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Hollywood gears up for 96th Oscar Awards ceremony

Hollywood gears up for 96th Oscar Awards ceremony
By Newsroom
Mar 10, 2024 3:59 PM

Christopher Nolan’s atomic blockbuster Oppenheimer will undoubtedly win multiple Oscars

Will “Oppenheimer” make Oscars history? Who will win the closely contested best actress race? And could Martin Scorsese go home empty-handed again?

Variety Awards editor Clayton Davis suggests five things to watch out for this Sunday at the 96th Academy Awards:

‘Oppenheimer’ record-breaker?

Christopher Nolan’s atomic blockbuster Oppenheimer will undoubtedly win multiple Oscars. But how many?

Davis explained that even a “really conservative” eight would be the most for a film since “Slumdog Millionaire” in 2009.

The record of 11 is probably just out of reach. But 10—achievable if it wins close races like best actor and best-adapted screenplay—would tie it with “West Side Story” (1961).

After years of minor indie hits taking Best Picture, “Oppenheimer” would be the highest-grossing winner since “Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” in 2004 and the third-highest of all time (also behind “Titanic”).

It seems sure to be the top-grossing film in history to win Oscars for its actors, Robert Downey Jr and — potentially — Cillian Murphy.

It would be only the second film to win best picture produced by a married couple — Nolan and his wife Emma Thomas — after “Driving Miss Daisy.”
‘Barbie’ avalanche

While not likely to win more than a couple of Oscars, “Barbie” will be omnipresent throughout Sunday’s gala.

Billie Eilish and Ryan Gosling are set to perform Oscar-nominated songs from the movie, and host Jimmy Kimmel is certasureepper his opening monologue with jokes about the smash hit comedy.

“I can’t imagine an entire evening that doesn’t reference ‘Barbie’ multiple, if not hundreds of times,” joked Davis.

Expect quips about the so-called “snubs” for Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie, who were not nominated for directing and starring in the year’s highest-grossing film, and many references to all things pink.

“There will be an avalanche of Barbie content, which might annoy a couple of people,” said Davis.

Best actress nail-biter

No significant race is more challenging to predict than best actress, where Lily Gladstone and Emma Stone are neck-and-neck among the pundits’ picks.

Davis is calling it for “Killers of the Flower Moon” star Gladstone but admits his answer changes “at different moments.”

As the first Native American actor to win, Gladstone would give the gala a historic moment. However, some voters don’t see her as the actual “lead” of a film in which Leonardo DiCaprio dominates the three-and-a-half hours of screen time.

Stone’s performance in Greek auteur Yorgos Lanthimos’s “Poor Things” is popular among the Academy’s “international vote”—but it could suffer if some of that bloc splinters off for Sandra Hueller of the French courtroom drama “Anatomy of a Fall.”

“This is where it comes down to math,” said Davis.
Scorsese’s losses

One of the greatest living directors, Martin Scorsese, is hardly short of accolades.

But if Gladstone loses, “Killers” will likely become the third of Scorsese’s movies to enter an Oscars with ten nominations, yet leave empty-handed.

Scorsese suffered similarly with “The Irishman” and “Gangs of New York.”

“It’s like ‘first world problems,’ to have 30 Oscar nominations and you didn’t win any of them,” joked Davis. “But that is a lot.”

America, America

As usual, the list of Oscars presenters is a who’s who of Hollywood.

At a press conference this week, organizers revealed that five previous winners of each acting category would take to the stage to introduce the five nominees this year.

That could mean Jennifer Lawrence introducing Emma Stone, Matthew McConaughey announcing Paul Giamatti, and Tim Robbins praising Robert Downey Jr.

It is an approach borrowed from the 2009 Oscars and brings a “lovely connection and that human interaction,” said this year’s showrunner Raj Kapoor.

The combination Davis is most hoping for?

“Rita Moreno is a presenter. And putting two and two together, there’s no reason why she doesn’t introduce America Ferrera’s nomination for ‘Barbie’ and say ‘America, America!'”

“I’m going to cry. I’m going to be in tears. And I can’t wait.”

Source: AFP

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Last Updated:  May 28, 2024 6:52 PM