| 

 



Gary Dretzka
Leonard
Klady
David Poland
Douglas Pratt
Ray Pride
|
The
Oscar Nominee Foreign Language Fact Sheet
List
of Nominees | Nominations by the
Number | Nominations by Film Fact
Sheets Best
Picture | Foreign Language |
Best Director | Best
Actor/Best Supporting Actor | Best
Actress/Best Supporting Actress
 |
| | Don't
Tell (Italy) Directed by Cristina Comencini
This is the
twenty-seventh Academy Award nomination for Italy. It has taken home ten Oscars
for La Strada (1956), The Nights of Cabiria (1957), Federico Fellinis 8½
(1963), Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1964), Investigation of a Citizen above
Suspicion (1970), The Garden of the Finzi Continis (1971), Amarcord (1974), Cinema
Paradiso (1989), Mediterraneo (1991) and Life Is Beautiful (1998). Additionally,
Italy received three Special/Honorary Awards prior to the establishment of the
Foreign Language Film as a regular category in 1956: Shoe-Shine (1947), The Bicycle
Thief (1949) and The Walls of Malapaga (1950) [shared with France]. Other previous
nominations were The Usual Unidentified Thieves (1958), The Great War (1959),
Kapo (1960), The Four Days of Naples (1962), Marriage Italian Style (1965), The
Battle of Algiers (1966), The Girl with the Pistol (1968), Scent of a Woman (1975),
Seven Beauties (1976), A Special Day (1977), Viva Italia! (1978), To Forget Venice
(1979), Three Brothers (1981), The Family (1987), Open Doors (1990) and The Star
Maker (1995).
|  |
| Joyeux
Noël (France) Directed by Christian Carion
This is
the thirty-fourth Academy Award nomination for France. It has taken home nine
Oscars for My Uncle (1958), Black Orpheus (1959), Sundays and Cybele (1962), A
Man and a Woman (1966), The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972), Day for
Night (1973), Madame Rosa (1977), Get Out Your Handkerchiefs (1978) and Indochine
(1992). Additionally, France received three Special/Honorary Awards prior to the
establishment of the Foreign Language Film as a regular category in 1956: Monsieur
Vincent (1948), The Walls of Malapaga (1950) [shared with Italy] and Forbidden
Games (1952). Other previous nominations were Gervaise (1956), Gates of Paris
(1957), La Vérité (1960), The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964), Live
for Life (1967), Stolen Kisses (1968), My Night at Maud's (1969), Hoa-Binh (1970),
Lacombe, Lucien (1974), Cousin, Cousine (1976), A Simple Story (1979), The Last
Metro (1980), Coup de Torchon ("Clean Slate") (1982), Entre Nous (1983),
Three Men and a Cradle (1985), Betty Blue (1986), Au Revoir Les Enfants (Goodbye,
Children) (1987), Camille Claudel (1989), Cyrano de Bergerac (1990), Ridicule
(1996), East-West (1999), The Taste of Others (2000), Amélie (2001) and
last years The Chorus (Les Choristes).
|  |
| Paradise
Now (The Palestinian Authority) Directed by Hany Abu-Assad
This
is Palestines first Academy Awardnomination. |  |
| Sophie
Scholl The Final Days (Germany) Directed by Marc Rothemund
This
is the sixth Academy Award nomination for Germany. Previous nominations were The
Nasty Girl (1990), Schtonk! (1992), Beyond Silence (1997), Nowhere in Africa (2002)
which won the Oscar, and last years Downfall. Prior to reunification in
1990, the Federal Republic of Germany received a total of eight Academy Award
nominations. They were The Captain of Kopenick (1956), The Devil Came at Night
(1957), Arms and the Man (1958), The Bridge (1959), The Pedestrian (1973), The
Glass Cell (1978), The Tin Drum (1979) which won the Oscar, and Angry Harvest
(1985). Also prior to reunification, the German Democratic Republic received one Academy
Award nomination: Jacob, the Liar (1976).
|  |
| Tsotsi
(South Africa) Directed by Gavin Hood
This is the second
Academy Award nomination for South Africa in as many years, as its entry Yesterday
was nominated last year.
|  |
| |
|