2026 Oscars: Official Submissions for International Feature Film

The race for the next International Feature Film Oscar has begun and this year Turkey is first out of the gate. Murat Fıratoğlu’s One of Those Days When Hemme Dies is the 32nd submission for the Anatolian country which has yet to be nominated but was on the shortlist once.
Last season, 89 countries submitted entries but only 85 eligible submissions made the final cut, with China being disqualified, Jordan withdrawing their submission and both Haiti and Uruguay not being on the final list. Scroll down for the updated list with country notes and stats and more. Bookmark this page as more are announced throughout the season. The 15-film shortlist will be revealed on December 16, 2025 with Academy Awards nominations announced January 22, 2026. The 97th Oscars will be held on March 15.
Foreign-language/International Feature films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar
Between 1947 and 1955, the Academy presented Special Awards to the best foreign language films released in the U.S. Because these awards were not handed out on a regular basis and didn’t have any nominees, they were not competitive. For the 29th Academy Awards in 1956, a competitive Academy Award of Merit, known as the Best Foreign Language Film Award, was created for non-English speaking films. It has since then been awarded annually category. Nearly 20 years earlier, Jean Renoir’s Grand Illusion (France) was nominated for Best Picture in 1938, its only nomination. 2006’s Letters From Iwo Jima was a Japanese-spoken US production not an official submission for foreign language film.
In 1957, Denmark became the first country to send a film with a female director to the Foreign Oscar competition (Annelise Hovmand’s Be Dear to Me). Two years later, Astrid Henning-Jensen’s Paw became to the first film directed by a woman to receive a nomination in the category.
Since the inception of the foreign language/international feature Oscar in 1956, only 15 films have also been nominated for the Best Picture Oscar and nearly half of those are all within the last decade: 2018’s Roma from Mexico, 2019’s Parasite from South Korea (the first ever to win BP), Japan’s Drive My Car (2021) and Germany’s All Quiet on the Western Front (2022), all winners of the International Feature Film Oscar. For the last two seasons in a row, two non-English language films have made the Best Picture cut in the same year: France’s Anatomy of a Fall (which the country opted not to submit) and the United Kingdom’s The Zone of Interest, the IFF winner, in 2023, and last year with France’s Emilia Pérez (the overall nomination leader and now record holder for most nominations for a non-English language film) and Brazil’s I’m Still Here, which won this category. This was the first time that two IFF nominees were also nominated for Best Picture.
| TITLE | COUNTRY | FILM YEAR |
| Z | Algeria | 1969 (FLF winner) |
| The Emigrants | Sweden | 1972 (FLF nominee) |
| Cries & Whispers | Sweden | 1973 (not FLF submitted) |
| The Postman | Italy | 1995 (not FLF nominated) |
| Life is Beautiful | Italy | 1998 (FLF winner) |
| Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon | Taiwan | 2000 (FLF winner) |
| Amour | Austria | 2012 (FLF winner) |
| Roma | Mexico | 2018 (IFF winner) |
| Parasite | South Korea | 2019 (IFF/Best Picture winner) |
| Drive My Car | Japan | 2021 (IFF winner) |
| All Quiet on the Western Front | Germany | 2022 (IFF winner) |
| Anatomy of a Fall | France | 2023 (not IFF submitted) |
| The Zone of Interest | United Kingdom | 2023 (IFF winner) |
| Emilia Pérez | France | 2024 (IFF nominee) |
| I’m Still Here | Brazil | 2024 (IFF winner) |
The biggest losers: While Israel is the biggest loser with 10 nominations and no wins in this category, Portugal is the currently the most unsuccessful country for getting a nomination with the most submissions (at 37). Philippines holds another record; it’s the sole country to send a submission film in the first competitive year (1956) that hasn’t gotten an Oscar nom yet. The other 7 countries that submitted that first year – France, Italy, West Germany (now Germany), Denmark, Sweden, Japan and Spain – all ended up winning the Oscar at least once.
Rules for International Feature Film at the 98th Oscars
I. DEFINITION
An international film is defined as a feature-length motion picture (over 40 minutes) produced outside
the United States of America and its territories with a predominantly (more than 50%) non-English
dialogue track. Animated and documentary feature films are permitted.
II. ELIGIBILITY
A. The country-selected film must be first released in the country of origin and begin no earlier than
October 1, 2024, and no later than September 30, 2025, and be first publicly exhibited for at least
seven consecutive days in a commercial motion picture theater for the profit of the producer and
exhibitor. The seven consecutive days of the theatrical release are required to occur in one venue. In
order for films to more easily meet theatrical exhibition requirements, the Academy will allow films to
qualify outside the country of origin, provided the film is theatrically exhibited outside of the United
States and its territories for at least seven consecutive days in a commercial motion picture theater
for paid admission.
All motion pictures must be publicly exhibited by means of 35mm or 70mm film, or in a 24- or 48-
frame progressive scan Digital Cinema format with a minimum projector resolution of 2048 by 1080
pixels, source image format conforming to the most recent revision of SMPTE ST 428-1 (D-Cinema
Distribution Master – Image Characteristics); image compression (if used) conforming to the most
recent revision of ISO/IEC 15444-1 (JPEG 2000); and image and sound files packaged as Digital
Cinema Packages (DCPs) in the “SMPTE DCP” format. SMPTE DCP refers to SMPTE ST 429-2 (DCinema Packaging – DCP Operational Constraints) and related specifications. (Blu-ray format does
not meet Digital Cinema requirements.)
The audio in a Digital Cinema Package (DCP) is typically 5.1 or 7.1 channels of discrete audio. The
minimum for a non-mono configuration of the audio shall be three channels as Left, Center, Right (a
Left/Right configuration is not acceptable in a theatrical environment). In addition to channel-based
audio, object-based audio may also be present as an immersive audio bitstream.
The discrete audio data shall be formatted in conformance with the most recent revision of SMPTE
ST 429-3 (D-Cinema Packaging – Sound and Picture Track File), SMPTE ST 428-2 (D-Cinema
Distribution Master – Audio Characteristics) and SMPTE ST 428-12 (D-Cinema Distribution Master
Common Audio Channels and Soundfield Groups). Immersive audio, if present, shall be formatted in
conformance with the most recent revision of SMPTE ST 2098-2 (Immersive Audio Bitstream
Specification) and SMPTE 429-18 (D-Cinema Packaging – Immersive Audio Track File) and
packaged in conformance with the most recent revision of SMPTE 429-19 (D-Cinema Packaging –
DCP Operational Constraints for Immersive Audio).
B. The film must be advertised and exploited during its qualifying theatrical release in a manner
considered normal and customary to theatrical feature distribution practices. The film need not have
been released in the United States.
C. Films that, in any version, receive a nontheatrical public exhibition or distribution before their
qualifying theatrical release will not be eligible for Academy Awards consideration.
Nontheatrical public exhibition or distribution includes but is not limited to:
Broadcast and cable television
PPV/VOD
DVD and/or streaming distribution
Inflight airline distribution
Internet transmission
D. The recording of the original dialogue track as well as the completed picture must be predominantly
(more than 50%) in a language or languages other than English. Accurate, legible Englishlanguage subtitles are required.
E. The submitting country must confirm that creative control of the film was largely in the hands of
citizens, residents, or individuals with refugee or asylum status in the submitting country.
F. Should a selection committee not disclose up-to-date and/or accurate information related to a
submitted film’s citizenship, business-related affiliation or credit on a selected film, designated credits,
production details and release information, a film will be deemed ineligible.
G. The International Feature Film Executive Committee shall resolve all questions of eligibility and rules.
III. SUBMISSION
A. Each country shall be invited to submit its best film to the Academy. Selection of that film shall be
made by one approved organization, jury or committee, of which at least 50% must include artists
and/or craftspeople from the field of motion pictures. A list of the selection committee members must
be submitted to the Academy no later than Friday, August 15, 2025, or by the submission deadline
published by the Academy. All selection committees will be required to adhere to guidelines that are
approved by the International Feature Film Executive Committee. Countries submitting for the first
time, or which have not submitted for the previous five years, must present a list of selection
committee members and application materials for Academy approval by December 31, 2025, for
eligibility in the following (99th) Awards year. A country need not submit a film every year for Awards
consideration.
B. Only one film will be accepted from each country as the official selection. Films should be
submitted to the Academy as soon as they are selected.
C. The Academy will provide online access to each country’s approved selection committee so that the
producer of the selected film can supply full production information.
D. The following submission materials must be submitted to the Academy by 5 p.m. PT on Wednesday,
October 1, 2025:
Completed online submission forms
Digital upload of the film for streaming purposes
[For Internal Use Only] A secure and password-protected link to the film. This is required to test
non-English dialogue.
Full cast and credits list
Director’s biography and photograph
A designated key frame for streaming display artwork
Proof of the film’s qualifying theatrical release, including but not limited to advertising
E. Entrants whose films advance to the shortlist must submit either one 35mm or 70mm film print or one
DCP of the film after the shortlist is announced. By submitting a film, the filmmakers agree that the
Academy has the right to make copies and distribute them for voting purposes only. The Academy
will retain for its archives one print of every motion picture receiving a nomination for the International
Feature Film award.
IV. VOTING
A. International Feature Film nominations will be determined in two rounds of voting:
- In the preliminary round, all active and life Academy members will be invited to view the eligible
submissions in the category. Those who opt in will be required to see a minimum number of
submitted eligible films as defined by the current procedures. Members will vote by secret ballot
in the order of their preference for not more than fifteen motion pictures. The fifteen motion
pictures receiving the highest number of votes shall advance to the next round of voting. - In the nominations round, all active and life Academy members will be invited to view the fifteen
shortlisted films in the category. A member must see all shortlisted films for the ballot to be
counted. Members shall vote in the order of their preference for not more than five motion
pictures. The five motion pictures receiving the highest number of votes shall become the
nominations for final voting for the International Feature Film award.
B. Final voting for the International Feature Film award shall be restricted to active and life Academy
members who have viewed all five nominated films.
C. The Academy statuette (Oscar) will be awarded to the film and accepted by the director on behalf of
the film’s creative talents. For Academy Awards purposes, the country will be credited as the
nominee. The director’s name will be listed on the statuette plaque after the country and film title.
V. ADVERTISING AND PUBLICITY RESTRICTIONS
In addition to complying with the Awards Rules for the 98th Academy Awards, all participants in the
Awards competition are also bound by the Awards Campaign Promotional Regulations concerning
the promotion of eligible films and are subject to the penalties provided therein, including the potential
declaration of ineligibility by the Board of Governors for violation of those guidelines.
VI. ELIGIBILITY IN OTHER CATEGORIES
A. International Feature Film submissions may be submitted for consideration for the 98th Academy
Awards in other categories, including Best Picture, provided they comply with the rules governing
those categories.
B. Animated feature films submitted to the International Feature Film category are eligible for the
Animated Feature Film category, provided that they meet the eligibility requirements outlined for the
International Feature Film category and the Animated Feature Film category.
C. Documentary feature films submitted to the International Feature Film category are eligible for the
Documentary Feature Film category, provided that they meet the eligibility requirements outlined for
the International Feature Film category and the Documentary Feature Film category.
D. Films submitted for consideration in the International Feature Film category for the 98th Academy
Awards are NOT eligible for consideration in other awards categories in the subsequent year, nor
could the films have been submitted in other awards categories in a previous year.
Stats, Notes and Superlatives
Submissions with women/women-identifying directors or co-directors: Armenia, Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Bolivia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cambodia, Czechia, Egypt, Germany, Jordan, Morocco, North Macedonia. Palestine, Panama, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Taiwan, Tunisia, Uruguay
Submissions with LGBTQ+ subjects or themes: Chile, Czechia, Thailand
Animated submissions: Latvia
Documentary submissions: Armenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Costa Rica, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, Ireland, Ukraine
Countries with potential eligibility issues:
Countries submitting for the first time: Madagascar, Papua New Guinea
2026 Oscars: International Feature Film Oscar Submissions
| COUNTRY | TITLE | DIRECTOR(S) | STUDIO/U.S. DISTRIBUTION/AWARDS | FACTS/STATS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albania | Luna Park | Florenc Papas (1st) | ||
| Armenia | My Armenian Phantoms | Tamara Stepanyan (1st) | 15th submission for Armenia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Australia | The Wolves Always Come at Night | Gabrielle Brady (1st) | 17th submission for Australia, which has been nominated once | |
| Austria | Peacock | Bernhard Wenger (1st) | Oscilloscope | 49th submission for Austria, which has been nominated four times and won twice (2007’s The Counterfeiters, 2012’s Amour) |
| Azerbaijan | Taghiev Oil | Zaur Gasimli (1st) | 10th submission for Azerbaijan, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Bangladesh | A House Named Shahana | Leesa Gazi (1st) | 21st submission for Bangladesh, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Belgium | Young Mothers | Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne (5th) | Music Box Films Cannes Best Screenplay | 50th submission for Belgium, which has been nominated eight times but has yet to win |
| Bhutan | I, the Song | Dechen Roder (1st) | 5th submission for Bhutan, which has been nominated once | |
| Bolivia | The Southern House | Carina Oroza) and Ramiro Fierro (1st) | 18th submission for Bolivia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Bosnia-Herzegovina | Blum – Masters of Their Own Destiny | Jasmila Žbanić (3rd) | Icarus Films | 25th submission for Bosnia-Herzegovina, which has been nominated twice and won once (2002’s No Man’s Land) |
| Bulgaria | The Herd | Milko Lazarov (2nd) | 36th submission for Bulgaria, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Brazil | The Secret Agent | Kleber Mendonça Filho (3rd) | NEON | 55th submission for Brazil, which has been nominated four times and has won once (2024’s I’m Still Here) |
| Cambodia | Tenement | Neth and Sokyou Chea (1st) | 13th submission for Cambodia, which has been nominated once | |
| Canada | The Things You Kill | Alireza Khatami (1st) | Cineverse Entertainment | 51st submission for Canada, which has been nominated seven times and won once (2003’s The Barbarian Invasions) |
| Chile | The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo | Diego Céspedes (1st) | Cannes Un Certain Regard | 30th submission for Chile, which has been nominated twice and won once (2017’s A Fantastic Woman) |
| China | Dead to Rights | Shen Ao (1st) | 39th submission for China, which has been nominated twice | |
| Colombia | A Poet | Simón Mesa Soto (1st) | 1-2 Special | 34th submission for Columbia, which has been nominated once |
| Costa Rica | The Altar Boy, the Priest and the Gardener | Juan Manuel Fernández (1st) | 14th submission for Costa Rica, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Croatia | Fiume o morte! | Igor Bezinović (1st) | 35th submission for Croatia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Czechia | I’m Not Everything I Want to Be | Klára Tasovská (1st) | 32nd submission for Czechia, which has been nominated three times and won once (1996’s Kolya) | |
| Denmark | Mr. Nobody Against Putin | Pasha Talankin (1st) and David Borenstein (1st) | 63rd submission for Denmark, which has been nominated 14 times and won four (1987’s Pelle the Conquerer, 1988’s Babette’s Feast, 2010’s In a Better World, 2020’s Another Round) | |
| Dominican Republic | Pepe | Nelson Carlo de Los Santos Arias (1st) | 18th submission for Dominican Republic, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Egypt | Happy Birthday | Sarah Goder (1st) | 39th submission for Egypt, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Equador | Chuzalongo | Diego Ortuño (1st) | 13th submission for Ecuador, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Estonia | Rolling Papers | Meel Paliale (1st) | 23rd submission for Estonia, which has been nominated once | |
| Finland | 100 Litres of Gold | Teemu Nikki (2nd) | 39th submission for Finland, which has been nominated once | |
| France | It Was Just an Accident | Jafar Panahi (2nd) | NEON Cannes Palme d’Or | 73rd submission for France, which has been nominated 42 times and won 12 times (including 3 Honorary) |
| Georgia | Panopticon | George Sikharulidze (1st) | 23rd submission for Georgia, which has been nominated once | |
| Germany | Sound of Falling | Mascha Schilinski (1st) | MUBI Cannes Jury Prize | 66th overall submission for Germany both pre and post-unification in 1990, Germany has been nominated 22 times and won four times (1979’s The Tin Drum, 2002’s Nowhere in Africa, 2006’s The Lives of Others, 2022’s All Quiet on the Western Front) |
| Greece | Arcadia | Yorgos Zois (1st) | 45th submission for Greece, which has been nominated five times | |
| Greenland | Walls – Akinni Inuk | Sofie Rørdam (1st) and Nina Paninnguaq Skydsbjerg (1st) | 3rd submission for Greenland, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Haiti | Kidnapping Inc. | Bruno Mourral (2nd) | 4th submission for Haiti, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Hungary | Orphan | László Nemes (3rd) | 61st submission for Hungary, which has been nominated 10 times and won twice (1981’s Mephisto, 2015’s Son of Saul) | |
| Iceland | The Love that Remains | Hlynur Pálmason (1st) | Janus Film | 46th submission for Iceland, which has been nominated once |
| India | Homebound | Neeraj Ghaywan (1st) | 58th submission for India, which has been nominated three times | |
| Indonesia | Sore: Wife from the Future | Yandy Laurens (1st) | 27th submission for Indonesia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Iran | Cause of the Death: Unknown | Ali Zarnegar (1st) | 28th submission for Iran, which has been nominated three times and won twice (2011’s A Separation and 2016’s The Salesman, both from Asghar Farhadi) | |
| Iraq | The President’s Cake | Hasan Hadi (1st) | Sony Pictures Classics Directors Fortnight Audience Award Camera d’Or | 14th submission for Iraq, which has yet to be nominated |
| Ireland | Santorium | Gar O’Rourke (1st) | 12th submission for Ireland, which has been nominated once | |
| Israel | The Sea | Shai Carmeli-Pollak (1st) | 58th submission for Israel, which has been nominated 10 times but has yet to win | |
| Italy | Family (Familia) | Francesco Gheghi (1st) | 72nd submission for Italy, which has been nominated 32 times, won 14 times, more than any other country | |
| Japan | Kokuhô | Sang-il Lee (2nd) | GKids | 72nd submission for Japan, which has been nominated 18 times and won five times (Including three Honorary Awards) |
| Jordan | All That’s Left of You | Cherien Dabis (1st) | 9th submission for Jordan, which has been nominated twice but has yet to win | |
| Kazakhstan | Cadet | Adilkhan Yerzhanov (2nd) | 19th submission for Kazakhstan, which has been nominated once | |
| Kyrgyzstan | Black Red Yellow | Aktan Abdykalykov (6th) | 18th submission for Kyrgyzstan, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Latvia | Dog of God | Lauris Ābeles (1st) and Raitis Ābeles (1st) | 17th submission for Latvia, which has been nominated once | |
| Lebanon | A Sad and Beautiful World | Cyril Aris (1st) | 21st submission for Lebanon, which has been nominated twice | |
| Lithuania | Southern Chronicles | Ignas Miskinis (1st) | 18th submission for Lithuania, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Luxembourg | Breathing Underwater | Eric Lamhène (1st) | 20th submission for Luxembourg, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Madagascar | Disco Afrika: A Malagasy Story | Luck Razanajaona (1st) | 1st ever submission for Madagascar | |
| Mexico | We Shall Not Be Moved | Pierre Saint-Martin (1st) | 58th submission for Mexico, which has been nominated nine times and won once (2018’s Roma) | |
| Mongolia | Silent City Driver | Janchivdorj Sengedorj (1st) | 10th submission for Mongolia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Montenegro | The Tower of Strength | Nikola Vukčević (2nd) | 12th submission for Montenegro, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Morocco | Calle Málaga | Maryam Touzani (3rd) | 21st submission for Morocco, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Nepal | Anjila | 15th submission for Nepal, which as been nominated once | ||
| Netherlands | Reeland | Sven Bresser (1st) | 58th submission for Netherlands, which has been nominated seven times and won three times (1986’s The Assault, 1995’s Antonia’s Line, 1997’s Character) | |
| North Macedonia | The Tale of Silyan | Tamara Kotevska (2nd) | 21st submission for North Macedonia, which has been nominated twice | |
| Norway | Sentimental Value | Joachim Trier (4th) | NEON Cannes Grand Prize | 47th submission for Norway, which has been nominated six times but has yet to win |
| Palestine | Palestine 36 | Annemarie Jacir (4th) | Watermelon Pictures | 18th submission for Palestine, which has been nominated twice but has yet to win |
| Panama | Beloved Tropic | Ana Endara (1st) | 12th submission for Panama, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Papua New Guinea | Papa Buka | Bijukumar Damodaran (1st) | 1st submission for Papua New Guinea | |
| Paraguay | Under the Flags | Juanjo Pereira (1st) | 9th submission for Paraguay, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Peru | Motherland | Marco Panatonic (1st) | 32nd submission for Peru, which has been nominated once | |
| Philippines | Magellan | Lav Diaz (2nd) | Janus Films | 36th submission for Philippines, which has yet to be nominated |
| Poland | Franz | Agnieszka Holland (3rd) | 57th submission for Poland, which has been nominated 13 times and won once (2014’s Ida) | |
| Portgual | Banzo | Margarida Cardoso (1st) | 42nd submission for Portugal, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Romania | Traffic | Theodora Mihai (1st) | 41st submission for Romania, which has been nominated once | |
| Saudi Arabia | Hijra | Shahad Ameen (1st) | 8th submission for Saudi Arabia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Senegal | Demba | Mamadou Dia (1st) | 7th submission for Senegal, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Serbia | Sun Never Again | David Jakovljević (1st) | 32nd submission for Serbia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Singapore | Stranger Eyes | Yeo Siew Hua (2nd) | Film Movement | 19th submission for Singapore, which has yet to be nominated |
| Slovakia | Father | Tereza Nvotová (1st) | 29th ubmission for Slovakia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Slovenia | Little Trouble Girls | Urška Djukić (1st) | 29th submission for Slovenia, which has yet to be nominated | |
| South Africa | The Heart is a Muscle | Imran Hamdulay (1st) | 21st submission for South Africa, which has been nominated twice and won once (2005’s Tsotsi) | |
| South Korea | No Other Choice | Park Chan-wook (2nd) | NEON | 37th submission for South Korea, which has been nominated and won once (2019’s Parasite) |
| Spain | Sirāt | Óliver Laxe (1st) | NEON Cannes Jury Prize | 68th submission for Spain, which has been nominated 20 times and won four (1982’s Begin the Beguine, 1993’s Belle Époque, 1999’s All About My Mother, 2004’s The Sea Inside) |
| Switzerland | Late Shift | Petra Biondina Volpe (2nd) | Music Box Films | 46th submission for Switzerland, which has been nominated five times and won twice (1994’s Dangerous Moves and 1990’s Journey of Hope) |
| Tajikistan | Black Rabbit, White Rabbit | Shahram Mokri (1st) | 4th submission for Tajikistan, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Taiwan | Left-Handed Girl | Shih-Ching Tsou (1st) | Netflix | 51st submission for Taiwan, which has been nominated three times (all for Ang Lee films) and won once (2000’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) |
| Thailand | A Useful Ghost | Ratchapoom Boonbunchachoke (1st) | Cineverse Entertainment | 32nd submission for Thailand, which has yet to be nominated |
| Tunisia | The Voice Hind Rajab | Kaouther Ben Hania (1st) | Watermelon Pictures | 12th submission for Tunisia, which has been nominated once |
| Turkey | One of Those Days When Hemme Dies | Murat Fıratoğlu (1st) | 32nd submission for Turkey, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Uganda | Kimote | Hassan Mageye (1st) | 2nd submission for Uganda, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Ukraine | 2000 meters to Andriivka | Mstyslav Chernov (2nd) | PBS Distribution | 18th submission for Ukraine, which has yet to be nominated |
| United Kingdom | My Father’s Shadow | Akinola Davies Jr. (1st) | MUBI | 22nd submission for the United Kingdom, which has been nominated three times and won once (2023’s The Zone of Interest) |
| Uruguay | Don’t You Let Me Go | Ana Guevara (1st) and Leticia Jorge (2nd) | 25th submission for Uruguay, which has been nominated once but had the nomination rescinded | |
| Venezuela | Ali Primera | Daniel Yegres (1st) | 35th submission for Venezuela, which has yet to be nominated | |
| Vietnam | Red Rain | Dang Thai Huyen (1st) | 22nd submission for Vietnam, which has been nominated once |
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