It happens every year (even with the dubious executive committee) that a number of celebrated films from world cinema fail to make the Academy's shortlist of nine for Best Foreign Language film. It's a cruel but necessary process to cull the mammoth list of submissions (76 entries this year) down to a manageable number.
The Past, Asghar Farhadi's followup to his Oscar-winning A Separation, is one of the high-profile casualties this year I haven't yet seen it, but have actually heard mixed things about it. The snub that stings the most for me personally was Haifaa Al-Mansour's Wadjda from Saudi Arabia, which is just a wonderful movie. Plain and simple. I think if it had been nominated, it would have been in good position to win the whole thing, but now we'll never know.
Among the surviving nine, the ones I've so far seen include Belgium's The Broken Circle Breakdown, Hong Kong's The Grandmaster, and Denmark's The Hunt. All three certainly have their champions, but I wasn't all that taken with the former two. The Hunt, however, is quite good, and may well be the one to watch for the win (... if it gets nominated, of course -- you never can tell with this branch).
The Broken Circle Breakdown (Belgium)
An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
The Missing Picture (Cambodia)
The Hunt (Denmark)
Two Lives (Germany)
The Grandmaster (Hong Kong)
The Notebook (Hungary)
The Great Beauty (Italy)
Omar (Palestine)