The Jewish Chronicle

No Oscar nod for Israel again

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ISRAEL’S MORE than half-century courtship to win an Oscar for best foreign language film has been akin to the tale of a young woman often chosen as a bridesmaid but never as a bride.

Since submitting its first entry — and winning its first nomination — for Sallah in 1964, Israel has made the short list of top nominees ten times without ever catching the Oscar bouquet.

This year, tribal boosters can stop biting their fingernail­s anticipati­ng the outcome. Israel’s entry The Cakemaker, a challengin­g film on bisexual affairs between German and Israeli lovers, was eliminated in the first round.

The list of nine semi-finalists among entries from 87 countries, announced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on Monday evening, excluded the Israeli entry.

However, Israel was not the only snubbed contender. Looking at the entire history of Oscar awards, the three leading countries in the number of both nominees and ultimate winners — Italy, France and Spain — were all eliminated this time around.

Yet, oddly enough, if the themes chosen by a country’s filmmakers reflect in some ways the interests of their movie-going publics, the world’s fascinatio­n with the Holocaust, the Second World War and their aftermaths has never been higher.

Eight countries have this year submitted films which deal directly or indirectly with the fate of Europe’s Jews during their darkest period — a list that comprises Austria, France, the Netherland­s, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia and Switzerlan­d.

None of these countries’ films made the short list, but of particular interest is Russia’s Sobibor, centring on the 1943 uprising in the notorious concentrat­ion camp, and Romania’s oddlynamed I Do Not Care If We Go Down in History as Barbarians, which focuses on the massacre of Odessa’s Jews by the Romanian army.

The list of nine semi-finalists will be winnowed down to five on January 22, and the winner will clutch the golden statuette at the 91st Oscar telecast on February 24.

Fascinatio­n in Second World War film never higher

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