by Nathaniel R
We wondered which country would be the early bird this year and that distinction goes to Turkey. Since the submissions are due by October 1, the process in many countries is already well under way and the announcements typically come fast and furious from mid-August through September.
TURKEY
Turkey has selected last year's Venice Horizons Jury prize winner One of Those Days When Hemme Dies to represent them at the Oscars. The film is the directorial debut of Murat Firatoglu who wrote, produced and stars in the film as a laborer on a tomato farm who decides to kill his boss (the titular character, Hemme) due to unpaid wages...
We'd love to hear from anyone who has seen One of Those Days When Hemme Dies -- Might it have international appeal?
Turkey has never been nominated for Best International Feature Film despite submitting regularly. Sadly that puts them in the list of TEN MOST UNLUCKY COUNTRIES IN OSCAR'S BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM CATEGORY
We're always rooting for these ten countries because this is a long time to submit without recognition.
CZECH REPUBLIC
Meanwhile Czech Republic has named three finalists for this year's submission from a long list of eight films. Sadly their selection process is now embroiled in controversy, with the Czech Academy basically telling voters which film to vote for. Whoops. That could undermine Broken Voices if it is selected:
It's interesting that Czech films have made the 15-wide Academy shortlist in HALF of the past six races and yet they haven't been nominated in 21 years. Is momentum building for a resurgence of interest in their cinema, or was this just a good run of submissions? Their only win came from Kolya, an arthouse hit in the mid 1990s.
GERMANY
Since the turn of the century in 2000, Germany has been the dominant country in this Oscar category. They lead the global pack with an astonishing 11 nominations, 3 wins, and 5 additional finalists in the past 25 years alone. Only Denmark (9/2/4) is anywhere close to that track record in our current Oscar era. In other words you always have to keep your eye on the German submission; they will consider it! They are reportedly going to choose between these five films:
AMRUM © Warner Brothers/Gordon Timpen, SMPSP
We're guessing the submission choice will come down to Amrum vs Sound of Falling. Whichever film it is, if Germany is nominated in the upcoming race, it'll be their fourth consecutive nomination. Streaks that long have not been seen since the 1970s. The only countries to have received exactly four consecutive nominations are the former Czechoslovakia (1965-1968) and Germany (1956-1959). Curiously Italy and France have never stopped at four -- their streaks either end with three consecutive years (which they've both done many times) or they jump to five consecutive years (which they've managed two or three times, respectively). Funny that, right? Italy holds the record for the longest streak of all time with a single instance of six consecutive nominations (1974-1979).
CURRENT PREDICTIONS IN THIS CATEGORY