by Nathaniel R
We can no longer wait around twiddling our thumbs for the Academy's official press releases. AMPAS used to be so prompt with the Best International Feature Film category. In the past few years they've dropped the ball. The deadline for submission was six weeks ago and though Academy members have already been screening the films for a month there's still no press release from AMPAS about the "official list". If they continue this unfortunate new habit that means that nearly a hundred films each year will fail to get two months of media attention that they fully deserve before most of them are eliminated. The Academy will narrow down this year's 92 accepted submissions to just 15 on December 21st (barely a month away). And from those 15 they'll announce the 5 nominees on January 24th. You can see the current predictions here and the full charts detailing all 92 contenders. We assume that Malta's entry, Carmen, was not accepted due to too much English language since it's the only submission from our research that's not on their screening list.
Anyway, if you smoosh all 92 films together into one imaginary film you'd get something like the following:
A family drama, with a political angle (and probably involving immigration of some kind), which comes from a early to mid-career director who is still rising. The film will be trilingual with dialogue in Arabic, French, and Spanish. It will be 107 minutes long.
We'll adjust the following stats and trivia IF Oscar's official press release begs to differ by a film or two (which sometimes happens) whenever it arrives. Or maybe they just won't release it this year? So Let's talk stats, trivia, genres, and themes...
CONTENDERS YOU CAN WATCH RIGHT NOW
12 of the 92 films are currently available to US audiences. Here's where you can see them...
At this writing only Corsage (Austria) will join these titles in availability before year's end -- just 14% of the list delivered to the public in a timely fashion (this excludes those sneaky unpublicized one-week qualifying releases). There might be more public interest in the category if release strategies would ever change!
If past history is any indication, several other films among the official submissions will opt for a January, February, or March theatrical bow in the US (despite the good odds that they'll be culled in December's finalist announcement -- 84% of the films will be!). Films do this in the hopes that an Oscar finalist position or a nomination will buoy them. But if they're eliminated in December (with the finalist list) or the nominations (at the end of January) many will drop those plans or open without fanfare. It's always a risky strategy. We say "just release the films once the distribution contracts are in place!" rather than counting on something you can't control (Oscar's favor).
Above all else we hope that if a film is lucky enough to be nominated it actually is released in theaters during awards season. Actual nominees that inexplicably opened AFTER the season had wrapped nearly always flopped -- For proof see the bottom of this list of the box office earnings of this last decade's International Feature Film nominees)
MISCELLANEOUS TRIVIA ABOUT THE CONTENDERS
MOST MULTI-LINGUAL FILMS
Quite a few of the other movies are bi or tri-lingual. It's especially fun when the languages play an important plot role in the movie, as in South Korea's Decision to Leave with its most engimatic character being a Chinese immigrant to Korea and sometimes requiring translation.
MOST COMMONLY SPOKEN LANGUAGES
Many different languages factor into two separate contenders. That includes Swahili this year which is not a common language in this category. That's because Tanzania has submitted for only the second time while Uganda has sent their very first film for Oscar consideration. The Academy has been making efforts to be more inclusive of African cinema, going so far as to allow for English-based pidgins spoken in many African films. Speaking of English, though, you can of course hear that peppered about in dozens of the submitted films, though films can be ruled ineligible if a majority of their dialogue is in English.
SHORTEST CONTENDERS
(All submissions that are under 90 minutes)
LONGEST CONTENDERS
(All submissions that are over 2 Hours)
The "short" movie group (17% of the movies) and the "long" movie group (18%) are roughly equal sized. The other 65% of the films fall in the standard movie length range of 1½ to 2 hours.
GENRES & TYPES
The bulk of submitted films each and every year are traditional dramas or variations thereofs (mysteries, dramedies, etcetera). They're usually thematically heavy too since that's what naturally rises to the top. That's a true bias of ALL mainstream awards bodies, not just Oscar -- the belief that dramas are automatically more deserving than 'lighter' fare. The following films bring some needed variety to the mix this season either by their form or through their genres.
ANIMATED FEATURES
While there is often one animated submission in this competition (sometimes even two) this is the most that have ever been submitted in a single year. Aurora's Sunrise and Eternal Spring are also documentaries. Perhaps these two submissions were emboldened by the success of Oscar-nominated animated documentaries Waltz with Bashir (2008) and Flee (2021). Curious bit of trivia: no animated feature that wasn't a documentary has ever been nominated for this prize.
DOCUMENTARY FEATURES
Not as many docs submitted this time (last year there were 7) despite three consecutive years of a documentary snatching up a nomination (Honeyland, Collective, Flee) in this category. Documentaries used to never be nominated in this category so the acceptance of them as part of this competition in the past few years has been a very sudden change in voter habits.
UNUSUAL GENRES (FOR THIS CATEGORY)
This particularly Oscar category is even more resistant to genre films than Best Picture or the acting categories are. That's partially because most countries only send dramas, and partially due to Oscar's bias against genre films. There have been a few examples of genre films that have snuck through and landed nominations but they're rare.
LGBTQ+ THEMED CONTENDERS
It's possible queer characters exist in one or two of the other 92 films but these five are the only ones we know of (at this writing) that qualify as LGBTQ+ cinema: Blue Caftan centers on a closeted tailor's marriage; Close is about an intimate teenage friendship between two boys that goes awry; Girl Picture is a coming-of-age film about three girls, two of whom are dating; Joyland is about a married man who falls for a trans woman; Finally Mars One is a family drama in which the daughter is a lesbian.
LGBTQ+ films are not often nominated and only two have ever won -- interestingly enough both of the winners were in Spanish and represent the "T" in LGBTQ+ cinema: Pedro Almodóvar's All About My Mother (1999) and Sebastian Lelio's A Fantastic Woman (2017). That said there is some evidence that the Academy is warming up to queer cinema. In the past three years we've had two more gay male nominees in this category: Pain & Glory (2019) and Flee (2021). It's also become common for at least one queer film to make the finalist list (indicating they came close to a nomination even if there wasn't enough support to go all the way). Recent examples of the latter include Ireland's Cuban drag queen drama Viva (2015), Canada's family drama It's Only the End of the World (2016), South Africa's male ritual drama The Wound (2017), Czech Republic's historical biopic Charlatan (2020), France's lesbian drama Two of Us (2020), and Austria's masterful prison drama Great Freedom (2021) which was one of those films that tried the dread "releasing after you've been eliminated" trick in the US this past spring.
HERE'S THE FULL LIST
A few more interviews and some reviews coming up
CHART 1 - Albania through Georgia
CHART 2 - Germany through Norway
CHART 3 - Pakistan through Vietnam
COUNTRIES THAT DIDN'T SUBMIT THIS YEAR THAT OFTEN DO...
Cuba, Egypt, Malaysia, Russia, and South Africa
Okay that's it for the part one of the trivia. In part two we'll talk directors and actors.