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Glenn is out this week, and Lee Fang will be your host for System Update.
Last night, the film “No Other Land” won the Oscar for best documentary. The film, which stars Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham and Palestinian activist Basel Adra, chronicles the occupation and destruction of Masafer Yatta, a Palestinian village in the West Bank.
The film has been described as a testimony to friendship, solidarity, and resistance. While much of the film documents Israeli attempts at land grabs and violence from Israeli military and settler forces from 2019 through 2023, it also juxtaposes snippets from old videos recorded by Adra's family and neighbors. “No Other Land” features footage of protests filmed by Basel Adra when he was just seven years old. As he sits with his mother in a field, his father is violently assaulted and then arrested by the Israeli army.
Video: No Other Land - Official Trailer
At the Oscars, Yuval Abraham, the film's co-creator and also an investigative journalist for the Israeli media outlet, +972 Magazine, in his Oscar acceptance speech, called for Israel to end the destruction of Gaza, for Hamas to release the remaining hostages, and for the end of policies of “ethnic supremacy” in the West Bank, in which Israeli Jews like himself are treated differently than his Palestinian friend, Basel Adra, who lives under a different set of laws and norms simply on the basis of race and ethnicity. Because Basra is Palestinian, he cannot vote for the government that ultimately rules over him, or for the Israeli military that decides the fate of millions of other Palestinians in the West Bank.
Video. Best Documentary Feature Film – Oscars 2025. March 2, 2025.
Now here's the rub: every other film awarded an Oscar last night had U.S. distribution. No Other Land, despite winning the most prestigious accolade in Hollywood, could not obtain a U.S. distributor. It is only shown in small and independent theaters. Hopefully this award changes that, but the situation reflects an ongoing form of systemic censorship in American media.
Here's how The New York Times described the dynamic.
“Despite a string of honors and rave reviews, no distributor would pick up this film in the United States, making it nearly impossible for American filmgoers to see it in theaters or to stream it. This shortcoming made “No Other Land” part of a broader trend in recent years in which topical documentaries have struggled to secure distribution.”
Now, this claim about quote, unquote “topical documentaries” struggling to obtain distribution obscures the reality. Let's take a look at the last decade or so of Oscar-winning documentaries.