theon wrote:
Anwar wrote:
rana wrote:
Anyway, as it turned out in case of WARRIOR, one restriction for nomination for Foreign Film Category is that it has to be in the language of that country?? So, it never will qualify as Canadian film (film is in Hindi) acceptable for Oscar Nomination and will never qualify as an Indian Film as it has nothing to do with India except plot and a few hired bodies.
Really? Then why did LES INVASIONS BARBARES get nominated - and even won - Best Film in a Foreign Language? If I'm not mistaken the film is in French, right? But French isn't an official language of Canada, right?

French is indeed an official language of Canada.
RULES CHANGED.
Water going for the Oscars (Feb 2007).
http://www.samachar.com/showurl.htm?rur ... the~Oscars!
Water is Canada's Oscar entry
Arthur J Pais in New York
September 22, 2006 16:43 IST
Canada has set a record for foreign Oscar submissions by nominating
a Hindi-language film, the Deepa Mehta-directed Water.
It could do so only because, three months ago,
Oscar rules were
changed to allow a country to nominate a film that isn't in its
indigenous language as long as English is not the dominant language
in the film.
The Oscar nomination has, for several years, been the subject of
bitter controversies over the language issue. A milestone was the
rejection in 2003 of The Warrior.
The WarriorThe Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences took
the unusual step of rejecting the movie because 'Hindi was not a
language indigenous to the UK.' It overlooked the fact that the film had
a British-born director, Asif Kapadia, and was co-produced by three
British companies. In an ironic twist, The Warrior, (right) set in
feudal India and starring Irrfan Khan, won Best British Film at the
British Academy Awards the following year.
Language was also the problem last year, when Austria's entry,
Michael Haneke's French-language thriller Cache -- for which he won
Best Director at Cannes -- was rejected. So was Italy's political
drama Private, featuring Arabic and Hebrew.
In a previous interview, Mehta had said that completing Water,
which inaugurated last year's Toronto International Film Festival, was
by itself hugely fulfilling, especially in the light of the project being
shut down by religious fundamentalists in Varanasi over four years
ago. The film exposes the sexual and other kinds of oppression in
a widow's ashram in the 1930s where the most beautiful of the
widows (Lisa Ray) has to prostitute herself to support fellow widows.
John Abraham plays a Gandhian idealist and Seema Biswas, the
silently rebellious older widow.
"It has been going to many festivals," Mehta said of the film, which went
to become the most successful Hindi film in North America, grossing
$5.4 million. "And if it gets an Oscar nomination, it will be a very big
boost for a small film." Made for about $3 million, the film has
grossed about $8 million worldwide.
Hindi is also heard for more than 15 minutes in the Danish foreign
Oscar entry, the Susanne Bier-directed After the Wedding. It
revolves around a Danish social worker in Mumbai who has to make
a sudden trip to Copenhagen, assuring his little friends at the
orphanage that he will return. But when he does, he is not the
same person. Will Pramod, his buddy at the orphanage, accept a
tempting offer from the Danish social worker?
Among other notable nominees so far is another Toronto International
Film Festival triumph, the grippingly disturbing drama from Germany,
The Lives of Others, about East Germany's Stasi secret service and
its system of domestic spying. Finland has nominated
Aki Kaurismaki's Lights in the Dusk, a story about a lonely night
watchman trapped in a series of misadventures.
If Water gets a nomination, it could be re-released in select
American and Canadian cities. The film was released in America by
Fox Searchlight, which will release Mira Nair's The Namesake in March.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will announce the
five international nominees on January 23, 2007. The 79th
Annual Academy Awards will take place on February 25, 2007.