Eric Kohn and Anne Thompson are collaborating on predictions updates for this category. See Thompson’s preliminary thoughts for what to expect at the 95th Academy Awards here and earlier predictions for this category here.

The State of the Race

With 15 movies on the shortlist for the International Feature Film Oscar, virtually everything that has been gaining momentum in recent months made the cut. Awards season’s most global category finds relatively big-budget contenders jockeying for the five-slot category from Europe, Latin America, and Asia, but a few rising filmmaker stars from the festival circuit could snake into the mix as well.

In a year where Netflix has no obvious Best Picture frontrunner, it makes sense that as the platform continues to grow its international presence, it has a strong showing in this category with two of the higher-profile films on the shortlist. German entry “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the third adaptation of the 1929 novel and the first made from a German perspective, marks the only genuine war epic in Oscar contention this year, and in a show of strength, also landed slots for Makeup and Hairstyling, Music, Sound, and Visual Effects. Director Edward Berger’s bleak, violent look at the trenches of WWI from the perspective of a reluctant recruit (Felix Kammerer) tracks the closing days of the battle from the frontlines with shocking realism and intense camerawork reminiscent of “1917,” another recent Academy-friendly contender. With actors such as Benedict Cumberbatch already campaigning for the movie, expect its profile to continue to rise as Netflix throws more resources behind it. Meanwhile, the streamer has been pushing Alejandro G. Iñarritu’s “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” since its divisive Venice premiere. Mexico’s two-time Best Director winner’s personal and eccentric autofiction about a famed documentarian (Daniel Gimenez Cacho) who returns to his homeland after finding success in the U.S. unfolds as a dreamlike descent into its character’s identity crisis. While critics have been mixed on the movie, which is 22 minutes shorter since Venice, good will for Iñarritu and his distinctive cinematic vision has been resonating with Academy members since its Telluride premiere, where everyone from Cate Blanchett to Barry Jenkins sang its praises. The movie may still be a touch too odd for more conservative tastes, but appreciation for Iñarritu (and, again, a generous Netflix campaign) will help keep it in the conversation.

Meanwhile, Park Chan-wook has been in the conversation since he won Best Director at Cannes. The Korean auteur’s work is usually too violent and disturbing to gain traction in awards season, but he has dialed back those instincts for this elegant and moody film noir about a Busan-based detective (Park Hae-il) who falls in love with a Chinese woman (Tang Wei) even as he investigates her for possibly murdering her husband. The movie, which has been a modest theatrical success in the U.S. for MUBI, benefits from longstanding respect for Park’s complex, layered storytelling and the growing awareness that it has been under-appreciated in the West. In a year that has also included a well-received sequel to “Knives Out,” the whodunit is having a moment that could benefit Park as well; at the same time, the movie’s hefty running time and somewhat predictable mystery have left some audiences cold. It will take a lot of advocacy for Park’s technical skills to push past. At the other end of the experience spectrum, there’s 30-year-old Belgian director Lukas Dhont. While his breakout trans drama “Girl” failed to make the shortlist in 2018 after it was criticized for the depiction of its protagonist, Dhont has course-corrected with a poignant look at prepubescent male friendship. The tragic story follows 13-year-old Léo (Eden Dambrine) who forges a close, quasi-romantic friendship with Rémi (Gustav de Waele) that turns sour when they’re bullied by homophobic classmates. A Grand Prix winner at Cannes, where it was acquired by A24, “Close” is the most intimate and sentimental entry in this category, exactly the sort of accessible tearjerker that could go far. While these films may have the strongest shot at the category, anything on the short list could break through as more Academy members explore the entries. That includes “EO,” from octogenarian filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski, a wondrous visual odyssey about the life of a donkey, and IFC Films’ Austrian entry “Corsage,” a playful period piece starring a pitch-perfect Vicky Krieps as the Empress Elisabeth of Austria.

Utopia The complicated world of the Middle East sits at the center of several contenders this year, including Danish entry “Holy Spider” (shot in Jordan and set in Iran, it follows a serial killer who targets sex workers) and Sweden’s university thriller “Cairo Conspiracy” (previously known as “Boy From Heaven”). Queer drama “Blue Caftan” is a hidden gem that could creep further into the conversation, as it follows a closeted gay man in a country where his desires are taboo; that plot is also the centerpiece of Pakistani entry “Joyland,” which remained the country’s Oscar submission even after it was briefly banned for its subject matter. The movie, a rousing crowdpleaser about a man from a traditionalist family who falls for a trans dancer, won the Queer Palme at Cannes. Despite acclaim for first-time director Saim Sadiq and an upcoming slot at Sundance, the movie has yet to secure a U.S. distribution deal many months after its premiere — but its current status in the Oscar race could change that. Finally, it’s worth acknowledging some of the snubs that were on the cusp of making the cut here. These include Berlinale winner “Alcarras,” the Spanish entry about a family fighting to save its peach farm from corporate takeover, the Brazilian Bolsonaro-era family drama “Mars One,” and the Norwegian war epic “War Sailor.” All of them are worth a watch. The following list is alphabetical. Frontrunners: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Edward Berger, Germany) “Argentina, 1985” (Santiago Mitre, Argentina) “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” (Alejandro González Iñárritu, Mexico) “Close” (Lukas Dhont, Belgium) “Decision to Leave” (Park Chan-wook, Korea) Contenders: “The Blue Caftan” (Morocco) “Cairo Conspiracy” (Sweden) “Corsage” (Austria) “EO” (Poland) “Holy Spider” (Denmark) “Joyland” (Pakistan) “Last Film Show” (India) “The Quiet Girl” (Ireland) “Return to Seoul” (Cambodia) “Saint Omer” (Saint Omer) Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.


title: “2023 Oscars Best International Feature Film Predictions” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-16” author: “Joseph Alton”


Eric Kohn and Anne Thompson are collaborating on predictions updates for this category. See Thompson’s preliminary thoughts for what to expect at the 95th Academy Awards here and earlier predictions for this category here.

The State of the Race

With 15 movies on the shortlist for the International Feature Film Oscar, virtually everything that has been gaining momentum in recent months made the cut. Awards season’s most global category finds relatively big-budget contenders jockeying for the five-slot category from Europe, Latin America, and Asia, but a few rising filmmaker stars from the festival circuit could snake into the mix as well.

In a year where Netflix has no obvious Best Picture frontrunner, it makes sense that as the platform continues to grow its international presence, it has a strong showing in this category with two of the higher-profile films on the shortlist. German entry “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the third adaptation of the 1929 novel and the first made from a German perspective, marks the only genuine war epic in Oscar contention this year, and in a show of strength, also landed slots for Makeup and Hairstyling, Music, Sound, and Visual Effects. Director Edward Berger’s bleak, violent look at the trenches of WWI from the perspective of a reluctant recruit (Felix Kammerer) tracks the closing days of the battle from the frontlines with shocking realism and intense camerawork reminiscent of “1917,” another recent Academy-friendly contender. With actors such as Benedict Cumberbatch already campaigning for the movie, expect its profile to continue to rise as Netflix throws more resources behind it. Meanwhile, the streamer has been pushing Alejandro G. Iñarritu’s “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” since its divisive Venice premiere. Mexico’s two-time Best Director winner’s personal and eccentric autofiction about a famed documentarian (Daniel Gimenez Cacho) who returns to his homeland after finding success in the U.S. unfolds as a dreamlike descent into its character’s identity crisis. While critics have been mixed on the movie, which is 22 minutes shorter since Venice, good will for Iñarritu and his distinctive cinematic vision has been resonating with Academy members since its Telluride premiere, where everyone from Cate Blanchett to Barry Jenkins sang its praises. The movie may still be a touch too odd for more conservative tastes, but appreciation for Iñarritu (and, again, a generous Netflix campaign) will help keep it in the conversation.

Meanwhile, Park Chan-wook has been in the conversation since he won Best Director at Cannes. The Korean auteur’s work is usually too violent and disturbing to gain traction in awards season, but he has dialed back those instincts for this elegant and moody film noir about a Busan-based detective (Park Hae-il) who falls in love with a Chinese woman (Tang Wei) even as he investigates her for possibly murdering her husband. The movie, which has been a modest theatrical success in the U.S. for MUBI, benefits from longstanding respect for Park’s complex, layered storytelling and the growing awareness that it has been under-appreciated in the West. In a year that has also included a well-received sequel to “Knives Out,” the whodunit is having a moment that could benefit Park as well; at the same time, the movie’s hefty running time and somewhat predictable mystery have left some audiences cold. It will take a lot of advocacy for Park’s technical skills to push past. At the other end of the experience spectrum, there’s 30-year-old Belgian director Lukas Dhont. While his breakout trans drama “Girl” failed to make the shortlist in 2018 after it was criticized for the depiction of its protagonist, Dhont has course-corrected with a poignant look at prepubescent male friendship. The tragic story follows 13-year-old Léo (Eden Dambrine) who forges a close, quasi-romantic friendship with Rémi (Gustav de Waele) that turns sour when they’re bullied by homophobic classmates. A Grand Prix winner at Cannes, where it was acquired by A24, “Close” is the most intimate and sentimental entry in this category, exactly the sort of accessible tearjerker that could go far. While these films may have the strongest shot at the category, anything on the short list could break through as more Academy members explore the entries. That includes “EO,” from octogenarian filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski, a wondrous visual odyssey about the life of a donkey, and IFC Films’ Austrian entry “Corsage,” a playful period piece starring a pitch-perfect Vicky Krieps as the Empress Elisabeth of Austria.

Utopia The complicated world of the Middle East sits at the center of several contenders this year, including Danish entry “Holy Spider” (shot in Jordan and set in Iran, it follows a serial killer who targets sex workers) and Sweden’s university thriller “Cairo Conspiracy” (previously known as “Boy From Heaven”). Queer drama “Blue Caftan” is a hidden gem that could creep further into the conversation, as it follows a closeted gay man in a country where his desires are taboo; that plot is also the centerpiece of Pakistani entry “Joyland,” which remained the country’s Oscar submission even after it was briefly banned for its subject matter. The movie, a rousing crowdpleaser about a man from a traditionalist family who falls for a trans dancer, won the Queer Palme at Cannes. Despite acclaim for first-time director Saim Sadiq and an upcoming slot at Sundance, the movie has yet to secure a U.S. distribution deal many months after its premiere — but its current status in the Oscar race could change that. Finally, it’s worth acknowledging some of the snubs that were on the cusp of making the cut here. These include Berlinale winner “Alcarras,” the Spanish entry about a family fighting to save its peach farm from corporate takeover, the Brazilian Bolsonaro-era family drama “Mars One,” and the Norwegian war epic “War Sailor.” All of them are worth a watch. The following list is alphabetical. Frontrunners: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Edward Berger, Germany) “Argentina, 1985” (Santiago Mitre, Argentina) “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” (Alejandro González Iñárritu, Mexico) “Close” (Lukas Dhont, Belgium) “Decision to Leave” (Park Chan-wook, Korea) Contenders: “The Blue Caftan” (Morocco) “Cairo Conspiracy” (Sweden) “Corsage” (Austria) “EO” (Poland) “Holy Spider” (Denmark) “Joyland” (Pakistan) “Last Film Show” (India) “The Quiet Girl” (Ireland) “Return to Seoul” (Cambodia) “Saint Omer” (Saint Omer) Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.


title: “2023 Oscars Best International Feature Film Predictions” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-04” author: “Jill Wilson”


Eric Kohn and Anne Thompson are collaborating on predictions updates for this category. See Thompson’s preliminary thoughts for what to expect at the 95th Academy Awards here and earlier predictions for this category here.

The State of the Race

With 15 movies on the shortlist for the International Feature Film Oscar, virtually everything that has been gaining momentum in recent months made the cut. Awards season’s most global category finds relatively big-budget contenders jockeying for the five-slot category from Europe, Latin America, and Asia, but a few rising filmmaker stars from the festival circuit could snake into the mix as well.

In a year where Netflix has no obvious Best Picture frontrunner, it makes sense that as the platform continues to grow its international presence, it has a strong showing in this category with two of the higher-profile films on the shortlist. German entry “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the third adaptation of the 1929 novel and the first made from a German perspective, marks the only genuine war epic in Oscar contention this year, and in a show of strength, also landed slots for Makeup and Hairstyling, Music, Sound, and Visual Effects. Director Edward Berger’s bleak, violent look at the trenches of WWI from the perspective of a reluctant recruit (Felix Kammerer) tracks the closing days of the battle from the frontlines with shocking realism and intense camerawork reminiscent of “1917,” another recent Academy-friendly contender. With actors such as Benedict Cumberbatch already campaigning for the movie, expect its profile to continue to rise as Netflix throws more resources behind it. Meanwhile, the streamer has been pushing Alejandro G. Iñarritu’s “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” since its divisive Venice premiere. Mexico’s two-time Best Director winner’s personal and eccentric autofiction about a famed documentarian (Daniel Gimenez Cacho) who returns to his homeland after finding success in the U.S. unfolds as a dreamlike descent into its character’s identity crisis. While critics have been mixed on the movie, which is 22 minutes shorter since Venice, good will for Iñarritu and his distinctive cinematic vision has been resonating with Academy members since its Telluride premiere, where everyone from Cate Blanchett to Barry Jenkins sang its praises. The movie may still be a touch too odd for more conservative tastes, but appreciation for Iñarritu (and, again, a generous Netflix campaign) will help keep it in the conversation.

Meanwhile, Park Chan-wook has been in the conversation since he won Best Director at Cannes. The Korean auteur’s work is usually too violent and disturbing to gain traction in awards season, but he has dialed back those instincts for this elegant and moody film noir about a Busan-based detective (Park Hae-il) who falls in love with a Chinese woman (Tang Wei) even as he investigates her for possibly murdering her husband. The movie, which has been a modest theatrical success in the U.S. for MUBI, benefits from longstanding respect for Park’s complex, layered storytelling and the growing awareness that it has been under-appreciated in the West. In a year that has also included a well-received sequel to “Knives Out,” the whodunit is having a moment that could benefit Park as well; at the same time, the movie’s hefty running time and somewhat predictable mystery have left some audiences cold. It will take a lot of advocacy for Park’s technical skills to push past. At the other end of the experience spectrum, there’s 30-year-old Belgian director Lukas Dhont. While his breakout trans drama “Girl” failed to make the shortlist in 2018 after it was criticized for the depiction of its protagonist, Dhont has course-corrected with a poignant look at prepubescent male friendship. The tragic story follows 13-year-old Léo (Eden Dambrine) who forges a close, quasi-romantic friendship with Rémi (Gustav de Waele) that turns sour when they’re bullied by homophobic classmates. A Grand Prix winner at Cannes, where it was acquired by A24, “Close” is the most intimate and sentimental entry in this category, exactly the sort of accessible tearjerker that could go far. While these films may have the strongest shot at the category, anything on the short list could break through as more Academy members explore the entries. That includes “EO,” from octogenarian filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski, a wondrous visual odyssey about the life of a donkey, and IFC Films’ Austrian entry “Corsage,” a playful period piece starring a pitch-perfect Vicky Krieps as the Empress Elisabeth of Austria.

Utopia The complicated world of the Middle East sits at the center of several contenders this year, including Danish entry “Holy Spider” (shot in Jordan and set in Iran, it follows a serial killer who targets sex workers) and Sweden’s university thriller “Cairo Conspiracy” (previously known as “Boy From Heaven”). Queer drama “Blue Caftan” is a hidden gem that could creep further into the conversation, as it follows a closeted gay man in a country where his desires are taboo; that plot is also the centerpiece of Pakistani entry “Joyland,” which remained the country’s Oscar submission even after it was briefly banned for its subject matter. The movie, a rousing crowdpleaser about a man from a traditionalist family who falls for a trans dancer, won the Queer Palme at Cannes. Despite acclaim for first-time director Saim Sadiq and an upcoming slot at Sundance, the movie has yet to secure a U.S. distribution deal many months after its premiere — but its current status in the Oscar race could change that. Finally, it’s worth acknowledging some of the snubs that were on the cusp of making the cut here. These include Berlinale winner “Alcarras,” the Spanish entry about a family fighting to save its peach farm from corporate takeover, the Brazilian Bolsonaro-era family drama “Mars One,” and the Norwegian war epic “War Sailor.” All of them are worth a watch. The following list is alphabetical. Frontrunners: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Edward Berger, Germany) “Argentina, 1985” (Santiago Mitre, Argentina) “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” (Alejandro González Iñárritu, Mexico) “Close” (Lukas Dhont, Belgium) “Decision to Leave” (Park Chan-wook, Korea) Contenders: “The Blue Caftan” (Morocco) “Cairo Conspiracy” (Sweden) “Corsage” (Austria) “EO” (Poland) “Holy Spider” (Denmark) “Joyland” (Pakistan) “Last Film Show” (India) “The Quiet Girl” (Ireland) “Return to Seoul” (Cambodia) “Saint Omer” (Saint Omer) Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.