eagles90's profile

625 Messages

 • 

18K Points

Tuesday, January 24th, 2023 1:50 PM

Live Poll: Oscars 2023 — Best International Feature Film

Which of the nominees of The Oscars (2023) for Best International Feature Film do you think should win?

List: https://www.imdb.com/list/ls562428381/

Poll: https://www.imdb.com/poll/kpSPJyU-utw/

4.5K Messages

 • 

71.2K Points

2 years ago

Eo (5 characters)

10K Messages

 • 

163K Points

2 years ago

Oscar Shortlist

4.1K Messages

 • 

86.2K Points

2 years ago

I think the biggest snub this year was Decision to Leave - with zero nominations.

625 Messages

 • 

18K Points

@Tsarstepan​ True.

10K Messages

 • 

163K Points

@Tsarstepan​ I was likewise impressed with Decision to Leave. It is odd it didn't get any noms, but I can't go so far to call them snubs. I can't say it deserved them here either, since there were titles that I would have place before it in this category. It ties @ #8 with Holy Spider (2022) out of the fifteen shortlist titles in this category on IMDb user ratings. FYI, I was equally impressed with Holy Spider and it would have been a toss-up with Decision To Leave for me even for the 8th spot.

4.5K Messages

 • 

71.2K Points

2 years ago

It is not a surprise, but I would have liked Geographies of Solitude to make the Documentary list. I have seen it right after watching All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, and there is not even the slightest shadow of a doubt that Geographies of Solitude is the better film. If All the Beauty and the Bloodshed is a great film, Geographies of Solitude is a documentary that should have its name inscribed in cinema history. I had not seen horse manure shot in 16 mm, exposed at starlight, developed in sea weed before, but it is hypnotic. I had not heard a soundtrack composed by the footsteps of insects before. It is a revolutionary documentary. To not nominate it in every for every possible Oscars is synonymous with not having seen it. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11398152/reference/

Where it screened it won practically every prize (20 wins on 25 nominations).

(edited)

4.1K Messages

 • 

86.2K Points

@cinephile​ Doesn't look like it had a qualifying run. Just four of US film festival screenings. It would need (I believe) a week theatrical run in LA and/or NYC.

4.5K Messages

 • 

71.2K Points

@Tsarstepan​ 

It must be a detriment of being a true independent film. The film was practically entirely made by Jacquelyn Mills (directing, cinematography, editing, sound recording, music). She went on Sable Island (Nova Scotia) alone with a limited stock of 16mm film, and she filmed the daily life of the naturalist Zoe Lucas. It is, in my opinion, revolutionary (and also a proof that you don't need 1000 people, and 500 millions to make a great film), but it also a film that must be hard to sell to distributors. I don't think it made a profit on its budget of 186 000 USD dollars. In my province, it screened in only one theater, and that is how I watched it.

P.S. The film's distributing rights for USA were bought by The Cinema Guild. So, it should be screened in the USA from tomorrow (but probably only in arthouse theaters).

(edited)

Champion

 • 

14.4K Messages

 • 

329.9K Points

2 years ago

1.9K Messages

 • 

52.5K Points

2 years ago

Im westen nichts Neues (2022) will win this Oscar, but Close (2022) will be a "close" second. It was the winner of the Cannes Film Festival Grand Prize, the winner of the Brazil Film Festival and many more.

4.1K Messages

 • 

86.2K Points

@leavey_2​ Will be watching Close tomorrow afternoon.

5 Messages

 • 

100 Points

6 months ago

(edited)