2022
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Filmsite's Greatest Films
of 2022
Best Animated Feature Film
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GUILLERMO DEL TORO's PINOCCHIO (2022)
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Marcel the Shell With Shoes On (2022)
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Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (2022)
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The Sea Beast (2022)
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Turning Red (2022)
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Actor:
BRENDAN FRASER in "The Whale," Austin Butler in "Elvis," Colin
Farrell in "The Banshees of Inisherin," Paul Mescal in "Aftersun," Bill
Nighy in "Living"
Actress:
MICHELLE YEOH in "Everything Everywhere All at Once," Cate Blanchett
in "Tár," Ana de
Armas in "Blonde," Andrea
Riseborough in "To Leslie," Michelle Williams in "The
Fabelmans"
Supporting Actor:
KE
HUY QUAN in "Everything Everywhere All at Once," Brendan Gleeson
in "The
Banshees of Inisherin," Brian Tyree Henry in "Causeway," Judd
Hirsch in "The Fabelmans," Barry Keoghan in "The Banshees of Inisherin"
Supporting Actress:
JAMIE LEE CURTIS in "Everything Everywhere
All at Once," Angela Bassett in "Black Panther:
Wakanda Forever," Hong Chau in "The Whale," Kerry
Condon in "The
Banshees of Inisherin," Stephanie Hsu in "Everything
Everywhere All at Once"
Director:
DANIEL KWAN and DANIEL SCHEINERT for "Everything Everywhere All
at Once," Martin McDonagh for "The Banshees of Inisherin," Steven
Spielberg for "The Fabelmans," Todd Field for "Tár," Ruben
Ostlund for "Triangle of Sadness"
In
this
95th Academy Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) with 23 categories of awards,
there were 10 nominees for Best Picture. It was
an unusual achievement that two of the films were not only critically-acclaimed,
but also were blockbusters that stood at the top of the box-office
for the year:
- Top Gun: Maverick
- Avatar: The Way of Water
Remarkably, both of them were
sequels. In fact, only seven sequels have ever received a Best
Picture nomination up until now, and only two won the top prize:
(i.e., The Bells of St. Mary's (1945), The
Godfather Part II (1974) (win), The
Godfather Part III (1990), The
Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002), The
Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) (win), Toy
Story 3 (2010), and Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)). [Note:
The last year in which the top two films in terms of domestic box-office
revenue were also nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award was
in 1982, when Spielberg's E.T.:
The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) was competing with Tootsie
(1982). It also occurred in 1975 when Spielberg's Jaws
(1975) was competing against One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) and in 1973 when The
Sting (1973) was up against The
Exorcist (1973).]
Also, some
of the other contenders this year were also populist choices
with strong box-office, including Everything
Everywhere All at Once and Elvis. After
the nominations were made public, Netflix (the previous year's front-runner)
had 16 overall nominations and sat in 2nd place behind A24 (with
17 nominations).
This year's Best Picture-winning film was
the obvious front-runner:
- Everything Everywhere All
at Once (11 nominations, with 7 wins for both Best Supporting
Actor and Best Supporting Actress, Best Original Screenplay, Best
Film Editing, Best Director, and Best Actress -
from A24 (with a total of 17 nominations) and the studio's highest-grossing
film of all time - a free-wheeling, weird domestic drama and comedy
(with sci-fi and fantasy elements) co-written and co-directed by
the "Daniels" - Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert; with numerous nominations:
Best Original Screenplay, Best Director, Best Original Score, Best
Song ("This
is a Life"), Best
Costume Design, Best Film Editing, and 4 acting nods for its mostly
Asian-American cast: Best Actress (Michelle Yeoh), Best Supporting
Actress (Jamie Lee Curtis and Stephanie Hsu), and Best Supporting
Actor (Ke Huy Quan)
[Note: It became the third film in Oscars history
to win three acting awards, following A
Streetcar Named Desire (1951) and Network
(1976). In addition, it was the first film to win three
acting awards and Best Picture. It was considered the
first bona fide science-fiction film to be awarded Best Picture.]
The other nine Best Picture nominees were (in descending
order of wins):
- All Quiet on the Western Front (9 nominations, with
four wins for Best Cinematography, Best International Feature Film, Best
Production Design, and Best Original Score), from German director Edward
Berger and Netflix (with a total of 16 nominations) about the devastating
effects of war through the eyes of a young idealistic German soldier sent
to the front's trench warfare during WWI; Netflix's lengthy adaptation
and remake of the 92 year-old Oscar-winning war film from director Lewis
Milestone titled All Quiet on the Western Front
(1930) was based upon Erich Maria Remarque’s 1929 classic
World War I novel; its nominations included Best Makeup and Hairstyling,
Best Original Score, Best Sound, Best Visual Effects, Best Adapted Screenplay,
Best Cinematography, and Best Production Design; it was devoid of acting
nominations; its Best International Feature Film Oscar win marked Germany's
12th nomination in the category and its third win
[Note: It was the first German-language movie to be nominated for Best Picture,
and the first Best Picture nominee to be spoken almost entirely in German. It
became the 8th non-English-language film ever to be nominated for both categories:
Best International Feature Film and Best Picture. To date, only two other foreign
language films earned more Oscar nominations: Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon (2000) (with 10 noms and 4 Oscar wins), and director Alfonso Cuaron's Roma
(2018) (with 10 noms and 3 Oscar wins). The double-nominee Parasite (2019) (with
6 noms and 4 Oscar wins) was the first and only foreign language film to win
both prizes - Int'l Feature and Best Picture.]
- Top Gun: Maverick (6 nominations, with one win for
Best Sound), the crowd-pleasing # 1 picture of the year at the box office
from Paramount Pictures (with a total of 9 nominations), with Tom Cruise
reprising his role as top Naval aviator Pete 'Maverick' Mitchell; it received
a number of technical achievement nominations, including Best Film Editing,
Best Sound, Best Visual Effects, and Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Original
Song (Lady Gaga's "Hold My Hand")
- Avatar: The Way of Water (4 nominations, with one
win for Best Visual Effects); the visually-astounding, CGI sci-fi action-epic
sequel to the 2009 original film from Disney/20th Century Studios (with
a total of 10 nominations), had three technical nominations including Best
Visual Effects, Best Sound, and Best Production Design besides Best Picture;
with his 7th overall career Oscar nomination, director James Cameron (as
producer) shared the Best Picture nomination with co-producer Jon Landau
- Women Talking (2 nominations, with one win for Best
Original Screenplay), writer/director Sarah Polley's powerful religious
drama was about serial rapes conducted from 2005 to 2009 against drugged
women in a conservative, Bolivian Mennonite religious community
Five of the Best Picture-nominated films came away empty-handed:
- The Banshees of Inisherin (9 nominations
and no wins), Searchlight Pictures' and writer/director Martin
McDonagh's R-rated Irish drama and black tragi-comedy told about
two lifelong friends and drinking buddies - Padraic Súilleabháin
(Colin Farrell) and folk musician, wannabe composer Colm Doherty
(Brendan Gleeson) who lived in a remote island town (Inishmore)
on Ireland's Aran Islands; its nominations included Best Original
Screenplay and Best Director (for McDonagh), Best Actor (Colin
Farrell), two Best Supporting Actor nominations (Brendan Gleeson
and Barry Keoghan), a Best Supporting Actress nomination (Kerry
Condon), Best Original Score, and Best Film Editing
[Note: There are only about 30 films that have achieved the honor
of receiving 4 acting nominations in all of Oscar history.]
- Elvis (8 nominations and no wins), Warner Bros.'
(with a total of 11 nominations) and director and co-scripter Baz Luhrmann's
dramatized, glitzy musical biopic of Elvis Presley charted the
life of the rock 'n' roll singer and movie star icon; its many
nominations included Best Actor (Austin Butler as the title character),
and other technical categories - Best Makeup and Hairstyling,
Best Sound, Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Film
Editing, and Best Production Design
- The Fabelmans (7 nominations and no wins), a semi-autobiographic,
sentimental coming-of-age family drama from Universal Pictures
(with a total of 8 nominations) based upon director Spielberg's
own upbringing; with nominations for Best Director (Spielberg),
Best Actress (Michelle Williams), Best Supporting Actor (Judd
Hirsch), Best Original Score, Best Original Screenplay, and Best
Production Design
[Note: At the age of 90, John Williams was nominated for
Best Original Score, making him the oldest person ever
to be nominated for a competitive Oscar. Williams’ nomination
was his 53rd — 48 for Score and five for Original Song.
He has won 5 Oscars.]
- Tár (6 nominations and no wins),
from Focus Features (with a total of 7 nominations) and writer/director
Todd Field, a provocative, meticulously-created R-rated classical
musical drama about the rise and fall of the toxic, imperious
title character - Lydia Tár
(Best Actress-nominated Cate Blanchett); with nominations for
Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography,
and Best Film Editing
- Triangle of Sadness (3 nominations and no wins),
Swedish writer/director Ruben Östlund's satirical tale of the uber-wealthy,
the year's Palme d'Or winner, was told in three acts. It told
about a luxury yacht cruise for the privileged super-rich, with
a hapless Captain (Woody Harrelson) that ended disastrously with
a shipwreck and 'Lord of the Flies' struggles to survive on a
desert island; its nominations included Best Director (Ruben Östlund)
and Best Original Screenplay
The Best Animated Feature Film winner was:
- Guillermo
del Toro’s Pinocchio - from Netflix (with its first
animated feature Oscar) - a dark and scary version of the familiar
Carlo Collodi classic tale (in stop-motion animation) set in
1930s Fascist Italy, about a disobedient wooden boy-puppet/marionette
who became ethically-challenged and was brought to life as a
real boy, pleasing grieving woodcarver Geppetto.
[Note: This
was Del Toro’s
3rd Oscar following Best Picture and Best Director wins
for The Shape of Water (2017). It was the second stop-motion
film to win this same award after Wallace and Gromit:
The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005).].
The other four
nominees were:
- Marcel the Shell With Shoes On - from A24,
based on the 2010 shorts about a tiny shell named Marcel who
wore shoes; the feature-length stop-motion mockumentary chronicled
the coming-of-age adventures and travails of a tiny, one-inch
mollusk named Marcel - the victim of a broken home, with two
companions: grandma Connie (Isabella Rossellini) and a pet piece
of lint named Alan
- Puss in Boots: The Last Wish - from DreamWorks
Animation, a re-boot of DreamWorks’ Puss franchise and the
6th film in the Shrek series,
with storybook-stylized CG animation, about the charismatic cat Puss
(with his last 9th life) on a mythical mission to restore his eight
previous lives
- The Sea Beast - from Netflix, a thrilling,
swashbuckling animated adventure about an orphan girl who joined
a crew of deep-sea monster hunters to capture a huge, legendary
sea creature (the 'Red Bluster') in the ocean
- Turning Red - from Walt Disney Pictures/Pixar
Animation, Pixar’s 25th feature film - with a female director
Domee Shi, a
coming-of-age tale of a 13-year-old Chinese-Canadian girl whose
extreme upset and emotions transformed her into a giant red panda
The five Best Directors nominated this year
included an all-male slate of candidates whose films were all
included amongst the Best Picture nominees. In the last
two years of Oscars with back-to-back wins, both Chloé Zhao
(for Nomadland
(2020))
and Jane Campion (for The Power of the Dog (2021)) became
the second and third females to win the directoral prize.
[Note:
This marked the fourth consecutive year with Asian talent nominated
for both producing and directing. Parasite (2019), Minari/Nomadland
(2020), Drive My Car (2021), and Everything Everywhere
All At Once (2022).]
The Best Director Oscar was presented to
34 year-old Daniel Kwan and 35 year-old Daniel Scheinert (known
as the two 'Daniels') (with no previous Oscar nominations) for Everything
Everywhere All at Once. [Note: Kwan
and Scheinert were also nominated for Best Original Screenplay
and Best Picture for the same film. They were the fourth duo in
Oscar history nominated for Best Director, with two of the duos
ultimately winning the award. Now they became the third victorious
directorial team. Previous duos were nominated for West
Side Story (1961) (Jerome
Robbins and Robert Wise - win), No Country For Old Men (2007) (Joel
and Ethan Coen - win), True Grit (2010) (Joel and Ethan Coen),
and Heaven Can Wait (1978) (Warren Beatty and Buck Henry).
Also, Asian-American director Daniel Kwan's nomination marked the
fourth year in a row that an Asian director was nominated.]
The other four Best Director nominees were:
- 76 year-old Steven Spielberg (with many previous
nominations (22) and Oscar wins (3) to date) for The Fabelmans
[Note: Spielberg became a nine-time Oscar nominee
in the Best Director category with this nomination. The record
of 12 Best Director nominations remains with William Wyler.
Spielberg and Wyler were now tied at 13 films nominated for
Best Picture - a record number. In Spielberg's career, he has won three
Academy Awards, two for Best Director (Schindler's
List (1993) and Saving
Private Ryan (1998)), and one for Best Picture (Schindler's
List (1993).]
- 58 year-old Todd Field (with three previous Oscar
nominations) for Tár
[Note: In addition to three nominations this year
for Tar, Todd Field has been nominated previously three
times for: Little
Children (2006) (Best Adapted Screenplay), and In the
Bedroom (2001) (Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously
Produced or Published and Best Picture).]
- 52 year-old Martin McDonagh (with three previous
nominations and no Oscar wins), a British-Irish playwright,
screenwriter, producer, and director, for The
Banshees of Inisherin
[Note: McDonagh was also nominated for Best
Original Screenplay and Best Picture for the same film. He
also has two nominations for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing,
Missouri (2017) - Best Original Screenplay and Best Director,
and a Best Original Screenplay nomination for In Bruges
(2008).]
- 48 year-old Ruben Ostlund, a Swedish film director
(with no previous Oscar nominations) for Triangle of Sadness
[Note: This was Ostlund's English-language debut film. Ostlund
received two noms for this film, Best Director and Best Original
Screenplay.]
In the four acting categories with 20 Oscars up for
grabs, an amazing 16 of the contenders were first-time nominees.
Four of the 20 performers were Asian-American
(three were nominated for Everything
Everywhere All at Once, and one for The Whale). This
marked the most Asian acting nominees in a single year. And both The
Banshees of Inisherin and Everything Everywhere
All at Once had four nominees in the four acting categories.
As it has been noted, the four Oscar winners
for acting awards were all first-time Oscar winners - Brendan Fraser,
Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, and Jamie Lee Curtis - and they all
were, to some degree, cast to the side after promising beginnings
in their long careers. Yeoh had appeared in the 18th James Bond
film Tomorrow
Never Dies (1997) and Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000, HK), while Vietnamese-born Quan
had starred as a young boy in Indiana
Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984) and The Goonies
(1985).
Jamie Lee Curtis' career began with a series of Halloween
(1978) genre films over many years, and
she also appeared in comedic roles in Trading
Places (1983) and A
Fish Called Wanda (1988). Brendan Fraser was known for his
1990's 'The
Mummy' franchise
films, and Gods and Monsters (1998).
The five Best Actor nominees this year were all first-time
nominees (of varying ages and nationalities), but as some noted,
without ethnic diversity: [Note:
The last time there were all first-timer Best Actor nominees was
for films in 1934, 88 years earlier.]
The Best Actor winner was 54 year-old American-Canadian
actor Brendan Fraser for his characterization of Charlie - a morbidly-obese
English professor who made attempts to reconnect with his estranged
teenage daughter Ellie Sarsfield (Sadie Sink), in The Whale (with
a total of 3 nominations and two wins - Best Actor and Best Makeup
and Hairstyling). The other four nominees were Best Actor were:
- 73 year-old British actor Bill Nighy, for his
role as Mr. Rodney Williams - a 1950s London civil servant-bureaucrat
working in the county's Public Works Department who received
a diagnosis of a terminal illness, in director Oliver Hermanus'
UK drama about the meaning of life titled Living (also
nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay by Kazuo Ishiguro that
was adapted from Akira Kurosawa's classic
Ikiru (1952, Jp.))
- 46 year-old Irish actor Colin Farrell, for his
role as stunned villager Pádraic Súilleabháin
who was suddenly ignored by his life-long friend and drinking
buddy Colm Doherty (co-star Brendan Gleeson), in The Banshees
of Inisherin
- 31 year-old Austin Butler, for his role as the
title character - hip-gyrating rock 'n' roll singer and actor
- seen from the flashbacked point of view of his former manager
Colonel Tom Parker (Tom Hanks), in Baz Luhrmann's musical biopic Elvis
- 26 year-old Irish-born Paul Mescal for his role
as 30 year-old Scottisher Calum Paterson, the father of 11 year
old daughter Sophie Paterson (Frankie Corio/Celia Rowlson-Hall),
on a vacation trip with her to Turkey, in writer/director Charlotte
Wells' nostalgic drama (and feature film debut) Aftersun
The five Best Actress nominees this year were
in a highly-competitive category. The inclusion of unexpected nominee
Andrea Riseborough was due to a last-minute viral celebrity campaign.
Nine of the 10 Best Actor and Best Actress nominees were white.
The Best Actress winner was 60 year-old Malaysian
actress Michelle Yeoh (with her first nomination), for her role
as Evelyn Wang - a middle-aged, overwhelmed laundromat owner who
traversed parallel and alternate universes (the multiverse), in
the dramatic sci-fi fantasy Everything Everywhere All at Once.
Yeoh became the first person from an Asian background to be named Best
Actress, and she was also only the second non-white performer ever
to win the award. [Note: The first was Halle Berry for Monster's
Ball (2001).]
The other four nominees for Best Actress were:
- 53 year-old Australian actress Cate Blanchett
(with two Oscar wins), for her role as toxic classical music
conductor Lydia Tár, in Tár
(2022)
[Note: Blanchett has a total of 8 Oscar nominations,
with a Best Supporting Actress win for The Aviator (2004),
and another win as Best Actress for Blue Jasmine (2013).
Other Oscar-nominated films for Best Supporting Actress include
Notes on a Scandal (2006) and I'm Not There (2007), and for
Best Actress include Elizabeth (1998), Elizabeth: The
Golden Age (2007), and Carol (2015).]
- 42 year-old Michelle Williams (with her fifth
nomination after four previous Oscar noms with no wins),
for her portrayal of Mitzi Fabelman (the Jewish mother of Steven
Spielberg's film-making alter-ego Sammy Fabelman), in director
Spielberg's autobiographical tale The
Fabelmans
[Note: Williams has two previous Best Actress noms, for Blue
Valentine (2010) and My Week with Marilyn (2011),
and two previous Best Supporting Actress noms, for Brokeback
Mountain (2005) and Manchester by the Sea (2016).]
- 41 year-old British actress Andrea Riseborough
(with her first nomination), for her role as the title character
Leslie Rowlands, a troubled alcoholic who lived in West Texas
and won the state lottery of $190,000 before her life went into
a downhill spiral, in director Michael Morris' directorial debut
film - the indie drama To Leslie
- 34 year-old Cuban/Spanish actress Ana de Armas
(with her first nomination), for her role as the often-naked
Marilyn Monroe/Norma Jeane Mortenson in the fictionalized, NC-17
rated biopic and psychodrama Blonde
Eight of the 10 Supporting
Actor and Supporting Actress nominees were first-timers. This
marked the fourth consecutive year that a film had double-nominees
in the category of Best Supporting Actor.
The Best
Supporting Actor winner was 51 year-old Vietnamese-American Ke
Huy Quan (with his first nomination) in the role of Evelyn's naive
and meek husband Waymond Wang, in Everything Everywhere All at
Once. Ke Huy Quan became the first person from an Asian background
to win the award. The other four nominees for
Best Supporting Actor were:
- 67 year-old Irish-actor Brendan Gleeson (with
his first nomination) in his role as folk musician Colm Doherty
who came into conflict with his long-standing best friend and
drinking buddy Pádraic
Súilleabháin (Colin Farrell), in the Irish dark
tragi-comedy The
Banshees of Inisherin
- 87 year-old Judd Hirsch (with his second Oscar
nomination), in his role as Boris Schildkraut - Sammy Fabelman's
grand-uncle and a former film worker and circus lion tamer,
in the autobiographical coming-of-age drama The
Fabelmans
[Note: Hirsch was only on-screen for 8 minutes and
3 seconds. Hirsch's nomination broke a long-standing record held
by Henry Fonda of 41 years, for the longest time period between
his First and Last Nomination/Win.
Hirsch received his first Supporting Actor nod for Ordinary
People (1980) in 1981, and now received a second similar
nomination 42 years later. The record of 41 years was long-held
by actor Henry Fonda. Hirsch also became the 2nd oldest Best
Supporting Actor nominee at 87 years, 315 days.]
- 30 year-old Irish actor Barry Keoghan (with his
first nomination) for his role as troubled Dominic Kearney, in The
Banshees of Inisherin
- 40 year-old African-American Brian Tyree Henry
(with his first nomination) for his portrayal of New Orleans
auto-mechanic James Aucoin, who was physically and emotionally
traumatized in the past by a deadly and tragic car accident that
killed his nephew, and was befriended by brain-injured, rehabilitating
Afghanistan war veteran Lynsey (Jennifer Lawrence), in director
Lila Neugebauer's debut feature film and Apple TV+'s R-rated
drama Causeway (the
film's sole nomination)
The Best Supporting Actress winner was 64
year-old Jamie Lee Curtis (with her first nomination), for her
characterization of cruel bureaucratic IRS inspector Deirdre Beaubeirdra,
in Everything Everywhere All at Once. The other four nominees
for Best Supporting Actress were:
- 64 year-old African-American Angela Bassett (with
her second Oscar nomination), for her role as the grieving Queen
Ramonda of the kingdom of Wakanda after the death of her son
King T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman in the original film), in Marvel
Studios' and director Ryan Coogler's superhero sequel Black
Panther: Wakanda Forever
[Note: Bassett's previous nomination was for Best Actress,
for What's Love Got to Do with It (1993).]
- 43 year-old Vietnam-born American actress Hong
Chau (with her first nomination) for her role as best friend
and nurse Liz, who was caring for a severely-obese
male named Charlie (Brendan Fraser), an English professor teaching
online, in Darren Aronofsky's drama
The
Whale
- 40 year-old Irish actress Kerry Condon (with her
first nomination), for her portrayal of Siobhán Súilleabháin
- the
long-suffering sister of Pádraic (co-star Colin Farrell),
in the Irish drama The
Banshees on Inisherin
- 32 year-old Chinese-American Stephanie Hsu (with
her first nomination) for her role as two iterations: Joy Wang,
the lesbian daughter of Evelyn Quan Wang (co-star Michelle Yeoh),
and as her multiverse manifestation known as Jobu Tupaki, in Everything
Everywhere All at Once
Snubs or Overlooked Films or Nominees:
- popular actor Tom Cruise and director Joseph Kosinski
were both overlooked for nominations in the Top Gun: Maverick sequel,
although the film acquired six Oscar nominations, including Best
Picture; the action-film also missed obtaining an expected Best
Cinematography nomination
- although director Baz Luhrmann's biopic Elvis received
8 nominations including Best Picture and Best Actor, the director
was devoid of recognition
- Ryan Coogler's sequel Black Panther: Wakanda
Forever was unable to match the performance of its Best
Picture-nominated superhero predecessor Black
Panther (2018) (with three Oscar wins from its seven nominations);
it only received five nominations, including Best Visual Effects,
Best Original Song ("Lift Me Up"), Best Makeup and
Hairstyling, and Best Supporting Actress (Angela Bassett),
and only had one win for Best Costume Design)
- Brad Pitt was denied a Best Supporting Actor nomination
for his role as aging,
hedonistic, recently-divorced silent film matinee idol Jack Conrad
in Damien Chazelle's epic Babylon (with only three nominations,
Best Costume and Best Production Design, and Best Original Score);
it was a frenzied, uneven, fast-paced, and extravagant historical
drama with an ensemble cast that chronicled the madcap magic
and the excesses of Hollywood and Tinseltown showbiz in the late "Roaring" 1920s;
in addition, Margot Robbie was denied a Best Actress nomination
for her role as Nellie LaRoy - an ambitious, wannabe NJ starlet
and hedonistic "It-Girl"
inspired by Clara Bow
- James Cameron - the producer, director, and co-writer
of the blockbuster sequel Avatar: The Way of Water, was
overlooked as Best Director; in his acclaimed career, his wins
included Best Picture and Best Director for Titanic (1997)
- the historical epic The
Woman King lacked
a single nomination - a complete shut-out - it could easily have
obtained a nod for Viola
Davis as the title character General Nanisca in The Kingdom
of Dahomey, West Africa in 1823, who was reunited with her daughter
Nawi (Thuso Mbedu); Lashana Lynch was also ignored for her role
as Izogie, and female director Gina Prince-Bythewood
was also unnominated
- co-writer/director Sarah Polley's acclaimed drama Women
Talking received two nominations (Best Adapted Screenplay
and Best Picture), but Polley (who won the Screenplay Oscar)
was left without a Best Director nomination
- Eddie Redmayne's acting performance as the infamous
serial-killing title character Charlie Cullen was passed over,
in director Tobias Lindholm's chilling crime drama The
Good Nurse
- Living, adapted from Akira Kurosawa's classic
Ikiru (1952, Jp.) received only a Best Adapted Screenplay
for Kazuo Ishiguro; the film's only other Oscar nomination was Bill Nighy's Best Actor nomination
- Paul Dano was snubbed for his role as Steven Spielberg's
gentle-minded father Burt in The Fabelmans, although his
two co-stars received noms for Best Actress (Michelle Williams)
and Best Supporting Actor (Judd Hirsch)
- Indian filmmaker-director S.S. Rajamouli's rousing
and spectacular Telugu film, the crime epic RRR managed
only one nomination (and a win) for Best Original Song ("Naatu
Naatu"),
although was considered a dark-horse Best Picture nominee; it
was the first Oscar win for an Indian film and the first win
for a song in the Telugu language.
- rising star Danielle Deadwyler was ignored for
her portrayal of Mamie Till
in the biographical drama Till (with no nominations)
- as the grieving mother of lynched 14 year-old schoolboy son
Emmett Till in Mississippi in 1955, she became a strong and determined
civil rights activist
- director Rian Johnson's who-dun-it mystery sequel
to Knives
Out (2019) -- Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, with
an ensemble cast and Daniel Craig reprising his role as master
detective Benoit Blanc, received only one nomination for Johnson's
own Best Adapted Screenplay
- in the wealth satire Triangle of Sadness,
Filipina actress Dolly De Leon was denied a Best Supporting Actress
nomination for her role as housekeeper-toilet cleaner Abigail
- Adam Sandler was denied a Best Actor nomination
for his role as Stanley Sugerman in director Jeremiah Zagar's basketball
drama Hustle
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