The Peterborough Examiner

Blind Vaysha deserves Oscar win

Startling Canadian film worthy contender for best animated short

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

Oscar-nominated animated and live-action shorts are screening at the Lightbox in Toronto and the Vancity in Vancouver.

It’s more than mere flag-waving when I say that Canada deserves to win the Oscar for best animated short this year. The nominated film is Blind Vaysha, from Bulgarianb­orn director Theodore Ushev, and it tells the story of a woman who can see the future with one eye, the past with the other, but never the present.

It’s a startling and creative effort produced by the National Film Board of Canada, whose 74 nomination­s stretch back to 1941, when Warclouds in the Pacific from director Stuart Legg was nominated in the Academy’s first recognitio­n of short documentar­ies. (It lost to Churchill’s Island, also by Legg.)

But don’t take my word for it. Toronto and Vancouver cinemas are screening all five nominated shorts and live-action shorts in separate programs. (Documentar­y shorts may follow soon.) Blind Vaysha has competitio­n from Borrowed Time (an atmospheri­c tale of a Wild West sheriff ); Pearl (a father-daughter story that unintentio­nally had me cringing at their poor driving habits); and Pear Cider and Cigarettes, a not-for-kids tale of a hedonist who moves to China for a kidney transplant.

There’s also Piper, which played in front of Finding Dory last summer, and tells the story of an adorable sandpiper. This is Pixar’s 12th nomination for the prize since Luxo Jr. in 1986, though it hasn’t had a win since 2000’s For the Birds. Canada’s most recent Oscar for best animated short was in 2006 for The Danish Poet by Torill Kove.

In the best live-action category, the oddsmakers’ favourite is Silent Nights, about a romance between a Danish woman who volunteers at a homeless shelter, and a Ghanian refugee. But I was torn between the Spanish short Timecode, in which two parking-lot security guards find an interestin­g way to communicat­e through dance; and La femme et le TGV from Switzerlan­d, about an unlikely friendship between the driver of a high-speed train and the woman whose house he roars past each day.

Also in the running: Ennemis intérieurs (Enemies Within), in which a Muslim man from Algeria tries to apply for French citizenshi­p in the 1990s, but finds he must pay a steep price to be accepted; and Mindenki (Sing), about a Hungarian girl whose music teacher is playing a cruel psychologi­cal game with the pupils in her choir.

In the documentar­y short film contest, there’s a Canadian connection to the sweet film Joe’s Violin, which tells the story of a Holocaust survivor who donates his beloved instrument to a poor school district. Its credits include Raphaela Neihausen, a Torontorai­sed producer.

The rest of the documentar­y nominees: Extremis, about life (and death) in the intensive care unit at Highland Hospital in Oakland, Calif.; 4.1 Miles, which looks at the rescue of Turkish refugees by the inhabitant­s of a tiny Greek island; The White Helmets, about volunteers in Aleppo, Syria, who risk their lives to save civilians trapped and injured by the bombings; and Watani: My Homeland, about a Syrian family’s journey to a new home in Germany. Clearly, there’s a theme in the air.

The Oscars will be telecast on Sunday, Feb. 26.

 ?? NATIONAL FILM BOARD OF CANADA ?? Blind Vaysha is a startling and creative Canadian film nominated for an Oscar for best animated short film.
NATIONAL FILM BOARD OF CANADA Blind Vaysha is a startling and creative Canadian film nominated for an Oscar for best animated short film.
 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Montreal animator Theodore Ushev has been working at his craft for more than 15 years.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal animator Theodore Ushev has been working at his craft for more than 15 years.

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