Two Northern Irish films on Oscar live-action longlist

A pornographer’s obsession in ‘SLR’ and facts of life in ‘Boogaloo and Graham’ make the cut

A still from SLR by Stephen Fingleton: the story of a pornographer who becomes obsessed with a mysterious, anonymous photographer
A still from SLR by Stephen Fingleton: the story of a pornographer who becomes obsessed with a mysterious, anonymous photographer

Two Northern Irish films have made it onto the long list for best live-action short at the Academy Awards. Ten films appear on the list, from which five will go forward as Oscar nominees.

Stephen Fingleton's SLR stars Liam Cunningham in the story of a pornographer who becomes obsessed with a mysterious, anonymous photographer. Mr Fingleton's film has already won best Irish short at the Foyle Film Festival and played successfully at the Glasgow and Cracow film festivals.

The director sees the film as following in the tradition of “voyeur” classics such as The Conversation and Blow-Up.

Michael Lennox's charming Boogaloo and Graham, starring Martin McCann and Charlene McKenna, concerns two young boys who, in 1970s Belfast, learn the facts of life from their pet chickens. Mr Lennox's first feature, A Patch of Fog, starring Stephen Graham and Conleth Hill, begins principal photography this weekend.

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Tying things up neatly, Martin McCann appears opposite Olwen Fouéré in Mr Fingleton's debut feature The Survivalist, which recently finished shooting in Northern Ireland.

This is no small achievement. Some 141 films were submitted this year. The American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' short films and feature animation branch reviewing committee then whittles that field down to manageable size. Special screenings will be held in Los Angeles, New York, London and San Francisco, before the announcement of the nominees on January 15th.

Ireland has performed extraordinarily well in the short films races in recent years. Earlier this month, Alan Holly's Coda was long-listed for the best animated short Oscar. In 2011, Terry George and Oorlagh George's The Shore won best live-action short. In 2006, Martin McDonagh's Six Shooter took the same prize and launched Mr McDonagh, then known as a playwright, into his successful film career.

Recent Irish nominees for best animated short film have included Nicky Phelan and Darragh O'Connell's Granny O'Grimm's Sleeping Beauty and Cathal Gaffney and Darragh O'Connell's Give Up Yer Aul Sins.

Long list for best live-action short academy award

Aya, Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis, directors (Chasis Films)

Baghdad Messi, Sahim Omar Kalifa, director, and Kobe Van Steenberghe, producer (a team productions)

Boogaloo and Graham, Michael Lennox, director, and Ronan Blaney, writer (Out of Orbit)

Butter Lamp (La Lampe Au Beurre De Yak), Hu Wei, director, and Julien Féret, producer (Ama Productions)

Carry On, Yatao Li, director (Rochester Institute of Technology)

My Father's Truck, Mauricio Osaki, director (Lupi Filmes)

Parvaneh, Talkhon Hamzavi, director, and Stefan Eichenberger, producer (Zurich University of Arts)

The Phone Call, Mat Kirkby, director, and James Lucas, writer (RSA Films)

SLR Stephen Fingleton, director, and Matthew James Wilkinson, producer (Stigma Films)

Summer Vacation (Chofesh Gadol) Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon, directors (GREENproductions)

Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke, a contributor to The Irish Times, is Chief Film Correspondent and a regular columnist