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Category 'Best Live Action Short Film'

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Live Action Short

Editor’s note: Welcome to the fourth of a 33-part series dissecting the 83rd Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!

by Branden of Foolish Blatherings

First of all, I would like to thank Jess from Insight Entertainment for the opportunity to write about the recent Oscar nominees. As everyone may know that the public will never see the five nominees for Best Live Action Short Film unless you find it on YouTube. Good luck searching. I am here to give you the inside scoop so you could win the company Oscar pool. You can thank me later.

The first nominee is the 15-minute Irish film, “The Crush” by first-time writer/director Michael Creagh. It tells the story of an eight-year-old boy who has an unhealthy infatuation to her teacher. To prove his love to her, he challenges her boyfriend to a duel to the death. The film was awarded Best Irish short at the Kerry Film Festival.

The next film is the 26-minute Estonian film by Tanel Toom, “The Confession” (Pihtimus), which tells the story of Sam, a reserved boy who is afraid of his confession. He is pure of heart and has no sins to confesses. With the help of his friend, Jacob try to have a reason to confess when tragedy strikes.

The third nominee is the 18-minute short, “God of Love” from director, Luke Mathney. It tells the story of a lovesick lounge singer/darts champion, Raymond Goodfellow who finds a package of love-inducing darts. He thinks his prayers are answered so he could get Kelly, the drummer in his band to fall for him. The problem is that she is already in relationship with his best friend, Fozzie, the guitarist in his band. He tries to get rid of the love triangle, but he learns a valuable lessons about unrequited love and his place in the universe.

The fourth nominee is the 19-minute Belgian film, “Na Wewe”, which means “You Too” in Burundi. It was directed by Ivan Goldschmidt that takes place in Kurundi circa 1994. In the middle of the civil war between the Hutus and Tutsis, a bus is overtaken by a band of rebels. During the chaos, everybody is uneasy about who is Hutu and Tutsi. Is the person next to you a friend or a foe?

The last nominee is the 24-minute film by Ian Barnes called “Wish 143.” It tells the story of a boy that has a terminal disease who wants to come of age before his time runs out.

I hope that you would find this post helpful for your company’s Oscar pool. I would place my bet on the “The Confession.” Anything that ends in tragedy is going to win. I don’t believe that “God of Love” or “Na Wewe” is going to win. I wouldn’t count out “The Crush” or “Wish 143.”
Good luck to all the nominees of Oscar night.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Live Action Short Film

Editor’s note: Welcome to the seventeenth of a 33-part series dissecting the 82st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!

By boylorne of 24 Hours to Midnight: The Blog!.

Luckily, we were chosen to cover a category that matches our attention span (if not our taste level) — Best Live Action Short Film.
The five nominees are:
  • Miracle Fish, Luke Doolan, director, and Drew Bailey, producer (Druid Films)
  • Instead of Abracadabra, Patrik Eklund, director, and Mathias Fjellstrom, producer (Direktorn & Fabrikorn)
  • Kavi, Gregg Helvey, director-producer (Gregg Helvey)
  • The Door, Juanita Wilson, director, and James Flynn, producer (Octagon Films Ltd.)
  • The New Tenants, Joachim Back, director, and Tivi Magnusson, producer (Park Pictures)

INSTEAD OF ABRACADABRA

dorky magic swede
chock full of indie styles!
but hipsters don’t vote

KAVI

kavi is a slave
this dirt poor kid won’t win it
slumdog’s so last year

THE DOOR

chernobyl fallout
the children are all so pale
fresh outta jokes, y’all

THE NEW TENANTS

last film - hope it’s good
hey, vincent d’onofrio!
let’s give him the win.

PICK TO WIN: The New Tenants

BONUS: SHORT TERM 12 (written before the nominations were announced):

then there’s short term 12.
sad kids, and sadder adults?
we have a winner.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Live Action Short Film

Editor’s note: Welcome to the tenth of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!

By Dean from Filmicability with Dean Treadway

The Live Action Short category for the Oscars can be a place for filmmakers to go to or come from.

This partial list of one-time nominees or winners that went on to notable feature film careers is short but interesting. Jean-Claude Carriere (whose films as a writer include That Obscure Object of Desire, The Tin Drum, Birth, and The Unbearable Lightness of Being) won in 1962 for producing Happy Anniversary. For his first film, 1965’s Le Poulet (The Chicken), Claude Berri, later acclaimed as the writer/producer/director of Jean De Florette and Manon of the Spring, vanquished both Noel Black (Pretty Poison) and Muppets creator Jim Henson for the award. Taylor Hackford parlayed his 1978 Academy Award for Teenage Father into a 30-year career capped by a 2004 Best Director nomination for Ray. Dean Parisot shared the Oscar with comedian Dennis Wright in 1988 for The Appointments of Dennis Jennings, and went on to helm Galaxy Quest and Fun with Dick and Jane. Peter Catteano, a nominee for Dear Rosie in 1990, was cited by the Academy for his direction of The Full Monty in 1997. And this year, Martin McDonagh was tapped for a Best Original Screenplay nomination for his debut feature In Bruges, but the man already has one golden boy—won it for his short Six-Shooter in 2005. There are others success stories out there, too—Pen Densham, Jacques Yves Cousteau, Stephen Verona, Chuck Workman, Lesli Linka Glatter, and Andrew Birkin, for starters.

There’s also an interesting list of established film industry names retreating from features and dabbling in Oscar-nominated short films, often as a precursor for a directing career of their own. Peter Sellers, George Coe, John Astin, Dyan Cannon, Peter Capaldi, JoBeth Williams, Sean Astin, Christine Lahti, Peter Weller, Griffin Dunne, Jeff Goldblum, Ray McKinnon, Peter Riegert, Lisa Blount and Kenneth Branaugh–all are actors who’ve had unlikely nods as producers of acclaimed short films.

It’s difficult to write about or predict the winners of the short film awards without seeing them all. Luckily, the Academy—for the fourth year in a row—released theatrically here in New York (and in a few dozen other venues) the ten nominated live action and animated shorts. And you can probably see them later on this year packaged together on a DVD release. However, I haven’t yet seen the 2h12m shorts program, so I’ve tried to scrape up as much information on each film as I could, but pickings from even the Academy Awards’ own site are slim at best. Thus, my article is going to only cover the basics.

NOMINEE: Auf Der Stricke (On The Line)
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Germany
DIRECTOR: Reto Caffi
WINNER: Student Academy Award, Best Narrative Short at Brooklyn, Hamburg, Switzerland, and Crakow film fests.
SYNOPSIS: A department store security guard is secretly in love with a clerk in the store’s bookshop. When he witnesses a seeming rival being attacked in the train, he gets off instead of helping him. Not being able to deal with his bad conscience, his formerly controlled life breaks down.

NOMINEE: Manon Sur le Bitumen (Manon on the Asphalt)
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: France
DIRECTOR: Elizabeth Marre and Oliver Pont
WINNER: Best Narrative Short, Toronto Shorts Film Festival
SYNOPSIS: A young woman gains a new insight into life while she’s near death.

NOMINEE: New Boy
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Ireland
DIRECTOR: Steph Green
WINNER: Best Narrative Short at Belfast, Berlin, Melbourne, Tribeca, Seattle, Rhode Island film fests.
SYNOPSIS: Captures the experience of being the new kid in school through the eyes of Joseph, a nine year-old African boy. Based on a story by Roddy Doyle (The Commitments, The Snapper, The Van)

NOMINEE: The Pig
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Denmark
DIRECTOR: Dorthe Warnø Høgh
WINNER: Best Narrative Short at Hamptons and Miami film fests.
SYNOPSIS: Is personal freedom more important than religious rights? An epic debate staged over a tiny painting in a bare hospital room.

NOMINEE: Spielzeugland (Toyland)
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Germany
DIRECTOR: Jochen Alexander Freydank
WINNER: Best Narrative Short at Palm Springs, Ashville, and Bermuda film fests.
SYNOPSIS: 1942: what happens when a German kid believes that his Jewish neighbors are going to Toyland? A story about lies and guilt.

Given these choices, the more cynical of us might think that Holocaust-related Toyland is going to be the winner here. But I don’t cotton to the notion that a work merely has to be Holocaust-related to win. Seems a rather dim view of things, if you ask me. So, though I think The Pig sounds like the most interesting of the five films, it seems to me that Ireland’s New Boy might have the heat at the moment, given its slew of festival wins, and its Roddy Doyle pedigree. As you well know, however, it’s difficult to tell, unless you’ve seen the films. That’s what makes this category the scourge of all Oscar prognosticators.

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Live Action Short Film

Editor’s note: Welcome to the sixteenth of a multi-part series dissecting the 2008 Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every weekday leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category (or more) of the Oscars (there are 24 in all). To read any other posts regarding this event, please just click on the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!

By Marilyn of Ferdy on Films.

If ever there was a category that seems almost entirely irrelevant to the Oscars, it is Live Action Short Film. These nominees have been the province primarily of first-time directors, perhaps even projects for graduation from film school. They don’t get general releases in theatres, at least, not here in the States. In fact, the only short I can remember seeing in conjunction with regular theatrical runs was The Heart of the World (2000) by Canadian director and cult favorite Guy Maddin. In fact, it got played over and over with various films until I was pretty damn sick of it.

However, the very first films ever made were live action shorts. An entire industry was built on these short stories of the screen, which may be one reason the Academy has been reluctant to eliminate this category from its Oscar ballot. The first year of Oscar, two awards in this category were given: Comedy and Novelty. Novelty seemed to have encompassd adventure/documentary films, like the 1933 winner Krakatoa, which I presume showed the volcano exploding. Mack Sennett and Hal Roach films were well represented in the Comedy division.

By 1935, big-name studios like Warner Bros, Paramount, RKO, and MGM were being nominated in three new divisions: Color, One-reel, and Two-reel. (The Color division was eliminated in 1938, presumably because the technology was now well-established and not worthy of special technical recognition.) A producer for Warner Bros named Gordon Hollingshead dominated nominations in these categories for some time, with Disney Studios poking up its head now and then.

In 1957, the award got its current title, and although well-known names such as Disney, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Ismael Merchant, Claude Berri, and Jim Henson could be found among the nominees, the category was headed toward obscurity. Today, the only short films we see at the movie theatres are commercials. I can tell you, after viewing the five nominees for the 2007 Live Action Short Subject Oscar, I’m ready to start a movement to kick the commercial assault to our senses off the screen and replace it with the witty and often stunning works to be found among this neglected type of film. Here are the 2007 nominees for Best Short Film (Live Action):

Tanghi Argentini (Belgium)—Guido Thys (director) and Anja Daelemans (producer)
This 14-minute short set at Christmastime, is about André (Dirk van Dijck), an officer worker who persuades his bah-humbug colleague Frans (Koen van Impe) to teach him to tango so that he can pursue an online romance with a woman who loves the dance. The characters are sketched quickly, but indelibly, with not a speech or movement wasted in telling this charming and surprising story. Director Thys has spent much of his time in television, so he’s got the experience to work this very short short for all its worth. A real crowd pleaser, it has won numerous international awards. It would be in keeping with the early history of this category to reward such a delightful comedy, but it may seem too slight to Academy voters, particularly against some of its competitors. (Very short clip here.)

Om Natten (At Night, Denmark)—Christian E. Christiansen (director) and Louise Vesth (producer)

Another Christmastime film, this 39-minute short has the kind of gravitas the Academy seems to like in its Best Pictures, but it’s a real downer that plays more like an Afterschool Special than a well-constructed short feature. Mette (Neel Rønholt), Sara (Laura Christiansen), and Stephanie (Julie Ølgaard) are three young women desperately ill with cancer who give each other companionship and strength on the hospital ward nicknamed Death Row. The women are types (the religious good girl, the woman allied with her divorced father against the world, and the troubled smoker/drinker/wearer of black nail polish who hasn’t seen her parents in five years). Christiansen, who has a couple of directing credits, has spent most of his film career as a production manager. He simply does not have a director’s touch, letting his actors flounder and his story meander and descend into cheap melodrama. The hubby was moved to tears, but then he spent a lot of time in a hospital and so identified with the characters. I, on the other hand, was bored to tears by this predictable, morose entry. Some people are picking it to win. They might be right, but if it does, it will show Oscar really has no taste whatsoever and is all about its image. (Trailer here.)

Il Supplente (The Substitute, Italy)—Andrea Jublin (director)

This 15-minute film that seems to say that we never really grow up makes its point in a bizarrely original fashion. We are taken to a high school, meeting up with the various nerds, stuck-ups, and artsy types who war away among themselves. Into one rowdy classroom comes a man (Jublin), a substitute teacher who behaves just as savagely with the students as they do with each other. He confiscates a toy soccer ball that has been autographed by an Italian player, locates the class ass kisser and gives him a bad score on his imitation of an ass-kissing snake, is told “no” by a student when he tells her to give him a poem she is writing, and incites the class to rough up the soccer-ball kid. He is found out to be not who he was presumed to be, and ends up confronting the same challenges in the adult world he forced on the kids in the classroom. This is well executed, with energetic performances by all the players, but a philosophical voiceover by the man ruins the anarchic tone of the short and sets us up for a predictable ending. This will not win the Oscar, nor does it deserve to, but it shows the makings of an original talent in first-time director Jublin. (Very short clip here.)

The Mozart of Pickpockets (Le Mozart Des Pickpockets, France)—Philipee Pollet-Villard (director)

Pollet-Villard wrote, directed, and costars in this 31-minute romp through Paris’ petty criminal world. Philippe (Pollet-Villard) and Richard (Richard Morgiève) are crime partners who live in a tiny pension and barely survive as part of a pickpocket ring that works the various street markets. The pair is dumb and inept, but gets lucky one day when they evade the police that round up their partners, partly by having a young boy (Matteo Razzouki-Safardi) stand holding Richard’s hand. The boy follows them home. He doesn’t speak or seem to understand them, so they assume he is deaf. But they incorporate him into a new pickpocket ring, which ends as quickly as it began with Philippe getting punched in the nose. Fortunately, the boy has ideas of his own about how to lift wallets. Richard exclaims to Philippe, “I’d never have thought of it in 10 years.” Yes, these sad sacks need this boy far more than he needs them. Pollet-Villard plays a wonderful blowhard and directs his actors with great skill. The film has a spritely pace and great situational comedy that never feels cheap. Young Razzouki-Safardi is so cute that he melts your heart, and his gigantic smile at the end of the film is more than winning. This film could be a contender, though I don’t think it will win. Again, it might be too slight for the Academy, and it has stiff competition. (Clips and a “making of” in unsubtitled French here.)

The Tonto Woman (United Kingdom)—Daniel Barker (director) and Matthew Brown (producer)

This 36-minute adaptation of an Elmore Leonard short story is the best of the bunch—easily one of the best films of any length in 2007—and the one that should take the Oscar if there is any justice in the world. It’s hard to believe that this assured, taut drama about the redemption of a Mexican cattle rustler named Ruben Vega (Francesco Quinn, Anthony Quinn’s son) is the film debut of director Daniel Barker. Certainly, he had a lot of help from veteran cinematographer Ben Davis (Layer Cake, Miranda, Imagine Me & You), whose compositions are spectacularly beautiful and evocative. Film scorer Dan Jones also provides a soaring score that is definitely influenced by Elmer Bernstein. The film opens in a confessional, then is told entirely in flashback from an omniscient point of view. Vega hides on a hillside and watches a beautiful woman walk topless to a tub and water pump outside a desert shack. She pumps water into the tub and starts to wash up. After she goes back inside, Vega comes to call on her, the picture of benign politeness. She stands in the shadows for a while, then confronts him, saying that she knows he was watching her—just like all the others. She has a startling tattoo on her chin, a remnant of the 11 years she spent as a slave to the Tonto-Mohave Indians. She is Sarah Isham (Charlotte Asprey), wife of the largest cattle rancher in the area. Her husband searched for her, but when he found her, he couldn’t keep a woman who had been defiled by the “red niggers” at home with him. She remains exiled in the desert, watched over by three thugs hired by her husband, who act as drovers of this human piece of property. Vega’s actions for the rest of the picture to redeem her back into society are also his redemption. Every scene is packed with emotional truth and dignity, acted out by a top-flight cast.

All these films and the nominated animated shorts are touring in select cities courtesy of Magnolia Pictures. I would expect a DVD release sometime soon. Perhaps home viewers will embrace this unique and wonderful form of cinema that the big studios and distributors have all but forgotten.

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