Oscars Quest ’26: The Best Documentary Feature Nominees

Inmates dressed in white join hands in a circle in a grassy prison courtyard.

A prison community comes together and tries to be better men in The Alabama Solution, when they’re not festering in filth and the guards aren’t beating them to death.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony on March 15th, including entire genres that I’m terrible about sidestepping during the other 10½ months of the year.

Documentaries can be keen, but much like reality TV, they aren’t part of my routine intake. Guided by the recommendations and/or questionable motives of the voting body of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, I’m compelled to watch at least five of them every year. In that spirit this wordy bumpkin presents a rundown of this year’s nominees for Best Documentary Feature in all their instructive, immersive, saddening, maddening, hilarious, harrowing, bewildering natures. I streamed all five online, though one of them had a narrow window of opportunity. These are recapped alphabetically, not ranked — I’d recommend any of them, though you might not want to watch them back-to-back unless sudden-onset depression is your idea of a good time. Just like the Documentary Short Subject category, apparently everyone forgot to document any excellent inspirational triumphs last year.

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Oscars Quest ’26: The Best Documentary Short Film Nominees

Craig and Brent Renaud sitting before a camera introducing themselves. Posters of their documentary work hang behind them.

Craig and Brent Renaud, brothers and journalists.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony on March 15th, including all the shorts we’d never heard of before the Academy brought attention to them.

Each year since 2009 (except for 2021’s pandemic lockdown marathon) I’ve ventured out to the few Indianapolis theaters carrying the big-screen releases of the Academy Award nominees for Best Live-Action Short Film and Best Animated Short Film. Results vary each time and aren’t always for all audiences, but I appreciate the opportunities to sample such works and see what the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences deemed worthy of honoring, whether I agree with their collective opinions or not.

Then there’s the Best Documentary Short Film collection, which gets treated like the black sheep of the trilogy and wasn’t even exhibited in Indy until the dedicated cineastes at Kan-Kan Cinema began carrying them a few years ago. I’ve usually skipped those and settled for trying to stream as many of those nominees as I legally could. That worked out to 100% completion for me exactly once; otherwise, there’s always a holdout or two that thwart me and aren’t legally available anywhere online until months after the Oscars telecast. Time and again, I fail to complete my scorecard before deadline and I heap shame upon myself.

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Oscars Quest ’26: The Best Live-Action Short Film Nominees

Shopgirl and shopper in black-and-white shoe store with one wall made of light-up shoeboxes and a floor-to-ceiling mirror on the other side.

Ladies’ shoe stores…of THE FUTURE!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony, including all the shorts, most of which we’d never heard of before the Academy brought attention to them.

Each year since 2009 (except for 2021’s pandemic lockdown marathon) I’ve ventured out to the few Indianapolis theaters carrying the big-screen releases of the Academy Award nominees for Best Live-Action Short Film and Best Animated Short Film. Results vary each time and aren’t always for all audiences, but I appreciate the opportunities to sample such works and see what the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences deemed worthy of honoring, whether I agree with their collective opinions or not. My wife and adult son usually accompany me on the journey and we make a family outing of it, even though Oscars Quest is not their problem.

Next up: this year’s five Best Live-Action Short Film nominees, ranked. Links or streaming options are provided where available in non-pirated form.

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Oscars Quest ’26: The Best Animated Short Film Nominees

Oil painting of swimmers at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, with Nazi banners hanging behind them near the audience.

A history lesson just in time for Olympics season.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony on March 15th, including all the shorts we’d never heard of before the Academy brought attention to them.

Each year since 2009 (except for 2021’s pandemic lockdown marathon) I’ve ventured out to the few Indianapolis theaters carrying the big-screen releases of the Academy Award nominees for Best Live-Action Short Film and Best Animated Short Film. Results vary each time and aren’t always for all audiences, but I appreciate the opportunities to sample such works and see what the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences deemed worthy of honoring, whether I agree with their collective opinions or not. My wife and adult son usually accompany me on the journey and we make a family outing of it, even though Oscars Quest is not their problem.

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“Song Sung Blue”: The Healing Power of Nostalgia

Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson in character, smiling cutely at each other.

A new Kate for “Leopold”.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony, even if I have to force myself to sit through some of them by repeating “Rules are rules” to myself until I accept my punishment.

In my childhood Neil Diamond was among the many artists who surrounded me daily in a not-great era of AM radio. I was raised on Top-40 charts that were a bouillabaisse of easy-listening lullabies, crossover country hits, and disco’s lingering death-throes. When I finally got control of a radio dial around age 11, I changed channels hard enough to yank off the knob and never turned back. I still get goosebumps whenever I hear or even remember “America”, and not the good kind of goosebumps — the other kind that’s more like a rash. In retrospect, unfairly or not, he’d become one of my many symbols of Everything Wrong With Previous Generations’ Music.

Long story why, but last year my wife and I made the mistake of watching the 1980 remake of The Jazz Singer starring Diamond as a middle-aged “fellow kid”, an aspiring schmaltzy singer whose name may or may not have been Schlemiel Schliamond. After an early scene of him helping some musician buddies by doing blackface, soon he’s discovered and becomes popular and insufferable. I’d say it was all downhill from there, but that’s assuming we were ever at the top of a hill to begin with. We keep plummeting till the grand finale with, of course, Diamond belting out “America” while his extremely faithfully Jewish dad (Academy Award Winner The Sir Laurence Olivier! I Am Not Making This Up) applauds like a bell-bottomed teenybopper and forgives his son’s multitude of sins and enormous ego. By then I was coughing up the kind of laughter that feels like the other kind of goosebumps have sprouted in your lungs. For a howler of a digestif, I looked up Roger Ebert’s one-star review, which was one for the ages.

In an uncanny bit of cosmic timing, two weeks later Universal dropped the first trailer for Song Sung Blue, a biopic with Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson as Mike and Claire Sardina, the real-life stars of a Neil Diamond tribute act. I did not run right out and buy advance tickets. But here we are anyway, because Oscars Quest. Permission granted to treat me as a hostile witness.

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People Really Win With AMC Theatres, Apparently!

Gray sweatshirt with fictional Barton Academy logo and crest in blue, with "The Holdovers" logo on one sleeve and below the back collar.

It’s a major award!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: sometimes we see movies in theaters! And for once, it’s finally paid off. No, I don’t mean income or ad clicks or blog views, unless you count the surge of silent American bots that’s been spiking my dashboard stats since February 11th. (Those do not count. If you’re reading this, dear bots: SHOO.)

But hey! Going to the movies recently won me a prize! And it was in the best kind of competition: the kind that you accidentally enter without even knowing you entered. Usually those are transparent email scams aiming to fleece the elderly.

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Valentine’s Day Morning in the Carmel Arts & Design District

Anne sitting in a very pink restaurant, holding a mug that says "Love is love". Baskets hang from the ceiling.

Milady enjoys hot chocolate and her companion for the day.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: sometimes we celebrate holidays! Sometimes we leave the house! Sometimes we celebrate holidays by leaving the house!

With Valentine’s Day on a Saturday this year and our schedules cleared, my wife Anne and I made plans to grab an early breakfast before the rest of the world woke up and packed every restaurant in central Indiana for the next eighteen hours. We put our heads together, looked up places that we hadn’t been to before, and loved where we wound up. We didn’t cross-index our search results for sightseeing options in the vicinity, but were pleasantly surprised to wander into some. We ended up taking many more pics than we’d expected that day.

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Our 2023 Road Trip #18: Columbia House

Spacious statehouse lobby with statue in the middle, flanking staircases, and two stories of arched doorways with stained glass transoms.

Welcome to the statehouse!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

Every year since 1999 Anne and I have taken one road trip to a different part of the United States and seen attractions, wonders, and events we didn’t have back home. From 1999 to 2003 we did so as best friends; from 2004 to the present, as husband and wife. After years of contenting ourselves with everyday life in Indianapolis and any nearby places that also had comics and toy shops, we overcame some of our self-imposed limitations and resolved as a team to leave the comforts of home for annual chances to see creative, exciting, breathtaking, outlandish, historical, and/or bewildering new sights in states beyond our own. We’re the Goldens. This is who we are and what we do.

For 2023 it was time at last to venture to the Carolinas, the only southern states we hadn’t yet visited…

…and we wrap up the South Carolina core of this trip with our last stops in its capital of Columbia, where we ventured inside the State House. Public access was limited, but we availed ourselves of the permissible exhibits.

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Our 2023 Road Trip #17: Columbia Pictures

George Washington statue in front of tall capitol steps. He's holding some stick-shaped object and has his coat draped on a column he's leaning on.

Mandatory George Washington statue.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover:

Every year since 1999 Anne and I have taken one road trip to a different part of the United States and seen attractions, wonders, and events we didn’t have back home. From 1999 to 2003 we did so as best friends; from 2004 to the present, as husband and wife. After years of contenting ourselves with everyday life in Indianapolis and any nearby places that also had comics and toy shops, we overcame some of our self-imposed limitations and resolved as a team to leave the comforts of home for annual chances to see creative, exciting, breathtaking, outlandish, historical, and/or bewildering new sights in states beyond our own. We’re the Goldens. This is who we are and what we do.

For 2023 it was time at last to venture to the Carolinas, the only southern states we hadn’t yet visited, with a focus on the city of Charleston, South Carolina. Considering how many battlefields we’d toured over the preceding years, the home of Fort Sumter was an inevitable addition to our experiential collection…

…but the time came to leave Charleston at long last and begin heading northwest toward home. We returned to I-26 toward Columbia, where we’d stopped on the way down for just a bit, and would stop again. There was much more to see in and around their state capital’s capitol.

[CAUTION: The following entry contains Confederate stuff. We are not fans. Viewer discretion is advised.]

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“Sentimental Value”: The Magic of Movies Comes With a Price

Stellan Skarsgard and Renate Reinsve share a darkened restaurant table in front of a window at sundown, He has an empty plate, her side is empty. Both have neutral expressions.

The winner of the “Have Dinner With a Marvel Star!” Sweepstakes was really hoping she’d be meeting Chris Evans.

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony. Sometimes it’s surprising how many actors and filmmakers return from previous years to pop up on my to-do list again, whether from Hollywood or from faraway lands.

I wasn’t the biggest fan of writer/director Joachim Trier’s The Worst Person in the World, a sex-forward Norwegian dramedy of thirtysomething dysfunction that definitely wasn’t made for fussy prudes like me. Trier, his co-writer Eskil Vogt, and star Renate Reinsve (who subsequently crossed over into the U.S. in 2024’s A Different Man opposite Sebastian Stan) reunite and return to the Oscar spotlight with Sentimental Value, this year’s only Best Picture contender that I hadn’t already seen before the nominations were announced. With 20/20 hindsight I’m sorry I didn’t make time for it sooner.

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“Arco”: The Rainbow Connection

Anime preteen boy in a pink hooded jumpsuit and rainbow vest being hugged from behind by a girl his age and height.

Cel-paint with all the colors of the wind!

Previously on Midlife Crisis Crossover: Oscars Quest ’26 continues! Once again we see how many among the latest wave of Academy Award nominees I can catch before the big ABC ceremony. Among other perks, sometimes it means movies I was thiiis close to watching last year get a second chance to slot into my free time.

Arco played at last year’s Heartland Film Festival and was on my viewing shortlist, but its lone showtime wound up among the several I missed due to schedule conflicts amid that great cinematic feast. One of two French nominees for Best Animated Feature this year, it played here in Indy for a single Oscar-season week before it flew off like a rainbow-streaking rocket toward the sunset.

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Yes, There’s a Scene After the “Zootopia 2” End Credits

Nick the fox and Judy the bunny sit in a therapy group, wearing nametags and looking askance at each other.

HE’s a wiseacre loner trying to walk the straight-and-narrow! SHE’s an irrepressible do-gooder crusading for justice! THEY FIGHT CRIME!

Previously on Zootopia: I was thrilled to see my favorite film of 2016 go on to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. I was less thrilled when Disney announced it was next in line to be stuffed into their sequel-sausage grinder. I don’t need every great film to keep filing for brand extensions. Zootopia 2‘s unhelpful first teaser trailer invoked one of my personal theorems: if a given film’s teaser is just a clip of dancing main characters who won’t dance in the actual film, said film is bound to suck. (Exhibit A: Chicken Little, Disney’s weak attempt at making their own Nickelodeon flick.)

Two months after release, the sequel is still riding high in theaters and now likewise Oscar-nominated. It’s therefore on my annual Oscars Quest scorecard, which obligated me to see it per my self-imposed rules. I doubted it would hit Disney+ before the March 15th telecast deadline, so I relented for the sake of the game.

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