‘Tanna’ director recounts path from tiny island to Oscar nod
SYDNEY, Australia — The premiere of “Tanna,” Australia’s first-ever Oscar nominee for a foreign language film, was as far from Hollywood glamor as one can get. The guests gathered not in an opulent theatre, but in a cyclone-flattened village on a remote island. There were no glittering gowns, but plenty of grass skirts. And the film’s stars were hardly A-list actors; they had, in fact, never even acted before — or seen a movie.
For Australian directors Bentley Dean and Martin Butler, their film’s evolution from a tiny production in the South Pacific to an Oscar contender for best foreign film is as thrilling as it is inconceivable. The tale of tribal love was shot on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu, in the indigenous Nauvhal language, with an amateur cast of villagers.
“It was just fabulous news and a little bit hard to believe,” Dean said in an interview on Wednesday, shortly after receiving word of the film’s Oscar nod. “Given how it all started, I think it makes it a bit more improbable.”
The film’s roots began 10 years ago, when Butler sent Dean to Tanna to work on a documentary. Dean fell in love with Tanna’s lush landscape and rich culture and vowed to find a way to return.

