Movie News, Movies

Short Review Of This Year’s Oscar Best Foreign Film Nominations

I thought I’d try something a little different this week and give a brief synopsis of the contenders for Best Foreign Language Film at this year’s Academy Awards.

The five finalists are listed below in no particular order.

Roma,” from Mexico, which was written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón (“Gravity,” “Y Tu Mamá También”), is thought to be the front-runner in this category after winning Best Picture and Best Director at the Golden Globes. And it picked up nominations for 10 Oscars including Best Picture and Best Foreign Film. That’s quite an accomplishment!

Taking place in Mexico City in the early 1970s and set in a middle-class neighborhood, the film is centered around the domestic servant of a doctors family. It’s a very realistic portrait of her increasing responsibility as she cares for the family’s children amid domestic strife and political upheaval. This very personal film, shot in glorious black and white is really quite powerful, although I did think that it could have been a wee shorter as it clocks in at 2 hours and fifteen minutes.

 

But “Roma” doesn’t register the longest screen time of the five nominees. That award would go to Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s psychological drama “Never Look Away,” Germany’s entry for Best Foreign Film. At three hours and eight minutes, the film covers a long expanse of time as a young artist escapes to West Germany, still tormented by his childhood under the Nazis and the GDR-regime.

 

Shoplifters” from Japan and directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda was last year’s winner of the Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or. It depicts a dysfunctional, loosely gathered family of petty thieves and grifters living below the poverty level. The family is upended when the young son is arrested and secrets revealed. What defines this family? The power of love and not blood will test the bonds that bind them together.

 

Capernaum” (Chaos), the Lebanese entry for Best Foreign Language Film, directed by Nadine Labaki, packs a powerful punch and will most certainly give “Roma” a run for its money. The winner of the Jury Prize at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival, “Capernaum” tells the heartbreaking but ultimately uplifting story of Zain, a young Lebanese boy who sues his parents for the “crime” of giving him life. Existing on the margins of society, he flees his negligent parents and survives on the streets using only his preternatural wits for protection. The film manages to weave a heart-wrenching tale with a thread of optimism. It is in a word….stunning!

 

Cold War,” Poland’s entry this year, was directed by Paweł Pawlikowski who is back with another commanding film (remember “Ida”?) – this time an impossible love story. Set against the backdrop of the Cold War in the 1950s in Poland, Berlin, Yugoslavia and Paris, a music director falls in love with a singer and tries to persuade her to flee communist Poland. Like “Roma,” it was shot in black and white and at eighty-eight minutes, captures your attention both visually and musically. Besides being nominated for Best Foreign Film, “Cold War” has picked up a Best Cinematography nomination and a Best Director nod for Pawlikowski. All well-deserved!

 

So there it is. Who will you root for? Well, first, you can try and see as many as you can before the Oscars are televised on February 24th. Below is a listing of where they can be screened in the DFW area.

  • Cold War” and “Roma” are currently showing at the Magnolia Theatre
  • Roma” is also available on Netflix for subscribers
  • Cold War” is playing at the Angelika in Plano
  • Capernaum” is playing at both the Angelika Dallas and Plano
  • Never Look Away” will open at the Angelika Dallas on Friday, Feb. 15th
  • Unfortunately, “Shoplifters” has already been shown in the DFW area and will be available on DVD Feb. 12th. Perhaps they will bring it back if it wins an award
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Susan Kandell

A native of the Bronx, Susan has lived in Dallas for over thirty years, but maintains her New York accent and is still a Yankee fan. In print, she is the film critic for the TJPost and contributes to IrishFilmCritic.com, SeligFilmNews.com, and BigFanBoy.com.

Susan is the co-founder and is currently the program director of the 3 Stars Cinema Film Series. In 1999 she co-founded 2Chicas Productions, which produced the award-winning documentary, ¡Salsa Caliente!. It has been screened in film festivals all over the country and was featured on WNET/13, the NY PBS affiliate TV station, with an introduction by Chita Rivera.

Susan was featured on page one of the Wall Street Journal, but thankfully not in handcuffs like Bernie Madoff.

She is currently the secretary of the North Texas Film Critics Association even though her penmanship is terrible.