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Academy Award-Nominated Live Action Shorts: All About Imperiled Children and Goofy Adults

Like the animated shorts, the live-action nominees can be neatly divided into serious films about imperiled children and darkly comic movies about goofy adults. Writer/director Gregg Helvey's Kavi dully follows the Dickensian plight of a poor Indian boy who longs to end his indentured servitude so he can attend school...
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Like the animated shorts, the live-action nominees can be neatly divided into serious films about imperiled children and darkly comic movies about goofy adults. Writer/director Gregg Helvey's Kavi dully follows the Dickensian plight of a poor Indian boy who longs to end his indentured servitude so he can attend school. Much better and subtler, writer/director Juanita Wilson's The Door delivers a bruising true-life account of a Russian family's attempt to survive the Chernobyl disaster and save their ailing daughter. The smart, idiosyncratic Miracle Fish combines coming-of-age tale, fantasy drama, and even sci-fi horror for a story of an unpopular 8-year-old boy who hides from bullies at school only to wake up from a nap to realize that everyone has disappeared. The New Tenants boasts the category's biggest names—Vincent D'Onofrio costars; Roman Polanski's cinematographer Pawel Edelman shot the film — but, alas, this aggressively quirky tale of two men's horrible experience with their bizarre new neighbors drowns in its own irreverence. The pick of the litter is Swedish writer-director Patrik Eklund's sublimely goofy Instead of Abracadabra, about an inept magician who dreams of wooing his lovely neighbor. This "loser comedy" is the sort the academy rightfully never honors when it stars Jack Black and is stretched to feature length, but at 20 minutes (and aided by Eklund's confident, sympathetic treatment), it's immensely funny.

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