The German film “Nothing New in the West” has come a whole lot closer to a possible Oscar trophy. The visually powerful war drama by director Edward Berger made it onto a shortlist of fifteen candidates for the so-called foreign Oscar. 92 countries had applied for the Oscar in the “International Feature Film” category for 2023. The eagerly awaited preselection was announced by the Oscar Academy in Beverly Hills, California on Wednesday (local time).
With the “trophy buzz”, the whispering and guesswork about the favourites, industry experts had given the German film good chances. But “Nothing new in the west” surprised on Wednesday with five shortlist hits: also in the make-up categories
“Nothing New in the West” based on the book by Erich Maria Remarque from 1929 shows the horror of the First World War from the perspective of a young soldier. Austrian Felix Kammerer plays the leading role. In addition to the German contribution, films such as “Corsage” (Austria), “Saint Omer” (France), “Close” (Belgium) and “Bardo, the invented chronicle of a handful of truths” (Mexico) were shortlisted for the ” International Feature Film”.
A year ago, Maria Schrader’s “I am your human” was shortlisted, but did not make it to the finals. Germany’s last success in this Oscar category was 15 years ago: in 2007 Florian Henckel won the trophy from Donnersmarck’s Stasi drama “The Lives of Others”.
The German composer Volker Bertelmann, also known by his stage name Hauschka, vividly underscored the horror of war in “Nothing New in the West”. The experimental musician often resorts to whipping, choppy tones. With soundtrack greats like John Williams (“The Fabelmans”), Nicholas Britell (“She Said”) and Justin Hurwitz (“Babylon”), Bertelmann is now one of 15 candidates, five of whom make it to the final round. In 2017 he was nominated for an Oscar together with his US colleague Dustin O’Halloran for the soundtrack to the film “Lion”. At the award ceremony, however, they went away empty-handed.
Munich director Nils Keller can also hope
In the Category Make Up
Significantly smaller productions “Made in Germany” have also come a step closer to the Oscar. The Munich director Nils Keller, a graduate of the Munich University of Television and Film (HFF), can hope for a trophy in the category “Live Action Short Film” with his film “Almost Home”. Andreas Kessler from the Baden-Württemberg Film Academy in Ludwigsburg also made it into the preselection with his short film “Nakam”.
A total of 200 filmmakers had applied for Hollywood’s highest award in this category. The two Germans are now among 15 contenders, a third of whom will advance in January. For Nils Keller, who staged a mother-son conflict in space in “Almost Home”, there was already a foretaste last October: he won the Student Academy Award in gold at the Student Oscars.