Pt 3. International Feature Race: A Dozen Movie Stars!
Friday, December 12, 2025 at 9:23AM by Nathaniel R
Internationally famous South Korean superstar Lee Byung-hun in "No Other Choice"
As a final part of our general trivia overview (pt 1 stats & genres / pt 2 directors) of the Best International Feature Film race -- before things narrow down -- we thought we'd look at famous actors gracing the international Oscar race this year. Here are a dozen of the most familiar faces that Academy voters (and you) will recognize from their own history of awardage not to mention previous classics and contenders from this very category. If their new film is nominated, you might see them in their full tux/gown glory on Oscar night.
We'll take these dozen megawatt talents alphabetically...
Leonie Benesch in from left to right: The White Ribbon, Babylon Berlin, September 5, and Late Shift
Leonie Benesch (Switzerland's Late Night)
Born in Hamburg, Germany, this 34 year old actress first received major international acclaim as a teenage thespian in Michael Haneke's Oscar nominated drama The White Ribbon (2009). A decade later she broke out in a major way in the streaming series Babylon Berlin, playing a nanny manipulated into committing a horrific crime by the rising Nazi party in 30s Germany. She's been booked and busy since. She's been involved in the past two consecutive Oscar races: In 2023, she headlined Germany's Best International Feature Film nominee The Teacher's Lounge (2023); In 2024 she was the standout (and defacto onscreen translator) in the ensemble of September 5 (2024) about an American sports broadcasting team during the Munich Olympics in 1972. Fun fact: She won two consecutive German Oscars (also known as "The Lolas") for these films. QUALIFYING. US RELEASE TBD
Gael García Bernal in (from left to right): Y Tu Mama Tambíen, No, Mozart in the Jungle, and Magellan
Gael Garcia Bernal (Philippine's Magellan)
Bernal, who just turned 47, catapulted to fame at just 21 with his debut in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's Amores Perros (2000) for which he won the Ariel (Mexico's Oscar). He became yet more famous with the even bigger international sensation the following year in Alfonso Cuaron's Y Tu Mama Tambien (2001) for which he won a shared Marcel Mastroianni Young Actor Award in Venice with his co-star and close friend Diego Luna; Both films were Oscar nominated international hits. Since that time Bernal has worked in numerous high profile and/or acclaimed films and television events from many countries and across many genres (Bad Education, Babel, The Crime of Father Amaro, Old, Werewolf by Night, Even the Rain, Coco, Cassandro, Neruda, to name just a few titles from his prolific career). Despite his dependably stellar performances, awards bodies have been mostly resistant after that double-whammy career launch. That said he did receive one BAFTA nomination (The Motorcycle Diaries) and a Golden Globe Award (Mozart in the Jungle). He's starred in six Best International Feature submissions (three of which were nominated) in this category over the past 26 years from four different countries: Mexico (Amores Perros, The Crime of Father Amaro), Spain (Even the Rain), Chile (No and Neruda), and now Philippines (Magellan). QUALIFYING. REGULAR THEATRICAL RELEASE IN US: JANUARY 9, 2026
Fares Fares in (from left to right): Jalla Jalla, Zero Dark Thirty, The Wheel of Time, and Eagles of the Republic
Fares Fares (Sweden's Eagles of the Republic)
While mostly familiar to fans of Scandinavia cinema, the 52 year old actor, who was born in Beirut, is hard to miss with his tall lanky frame and commanding screen presence. He broke out first with the comic Swedish Oscar submission Jalla! Jalla! (2000) about a Lebanese immigrant and quickly became a fixture of Scandinavian tv & film. Some highlights include The Commune and the franchise Department Q, which was recently remade in the English language for Netflix --quite well I should add --with Alexej Manvelov taking over his role). Stateside he's surely most famous for supporting roles in Zero Dark Thirty (2012), Rogue One (2016), and as "Ishamael" in The Wheel of Time series. US RELEASE TBD
Paulina Garcia in (from left to right): Gloria, Little Men, Narcos, and Beloved Tropic
Paulina Garcia (Panama's Beloved Tropic)
She was Oscar-worthy for Chile's Oscar submission Gloria (2013) -nominated right here -- which was later remade in English with Julianne Moore though Garcia's performance was umimproveable. Her most high profile international work since then was a supporting role in Ira Sach's wonderful coming-of-age indie Little Men (2016) and a regular on the first two seasons of Netflix' drug cartel drama Narcos (2015-2017) starring current Oscar hopeful Wagner Moura. She's back in an Oscar submission via Panama's dementia drama. US RELEASE TBD.
Lee Byung-hun in (from left to right): Joint Security Area, GI Joe: Rise of the Cobra, Inside Men, and No Other Choice
Lee Byung-Hun (South Korea's No Other Choice)
The 55 year old South Korean superstar first came to fame in Park Chan-wook's Joint Security Area (2000) a quarter century ago. He's been a superstar in South Korea ever since (highlights include but are definitely not limited to: I Saw the Devil, The Good The Bad The Weird, Concrete Utopia, Squid Game). He also moonlights as a mainstream Hollywood supporting player / scene stealer in action films including Red 2, GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra (as Storm Shadow), Terminator Genisys (as the T-1000) and The Magnificent Seven. Reuniting with Park Chan Wook for No Other Choice (opening December 25th in the US), he delivers his greatest performance yet as an increasingly desperate unemployed man who decides that the only way to land another management job is to eliminate his competition. He has... "no other choice." OPENS IN US ON CHRISTMAS DAY.
Sergi López in (from left to right): With a Friend Like Harry, Pan's Labyrinth, Leaving, and Sirât
Sergi López (Spain's Sirât)
López, born in Catalania, and fluent in Catalan, Spanish, and French, first came to fame via the French film Western (1998) for which he was César nominated for "Most Promising Actor". That promise was definitely fulfilled. While he primarily works in Spanish (4 Goya nominations) and French language cinema (1 César win), he's familiar to US audiences (of a certain age at least) for imported arthouse hits from the Aughts (With a Friend Like Harry, An Affair of Love, Pan's Labyrinth, and Dirty Pretty Things). Other highlights include the French-language erotic drama Leaving (with Kristin Scott Thomas), and acclaimed roles in Sólo Mía, Black Bread, and Rosa's Wedding. Things have been quieter for him, internationally speaking, since his 2000s heyday, but the star, who turns 60 this month, is now up for his third Best European Film Actor award for Sirât and the film has been a critical sensation. We'll know if it makes the Oscar finals next week. QUALIFYING. REGULAR THEATRICAL RELEASE IN US: JANUARY ???, 2026
Carmen Maura in (from left to right): Tigres de Papel, Women on the Verge..., Women on the Sixth Floor, and Calle Malaga
Carmen Maura (Morocco's Calle Malaga)
This legend of Spanish cinema has a European Lifetime Achievement Award, an EFA, a César, four Goya awards, and multiple film festival honors her name. At 80 years of age she is still landing lead roles, two this year with Crazy Old Lady and Morocco's Oscar entry Calle Malaga which took the audience award at Venice. Her first major role was a Spanish comedy Tigres de papel (1977) but she rose to fame internationally in the late 1980s as the original muse of Pedro Almodova, their partnership running from his debut Pepi, Luci, Bom through his international smash Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988). That farce became the iconic auteur's first Oscar-nominated film an won Maura the EFA for Best Actress. After reconciling with Pedro for a gorgeous performance in Volver (2006), she received a shared Cannes Best Actress award. Her best known film since then has been The Women on the Sixth Floor for which she won the French Cesar for Best Supporting Actress. Other highlights include Ay Carmela! (EFA nomination & Goya Award), Valentin, Beyond the Walls, and Commonwealth (Goya Award). QUALIFYING. REGULAR THEATRICAL RELEASE IN US: FEBRUARY 6, 2026
Wagner Moura in (from left to right); Carandiru, Futuro Beach, Civil War, and The Secret Agent
Wagner Moura (Brail's The Secret Agent)
I first saw this Brazilian star in Walter's Salles Oscar submission Behind the Sun (2000) but he really broke out with international audiences in the mid' 2010s in his thirtysomething years. My personal fandom began with the gay drama Futuro Beach (2014) in which he plays an ocean-loving lifeguard who immigrates to landlocked Berlin for a relationship with a German man; others fell for him around the same time via the Netflix Series Narcos (2015) or the sci-fi flick Elysium (2013). He's really been on a quality tear in the past few years with key supporting performance as in the action flick The Gray Man, sensational voice work in the Oscar nominated Puss N Boots: The Last Wish, a very entertaining two episode assignment in Mr & Mrs Smith, a turn as a journalist in the thick of Civil War, and in the TV miniseries Dope Thief. But returning home at 49 years of age for a star turn as The Secret Agent won him Best Actor at Cannes and may well be his ticket to the Oscars. NOW PLAYING IN US THEATERS.
Renate Reinsve in (from left to right): Worst Person..., A Different Man, Armand, and Sentimental Value
Stellan Skarsgård in (from left to right): Ake and His World, Good Evening Mr Wallenberg, Dune, and Sentimental Value
Renate Reinsve AND Stellan Skarsgård (Norway's Sentimental Value)
Norway's most internationally famous leading actress made her debut in Joachim Trier's criticially acclaimed Oslo August 31 (2011) in a small role playing a character named "Renate". Her career exploded ten years later with the instant classic The Worst Person in the World which received two Oscar nominations. Since then the thirty-eight year old actress has headlined an underappreciated if abrasive Norwegian Oscar finalist Armand and worked in US indies (A Different Man), and prestige television (Presumed Innocent). Reuniting with Trier she's possibly heading to a Best Actress nomination.
Seventy-four year old Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgård, quite a lot more famous, arguably needs no introduction. His long film career stretches across 50 years in films from multiple countries. Highlights include the classic Norwegian thriller Insomnia (later remade by Christopher Nolan) and headlining or supporting roles in nine Oscar submissions for Best International Feature Film including entries from Czech Republic (Painted Bird), Norway (Out Stealing Horses, Hope, Sentimental Value) and Sweden (Ake and His World, Hip hip Hurrah!, The Women on the Roof, Good Evening Mr Wallenberg, The Ox). But that's not all. He's a fixture in arthouse cinemas in the US via his frequent collaborations with Lars Von Trier (Nymphomaniac, Breaking the Waves, Melancholia), and a ubiquitously game supporting player in mainstream Hollywood efforts (The Hunt for Red October, Mamma Mia!, Cinderella, Dune, Andor, and of course the MCU via the Thor pictures). Among his off-screen accomplishments he fathered the delightful and equally talented Alexander Skarsgård (and several other children!) proving that nepotism occassionally benefits everyone. He's won a Golden Globe and been Emmy nominated and this year it looks like Oscar voters will honor him. NOW PLAYING IN US THEATERS.
Albrecht Schuch in (from left to right): System Crasher, Berlin Alexanderplatz, All Quiet..., and Peacock
Albrecht Schuch (Austria's Peacock)
Like Renate Reinsve, just discussed, he broke out in a major way quite recently and has been devouring German Film Awards ever since. His breakthrough year was 2020 when he became the first man to win both lead and supporting "Lola" awards (Germany's Oscar) at the same ceremony for System Crasher (lead... and Germany's Oscar submission that season), Berlin Alexanderplatz (supporting). He won two more quickly via Dear Thomas (2021, lead), and All Quiet on the Western Front (2022, supporting), the latter becoming successful internationally via Netflix and landed him a BAFTA nomination, and another citation right here at TFE. The forty year-old star recently won Best Actor at the Austrian Film Awards for his latest vehicle, the satirical Peacock, which is about a man who works at a "rent-a-friend" agency who plays roles for other people... but who is he really? US RELEASE TBD.
Ken Watanabe in (from left to right): Tampopo, The Last Samurai, Letters from Iwo Jima, and Kokuho
Ken Watanabe (Japan's Kokuho)
Does Watanabe need any introduction? The international star first became famous at home in the 1980s in multiple samurai roles on Japanese television. American audiences got their first glimpse of him in a small role in the arthouse sensation Tampopo (1985) but he became much more internationally famous two decades later with an Oscar nomination for the Tom Cruise drama The Last Samurai (2003) which he chased with two Best Actor wins at home in Japan via Memories of Tomorrow (2006) and The Unbroken (2009). More Hollywood efforts followed his Oscar nomination including Batman Begins, Letters from Iwo Jima, Inception, Memoirs of a Geisha, and Godzilla. He varied things up with both a Tony & and an Olivier nominated turn on stage in the revival of the classic musical The King and I ten years back. The sixty-six year-old star now returns in the three hour Kokuho epic -- the first live action film distributed by GKids -- about the son of a yakuza leader becoming a kabuki actor. QUALIFYING. REGULAR THEATRICAL RELEASE IN US: FEBRUARY 6, 2026
Which of these stars are you a fan of? Or, if you're miffed I didn't include someone, who was it?



Reader Comments (10)
With each appearing in likely Best Picture nominees, I am hopeful that a savvy Oscar producer will coordinate a Breaking the Waves reunion for Emily Watson (Hamnet) and Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value) to present a prize during the show.
Wagner Moura is also widely popular in Brazil for his role in the film Elite Squad. The film was divisive for it's violence but mostly acclaimed critically and popular with filmgoers. It only didn't make the Oscar shortlist that year because of the more Academy-friendly The Year My Parents Went on Vacation (which made the shortlist). Four years later, the sequel was submitted for consideration, but it was much less popular.
He also had a major role in another Oscar submission - Carandiru - along with another famous Brazilian actor of his generation - Rodrigo Santoro.
Some of his other films were also widely popular including Ó Pai, Ó (opposite Lázaro Ramos) and the comedy Basic Sanitation (with Fernanda Torres).
Say his name: ALBRECHT Schuch...
Thanks for putting Leonie Benesch on this list. I’ve only seen her in “September 5”, but I thought, now there’s someone interesting I need to see more of.
I love Ken Watanabe (as do we all) and hope that “Kokuho” will play in my city.
I just saw Wagner Moura for the first time (?) today in “The Secret Agent” and I’d like to think about that one a bit more.
I liked “Sentimental Value”, but I have some ambivalence about it. I guess it has to do with when everyone knuckled under and did what the patriarch wanted, everything was fine. They should have just swallowed their individual feelings and history and done what he wanted all along.
Two actors nominated for this year’s European Film Awards:
- Mads Mikkelsen in “The Last Viking”. I love Mads; it’s always such a treat to watch an actor of physical grace and elegance. Although I think his English language film this year, “Dust Bunny” might be more fun.
- Vicky Krieps (always a critical favourite) in “Love Me Tender” from France.
International actors who could/should be in the awards race for their roles in English language films this year: Nina Hoss in “Hedda”; Akira Emoto in “Rental Family”; Youn Yuh-jung in “The Wedding Banquet”.
And my current crush (supporting actor) Matthieu Penchinat as cameraman Raoul Coutard in “Nouvelle Vague”.
Zoey Deutch should be considered for her role in “Nouvelle Vague” too. She’s an actress who has steadily been getting better and better, and now she is very very good. She plays actress Jean Seberg. Apparently the way Seberg speaks French is famous in France (?!) so Deutch not only had to speak French, she had to speak it in the “famous” Jean Seberg way.
Can someone explain the Wagner Moura love??? He is so blank in that movie!!
Another star you forgot is Argentina's Dolores Fonzi. Not only she reached a certain fame in Argentina and Latin American arthouse cinema after working with Trapero, Mitre and other directors before becoming one, but also she and Gael were a couple and both are parents of two children. Also, as part of the gossip she was allegedly part of the love triangle and potential break up of Gael and Natalie Portman (Portman even went to Buenos Aires in 2006).
This is a fun overview of familiar faces in the international Oscar race! It’s exciting to see which actors might grace the stage in their tuxes and gowns. On a lighter note, while exploring sites like this, it’s always good to be cautious with online tools like 美人診断 危険 and make sure your personal data stays safe.
this piece turns the spotlight on the famous actors competing this year. These are a dozen of the most recognizable faces that Academy voters, and audiences alike, will instantly know from past awards success, celebrated performances, and even prior classics from this very category. Should their latest films earn nominations, don’t be surprised to see these stars return in full tuxedo and gown glory on Oscar night. EZ Pass PA
I just realized, that Taiwan's "Left-handed girl" is co-written by none other than Sean "Anora" Baker.
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