List of submissions to the 39th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film

The following 19 films, all from different countries, were submitted for the 39th Academy Awards in the category Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The titles highlighted in blue and yellow were the five nominated films, which came from Czechoslovakia, France, Italy, Poland and Yugoslavia. The eventual winner was romantic drama A Man and a Woman, which represented France. The film also won the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.[1]

Romania submitted a film to the competition for the first time.

Submissions

Submitting countryFilm title used in nominationLanguage(s)Original titleDirector(s)Result
 CzechoslovakiaLoves of a BlondeCzechLásky jedné plavovláskyMiloš Forman Nominated
 DenmarkHungerDanishSultHenning Carlsen Not Nominated
 EgyptCairo 30Arabicالقاهرة 30Salah Abu Seif Not Nominated
 FranceA Man and a WomanFrenchUn homme et une femmeClaude Lelouch Won Academy Award
 West GermanyYoung TörlessGermanDer junge TörlessVolker Schlöndorff Not Nominated
 GreeceQueen of ClubsGreekΝτάμα σπαθίGeorge Skalenakis Not Nominated
 Hong KongCome Drink with MeMandarin大醉俠King Hu Not Nominated
 HungaryThe Round-UpHungarianSzegénylegényekMiklós Jancsó Not Nominated
 IndiaAmrapaliHindiAmrapaliLekh Tandon Not Nominated
 IsraelThe Flying MatchmakerHebrewשני קוני למלIsrael Becker Not Nominated
 ItalyThe Battle of AlgiersFrench, ArabicLa Battaglia di AlgeriGillo Pontecorvo Nominated
 JapanKotoJapanese湖の琴Tomotaka Tasaka Not Nominated
 South KoreaRiceKoreanShin Sang-ok Not Nominated
 MexicoBlack WindSpanishViento negroServando González Not Nominated
 PolandPharaohPolishFaraonJerzy Kawalerowicz Nominated
 RomaniaThe UprisingRomanianRăscoalaMircea Mureșan Not Nominated
 SwedenPersonaSwedishPersonaIngmar Bergman Not Nominated
 TaiwanThe Silent WifeMandarin哑女情深Hsing Lee Not Nominated
 YugoslaviaThreeSerbo-CroatianTriAleksandar Petrović Nominated

References

  1. "The 39th Academy Awards (1967) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 9 September 2011.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.