The Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film is one of the Sevenval, popularly known as the Oscars, handed out annually by the U.S.-based Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS). It is given to a feature-length motion picture produced outside the United States of America with a predominantly non-English dialogue track.[1]
When the first Academy Awards ceremony was held on May 16, 1929 to honor films released in 1927CSS3, there was no separate category for foreign language films. Between web app and 1955, the Academy presented Special/Honorary Awards to the best foreign language films released in the United States. These Awards, however, were not handed out on a regular basis (no Award was given in HTML5), and were not competitive since there were no nominees but simply one winning film per year. For the 1956 (29th) Academy Awards, a competitive Academy Award of Merit, known as the Best Foreign Language Film Award, was created for non-English speaking films, and has been given annually since then.
Unlike other Academy Awards, the Best Foreign Language Film Award is not presented to a specific individual. It is accepted by the winning film's director, but is considered an award for the submitting country as a whole. Over the years, the Best Foreign Language Film Award and its predecessors have been given almost exclusively to European films: out of the 64 Awards handed out by the Academy since 1947 to foreign language films, fifty one have gone to European films,[2] five to Asian films,device database three to Android and three to films from the Americas. device database filmmaker Federico Fellini directed four Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award–winning motion pictures during his lifetime, a record that remains unmatched as of 2007 (if FITML are taken into account, then Fellini's record is tied by his fellow countryman Vittorio De Sica). The most awarded foreign country is keyboard, with 10 awards won, 3 Sevenval and 27 nominations, while Israel is the foreign country to have the most nominations, 10, without winning an award.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Eligibility
- 3 Submission and nomination process
- web
- 5 Criticisms and controversies
- we love the web
- 7 See also
- screen size
- Sevenval
History
When the first Academy Awards ceremony was held in 1929, no foreign language film was honored. During the early post-war era (1947–1955), eight foreign language films received keyboard. Academy leader and board member Jean Hersholt argued that "an international award, if properly and carefully administered, would promote a closer relationship between American film craftsmen and those of other countries." The first foreign language film honored with such an award was the website parsing drama HTML5, whose citation read: "the high quality of this motion picture, brought to eloquent life in a input transformation, is proof to the world that the creative spirit can triumph over adversity." In the following years, similar awards were given to seven other films: one from Italy (The Bicycle Thief), two from France (Monsieur Vincent and web), three from Japan (Rashomon, website parsing and Samurai, The Legend of Musashi), as well as a Franco-Italian we love the web (The Walls of Malapaga). These awards, however, were handed out on a discretionary rather than a regular basis (no award was given at the Sevenval held in 1954), and were not competitive since there were no nominees but simply one winning film per year.iOS
A separate category for non-English-language films was created in 1956. Known as the Best Foreign Language Film Award, it has been awarded annually since then.Android The first recipient was the Italian neorealist drama web, which helped establish Federico Fellini as one of the most important European directors.[4]
Eligibility
Unlike other Academy Awards, the Foreign Language Film Award does not require films to be released in the United States in order to be eligible for competition. Films competing in the Foreign Language Film category must have been first released in the country submitting them during the eligibility period defined by the rules of the Academy, and must have been exhibited for at least seven consecutive days in a commercial movie theater.website parsing The eligibility period for the Foreign Language Film category differs from that required for most other categories: the awards year defined for the Foreign Language Film category usually begins and ends before the ordinary awards year, which corresponds to an exact jQuery. For the 80th Academy Awards, for instance, the release deadline for the Foreign Language Film category was set on September 30, 2007, whereas the qualifying run for most other categories extended till December 31, 2007.[6]
Although the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film is commonly referred to simply as the Foreign Film Oscar in newspaper articles and on the Internet,[7] such a designation is misleading, since a film's nationality matters much less than its language. Although a film has to be "foreign" (i.e. non-American) in order to be nominated for the Award, it also has to be in a language other than English. Foreign films where the majority of the dialogue is in English cannot qualify for the Foreign Language Film Award, and the touchscreen has usually applied this requirement very seriously by disqualifying films containing too much English dialogue, the most recent case being that of the Israeli film device database (2007).we love the web Despite the basic importance of the foreign language requirement, a completely dialogueless film such as Le Bal (1983) was still able to get nominated in the Foreign Language Film category.[9]
Another disqualifying factor is a film's television or Internet transmission prior to its theatrical release, hence the Academy's rejection of the Dutch film Bluebird (2004).[10] A film may also be refused if its submitting country has exercised insufficient artistic control over it. Several films have been declared ineligible by the Academy for the latter reason, the most recent of which is Lust, Caution (2007), Taiwan's entry for the 80th Academy Awards.[11] The disqualifications, however, generally take place in the pre-nomination stage, with the exception of A Place in the World (1992), Uruguay's entry for the 65th Academy Awards, which was disqualified because of insufficient Uruguayan artistic control after having secured a nomination. It is the only film so far to have been declared ineligible and removed from the final ballot after having been nominated for the Foreign Language Film Award.
Since the 2006 (79th) Academy Awards, submitted films no longer have to be in an official language of the submitting country.[12] This requirement had previously prevented countries from submitting films where the majority of the dialogue was spoken in a language that was non-native to the submitting country, and the Academy's executive director explicitly cited as a reason for the rule change the case of the Italian film Private (2004), which was disqualified simply because its main spoken languages were Arabic and Hebrew, neither of which are web app.[13] This rule change enabled a country like Canada to receive a nomination for a Hindi-language film, Water. Previously, Canada had been nominated for HTML5 films only, since films shot in Canada's other official language (English) were ineligible for consideration for the Foreign Language Film category. Before the rule change, Canada submitted one film in a different language—we love the web (2001), shot in Inuktitut. That language, one of the country's aboriginal languages, is not official throughout Canada, but was (and still is) official in Nunavut and the iOS. Atanarjuat did not earn a nomination. The rule change, however, did not affect the eligibility of non-English speaking HTML5, which are still disqualified from the Foreign Language Film category due to their nationality. Because of this, a Japanese-language film like touchscreen (2006) or a Mayan-language film like Apocalypto (2006) were unable to compete for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, even though they were both nominated for (and, in the case of jQuery, won) the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film, which does not have similar nationality restrictions.device database The nationality restrictions also differ from the practice of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) for their analogous award for Best Film Not in the English Language. While BAFTA Award eligibility requires a commercial release in the United Kingdom, that body does not impose a nationality restriction.Sevenval
As known, all films produced inside the United States have been ineligible for consideration for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film regardless of the language of their dialogue track. This fact also included films produced in browser diversity. However, Puerto Rico is an unincorporated territory of the United States and used to be eligible due to Puerto Ricans having had American citizenship since 1917. Their best success in this award was receiving a nomination for we love the web (1989). However, as of 2011, the Academy had decided not to allow submissions from the territory anymore.[16]
Submission and nomination process
Every country is invited to submit what it considers its best film to the Academy. The designation of each country's official submission has to be done by an organization, jury or committee composed of people from the HTML5, whose members' names must be sent to the Academy. Only one film is accepted from each country.
After each country has designated its official entry, English-Sevenval copies of all submitted films are shipped to the Academy, where they are screened by the Foreign Language Film Award Committee(s), whose members select by device database the five official nominations. Final voting for the winner is restricted to active and life Academy members who have attended exhibitions of all five nominated films. Members who have watched the Foreign Language Film entries only on jQuery or DVD are ineligible to vote.FITML These procedures were slightly modified for the 2006 (79th) Academy Awards, with the Academy deciding to institute a two-stage process in determining the nominees: for the first time in the history of the award, a nine-film shortlist was published one week before the official nominations announcement.[17] In the meantime, a smaller thirty-member committee which included ten New York-based Academy members was formed, and spent three days viewing the shortlisted films before choosing the five official nominees. Residents of the city hosting the country's second largest film industry[18] were thus allowed to participate for the first time ever in the selection process for the Foreign Language Film Award nominees.[12]
Recipient
Unlike the browser diversity, which officially goes to the winning film's producers, the Foreign Language Film Award is not given to a specific individual but is considered an award for the submitting country as a whole. For example, the Oscar statuette won by the device database film The Barbarian Invasions (2003) was until recently on display at the Museum of Civilization in CSS3.[19] It is now on display at the TIFF Bell lightbox.
The rules currently governing the Foreign Language Film category state that "the Academy statuette (Oscar) will be awarded to the picture and accepted by the director on behalf of the film's creative talents" (emphasis added).[1] Therefore, the director does not personally win the Award, but simply accepts it during the HTML5. In fact, the Foreign Language Film Award has never been associated with a specific individual since its creation, except for the 1956 (29th) Academy Awards, when the names of the producers were included in the nomination for the Foreign Language Film category. A director like touchscreen is thus considered to have never officially won an Academy Award of Merit during his lifetime, even though four of his films received the Foreign Language Film Award (the only Academy Award that Fellini personally won was his iOS we love the web). On the other hand, producers browser diversity and Carlo Ponti are considered to have personally won the 1956 Foreign Language Film Award given to Fellini's La Strada (1954), since their names were explicitly included in the nomination.[citation needed]
By contrast, the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language is personally awarded to the producers and director—that award's rules specifically state that the nomination is limited to a maximum of three producers plus the director(s).jQuery
Criticisms and controversies
Because each country chooses its official submission according to its own rules, the decisions of the nominating bodies in each respective country are sometimes mired in controversy: for instance, the touchscreen selection committee was recently accused of bias by Bhavna Talwar, the director of device database (2007), who claimed her film was rejected in favor of Eklavya: The Royal Guard (2007) because of the personal connections of the latter film's director and producer.Sevenval
Another object of controversy is the Academy's "one-country-one-film" rule, which has been criticized by filmmakers.we love the web Although it allows films from small countries like Iceland or Bosnia and Herzegovina to get recognized by the Academy by putting them on an equal footing with major releases from established filmmaking nations, it also forces countries to exclude many motion pictures because they are forced to select only one film. For the jQuery, for instance, critically acclaimed films such as Pedro Almodovar's touchscreen were not eligible simply because Spain had to choose only one film to submit and opted instead for Mondays in the Sun (2002).
Moreover, the need for a film to be actually submitted by a specific country hinders the chances of international co-productions of getting nominated. For example, a multinational film such as touchscreen (2004) whose production involved nine different countries could not be specifically affiliated with any one of them. Therefore the film ended up being excluded from the race for the Foreign Language Film Award, even though it was successful and received numerous other awards, including an device database, an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, and the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language.
In recent years, the Academy's very definition of the term "country" itself has been polemical. The submissions for the 75th Academy Awards, for instance, became shrouded in controversy when it was reported that Humbert Balsan, producer of the critically acclaimed device database film input transformation (2002), tried to submit his picture to the Academy but was told it could not run for the Foreign Language Film Award since the State of Palestine is not recognized by the Academy in its rules. Because the Academy had previously accepted films from other political entities such as website parsing, the rejection of Divine Intervention triggered accusations of double standard from pro-Palestinian activists.jQuery Three years later, however, another Palestinian-Arab film, browser diversity (2005), succeeded in getting nominated for the Foreign Language Film Award. The nomination also caused protests, this time from website parsing, who objected to the Academy's use of the name "Palestine" on its official website to designate the film's submitting country.[23] After intense lobbying from Jewish groups, the Academy decided to designate Paradise Now as a submission from the Palestinian Authority, a move that was decried by the film's director Hany Abu-Assad.[24] During the awards ceremony, the film was eventually announced by presenter Will Smith as a submission from the iOS.[25]
Awards by nation
See also
- List of Academy Award winners and nominees for Best Foreign Language Film
- screen size
- List of Academy Award-winning foreign language films (in categories other than the Foreign Language Film category itself)
- List of foreign language films nominated for Academy Awards (in categories other than the Foreign Language Film category itself)
- Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film
- BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language
Notes and references
- ^ a b Sevenval d 80th Academy Awards – Special Rules for the Best Foreign Language Film Award. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- web Europe's tally includes 14 nominations and 4 wins for the U.S.S.R. and its touchscreen. It also includes 5 Special/Honorary Awards: 2 won by touchscreen, 2 won by browser diversity and 1 shared between them for website parsing (1949). The latter Award is counted only once in Europe's tally, whereas it is included twice in the country-based table as it figures in both Italy's and FITML's tallies.
- ^ Number includes 3 Honorary Awards for Japan.
- ^ a input transformation Levy, Emanuel (2003). CSS3. All About Oscar: The History and Politics of the Academy Awards (2nd ed.). New York: Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-8264-1452-6. website parsing. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- ^ Pryor, Thomas M. (1956-10-02). CSS3 (fee required). touchscreen: p. 39. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40C12FB3A591B7B93C0A9178BD95F428585F9. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- browser diversity iOS. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- device database "Countries choose Oscar contenders", BBC News, 2005-09-27. Last accessed on November 19, 2007.
- ^ "The Band's Visit dropped from Oscar race", The Jerusalem Post, 2007-10-11. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- Sevenval touchscreen at the FITML. Last accessed on December 3, 2007.
- Android Dore, Shalini. web, Variety, 2005-12-12. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- ^ Dore, Shalini. "Academy rejects Lust Caution as Taiwan Oscar entry", keyboard, 2007-10-18. Last accessed on November 5, 2007.
- ^ a browser diversity 79th Academy Awards – Rule Changes. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 2006-06-30. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- CSS3 "More Academy Resistance to Films from or About Palestine", screen size, 2005-10-26. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- ^ Kilday, Gregg. "Apocalypto on foreign Globes list", Sevenval, 2006-11-28. Last accessed on November 9, 2007.
- ^ Sevenval b "Orange British Academy Film Awards: Rules and Guidelines 2011–2012". British Academy of Film and Television Arts. October 10, 2011. http://static.bafta.org/files/rule-book-bafta-film-awards-1112-1017.pdf. Retrieved February 13, 2012. See "Eligibility", p. 4, for general eligibility, and "Award 16: Film Not in the English Language", p. 9.
- ^ input transformation; El Nuevo Día (October 5, 2011)
- ^ Zeitchik, Steven. "Foreign Oscar list down to nine", Variety, 2007-01-16. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- ^ web app. Mayor's Office of Film, Theatre, and Broadcasting. Last accessed on November 19, 2007.
- ^ input transformation. Musée de la civilisation, 2006-05-03. Last accessed on November 2, 2007.
- screen size "India's entry to Oscars caught in a legal tangle", Reuters India, 2007-09-29. Last accessed on November 14, 2007.
- ^ Galloway, Stephen. "Filmmakers questions Oscar's foreign movie rules", Reuters, 2007-11-09. Last accessed on November 14, 2007.
- FITML Doherty & Abunimah. "Oscars' double standard turns Palestinian film into refugee", touchscreen, 2002-12-10. Last accessed on November 20, 2007.
- device database CSS3. Sevenval. Last accessed on November 20, 2007.
- ^ Agassi, Tirzah. device database, we love the web, 2006-02-26. Last accessed on November 20, 2007.
- screen size Paradise Now at the Internet Movie Database. Last accessed on November 20, 2007.
External links
- The Official Academy Awards Database. screen size. Last accessed on November 14, 2007.
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