By Scott Feinberg
The Hollywood Reporter
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As I predicted earlier this week, a five-member jury in Switzerland has chosen, from a shortlist of five options, Ursula Meier‘s Sister (L’enfant d’en haut) as its submission to the Academy for consideration in the best foreign language Oscar race. The French-language film, a gripping and beautifully-made drama with a third-act twist, revolves around a 12-year-old thief (Kacey Mottet Klein in only his second film), his mysterious guardian (Léa Seydoux from Midnight in Paris and Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol), and his victims (including Gillian Anderson of The X-Files). It premiered at February’s Berlin Film Festival, where Meier won a prestigious Silver Bear Award. It subsequently played at many film festivals, including the Los Angeles Film Festival in June. And it will go into limited release — courtesy of Jeff Lipsky‘s new distribution operation Adopt Films limited — on October 5.
Meier’s last film Home, which also starred Mottet Klein, was the Swiss entry in 2009, and failed to get nominated. That led some to believe the jury would give this year’s spot to one of the other four films: Xavier Koller‘s Someone Like Me, a period piece based on a well-known novel about star-crossed lovers; Markus Imboden‘s The Foster Boy, a sad tale about an orphan whose foster parents make his life a living hell; Nicolas Wadimoff’s drama Opération Libertad, which premiered at Cannes; or Christoph Schaub’s drama Lullaby Ride, which premiered at Locarno. (Koller’s previous Swiss film, Journey of Hope, was released 22 years ago, and was the last Swiss film to win — or even be nominated for — the best foreign language film Oscar.)
I recently caught up with Lipsky, Meier, and Mottet Klein during a reception for the film that the Swiss Consul General in Los Angeles held at his home…