BOSTON — Behind the spotlight on this year's Oscar nominees for best feature documentary is a soft-spoken and camera-shy film professor at Harvard who taught three of the directors in the 1990s, encouraging their work and inspiring them to greatness.
Rob Moss, who has taught at Harvard for 25 years, says he's not surprised that Jehane Noujaim, Joshua Oppenheimer and Richard Rowley, all 39, have achieved individual acclaim. All three credit Moss with helping them develop their vision — but he says humbly that he doesn't know what he did to inspire them.
"It was not something I planned or set out to do," Moss said. "Teaching is a lot more about not knowing than knowing. It is about giving students the freedom to find out what filmmaker they want to be."
Rowley directed the nominated film "Dirty Wars" — based on the book by the same name by Jeremy Scahill — which looks critically at the involvement of the U.S. military in the Middle East. Oppenheimer, his former classmate and dorm neighbor, directed "The Act of Killing," a dark look into the mass killings of communists and ethnic Chinese in Indonesia in the 1960s.
Noujaim, who graduated with Oppenheimer in 1997, directed "The Square," a detailed depiction of the Egyptian revolution from start to finish.
Noujaim won the Directors Guild of America award in late January for "The Square," competing against all the Oscar-nominated films but "Dirty Wars." That could foreshadow an edge for her because in the last five years, four of the DGA-winning films for best feature documentary also won the Oscar in that category that year.
Last week, "The Act of Killing" won the London Critics' Circle Film Award for best documentary, a category added in 2011. No previous winners of the London award have also won Oscars.
Nominated with the Harvard trio for the Oscar are Morgan Neville's "20 Feet From Stardom," about the unsung backup singers behind such rock stars as Bruce Springsteen, Sting and Stevie Wonder — and "Cutie and the Boxer," directed by Zachary Heinzerling, a glimpse of the 40-year marriage of New York boxing painter, Ushio Shinohara and Noriko, his former art student.