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I Want My Foreign Films

A moviegoer reveals Oscar’s annual problem


The only three Oscar-nominated films I couldn’t see this year
Back in the ‘80s, a commonly-heard rant was “I want my MTV.” It was, of course, a marketing ploy by MTV to get their channel added to cable systems. We were supposed to rise up as consumers and demand this channel like it was a birthright. But we really did want our MTV, so we asked for it, and before long we had it.
Here’s what I want today: I want my foreign films.
Some notable ones are missing. Every year the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences nominates 5 foreign language films for its coveted statuette. And as every filmmaker knows, there is no better publicity for their film than an Oscar nomination.
However, all the publicity doesn’t do diddly-squat if filmgoers can’t find the film. And that is what happens to most Oscar-nominated foreign language films, every year.
Don’t believe me? Check this out. I make a point to see every Oscar-nominated film each year before the Oscars. That usually means I have to see 30-45 films in just over a month. I’m willing to go anywhere, do anything, and pay anything. Plunk down $20 for a one-night-only showing of a nominated film? I’ve done it.
And consistently, I’ve seen every single one of the domestic nominees. This year that meant seeing 44 films in 34 days. They’re in theaters, or they’re on disc, or Netflix is streaming them. But in 2008, I only saw 1 of the 5 foreign nominees. In 2009, I saw 3. In 2010, I saw 2. Why? Because these films are simply nowhere to be found.
These are films that have been nominated as the best of the best, the finest in the world, and are up for the highest possible American film award. They get a nice promotional bump as nominees from late January to late February. And yet many won’t see the inside of an American theater until a month after that, and often not at all.
How can that be?
I’ll tell you what’s NOT the problem:

This makes no business sense at all. Companies with an in-demand product are not selling it to one of the world’s largest markets at the time when all eyes are on it.
Whatever the obstacle, I’m putting American movie distributors on notice, right now. I represent an eager, paying, untapped market. I want my foreign films. Figure it out.
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