France submits "Emilia Perez". Spain chooses "Saturn Return". Mexico names finalists
Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 11:00PM
NATHANIEL R in Best International Feature, Best International Film, Colombia, Indonesia, Mexico, Oscars (24)

by Nathaniel R

Selena Gomez in "Emilia Perez"

We've already posted two reviews of Emilia Perez here at TFE, from Elisa (pro) and Cláudio (con), and it's been a potential Oscar player since it's premiere at Cannes in May.  Today France announced that the buzzy drug cartel trans musical curiousity would represent them at the Oscars, beating out fellow finalists Misericordia, All We Imagine as Light, and The Count of Monte Cristo. This is the second time France has submitted the often thrilling auteur Jacques Audiard. His previous submission, Un Prophete, was nominated for the prize back in 2009 but surely split the 'critical consensus' vote with Michael Haneke's The White Ribbon, allowing Argentina to slip between them for the win for the sleeper success The Secret in Their Eyes.  France hasn't won the Oscar in this category since 1992's Indochine. Could Emilia Perez finally spell gold again for the birthplace of cinema?

But there's lots more International Feature Oscar news after the jump...

Saturn Return

Spain also selected their submission film, choosing Saturn Return over the other finalists, Marco and Blue Star. Saturn Return is about the rise to fame of an indie rock group in the 1990s. 

Albania chose Waterdrop  about a public official whose teenage son is involved in a rape scandal. 

Indonesia is going with Women from Rote Island which is a drama about a woman whose two daughters are raped. 

Poland went with Under the Volcano about a Ukrainian family stuck in Spain due to the war back home.

The rest of the news today comes from South America. Brazil has narrowed down their eligible films to six titles (see previous post, now updated); Bolivia and Colombia have also named their contenders in the thriller Own Hand and a boxing-related drama La Suprema, respectively. 

Meanwhile we now know that Mexico is choosing between six films, all from directors who've never been submitted in this category, though one of them has Oscar history. Because the Ariel Awards (Mexico's Oscars) aren't on the same timetable as the Oscars (running summer to summer and held in September) we have a mix of last year's Ariel nominees and films that will be eligible for the 2025 Ariels. They are:

Which film do you think it will be? 

INTERNATIONAL OSCAR PREDICTIONS

 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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