10K Messages
•
163K Points
LIVE POLL: Is Oscars' Greatest Prize More Worldly?
Is Oscars' greatest prize, its Best Picture award becoming more worldly? In 2020, the South Korean black comedy thriller film, Gisaengchung (2019) led the Oscars with a stunning 4 awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best International Feature Film. In doing so, it became the 1st non-English language film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. In 2022, the Japanese road movie, Doraibu mai kâ (2021) seems to be steering a similar course by earning 4 Oscars nominations for Best Picture, Best Director, Best International Feature Film, and Best Adapted Screenplay. Likewise, the Danish animated docudrama, Flugt (2021) made its own Oscars history in 2022. It became the 1st film to be nominated in the Best International Feature Film, Best Documentary Feature and Best Animated Feature categories simultaneously.
As of February 8th, 2022, 94 years of Oscar Best Picture nominations have yielded 571 Anglo-based produced or co-produced nominees, a stunning 98.3%. For purely non-Anglo productions, that averages out to be about 1 nomination every 10 years. While there is still work to be done, the Academy's recent strides to make filmdom's greatest prize a more worldly award have not gone unnoticed. This poll is dedicated to the 10 purely non-Anglo-based productions or 1.7% that bucked the odds to secure an Oscar Best Picture nomination.
Which of these Oscar-nominated Best Picture movies with a rare non-Anglo* primary production origin is your favorite? *non-English speaking country not descended from the British Isles
Anglo Countries: Europe (British Isles: U.K., Ireland, Scotland, etc.), Americas (U.S.A., Canada, Bahamas, Barbados. Belize, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, etc), Australasia (Australia, New Zealand) and Africa (South Africa, etc) from the total of 195 World Countries
LIVE POLL: https://www.imdb.com/poll/HSuMXN-I_Jo/
See the partial list of Oscar-nominated Best Picture non-Anglo produced movies here: https://www.imdb.com/list/ls045829486/
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
6 years ago
??
Ideally, the Oscars Best Picture award should be given to the film that was the best movie in the world for a given year. In the past decade, France's The Artist (2011) and South Korea's Parasite (2019) are the only two films to have won the Oscar for Best Picture and to be financed and produced in whole by a non-English speaking country not descended from the British Isles. While, a record of two out ten is not very worldly, it does show progress toward the prize being representative of world cinema's top prize. Prior to 2010, only eight films were wholly produced and financed outside the United States and had gone on to win Best Picture. The remaining eight Best Picture were financed, in part or in whole, by companies from the United Kingdom. When looking at the diversity of all Oscar Best Picture nominees, non-Anglo productions received only nine nominations or a paltry 1.6% of the total Best Picture nominations over the Oscars' entire ninety-four year history. While, some may view this dominance a fairly earned, others think it demonstrates the award consideration is limited to only a corner of the world, rather than being truly an international award.
(edited)
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
6 years ago
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
6 years ago
Controversies (from Wikipedia)
One point of contention with the award is the lack of consideration of non-English language films for Best Picture. Only eleven foreign language films have been nominated in the category (and none have won): Grand Illusion (French, 1938); Z (French, 1969); The Emigrants (Swedish, 1972); Cries and Whispers (Swedish, 1973); The Postman (Il Postino) (Italian/Spanish, 1995); Life Is Beautiful (Italian, 1998); Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (Mandarin Chinese, 2000); Letters from Iwo Jima (Japanese, 2006, but ineligible for Best Foreign Language Film, as it was an American production); Amour (French, 2012); and Roma (Spanish/Mixtec, 2018).
Only nine films wholly financed outside the United States have won Best Picture, eight of which were financed, in part or in whole, by the United Kingdom. Those films being: Hamlet (1948), Tom Jones (1963), A Man for All Seasons (1966), Chariots of Fire (1981), Gandhi (1982), The Last Emperor (1987), Slumdog Millionaire (2008), and The King's Speech (2010). The ninth film, The Artist (2011), was financed by France.
Genre Biases (from AMC filmsite)Only a few foreign-language or foreign-made films have even earned a Best Picture nomination: Z (1969, Fr./Alg.), The Emigrants (1971, Swe.), Cries & Whispers (1972, Swe.), Il Postino (1994, It.), Life Is Beautiful (1997, It.), Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000, Taiwan/HK), Letters From Iwo Jima (2006, Jp./US), Babel (2006, US/Mex.Fr.), The Artist (I) (2011, Fr./Bel)and Amour (2012, Fr.).
Through the 2019 Oscars, 550 of the 559 Oscar Best Picture nominees are Anglo productions or co-productions representing 98.4% of all Oscar Best Picture nominations. Anglo Countries: Europe (British Isles: U.K., Ireland, Scotland, etc.), Americas (U.S.A., Canada, Bahamas, Barbados. Belize, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, etc), Australasia (Australia, New Zealand) and Africa (South Africa, etc).
0
themoviesmith
1.5K Messages
•
35.2K Points
6 years ago
1
leavey_2
1.9K Messages
•
52.5K Points
6 years ago
1
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
5 years ago
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
5 years ago
(TOP 50) 2020 Oscar Predictions: Gold Derby Predicts the 92nd Academy Awards
These two non-Anglo produced movies have realistic shots at one of the ten nomination slots in the Oscars 2020 Best Picture category. Parasite (2019) ranks #3 in the odds for a Best picture nod, while Pain and Glory (2019) sits at #15 for a Best picture nod. A nomination for either would bring the total of Best Picture pure non-Anglo produced movies to just ten in Oscars history. While this would represent a significant uptick over the past decade; it is an underwhelming benchmark for an award ceremony that over ninety-two years prizes has shunned foreign films in its main category.
Parasite 2019 | Movie 8.6 (111,293)
Korean Title: 기생충 aka 'Gisaengchung' (South Korea)
Pain and Glory 2019 | Movie 7.7 (21,769)
Spanish Title: 'Dolor y gloria' (Spain)
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
5 years ago
Parasite 2019 | Movie 8.6 (111,293)
Korean Title: 기생충 aka 'Gisaengchung' (South Korea)
As of 2020, 98.2% of all Oscar Best Picture nominees are Anglo-based productions or co-productions. They are represented by five hundred fifty-six of the total five hundred sixty-six Oscar Best Picture nominees. This poll is dedicated to the other 1.8% of non-Anglo based productions that bucked the odds to secure a Oscar Best Picture nomination and the one that won.
2
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
3 years ago
(edited)
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
3 years ago
Interestingly, after eight straight European entries from France, Italy and Sweden, the last two have been from Asia with South Korea and Japan each snagging their first Oscar Best Picture nominations. All these countries have established track records when it comes to filmmaking excellence. The pendulum has seem to have swung toward giving Asia the recognition it deserves on a global stage.
(edited)
0
urbanemovies
10K Messages
•
163K Points
3 years ago
This poll suggestion is ready for publication.
0
0
kennethjohnson
3 Messages
•
80 Points
3 years ago
Parasite!
0
0
Pencho15
Champion
•
6.8K Messages
•
119.5K Points
3 years ago
You're missing Roma.
Even if it was produced by Netflix, It is a 100% Mexican film. Netflix produces films all over the world.
5
0
ElMaruecan82
5.2K Messages
•
138.3K Points
3 years ago
Speaking for myself, I think giving the Best Picture Oscar to a foreign film should be the exception but not the rule.
If we followed that logic, then the Academy should have as many foreign entries in the other categories than the Best Picture.
But I like the way it's done now, I like that it's mostly consisting of Anglo-American productions because Oscars are entitled to be a celebration of Hollywood movies, Hollywood in its broader sense... and for me Anglo-Saxon or British cinema is like the "little brother" who was part of the game from the beginning.
And I love the fact that ever since it's started, some foreign movies were so "undeniably" good that they had to be included in the Best Picture category, movies like "Grand Illusion" for instance. I like that for 1973, you have American classics like "The Exorcist", "American Graffiti" and "The Sting" but also one sloth dedicated to "Cries and Whispers".
In my opinion, the Academy has more progresses to make on its genre bias, it's been a while since we haven't had a good old comedy in the Best Picture category and I don't mind one blockbuster or two if they're quality films, as for foreign movies, you have the Cannes Festival.
5
0
Jessica
Champion
•
9.8K Messages
•
195K Points
3 years ago
Live Poll
https://www.imdb.com/poll/HSuMXN-I_Jo/
2
0