email print share on Facebook share on Twitter share on LinkedIn share on reddit pin on Pinterest

OSCARS 2015 Bulgaria

Bulgarian Rhapsody selected as Oscar candidate

by 

- Young Bulgarian directors protest against the National Cinema Council's decision

Bulgarian Rhapsody selected as Oscar candidate
Bulgarian Rhapsody by Ivan Nichev

The National Cinema Council, an expert advisory body under the jurisdiction of the Bulgarian National Film Center, has decided that Ivan Nichev's Bulgarian Rhapsody will represent the country at next year's Oscars. Yet to be released in Bulgaria, Nichev's World War II drama opened a local film festival in June. 

The decision was met with astonishment by the local film industry, as Maya Vitkova's Viktoria [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Maya Vitkova
film profile
]
and Milko Lazarov's Alienation [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Milko Lazarov
film profile
]
were thought to be the main favourites for the selection. Viktoria was the first Bulgarian film ever to be selected at Sundance and has been shown at dozens of international film festivals since February. Alienation had its world premiere in the Venice Days sidebar of the Venice Film Festival in 2013, where it won the Best Director of a Debut Film Award and the Europa Cinemas Label – Special Mention. 

(The article continues below - Commercial information)

Several Bulgarian directors are determined to protest against the committee's decision. An event was created on Facebook, asking for justice for Bulgarian cinema, and official letters and petitions will be sent to the local National Film Center and Ministry of Culture.

The directors' anger seems justified, as Nichev is actually a member of the National Cinema Council. He seems to be a favourite of the committee, as his previous directorial efforts, After the End of the World and Journey to Jerusalem, the first two films in a trilogy that comes to a close with Bulgarian Rhapsody, were past Oscar candidates.

The protesting directors are questioning not only the committee's decision, which gave Bulgarian Rhapsody 23 points, as against 12 for Viktoria and seven for Alienation, but also its members' objectivity and efficiency in promoting Bulgarian cinema abroad. The 12 members of the committee are Ivan Nichev, Andrey Chertoff, Hristo Hristov, Vladimir Andreev, Galina Toneva, Victor Chuchkov, Ilia Kostov, Ivan Georgiev, Anna Petkova, Vladimir Asenov, Ivan Pavlov and Diana Andreeva.

(The article continues below - Commercial information)

Did you enjoy reading this article? Please subscribe to our newsletter to receive more stories like this directly in your inbox.

Privacy Policy