Vancouver Sun

SHORT AND SWEET

Less-celebrated Oscar categories with Canadian hopefuls deserve attention, too

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

Here’s your chance to shine in the minor Oscar categories at the office pool. Anyone can hold forth on why Bohemian Rhapsody or Green Book definitely (or never in a million years) deserves to be named best picture. But how many can articulate with confidence which Canadian should win the prize for best animated short?

The five nominees include three Canadian teams: Toronto’s Domee Shi made Bao, about a woman who treats her dumpling like a son; it played before Pixar’s Incredible­s 2 last year. Vancouver’s Alison Snowden and David Fine created Animal Behaviour, a self-help group featuring an anthropomo­rphic menagerie. And Hamilton, Ont.-born Trevor Jimenez gives us Weekends, a wordless, dreamy exploratio­n of a child shuttled between separated parents.

The other contenders are Late Afternoon from Louise Bagnall and Nuria González Blanco, about an aging woman reflecting on her life; and One Small Step by Andrew Chesworth and Bobby Pontillas, in which a little girl longs to be an astronaut.

It’s a strong field, but I liked Jimenez’s evocative, wordless style.

Canadians are also well represente­d in the live-action short category, with two Quebec entries. In Fauve, by Jérémy Comte and Maria Gracia Turgeon, a childhood dare gets out of hand, while Marguerite, from Marianne Farley and Marie-Hélène Panisset, tells of an elderly woman’s romantic regrets.

Rounding out the field are more tales of children. In Madre (Mother), by Rodrigo Sorogoyen and María del Puy Alvarado of Spain, a six-year-old’s call from a secluded beach throws his mom into panic. Skin, by Guy Nattiv and Jaime Ray Newman, features a young racist-in-training whose father’s hate crime will engulf him.

Then there’s Detainment, by Vincent Lambe and Darren Mahon, which has been raising eyebrows in Britain over its subject matter, the murder of two-yearold James Bulger by two 10-yearold boys in Liverpool in 1993.

With its softer tone, Marguerite may well have the best chance in this category.

There’s no Canadian content in the nominees for best documentar­y short subject, but there is a wide range of topics. Lifeboat explores the plight of migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean with hopes of reaching Europe. End Game looks at terminally ill patients at a San Francisco hospital; it’s released by Netflix and available on the streaming service. In Black Sheep, a black

OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS

★★★★ outof5 Cast: Various

Director: Various

Duration: 1 h 16 m (animated); 1 h 49 m (live-action);

2 h 23 m (documentar­y)

man recounts the extreme things he did to fit in while growing up in a predominan­tly white British neighbourh­ood. And A Night at the Garden, just seven minutes long, recalls a pro-Nazi rally that drew 20,000 to New York’s Madison Square Garden in February, 1939.

For its unexpected topic, though, my vote goes to the 26-minute documentar­y that follows a group of women in rural India who are making and selling sanitary pads in a region where menstruati­on is such a taboo that even some women don’t completely understand it. It’s also got the most creative title: Period. End of sentence.

 ?? TWELVE MEDIA ?? Vincent Lambe and Darren Mahon’s short film Detainment, about the 1993 murder of toddler James Bulger that shook Liverpool, is nominated for an Oscar.
TWELVE MEDIA Vincent Lambe and Darren Mahon’s short film Detainment, about the 1993 murder of toddler James Bulger that shook Liverpool, is nominated for an Oscar.
 ?? NATIONAL FILM BOARD ?? Animal Behaviour is nominated for an Oscar in the best animated short category.
NATIONAL FILM BOARD Animal Behaviour is nominated for an Oscar in the best animated short category.

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