The Academys often controversial and always interesting foreign-language race is picking up a little steam,with Romania,Morocco and Venezuela submitting their entries to join Greece and Poland this year. We wont know for months if Greece has found another surprise nominee like last years Dogtooth,or if Romania will once again be overlooked for a strong,tough film the way it was with 4 Months,3 Weeks And 2 Days. But at this point we can start to discern countries strategies for dealing with the Academys Best Foreign-Language Film process. Greece,for instance,seems to have reacted to Dogtooth with an attitude of if it aint broke,dont fix it, while Romania may be going for something marginally friendlier than its usual grim submissions. Under Academy rules,each country is allowed to submit a single film; a lengthy screening process narrows the field from several dozen (65 last year) to nine,and then two hand-picked committees choose the final five nominees. So far,these are the entries. Many more to come before the Academy's September 30 deadline: Greece: Attenberg Director: Anthin Rachel Tsangari Last year Greece got the Oscar races strangest and most controversial nomination with Dogtooth,and the country appears to have gone back to the same well with a film produced by Dogtooth director Yorgos Lanthimos and directed by the movies producer Tsangari. Guy Lodge,who has seen the film,calls it Dogtooth-lite: in addition to common themes of sexual discover and youth alienation,the films share a similar brooding,deadpan humour. Morocco: Omar Killed Me (Omar m'a tuer) Director: Roschdy Zem The true story of Moroccan immigrant imprisoned for murder near Cannes,Omar Killed Me examines a penal system in which French police and prosecutors were eager to pin the crime on a convenient target. Director Zem is currently receiving rave reviews for the limited stateside release of Point Blank. Poland: In Darkness Director: Agnieszka Holland Holland has been nominated for the Academy Awards for Olivier,Olivier and has worked in the United States on TV series like The Wire,The Killing and Treme,and her film has already been picked up by Sony Classics,the company with an impressive record of picking winners and nominees in this category. Besides which,the plot looks like ideal Oscar-bait: Its based on the true story of a Polish criminal who helped hide Jewish refugees during World War II. Romania: Morgen Director: Marian Crisan Reportedly less grim than the Romanian fare that has been controversially overlooked by the Academy in recent years,Morgen looks at the friendship between a Romanian-Hungarian security guard and an illegal immigrant. Venezuela: The Rumble Of The Stones (El rumor de las piedras) Director: Alejandro Bellame Palacios The least-known of this years entries,Palacios film deals with a woman in Caracas trying to rebuild a life for herself,her mother and her two sons in the wake of floods that destroyed their home.