Spike Lee, Riz Ahmed and Spike Jonze. This would be a more international choice. But in a weak year, my money is on Hamed and “Kira & El Gin”.
ETHIOPIA- “Among Us Women” Ethiopia has only sent one film in the past six years and they don’t have any fiction features on the film festival circuit this year. If they do submit, I predict it will be documentary “Among Us Women”, following a pregnant farmer living in a rural village as she deals with medical bureaucracy at her local clinic and the trusted midwife in her local community. The film has German and Ethiopian co-directors, which means it would likely be eligible.
GHANA- “Public Toilet Africa” I hate predicting the same film two years in a row, but quirky road-movie-cum-revenge-tale “Public Toilet Africa” doesn’t seem to have premiered in Ghana since premiering at Locarno 2021, although it secured a berth at the 2022 SXSW in the United States. Ghana has only sent a film once (in 2019) and the oddly titled “Toilet” (in a mix of Twi, Polish and English) would be a great second one. Critics say it’s a bit of a mess, with a plot all over the place but it paints a fascinating picture of Ghana.
IRAN- “Leila’s Brothers” Iran has a wide-open race with seven contenders from the three big festivals (Cannes, Berlin and Venice) and four different films that dominated the Fajr Film Festival awards. With a recent crackdown on filmmakers at home, I think they’re going to want to pick someone with impeccable revolutionary credentials (Asghar Farhadi criticized the government last year during the Oscar campaign). I’m predicting they choose 3-hour drama “Leila’s Brothers”, starring Taraneh Alidoosti as a woman fed up with being taken advantage of by her dysfunctional family. It competed in Cannes and has gotten very strong reviews from critics. Young director Saeed Roustayi swept the Fajr Film Awards in 2016, meaning he probably follows the rules. Two films by previously selected directors- “Beyond the Wall” (Venice) by the director of “No Date No Signature” and “Night Guardian” (Fajr; Best Director) by the director of their 2005 and 2014 submissions- will be very strong competitors. Rounding out the Top Five choices for Iran: “Last Snow (Fajr; Jury Prize), a village drama about the mysterious disappearance of a young woman, and “Without Her” (Venice Horizons and Fajr; Best Actress), a mystery about a woman seeking to help an apparent amnesiac. Dark horse: I don’t think “World War III”, set to premiere in Venice, will be eligible until next year but this weighty drama could contend if it gets a late release. Family drama “Hit the Road”, probably the most acclaimed Iranian film of the year, won’t be considered since it was directed by the son of imprisoned, dissident director Jafar Panahi.
IRAQ- “Our River, Our Sky” One of last year’s great surprises was the return of Iraq, with the riveting thriller “Europa”…perhaps not in my Top 5 but one of the most original and interesting films in last year's competition. Iraq basically runs itself as two completely separate countries- the Arab south and the autonomous Kurdish north. Most (6 of 10) of their Oscar submissions have come from the Kurdish region. This year, the Kurds are probably out of luck. “Goodnight Soldier”, about two feuding families whose kids fall in love, has gotten good reviews in the West but has been reviled among many Kurds for sexually explicit scenes. “The Exam”, a moral dilemma drama about a woman who wants to help her sister cheat on a school exam to avoid an arranged marriage, was my pick last year…but I think it was released too early. From the Arab side, we have “Our River, Our Sky” (Sarajevo 2021) as well as “Tale of a Purple House” (Locarno 2022), a 3-hour intellectual documentary which I doubt will be released in cinemas. So, I think “Our River”, about the chaos of Iraq’s civil war circa 2006, will get this. That would make 74-year old London-based Maysoon Pachachi the first woman ever to represent Iraq. A fifth option- “The Hanging Gardens”- will premiere at Venice but probably won’t make it to cinemas by November 30.
ISRAEL- “Karaoke” Israel just announced the 27 films eligible for the Ophir Awards. As always, the winner of Best Picture will represent Israel at the Oscars (as long as it’s not in English). That means to predict the Ophir winner, you first need to predict what will be nominated. It’s a very strong list! I’m pretty sure that “35 Downhill” (Winner, Best Israeli film, Jerusalem 2022), “Karaoke” (Tribeca), “June Zero”, and the upcoming family drama “The Silence” will make the cut, and will be the four main contenders to win the Ophir. The final slot is likely to go to Bérénice Bejo’s “Shake Your Cares Away” (Winner, Best Israeli film, Jerusalem 2021) although it could just as easily go to animated film “Where is Anne Frank?” (by the director of “Waltz with Bashir”), “Concerned Citizen” (Berlin), urban drama “Children of Nobody”….or possibly even English-language comedy “My Neighbor Adolf” (which looks like a remake of “Mr. Kaplan” and wouldn’t be eligible to go to the Oscars). So which of those potential nominees will go to the Oscars? My money is on “Karaoke” which has the best reviews, a sizable star (Lior Ashkenazi) and a plot that will be relatable to the older Oscar voters that have historically dominated the voting (though far less than before). "Karaoke" is a comedy-drama about a dull 60-something couple who find a new spark in life when they meet a fascinating new neighbor (Ashkenazi). “June Zero” is also an extremely strong contender, but I wonder if having an American director will make less people vote for it. If it’s not “Karaoke”, I’m pretty sure it will be the as-yet unseen “The Silence” (Hashtika), whose director almost went to the Oscars in 2006 but lost in a tiebreaker vote.
JORDAN- “The Alleys” Last year, Jordan cowardly withdrew the provocative “Amina” in response to a social media campaign of people condemning the film, who clearly hadn’t seen it. This year, Jordan has a really difficult decision with four contenders, namely “The Alleys” (Locarno 2021), “Daughters of Abdul-Rahman” (Cairo), “Farha” (Toronto/Busan 2021) and “Salma’s Home” (Netflix). That’s a lot of movies for Jordan! Buzz for “Farha” has faded, but I think the other three stand a great chance of being selected. I am predicting urban thriller “The Alleys”, about the various denizens of a conservative Amman neighborhood, because reviews have been great and because it comes from the screenwriter of Jordanian Oscar nominee “Theeb”. “Daughters of Abdul-Rahman”, a lighter film about four estranged sisters looking for their missing father, is my second pick. As far as I know, only “Alleys” has been released in theatres, although the Netflix release of "Salma” may also count.
KENYA- “Gaza” Kenya doesn’t have much of anything this year and I’ve no idea what they’re going to send. Unconventional love story “Blind Love” was released too early, and “Kamtupe”, about a government official who is robbed of a laptop with government secrets, looks too commercial. “Zuena”, about a woman returning to her home village, is a spare 60 minutes, and “Ayaanle”, a thriller about the country’s Somali minority, is more likely to be selected by Somalia. “Gaza” makes more sense but according to IMDB, it’s opening one day after the deadline. This film about a woman who’s just been released from prison could be a good option with a qualifying release one day early.
KUWAIT- “Akh” Kuwait hasn’t sent a film since 1978, a longer gap than any of the 128 countries that have competed over the years. They obviously won’t send anything this year. According to IMDB, their only option is “Akh”, a horror film loosely based on Cain and Abel. It doesn’t seem to have screened anywhere yet.
LEBANON- “Memory Box” It’s a case of deja vu! Lebanon had a banner year at international film festivals last year, while this year they’ve mostly been absent. However, three of their films from last year- “Memory Box” (Berlin, Main Competition), “Death of a Virgin and the Sin of Not Living” (Berlin Panorama), and “The Sea Ahead” (Cannes, UCR)- all debuted in Lebanese cinemas in 2022. All three have gotten pretty great reviews, although it’s “Memory Box” that has seen the most festival play and attention. It’s about three women linked by a mysterious box of audiotapes and other memorabilia. I’d love to see comedy-drama “Death of a Virgin” make it- it's about four teenagers losing their virginity to a prostitute- but it’s probably out of luck this year. Lebanon does sometimes like to pick a brand-new film…”Beirut Hold ‘Em ” (starring Saleh Bakri) and “The Anger” could contend but probably not against these heavy hitter festival films. "Dirty Difficult Dangerous" will premiere in Venice but won't be eligible until next year.
LESOTHO- Nothing The tiny Kingdom of Lesotho sent “This Is Not a Burial, It's a Resurrection” in 2020 but I don’t think they have had anything eligible since. At their local film festival in December 2021, a film called “Quarantine” won Best Lesotho Film, but there’s no information about it online and I’d imagine it’s probably a short film.
MALAWI- “Sorry to My Mother” Malawi sent a surprise entry last year. The only film I know of this year is low-budget melodrama “Sorry to My Mother”, which premiered in April 2022. Production values don’t look up to Oscar standards, but this is all they’ve got.
MAURITANIA- “The Perfumed Hill” Abderrahmane Sissako got a well-deserved Oscar nomination for Mauritania’s only Oscar entry “Timbuktu” way back in 2014/2015. It’s long been assumed that Sissako’s next film would be Mauritania’s second Oscar entry, but he hasn’t made a feature since (he has been making short films, and recently directed a theatrical opera in Paris). As of April 2022, Sissako is in post-production on “The Perfumed Hill”, a drama set amidst the African community in Guangzhou, China. Completion of the film has been delayed due to COVID and I’m not sure if it will premiere in 2022 or 2023. Because Mauritania has been absent longer than five years, they’ll have to get AMPAS authorization for a new committee.
MOROCCO- “The Blue Caftan” Like Georgia and Pakistan, Morocco has to decide whether to send their best film of the year…despite its LGBT themes. “The Blue Caftan” is widely recognized as the best Moroccan film of the year. It won the FIPRESCI prize this year at Un Certain Regard at Cannes, it's produced by Morocco’s most well-known director (Nabil Ayouch, who has repped Morocco a record five times), it has a well-known cast (Lubna Azabal and Saleh Bakri) and director Maryam Touzani has represented Morocco once before. But I worry that the theme of a wife dealing with a closeted gay husband may be too much for Morocco, where homosexuality is illegal. However, the film is promoted on the Centre Cinematographique Marocain (CCM) website, and they don’t have any other really strong candidate….My Moroccan friend says it was widely publicized that the film "won an award at Cannes" without talking too much about the gay stuff. So I’m predicting they (quietly) send it. Perhaps they won’t make an announcement and it will just appear on the list? If they’re too shy, they’ll probably send “Life Suits Me Well” (Tallinn), about a man who returns to his hometown after being diagnosed with a fatal illness. Dark horses: “Collapsed Walls” premiered this summer, while feminist adventure “Queens” will close out Venice Critics Week (but Moroccan movies take forever to play in cinemas so it probably won’t premiere in time). Let’s be optimistic and predict “Caftan”.
MOZAMBIQUE- “Maputo Nakuzandza” In 2017, Mozambique became the first country in Portuguese-speaking Africa to send a film to the Oscars, with the surprisingly good “Train of Salt and Sugar”. I doubt they’ll send anything this year but if they do, it will be “Maputo Nakuzandza” (Maputo, I Love You), a 60-minute “film-poem” following a variety of characters in the Mozambican capital, directed by Brazilian Ariadine Zampaulo (“Train” was also directed by a Brazilian).
NIGER- Nothing Niger sent a film to the Oscars once in 2018. An acclaimed documentary by a female filmmaker, “Zinder”, appeared at several doc-centered festivals in 2021, and premiered at home in Summer 2021. However, I don’t think they have anything this year.
NIGERIA- “The King’s Horseman” Nigeria had an Oscar committee approved in 2014, but they’ve only sent one eligible film since then. Most years, including last year, they launch a call for submissions and then declare that none of their submissions were eligible. If they enter, I see three main possibilities. Horror anthology “Juju Stories” premiered in Locarno 2021 and debuted in Nigerian theatres in January 2022. This looks like a really fun movie, and the trailer appears to be slightly more than 50% in Pidgin English or another African language. Yoruba-language “King of Thieves”, reportedly the most watched African film since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, is a genre-defying period action movie set in a fictional African kingdom, complete with magic, warriors, folklore and melodrama. Culturally, very, very Nigerian. But thanks to the power of Netflix and the prestigious Toronto Film Festival, I think this will go to “The King’s Horseman”, based on a true story from the 1940s in which a respected King’s courtier is expected to commit ritual suicide after the death of the King….but unsurprisingly doesn’t wish to die just yet.
PALESTINE- “Mediterranean Fever” Cineuropa calls this “a delightful comedy about depression.” Premiering at Cannes Un Certain Regard, this comedy about the unlikely friendship between a depressed writer and a con artist is probably Palestine’s best (and only) option this year. I don’t think Hany Abu Assad’s “Huda’s Salon” ever premiered in Palestine and anyway, Palestinians protested that the film had too much nudity. Dark horse: Michael Winterbottom’s Gaza documentary “11 Days in May” has a Palestinian co-director…but with Kate Winslet narrating, it probably has too much English. "A Gaza Weekend" will premiere in Toronto and will likely be eligible next year.
SAUDI ARABIA- “Quareer” The Saudi Academy has shown itself to be partial to films about strong women (probably partially because of the propaganda value). So with “Quareer”, a provocative anthology of short films by young, female directors, winning Best Film at the Saudi Film Festival, I think this will be an easy win. If not, expect it to be “Route 10”, a rare Saudi thriller about a brother and sister running into all kinds of trouble when they drive cross-country across the Saudi desert after their flight is canceled.
SENEGAL- “Saloum” Ditto Ghana. I hate to predict the same film twice in a row, but midnight movie favorite “Saloum”, a unique African horror film set in a remote region of Guinea-Bissau, is finally premiering in Senegal in August 2022, after nearly a year on the film festival circuit after its Toronto premiere in 2021. It’s great to have genre films competing, so here’s hoping Senegal enters.
SOMALIA- “Ayaanle” A committee in exile formed last year to send the excellent “Gravedigger’s Wife” to the Oscars. Due to Somalia’s security situation, the film was actually made in Djibouti with a cast of Somali émigrés. This year, they could send “Ayaanle”, a Kenyan thriller made by Nairobi-based Somalian director Ahmed Farah and starring Barkhad Abdirahman, an ethnic Somali from Kenya who has appeared in small roles in films like “Captain Phillips”. It’s probably a majority Kenyan production (so Kenya could also send it) and it has quite a lot of English….So, not sure if it will be eligible.
SOUTH AFRICA- "Good Madam" I honestly have no idea what South Africa will send this year. The winner of Best South African Film at the Durban Film Festival- period drama “1960”- is in English. The trailers for contenders like “Two Thirds of a Man” (Durban), “You’re My Favorite Place” (also Durban; directed by Jahmil XT Qubeka, who repped South Africa in 2018 and 2019) and “Indemnity” are roughly half in English so I have no idea if they’re eligible. 2021 releases “Good Madam” (Toronto) and “Hotel on the Koppies” (Rotterdam) seem to meet the language requirement but I can’t find their release dates anywhere, so again I'm not sure if they're eligible. Lesbian drama “Valley of A Thousand Hills” (in Zulu) is an option that could potentially follow in the steps of the shortlisted “The Wound”. I have a feeling South Africa is going to pick something surprising that I’ve never heard of- perhaps a late 2022 release. But for now, I’m predicting horror-drama “Good Madam” (primarily in Xhosa), about a black woman working as a caretaker for an elderly white lady in what may or may not be a haunted house.
SUDAN- “The Dam” Sudan made an acclaimed debut in 2020 with “You Will Die at 20”…I’m still trying to figure out the ending. This year, they could potentially submit “The Dam”, which competed for the Camera d’Or at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. However, the film’s pro-revolution credentials (Sudan’s democratic revolution was overthrown in a counter-revolution in October 2021) and the fact that the director is Lebanese and the writers are French could pose insurmountable obstacles.
SYRIA- “Nezouh” Syria submitted a film just once in 2017, when they sent a documentary selected by an opposition-backed committee in exile. This is the last year they can submit without getting re-approved by AMPAS. They do have a really intriguing film premiering at Venice this year- “Nezouh”- about a family trying to make the heartbreaking decision whether to stay in Syria during the war, or flee as refugees. There’s also “Our Memory Belongs to Us”, a documentary about three activists in France who reunite ten years after fleeing Syria.
TANZANIA- “Tug of War” Tanzania submitted a film over twenty years ago in 2001 but never entered again. This year, they have their best opportunity in two decades to send a film. The Swahili-language “Tug of War”, about the forbidden romance between a revolutionary young man and a Tanzanian-Indian girl fleeing an unwanted marriage, played at Seattle (winning two awards), Palm Springs and Toronto, which is huge for a Tanzanian film. Most importantly, it won the two major Best Picture awards at the Zanzibar International Film Festival, the most important film festival in East Africa. Here’s hoping they return.
TUNISIA- “Harka” Tunisia had three films prominently featured at Cannes this year- crime thriller “Ashkal” and rural drama “Under the Fig Trees” were in Director’s Fortnight, while “Harka” won one of the two acting awards (alongside Vicky Krieps) in Un Certain Regard. They also have two carryovers from last year- “Streams” (Locarno) and “Insurrection” (Carthage, their national film festival). It’s tough to predict because the two 2021 films have both been released in Tunisian cinemas, while the three 2022 Cannes titles haven’t. According to this year’s rules, they could qualify with a release in France (or somewhere else) but they aren’t scheduled to do so until after this year’s November 30 deadline. I’m predicting “Harka”, about a young man disillusioned by the Arab Spring forced to take care of his sisters after his father’s death, but that depends whether it can get a qualifying release and w. If not, it will probably be “Insurrection”. Dark horse: Ridha Behi (“Satin Rouge”) has a new film with Claudia Cardinale- “Island of Forgiveness”, currently in post-production.
TURKEY- “Bandirma Missile Club” In the past twelve years, Turkey has picked three films by Semih Kaplanoğlu (I fell asleep during two and didn’t see the third) and three 3-hour ordeals by Nuri Bilge Ceylan. But both these directors have their next films coming out in 2023, so Turkey will be forced to pick something else. It’s a wide open race with the Turkish winners of the country’s three main festivals- “Anatolian Leopard” (Ankara), “Brother’s Keeper” (Antalya) and “The List of Those Who Love Me” (Istanbul) facing off against two new films by previously selected directors- “Godspeed” and “A“Dumlupinar”- a regional box-office smash (“Bergen”), a festival darling (“Burning Days”, Cannes Un Certain Regard), two buzzy upcoming releases (“Heartsong” on Netflix, and “Bandirma Missile Club”) and two films that just have good reviews (“Between Two Dawns” and “A Night in Four Parts”). That’s eleven potential candidates! The Turkish Academy tends to waver between grim, auteur arthouse (Ceylan and Kaplanoğlu, but also “Sivas”, “Cold of Kalandar” and “Where the Fire Burns”….so 9 of the past 12 years) and “pull at your heartstrings” sentimental box-office hits (“Ayla” and “Miracle in Cell #7”). Only once have they deviated from this formula when they picked a splashy, historical costume drama in 2013. Most people are predicting box-office smash biopic “Bergen”, about a famed Turkish singer, Cannes drama “Burning Days”, or “Anatolian Leopard” (Toronto 2021), about intrigue at a local zoo. And all of them are possible. But the popular “Bergen” is not at all what Turkey sends; reviews for “Leopard” aren’t completely positive, and “Burning Days”, which was nominated for the Queer Palm, may have uncomfortable political parallels with the Turkish dictatorship. If they want a nomination, they should send “Brother’s Keeper” (Berlin 2021), easily the most acclaimed Turkish film of the year, but I can’t see this Academy sending a film that’s half in Kurdish. I’m predicting they send the upcoming “Bandirma Missile Club”, a true story about a Turkish high-school club that produced rockets that competed with the latest U.S. and Soviet technology of the time. Not the smartest choice, but it’s my prediction. I have “Burning Days” (Cannes), about political corruption seeking to influence a murder investigation, in second place, “Between Two Dawns”, a moral dilemma drama, in third, submarine thriller “Dumlupinar” in fourth, “A Night in Four Parts” in fifth and critical favorite “Brother’s Keeper” in sixth. I’m really curious how this one will turn out!
YEMEN- “The Burdened” War-torn Yemen has sent movies to the Oscars twice, most recently with comedy-drama “10 Days Before the Wedding”, one of the most delightful submissions I’ve seen in recent memory. Director Amr Gamal is in post-production with his second film- abortion drama “The Burdened”- which won a special grant in Karlovy Vary last month. I don’t think it will be released in time (all Yemeni cinemas are closed and they had to screen his last film in makeshift wedding halls) but it will probably be Yemen’s next submission.
POSSIBLE DEBUTS:
ANGOLA is most likely to form a committee for the first time; they have not one but two films at Locarno (?!)- “Tommy Guns” and “Our Lady of the Chinese Shop”. “Tommy Guns”, which has an Angola-born Portuguese director, is appearing in the more prestigious International Competition section, so that could be Angola’s first-ever submission. ZAMBIA’s “Maria Kristu: The Buumba Story”, about how religion contributes to the marginalization of women and girls, has played at a lot of African film festivals…The trailer is about 60% in Bemba and 40% in English. I heard that the CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC unsuccessfully tried to submit “Oka!” in 2011, so maybe they’ll try again with Berlinale documentary “We Students!”. Less likely “Biye Retour” from tiny MAURITIUS.
2 comments:
Iran - I hope you're right about "Leila's Brothers", haven't seen it yet, but I'm so glad
Saeed Roustayi finally gets the recognition he deserves. His first two features were so great. I heard that he was backlashed for submitting his ""Leila's Brothers" to Cannes without official approval.
Israel - My country. It is indeed a strong year for Israeli cinema.
As you probably already know, the Israeli Academy has announced the nominees and the five contenders are Cinema Sabaya, Karaoke, 35 Downhill, Valeria Is Getting Married and Where Is Anne Frank. Right now it seems to be a four-headed race between the first four as they're nominated in all their eligible categories except "35 Downhill", which missed only Costume Design.
Personally, I would prefer "35 Downhill" as it has touched me the most, but on paper, it should go to "Karaoke" being the most internationally recognized film out of the four.
"Valeria Is Getting Married" is going to be screened in Venice and if they want to submit a film by a female director (there's a strong feminist lobby), this can be it. It would also be indeed a deserved winner as Michal Vinik makes the most out of the (almost) single location real-time situation making her 78 minutes drama tense.
The same goes (female and well-deserved) for "Cinema Sabaya" showing Jewish and Arab existence in positive and smart light. Its female characters are original and bright.
"Silence" is the worst Zarhin's film and I'm glad it managed to get only 3 nominations in the acting categories.
Lebanon - “Memory Box” is very confusing with too many plotlines going on. Hope they will come with something else.
Greetings from Bolivia!
Unfortunately, I've heard that you are correct. It appears that "Leila's Brothers" has been banned in Iran. Although the film can still qualify with a release somewhere else (due to COVID rules), it seems there's no way the Iranian Academy will send it. Very sad.
Thanks for your comments on the Israeli race. You know better since you've seen the films, although it looks like we both agree that Israel is probably (though not definitely) going to send "Karaoke".
The films I'm most looking forward to seeing from the region are "The Blue Caftan" (Morocco), "The Alleys" (Jordan), "Saloum" (Senegal) and "Quareer" (Saudi Arabia) so really hoping to see some of them on the list.
Post a Comment