Current:Home > InvestAnd the Oscar for best international film rarely goes to ... -消息
And the Oscar for best international film rarely goes to ...
View
Date:2025-04-13 16:14:31
"I'm sure the majority of the world doesn't even know we make movies."
These are the words of Likarion Wainaina, the 35-year-old writer-director of 2018's Supa Modo, one of Kenya's most acclaimed films. It's a bittersweet, quirky tale of villagers rallying around a terminally ill 9-year-old girl to make her final wish– of becoming a superhero— come true.
The Seattle Times wrote about the film, "I straight-up bawled my eyes out."
Kenya submitted the film for consideration in the Oscar category of "international feature films." It was not nominated.
Countries submit potential candidates for the category — known as "foreign language film" until 2020. To be eligible, a film must be produced outside the U.S. and contain primarily non-English dialogue.
And over the years, certain countries rise to the fore — notably in Europe — while others are neglected.
Lower income countries rarely crack the list of 5 nominees, let alone win the Oscar. The nations of Africa, for example, are practically invisible. Since the category was introduced in 1956, only 10 films from Africa have been nominated, representing just 5 countries. Only 3 have won: Z from Algeria (1969), Black and White in Color from Ivory Coast (1976) and South Africa's Tsotsi (2005). Two of those Oscar winners were directed by Europeans and the third by a white South African.
Meanwhile, the list of overlooked films is quite impressive. The 2019 Senegalese film, Atlantique, won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival. It's been described by critics as a "supernatural romance" that largely acts as an allegory for the migrant crisis. Its director, Mati Diop, made history by becoming the first Black woman to direct a film featured in competition at the festival. Former President Obama named it one of his favorite films of the year. On Rotten Tomatoes the critics' rating is 96%. Atlantique was submitted for an Oscar nomination but did not make the final cut.
The Oscar has gone to a European nation 58 times over 74 years (in addition to Canada winning once). France has been nominated more times than any other country with 41 nominations. Of the 10 countries that have won the most Oscars in the category, all are in Europe with the exception of 5-time winner Japan.
And only a small club of countries is even in the running. Just 62 nations — fewer than a third of the countries on earth — have ever had a film nominated.
The inequity is not due to lack of trying by non-European countries. Egypt has submitted films on 36 occasions and the Philippines 33, yet neither nation has once received a nomination.
Of course, cultural biases have a deep impact on all Oscar categories. Just ask the organizers of the #OscarsSoWhite campaign. Or consider the paucity of female nominees in the best director category. This year's slate is all male.
The 2023 lineup
This year, submissions came from 93 nations, many of them in the Global South. They include Bangladesh, Cambodia, Tanzania and Uganda, with its first submission ever — Tembele, the story of a garbage collector who has a breakdown after the death of his newborn son. Morris Mugisha's film won top awards at the Uganda Film Festival.
The Oscar nominations went to four European nations — Belgium, Germany, Ireland and Poland — and Argentina, an upper middle-income country that has won the category twice and earned eight previous nominations.
NPR reached out to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Film Academy for comment on the possible reasons that the list of international film nominees comes from such a relatively small and largely Western group of countries. The Academy did not provide comment.
So it is left to others in the world of film to speculate.
Columbia University Professor Richard Peña specializes in international cinema and as program director at the Film Society of Lincoln Center was pivotal in bringing cinema from Iran, Taiwan, Cuba, and Egypt to American audiences.
Professor Pena told NPR: "Members of the Academy and the Hollywood community are not the most 'cosmopolitan' in their view of world cinema. Inevitably, though, the more obscure 'foreign' films help make what seems unfamiliar, more familiar."
The Smithsonian's Amalia Córdova specializes in indigenous film and co-founded the Mother Tongue Film Festival in Washington, D.C., in 2016, which screens movies "about or in endangered, Indigenous or minoritized languages." Her perspective: "The national film industries tend to aspire to Hollywood standards and popularity. But the gems are often in the more marginalized cinemas of each country. In terms of the education that we want to give our children in a globalized world, it can't just be a replication of American culture, only in another language. It should instead be a glimpse into how diverse a place the earth is and how humans live in different ways throughout different parts of the planet."
Of course the international film category isn't the only place where other nations are recognized. Films and individuals from other countries have been nominated in many categories in the past and this year as well.
In 2020, the South Korean film Parasite won four Oscars— including best picture.
Last year, a film from Bhutan was a surprise nominee in the international film category: Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom. It's all the more notable because Bhutan is a country with fewer than a million inhabitants.
Competing with three European countries and a Japanese film, Lunana was not the winner. The Oscar went to Japan.
This year, "Naatu Naatu," a Telugu-language song from India featured in the blockbuster film RRR, is up for best original song.
Documentaries from India are nominated in both the long and short-form category— All That Breathes, about two brothers who save birds, and The Elephant Whisperers.
But true to the pattern shown in the best international film category, a number of international nominees for other Oscars are from Western countries, including four Irish actors in the running for actor awards from The Banshees of Inisherin and Aftersun.
Nonetheless, filmmakers from the Global South have hope for more recognition in the future. Despite his frustration, Kenya's Wainaina remains optimistic: "Normally, we from Africa are seen as beggars and always asking for handouts. But I believe for a fact that once the spotlight is put on African cinema, the one thing that every single Academy member will be asking is, 'What took us so long to watch this stuff?' "
Ian Brennan is a Grammy-winning music producer ( for Zomba Prison Project, Tinariwen, The Good Ones [Rwanda] and spoken word artist Raymond Antrobus). In the past decade he has recorded over 40 records by artists from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America and South America. He is the author of seven books, most recently Muse-$ick: a music manifesto in fifty-nine notes.
veryGood! (2482)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- A failed lunar mission dents Russian pride and reflects deeper problems with Moscow’s space industry
- Sha’Carri Richardson wins 100, claims fastest woman in world title
- Georgia Sheriff Kristopher Coody pleads guilty to groping Judge Glenda Hatchett
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Sheriff seeking phone records between Alabama priest and 18-year-old woman who fled to Europe
- Minneapolis mayor vetoes measure for minimum wage to Uber and Lyft drivers
- Atlanta-based Morris Brown College says they are reinstating Covid mask mandates
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- How Ron DeSantis used Florida schools to become a culture warrior
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Ex-New York police chief who once led Gilgo Beach probe arrested on sexual misconduct charges
- 1 student killed, 23 injured after school bus flips in Ohio to avoid striking minivan
- San Francisco archdiocese is latest Catholic Church organization to file for bankruptcy
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- 'Get out of my house': Video shows mother of Kansas newspaper publisher confronting cops
- 'Inhumane': Louisiana man killed woman, drove with her body for 30 days, police say
- Fantasy football rankings for 2023: Vikings' Justin Jefferson grabs No. 1 overall spot
Recommendation
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Serena Williams welcomes second daughter, Adira River, with husband Alexis Ohanian
Top-Rated Things From Amazon That Can Make Your Commute More Bearable
Chipotle IQ is back: How to take the test, what to know about trivia game
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Tropical Storm Harold path: When and where it's forecasted to hit Texas
NBA fines James Harden over comments that included calling 76ers' Daryl Morey 'a liar'
Woman admits bribing state employee to issue driver’s licenses without a road test