February 24, 2016 Page 5 Black History Month My Counterpoint to the Oscars Snub o PinionAted J udge by J udge d arleen o rtega Films with rich insight to the human condition The Academy Awards, which will air on Sunday, are gradually making themselves irrelevant, as they shamelessly overlook some of the best work and promote only a small and all-white cadre of per- formers. In keeping with my own tradition, I offer this list of the 10 best ilms of 2015 just in time to provide a counterpoint, with a bit of Oscar commentary thrown in. I must acknowledge at the out- set that this is a pretty heavy bunch -- not a single comedy, and some pretty dark themes. More than half are foreign ilms and half are not in English; I saw two at last year’s Portland International Film Festival (PIFF) and would have in- cluded one more (“The President” from Georgia) except that it’s not had a DVD release in the U.S. Still, all these ilms are rich with To start, here is the list: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Timbuktu Love and Mercy The Salt of the Earth Son of Saul The Revenant Tangerine Leviathan 45 Years Marie’s Story PeaceOficer insights about the human condition and well worth plunging into their depths. The truth-telling here is beautiful and enriching. 1. “Timbuktu” is a devastating examination of lived experiences of jihad in a community in Mali. Director Abderrahmane Sissa- ko focuses his gorgeous ilm on scenes of ordinary life in a Muslim village under siege by outsiders hired to impose religious regime change, impervious to the entreat- ies of even the local imam. Sissako portrays the brutality of fundamen- talism with quiet clarity: Rules are imposed against music and sports and mixed company -- and yet, at every turn, the human spirit of the villagers ights being crushed. A group of boys assembles a soc- cer game with an imaginary ball; a woman whipped for singing in mixed company turns her cries into music; members of a small family savor their love for each other and dare to hope that humiliations will end. This is both a universal vision of human struggle against tyranny and a window into very particular aspects of an African culture that has not found its way onto West- ern movie screens. I saw this at last year’s PIFF, and nothing has topped it since. [Not rated; on at least 76 other critics’ top 10 lists; in Arabic, French, Tamasheq and Bambara; nominated for an Acad- emy Award for Best Foreign Lan- c ontinued on p ages 8-9 Oscar nominated ‘Timbuktu,’ a powerful African drama about a community in northern Mali under jihadist occupation, is the top ilm of 2015 as reviewed by our Portland Observer contributor and ‘Opinionated Judge’ columnist Darleen Ortega. photo credit l es f ilMs