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    Global politics loom over Oscar foreign film event

    BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) - Nominees for the best foreign language film Oscar gathered on Saturday for an annual symposium to discuss their films, but a cloud of global politics loomed over the event in which Iranian and Israeli filmmakers both took part.

    One day earlier in Los Angeles, Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, whose divorce drama "A Separation" is an Oscar nominee, missed an award-related event saying he was ill, prompting reports in the Israeli media that he might be avoiding them and the director of Israel's nominee, "Footnote."

    For Saturday's Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences event, Farhadi did not pose for news photographers outside - although his actors did - and during the symposium, he and "Footnote" maker Joseph Cedar sat at opposite ends of the panel.

    Afterward, he was whisked away before reporters could talk to him and taken to another event, the Independent Spirit Awards, where "A Separation" won best international movie. But Farhadi appeared only onstage and not in a backstage press room.

    The Iranian government has treated some of its country's filmmakers such as Jafar Panahi harshly in recent years. Farhadi has said in past interviews he was not censored in making his movie, and it is impossible to know whether he feels government pressure now. But his fellow filmmakers said they understood his dilemma in meeting with the western media.

    "If he (Farhadi) doesn't want to talk to the press, I can appreciate that," Canadian director Philippe Falardeau, whose "Monsieur Lazhar" also is nominated, told Reuters. "I can say a lot of stupid things to the press and I won't get in trouble for that back home. That's not his case."

    Cedar declined comment when approached by Reuters to ask whether he and Farhadi had a chance to meet and talk about their respective Oscar-nominated movies.

    HUMANITY, NOT POLITICS

    For weeks in interviews leading up to the Academy Awards, both filmmakers have stressed that their movies are about families and human issues - not politics - and at Saturday's symposium, they continued to focus on cinema over politics.

    Farhadi's "A Separation," which has won numerous awards this year, opens with a couple seeking a divorce being dismissed by a judge who tells them their problems are too small. As the movie plays out, many people become involved in their private affair.

    "The problem with smaller problems is that you can't really see them," Farhadi told a packed house. "The big problems are so big that at least you can see it and identify it."

    Cedar found inspiration for "Footnote," about an estranged father and son relationship, in his own life. The director told the audience he remembered receiving a call from the Italian embassy in Jerusalem saying they would like to present him with an award honoring the 60th anniversary of Israel's founding.

    But over time, he came to suspect the award was instead intended for his father, a prominent bio-chemist, and from that experience came "Footnote," in which a similar mix up occurs.

    Likewise, Belgian filmmaker Michael Roskam drew from real life for his debut feature, "Bullhead" about a psychically wounded cattle farmer who runs afoul of a deadly crime ring.

    "In my country we were actually confronted with the existence of the Belgian hormone mafia," said Roskam who went on to describe the real-life execution of an investigator at the hands of outlaws, an incident mirrored in "Bullhead."

    Nominated in 1992 for "Europa Europa," Agnieszka Holland originally turned down the chance to direct this year's Polish nominee, "In Darkness."

    "It was the worst shoot of my lifetime," she said about her movie, which takes place in the sewers of the Polish city of Lvov where Jews hid during Nazi occupation.

    Holland and her cast spent long hours in the darkness and stench of real sewers to achieve greater verisimilitude. "So you understand why I would turn it down," she laughed. "I have some experience and I could imagine what it would mean to me physically and psychologically to make this film."

    Falardeau's "Monsieur Lazhar" tells of a one-man play about an Algerian schoolteacher in Montreal who must help his students come to terms with their former teacher's suicide.

    Although he is happy to be nominated and proud of his movie, Falardeau confessed he thinks "A Separation" should win. "I would vote for 'A Separation,'" he said. "I think it's not only the best film, I think it's the film that has to win."

    (Reporting By Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Eric Walsh)

     

    4 comments

    • Tatiana E.  •  Pleasanton, California  •  2 months ago
      Silly me, and I thought Lvov was a UKRAINIAN city. :( Then what do I know, I've only lived in Ukraine for the first fifteen years of my life.
      • mordra 2 months ago
        I get what you're saying Tatiana. My grandmother was born near Sniatyn but her immigration papers say she was Polish. She was furious and kept telling the immigration people she was Ukrainian and not Polish.
      • SHELDON 2 months ago
        Between WW1 & the end of WW2 it was part of Poland.
    • Suit of Flames  •  2 months ago
      No foreign films should be accepted until Israel recognizes the Palestinian state
      • Tatiana E. 2 months ago
        What about the Palestinians making more movies? For God's sake, keep politics out of show business. Politics makes yours truly sick.
      • mordra 2 months ago
        How about, no foreign films should be accepted until Israel and Palestine drop their individual claims to the land and learn to live in peace and quit involving everyone else in their squabble. How about that?
      • Ethan 2 months ago
        Suiit of Flames and Mordra, you are both idiots. Making art and being recognized for it is the same as being recognized for athletic accomplishments. You wouldn't stop the Olympics just because Israel and the Palestinian territories are participating. Using your logic, America should not be allowed to participate in any international film festivals because they are currently participating in multiple wars and are definitely involving the rest of the world. Art is art - not politics, and censoring someone because of the place of their birth is equivalent to racism and is just as big of a crime against humanity as anything else. We as humans evolve best when we have art to help us relate to each other.
    • donato  •  Salisbury, Maryland  •  2 months ago
      If I ran doesn't win they will plant a suicide bomb
    • kds4e  •  2 months ago
      once again muzlamik violence dominates every event. the spectre of evil mohamed looms over everything everywhere.

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