Tag: Oscars

  • Meet blacklisted Hollywood writer Dalton Trumbo who won two Oscars

    Meet blacklisted Hollywood writer Dalton Trumbo who won two Oscars

    On June 22, 1950, the infamous Red Channels pamphlet was released, implicating some of Hollywood’s biggest stars as communists.

    Amidst the “Red Scare” that ensued, Dalton Trumbo, who later penned scripts for Roman Holiday and Spartacus, faced allegations of disseminating subversive ideas through his films and was imprisoned. He recounted his ordeals to the BBC in 1960.

    During a BBC interview with screenwriter Dalton Trumbo by his Hollywood swimming pool in 1960, he had recently authored scripts for two major films of the year. Despite his soaring success, interviewer Robert Robinson detected a “certain reticence” in him, surmising that he harbored “no desire to resurrect old conflicts.” It was unsurprising that he felt somewhat bruised.

    Trumbo had endured 13 years of imprisonment, Hollywood blacklisting, and clandestine work under pseudonyms, all due to the US anti-communist crusade. His only offense was refusing to disclose his communist affiliations to a US government committee in 1947, asserting his legal right under the First Amendment to hold any political beliefs he chose.

    Of course, Trumbo had been a member of the Communist Party but that wasn’t the point, and in any case, he was far from a stereotypical “Red”. He later told the BBC: “I never felt the slightest guilt about making what I earned – the pictures were making millions. If I got a small part, fine, I enjoyed it. The idea of guilt, I’m not puritanical, would have startled me.”

    Born in 1905, Trumbo’s writing career took off in the 1930s and by the end of the decade, he was one of Hollywood’s highest-paid screenwriters. In that era, Hollywood was isolated from the worst of the Great Depression thanks to its popular and lucrative escapism in a troubled world, but a strong social conscience was stirring among some in the entertainment industry.

    Trumbo later told the BBC in 1973: “People joined the Communist Party because it was doing things that they felt should be done. It was opposing the rise of fascism all through Europe. It was helping those who were refugees.”

    Subversion through cinema

    Established in 1938, the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), later infamous for its scrutiny of the film industry, aimed to investigate “subversive” tendencies, particularly communist affiliations.

    However, the landscape shifted with the outbreak of World War Two, leading to unexpected alliances. Adolf Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 transformed Stalin’s communist Russia into a US ally.

    During the war, Hollywood contributed to the war effort by producing a few pro-Soviet films, such as the 1943 curiosity Mission to Moscow. Director Michael Curtiz, who had previously won an Oscar for Best Director for Casablanca, helmed this production.

    Following the war’s conclusion, the alliance between the US and the Soviet Union dissolved, giving rise to a new era of Cold War apprehension. This climate of fear regarding the perceived threat of communism provided fertile ground for HUAC to extend its influence.

    In 1947, Trumbo was one of 10 Hollywood writers and directors put on the stand during its hearings on alleged communist propaganda in the movie business. One question was repeatedly asked of them: “Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the Communist Party?”

    In response, Trumbo said: “I believe I have the right to be confronted with any evidence which supports this question. I should like to see what you have.” His answer did not go down well. All of the “Hollywood 10” refused to testify and were found guilty of contempt of Congress.

    As Trumbo recalled to the BBC’s Robert Robinson in 1960, the studio heads convened a meeting at New York’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel where they announced the decision to blacklist the 10 men. He said: “They made this announcement that 10 persons who had refused to divulge before the committee their political affiliation would no longer be employed in the Hollywood motion picture industry, as they call it. I hate to call it an industry.”

    While HUAC was the high-profile face of the anti-communist investigations, other Hollywood suspects were targeted more insidiously by a pamphlet called Red Channels, published in 1950. Among those implicated were actors Edward G Robinson and Orson Welles, writers Arthur Miller and Dashiell Hammett, musicians Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland and performers Lena Horne and Burl Ives.
    Subtitled “the report of communist influence in radio and television”, inclusion on the list was enough to damage or even finish a career. The repercussions for Trumbo were even more severe.

    In the same month that Red Channels was published, Trumbo went to prison for his conviction, or as he told the BBC with heavy irony, “I was given excellent board and lodging at the Federal Correctional Institution in Ashland, Kentucky for a year.”

    Hitting rock bottom

    Upon his release from jail, Trumbo’s name and reputation had been wiped out by the blacklist. Unable to find work in California, he moved with his family to Mexico City. He said: “I remained there two years. I was not happy. I also went spectacularly broke. And I returned and we have lived here ever since.”

    No longer able to write scripts using his own name, he had to turn to the black market to beat the blacklist. “I had methods of circumventing it so that I was never entirely out of work,” he admitted to the BBC.

    “However, the persons who were in a position to gamble for my services, that is to gamble that my relationship with the picture would not be revealed to the picture’s ultimate damage, were doing less expensive pictures and hence I earned much less money.”

    He had to pen scripts under various pseudonyms or employ other writers to front his work. While some of these screenplays were for B-movies without the prestige of his pre-blacklist projects, they also encompassed the 1953 masterpiece Roman Holiday, featuring Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck.

    In 1957, masquerading as Robert Rich, Trumbo clinched the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for The Brave One, a poignant tale of a boy and his pet bull.

    Trumbo would later tell the BBC: “A number of claimants came forth, saying they were Robert Rich, or that the story really had been stolen from them. It was a very serious problem to admit that I had done it, and I certainly was going to say nothing because you cooperate with your man. And I must say, confidence in that period was beautifully kept… We had a mutual interest, which was economic.”

    The absurdity of the situation exposed cracks in the Hollywood blacklist, and Trumbo could manoeuvre himself back into the mainstream movie business. First, he was hired openly by producer Otto Preminger to write the screen adaptation for Exodus, Leon Uris’s best-selling 1958 novel about the creation of the state of Israel. Next, Hollywood star Kirk Douglas picked him to write the screenplay for Spartacus, directed by Stanley Kubrick.

    Both films were released in 1960, and by the time Trumbo was interviewed by the BBC, he was confident that the blacklist had been effectively smashed. By the time of Trumbo’s death in 1976, times had changed and he was fully vindicated.

    A year earlier, while in poor health, he finally received his Oscar for The Brave One. In 1993, 40 years after the release of Roman Holiday, Trumbo was posthumously awarded an Oscar for his screenplay for that film. Trumbo himself was the subject of a Hollywood biopic in 2015. Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston was Oscar-nominated for his wry portrayal of the writer.

    Towards the end of his life, Trumbo acknowledged that in some ways he had been more fortunate than some other people caught up in the “Red Scare”. “It was a matter of total disaster for others – financial, matrimonial, for some of their children,” he said. “And, you know, the success of a few should not temper the frightful quality of what went on. It was terrible.”

  • List of Academy Award winners 2024

    List of Academy Award winners 2024

    Ryan Gosling brought his A-game with his energy, John Cena made a bold statement in his birthday suit, and Jimmy Kimmel continued to impress as the host of the Oscars.

    Among the winners, “Oppenheimer” stood out, winning seven awards including Best Picture. “Poor Things” also had a successful night, walking away with four statues.

    Before the ceremony, “Oppenheimer” led with 13 nominations, followed by “Poor Things” with 11 and Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” with 10.

    While “Oppenheimer” and “Poor Things” had a triumphant evening, “Killers of the Flower Moon” failed to secure any wins, and “Barbie” only won in the Best Original Song category despite its success at the box office.

    Some of the other notable winners included Da’Vine Joy Randolph for Best Supporting Actress, “The Zone of Interest” for Best International Feature, and “The Boy and the Heron” for Best Animated Feature.

    Here’s the full list:

    Best picture

    “American Fiction”

    “Anatomy of a Fall”

    “Barbie”

    “The Holdovers”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Maestro”

    “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    “Past Lives”

    “Poor Things”

    “The Zone of Interest”

    Best actor in a leading role

    Bradley Cooper, “Maestro”

    Colman Domingo, “Rustin”

    Paul Giamatti, “The Holdovers”

    Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    Jeffrey Wright, “American Fiction”

    Best actress in a leading role

    Annette Bening, “Nyad”

    Lily Gladstone, “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    Sandra Hüller, “Anatomy of a Fall”

    Carey Mulligan, “Maestro”

    Emma Stone, “Poor Things” – WINNER

    Best actor in a supporting role

    Sterling K. Brown, “American Fiction”

    Robert De Niro, “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    Robert Downey Jr., “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    Ryan Gosling, “Barbie”

    Mark Ruffalo, “Poor Things”

    Best actress in a supporting role

    Emily Blunt, “Oppenheimer”

    Danielle Brooks, “The Color Purple”

    America Ferrera, “Barbie”

    Jodie Foster, “Nyad”

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph, “The Holdovers” – WINNER

    Best director

    Justine Triet, “Anatomy of a Fall”

    Martin Scorsese, “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    Christopher Nolan, “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    Yorgos Lanthimos, “Poor Things”

    Jonathan Glazer, “The Zone of Interest”

    Best cinematography

    “El Conde”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Maestro”

    “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    “Poor Things”

    Best international feature film

    “The Teachers’ Lounge,” Germany

    “Io Capitano,” Italy

    “Perfect Days,” Japan

    “Society of the Snow,” Spain

    “The Zone of Interest,” United Kingdom – WINNER

    Best adapted screenplay

    “American Fiction” – WINNER

    “Barbie”

    “Oppenheimer”

    “Poor Things”

    “The Zone of Interest”

    Best original screenplay

    “Anatomy of a Fall” – WINNER

    “The Holdovers”

    “Maestro”

    “May December”

    “Past Lives”

    Best live action short film

    “The After”

    “Invincible”

    “Knight of Fortune”

    “Red, White and Blue”

    “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar” – WINNER

    Best animated short film

    “Letter to a Pig”

    “Ninety-Five Senses”

    “Our Uniform”

    “Pachyderme”

    “War Is Over! Inspired by the Music of John & Yoko” – WINNER

    Best animated feature film

    “The Boy and the Heron” – WINNER

    “Elemental”

    “Nimona”

    “Robot Dreams”

    “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”

    Best documentary short

    “The ABCs of Book Banning”

    “The Barber of Little Rock”

    “Island in Between”

    “The Last Repair Shop” – WINNER

    “Nǎi Nai & Wài Pó”

    Best documentary feature film

    “Bobi Wine: The People’s President”

    “The Eternal Memory”

    “Four Daughters”

    “To Kill a Tiger”

    “20 Days in Mariupol” – WINNER

    Best original song

    “The Fire Inside” from “Flamin’ Hot”

    “I’m Just Ken” from “Barbie”

    “It Never Went Away” from “American Symphony”

    “Wahzhazhe (A Song for My People)” from “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “What Was I Made For?” from “Barbie” – WINNER

    Best original score

    “American Fiction”

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    “Poor Things”

    Best makeup and hairstyling

    “Golda”

    “Maestro”

    “Oppenheimer”

    “Poor Things” – WINNER

    “Society of the Snow”

    Best costume design

    “Barbie”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Napoleon”

    “Oppenheimer”

    “Poor Things” – WINNER

    Best editing

    “Anatomy of a Fall”

    “The Holdovers”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Oppenheimer” – WINNER

    “Poor Things”

    Best sound

    “The Creator”

    “Maestro”

    “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One”

    “Oppenheimer”

    “The Zone of Interest” – WINNER

    Best production design

    “Barbie”

    “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    “Napoleon”

    “Oppenheimer”

    “Poor Things” – WINNER

    Best visual effects

    “The Creator”

    “Godzilla Minus One” – WINNER

    “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3”

    “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One”

    “Napoleon”

  • Award shows no longer provide an amusing atmosphere – Kevin Hart snubs Oscars

    Award shows no longer provide an amusing atmosphere – Kevin Hart snubs Oscars

    American Comedian Kevin Hart has said he will not host the Oscars again.

    Due to criticism over past anti-gay remarks he had made during stand-up routines a decade prior, Hart, who was scheduled to host the 2019 Oscars, withdrew from the role.

    In a Variety Magazine interview, Kevin Hart said he would never host the Oscars.

    Speaking to Sky News, Hart said: “Whatever little hope you had, I want to destroy it right now. Those gigs aren’t good gigs for comics. It’s no shot to the Oscars, no shot to the Globes or anything else. Those just aren’t comedy-friendly environments anymore.

    “I think they got it right one year where it was like just a bunch of personalities acting as the hosts and that’s a nice thing. It’s a collaborative thing, different people get to be responsible for act one, act two, act three, but you know, the days of it being a room for a comic, those days are done.”

    Hart, who has hosted the MTV Movie Awards, the BET Awards, and the MTV Video Music Awards in the past, commended his fellow comedians on their successful hosting careers.

    “Shout out to those that have cracked the code and done it right early on, you know, the Chris Rocks of the world, the Billy Crystals of the world, the girls we’ve had like Tina Fey, Amy Poehler. Ricky Gervais. There’s a lot of people that understand that if you’re not an industry comic, meaning a comic that has the relationships of all, then those rooms are very cold.

    “So, me doing it is, of course, at an advantage, because I know the room and for me, and familiar with so many but, for others it’s not the same,” Hart said. “It’s not the gig that it was of old. It’s too much pressure on the idea of a comic and what’s jokes and not jokes. So, it’s tough.”

    Kevin Darnell Hart is an African-American comedian and actor who is known for his roles in the Jumanji sequels including Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (2017) and Jumanji: The Next Level (2019), Undeclared (2001), Scary Movie 3 (2003), Think Like a Man (2012), Ride Along (2014), The Secret Life of Pets (2016), Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (2017), Central Intelligence (2016) and Fast & Furious: Hobbs & Shaw (2019).

  • See every look from the 2023 Oscars red carpet

    See every look from the 2023 Oscars red carpet

    Last night, the 95th annual Oscars took place at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California. The evening’s star-studded ceremony, honoring the year’s best performances on film, was hosted by comedian Jimmy Kimmel—his third time assuming the hosting role.

    Leading the nominations this year were buzzy films such as Elvis, Tár, Everything Everywhere All at Once, and The Fabelmans (all of which were up for Best Picture). Cate Blanchett, Ana de Armas, Andrea Riseborough, Michelle Williams, and Michelle Yeoh were up for Best Actress; Austin Butler, Colin Farrell, Brendan Fraser, Paul Mescal, and Bill Nighy were up for Best Actor. See the full list of Oscar winners from last night’s ceremony here. 

    Before the trophies were handed out on stage, however, Hollywood A-listers hit the Oscars step and repeat in their finest evening wear. The Academy Awards are, after all, one of the most-watched red carpets in the world. Those who attended brought forward show-stopping, glamorous ensembles.

    Rihanna stunned on both the red carpet and on stage, where she performed her power ballad “Lift Me Up” in custom Margiela. Lady Gaga also served two contrasting looks—on the red carpet, a fresh off-the-runway gown, and on stage, a completely makeup-free look. Austin Butler’s Elvis-inspired platform heels also ranked among our favorite red carpet-outfits from the night. See all of the best-dressed stars at the 2023 Oscars here.

    It’s clear that what the stars wore to the 2023 Oscars will be just as discussed as who won. Be sure to follow along with all of Vogue’s 2023 Oscars coverage, and don’t forget to vote on your favorite looks below.

    Rihanna in Alaia

    Michelle Yeoh in Dior Haute Couture

    Lady Gaga in Atelier Versace

    Cate Blanchett in Louis Vuitton

    Nicole Kidman in Armani Prive

    Michael B. Jordan

    Ana de Armas in Louis Vuitton

    • Janelle Monae in Vera Wang
    • Pedro PascalIs
    • Kate Hudson
    • Jennifer Connelly
    • Colin Farrell  in Dolce&Gabbana and Henry Farrell in Dolce&Gabbana
    • Jessie Buckley
    • Ke Huy Quan in Armani Prive, Fred Leighton, and David Yurman jewelry
    • Emily Blunt in Valentino and Chopard Jewelry
    • Molly Sims in Georges Chakra Couture
    • Jessica Chastain in Gucci
    • Elizabeth Olsen in Givenchy and Giuseppe Zanotti shoes
    • Halle Berr
    • Sandra Oh in Giambattista Valli Haute Couture and Briony Raymond jewelry
    • Cara Delevingne in Elie Saab, BVLGARI jewelry, and Stuart Weitzman Shoes
  • 20 times the Oscars got it exactly right

    20 times the Oscars got it exactly right

    We love to argue over the all the times the Oscars have gotten it wrong. For every memorable, iconic Best Picture winner, there are two trophy-winning movies that have either been forgotten or just seem a little embarrassing in retrospect (Crash being the enduring recent example).

    But sometimes, the Academy voters get it exactly right They’ve been at it for 95 years after all; they’ve had plenty of time to make enduring choices, if only by chance. As fun as it is to slag their bad choices, we’re here today to recognize awards that truly hold up, and remind ourselves us of great movies we might actually want to, you know, actually watch again.

    The screenplay so good, the movie about the screenplay (Mank) earned 10 Oscar nominations itself. Mankiewicz and Welles took a much-deserved prize, which was impossibly Citizen Kane’s sole Oscar win. We can keep debating who deserves the credit for the script without casting doubt on its significance.

    Joan Crawford won exactly one Oscar in her long career. By 1945, she was already in comeback mode, and Mildred Pierce was the reinvention that proved that she wasn’t going to just fade away. It’s likely her best, and probably most iconic performance, at least until Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?

    It might have felt like stunt casting, which is rarely a good idea, but non-actor Harold Russell gives an impressively understated performance in The Best Years of Our Lives as Homer Parish, a returning WWII veteran struggling following the amputation of both of his hands—just as Russell himself had. His win was entirely deserved, and also deeply meaningful.

    Whenever someone mimics the cackling, cantankerous old prospector-type character, they’re paying homage to Walter Huston. The actor had very little interest in this role (seeing himself as more of a leading-man type), but his son John (the director) had some pull in bringing him onboard. Unlike those later parodies, Huston invests his character with heart and humanity, even while doing an entirely unhinged little jig.

    The expressionist photography, in beautiful black and white; those weird and disorienting Dutch angles…The Third Man is a visual feast, and that’s all down to Krasker, who never did better work than he did here. Few Cinematographers ever have.

    West Side Story is a great musical with elements that don’t hold up terribly well today. (Natalie Wood is great in other movies, but a convincing Puerto Rican immigrant she is not). Rita Moreno’s performance is not one of them—she steals every single scene she’s in. What’s less great is that it took 60 years for another Latina actress to take home an Oscar (and for the same role no less).

    The Academy has always struggled with horror movies, rarely rewarding anything that smells like a genre picture. Ruth Gordon’s performance in Rosemary’s Baby is an exception; her Minnie Castavet starts off as a tease—a stock nosy neighbor character—only offering hints of more sinister intentions that will soon come horrifically to the fore. She’s funny and deeply creepy by turns.

    I love a cornball ballad as much as the next middle-aged white person, but the history of Oscar’s Best Original Song category up to the modern day is positively lousy with ‘em: “The Morning After,” “The Way We Were,” “You Light Up My Life,” “Up Where We Belong,” “My Heart Will Go On,” etc. Here, we get a thoroughly non-generic bit of Blaxploitation-era funk from Isaac Hayes that’s also entirely inseparable from the film to which it’s attached. Just try thinking of Shaft the movie without humming it.

    I’m not sure it’s his absolute best performance (that’s probably in The Conversation), but Popeye Doyle is certainly the most memorable character brought to life by one of our most accomplished (and still living!) actors.

    The Godfather looms large in the pantheon of 1970s cinema, and it’s one of our finest films full stop. The sequel is better, using everything we learned about these characters in the first installment to pull them deeper into the American tragedy of the wildly successful but rarely happy Corleone family. One of only two sequels to have ever won Best Picture, The Godfather, Part II might have been passed over on that basis, but the Academy was smarter than that—at least this time. Some would argue that the way to play a villain is to invest them with humanity and empathy, which is all well and good, but Louise Fletcher earned an Oscar for investing Nurse Ratched with believability: We believe she is one of the worst villains in film history, and we love to hate her for it.

    The movie that catapulted Barbara Kopple to the top ranks of American documentary filmmakers is also a gritty, inspiring, and harrowing look at the stakes (up to, and including murder) involved when workers stand up for their rights. It’s also a portrait of righteous ferocity in a bygone era, when blue-collar workers, united, stood and fought for their rights rather than merely begging for scraps.

    Longtime Scorsese collaborator Schoonmaker isn’t quite the household name the iconic director is, but, without her work editing his films, it’s entirely possible we wouldn’t be that familiar with his name, either. Her early-career win for Raging Bull cemented her place in the pantheon and still represents some of her most visceral, impressive work.

    Sometimes the lines get blurred, but here, Joe Pesci is practically the platonic ideal of a Best Supporting Actor. He’s clearly not the main character, but a memorable, quotable presence, providing unlikely comic relief and just a few hints of pathos.

    Try to imagine modern pop culture without Marge Gunderson’s impressions. Though sometimes painted as a caricature, Frances McDormand plays Marge as a human being with a recognizable, if heightened, mode of speaking and acting. In the world of the Coen brothers, she’s the most reasonable person you’ll find.

    Perhaps the best film from a truly great director, the only problem with Pedro Almodóvar’s film’s win is that it should have been up for an overall Best Picture. Certainly it holds up better than the 1999 winner, American Beauty.

    It’s…interesting that the only Black Best Actress in the history of the Oscars, past or present (including this year, when there are no Black women among the nominees) is a portrait of a woman grief-stricken, harried, and victimized. None of that detracts from the triumph of Berry’s performance; she plays the character as a raw nerve, even as she begins to demand something more of a life that’s been needlessly cruel to her at every turn.

    A gorgeous, poetic movie that felt like it kicked off a new era for the Academy, Moonlight only gets better with age (which can’t be said about many an Oscar-winning film). It’s worth remembering as much more than just the movie that almost didn’t get awarded its rightful Oscar.

    Get Out does absolutely everything a movie should do, and it’s all right there on the page: it’s funny and thrilling, with well-drawn characters and an incredibly sharp and well-earned sense of satire. It should have won Best Picture (no sleight to Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water, also quite good)—but one of the most important cultural touchstones of the past decade more than deserved this award, at least.

    Is Parasite a satire? A social drama? A horror movie?

    Yes? Bong Joon-ho’s story of the members of a poor family who wheedle their ways into the household of some rich people is both wildly entertaining and as sharp as they come, and probably one of Oscar’s smartest Best Picture choices ever. It’s a film that proves that, even as American cinema sags under the pressures of our four-quadrant blockbuster era, there are still movies with bite to be found if you don’t mind subtitles.

  • Full list of Oscar winners at the 95th Academy Awards

    Full list of Oscar winners at the 95th Academy Awards

    On Sunday, Hollywood’s elite gathered to learn who had received a coveted Oscars statuette. The 95th Academy Awards were held in Los Angeles, and the winners and all of the nominees are listed here.

    Best picture

    • Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
    • Avatar: The Way of Water
    • The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Elvis
    • The Fabelmans
    • Tár
    • Top Gun: Maverick
    • Triangle of Sadness
    • Women Talking

    Best actor

    • Brendan Fraser, The Whale (winner)
    • Paul Mescal, Aftersun
    • Bill Nighy, Living
    • Colin Farrell, The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Austin Butler, Elvis

    Best actress

    • Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • Michelle Williams, The Fabelmans
    • Andrea Riseborough, To Leslie
    • Ana de Armas, Blonde
    • Cate Blanchett, Tar

    Best actor in a supporting role

    • Ke Huy Quan – Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • Brendan Gleeson – The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Brian Tyree Henry – Causeway
    • Judd Hirsch – The Fabelmans
    • Barry Keoghan – The Banshees of Inisherin

    Best actress in a supporting role

    • Jamie Lee Curtis – Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • Angela Bassett – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
    • Hong Chau – The Whale
    • Kerry Condon – The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Stephanie Hsu – Everything Everywhere All at Once

    Best director

    • Daniel Kwan with Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • Steven Spielberg, The Fabelmans
    • Todd Field, Tar
    • Ruben Ostlund, Triangle of Sadness
    • Martin McDonagh, The Banshees of Inisherin

    Best original song

    • Naatu Naatu, Kaala Bhairava and Rahul Sipligunj (RRR) (winner)
    • Applause, Sofia Carson and Diane Warren (Tell It Like a Woman)
    • Lift Me Up, Rihanna (Black Panther: Wakanda Forever)
    • Hold My Hand, Lady Gaga (Top Gun: Maverick)
    • This is a Life, Son Lux (Everything Everywhere All at Once)

    Best original score

    • All Quiet on the Western Front (winner)
    • Babylon
    • The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Everything Everywhere All at Once
    • The Fabelmans

    Best makeup and hairstyling

    • The Whale (winner)
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
    • The Batman
    • Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
    • Elvis

    Best costume design

    • Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (winner)
    • Babylon
    • Elvis
    • Everything Everywhere All At Once
    • Mrs Harris Goes To Paris

    Best cinematography

    • All Quiet on the Western Front (winner)
    • Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths
    • Elvis
    • Empire of Light
    • Tár

    Best original screenplay

    • Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • Triangle of Sadness
    • The Fabelmans
    • The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Tar

    Best adapted screenplay

    • Women Talking (winner)
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
    • Living
    • Top Gun: Maverick
    • Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

    Best sound

    • Top Gun: Maverick (winner)
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
    • Avatar: The Way of the Water
    • The Batman
    • Elvis

    Best film editing

    • Everything Everywhere All at Once (winner)
    • The Banshees of Inisherin
    • Elvis
    • Tar
    • Top Gun: Maverick

    Best production design

    • All Quiet on the Western Front (winner)
    • Avatar: The Way of the Water
    • Babylon
    • Elvis
    • The Fabelmans

    Best visual effects

    • Avatar: The Way of Water (winner)
    • All Quiet on the Western Front
    • The Batman
    • Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
    • Top Gun: Maverick

    Best international feature film

    • All Quiet on the Western Front (winner)
    • Argentina, 1985
    • Close
    • EO
    • The Quiet Girl

    Best animated feature

    • Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio – Guillermo del Toro, Mark Gustafson, Gary Ungar and Alex Bulkley (winner)
    • Marcel the Shell with Shoes on – Dean Fleischer Camp, Elisabeth Holm, Andrew Goldman, Caroline Kaplan and Paul Mezey
    • Puss in Boots: The Last Wish – Joel Crawford and Mark Swift
    • The Sea Beast – Chris Williams and Jed Schlanger
    • Turning Red – Domee Shi and Lindsey Collins

    Best documentary feature

    • Navalny (winner)
    • All That Breathes
    • All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
    • Fire of Love
    • A House Made of Splinters

    Best live action short

    • An Irish Goodbye (winner)
    • Ivalu
    • Le Pupille
    • Night Ride
    • The Red Suitcase

    Best documentary short

    • The Elephant Whisperers (winner)
    • Haulout
    • How Do You Measure a Year?
    • The Martha Mitchell Effect
    • Stranger at the Gate

    Best animated short

    • The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse (winner)
    • The Flying Sailor
    • Ice Merchants
    • My Year of Dicks
    • An Ostrich Told Me the World is Fake and I Think I Believe It
  • Seven outstanding Oscar highlights from the 95th Academy Awards

    Seven outstanding Oscar highlights from the 95th Academy Awards

      The 2023 Academy Awards included many moving acceptance speeches, unexpected twists, and extraordinary films. Here are a few of the most memorable parts of the greatest Hollywood night of the year.

      A full-circle moment

      Sunday’s ceremony was an opportunity for Ke Huy Quan to catch up with his old friend Harrison Ford.

      Quan, who starred alongside Ford in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom when he was a child, won best supporting actor for Everything Everywhere All at Once following a two-decade break from performing.

      After Everything Everywhere’s best picture win, he excitedly ran up to the stage and embraced his former co-star, who presented the award.

      Harrison Ford and Ke Huy Quan in the Indiana Jones film and at Sunday night's Oscars
      • Ke Huy Quan: From forgotten child star to Oscars hero

      Lada Gaga goes make-up free

      Lada Gaga made sure her vocals were centre stage when she performed without make-up and wearing jeans and a plain T-shirt.

      The look for her performance of Hold My Hand, nominated for best original song, was a stark contrast to her earlier appearance on the not-so-red carpet, in a black Versace dress with a sheer corset bodice.

      While on the carpet, she received praise from fans on social media for rushing to the aid of a photographer who appeared to have fallen when walking past her.

      Lady Gaga in full make up on the champagne (red) carpet ahead of the Oscars
      Lady Gaga performs without make up during the ceremony

      Hugh Grant talks up the benefits of moisturiser

      British actor Hugh Grant’s humour was a hit with the crowd at the Dolby Theatre.

      When presenting the award for best production design with his Four Weddings and a Funeral co-star Andie MacDowell, Grant joked: “The purpose of this is two-fold.

      “The first is to raise the vital importance of a good moisturiser. Andie has used one every day of her life, I have not.”

      Grant then gestured to MacDowell, saying: “Still stunning.” He then gestured to himself: “Basically a scrotum.”

      Hugh Grant and Andie MacDowell at the Oscars
      Image caption,Hugh Grant and Andie MacDowell at the Oscars

      Earlier in the evening, Grant seemed less enthused as he spoke to model Ashely Graham about his cameo appearance in the film Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery.

      Asked about his experience filming the sequel, he replied: “Well I’m barely in it. I’m in it for three seconds.”

      Probed further about whether he enjoyed filming it, he replied: “Almost.”

      John Travolta’s tearful tribute to Grease co-star

      When presenting the In Memoriam tribute for Hollywood figures who have died last year, John Travolta offered an emotional tribute to his Grease co-star Olivia Newton John.

      “We remain hopelessly devoted to you,” Travolta tearfully said, referencing the iconic song by Newton John.

      John Travolta at the 2023 Oscars
      Image caption,John Travolta at the 2023 Oscars

      Jimmy Kimmel addresses The Slap

      The late-night talk show host returned to host his third Academy Awards ceremony. He quickly addressed last year’s Oscars controversy, when Will Smith slapped Chris Rock on stage.

      “We want you to have fun, feel safe and, most importantly, we want me feel safe. So, we have strict policies in place,” Kimmel said.

      “If anyone in this theatre commits an act of violence at any point during the show, you will be awarded the Oscar for best actor and permitted to give a 19-minute long speech.

      “But seriously, the Academy has a crisis team in place,” he added. “If anything unpredictable or violent happens during the show, sit there and do absolutely nothing. Maybe even give the assailant a hug.”

      … and brings a donkey on stage

      In an ode to the Irish film Banshees of Inisherin, Kimmel later brought a donkey on stage.

      “She’s a certified emotional support donkey. At least that’s what we told the airline to get her on the plane from Ireland. If you’re feeling sad or need a hug… Let’s get you back on that Spirit Airlines flight now.”

      https://emp.bbc.com/emp/SMPj/2.47.3/iframe.htmlMedia caption,

      WATCH: Kimmel kicks off Oscars with Will Smith joke, then brings out a donkey

      Cocaine Bear makes an appearance

      Elizabeth Banks presented the award for best visual effects – accompanied by a very hyperactive grizzly.

      “I recently directed the film Cocaine Bear and without visual effects, this is what the bear would look like,” Banks joked.

      Elizabeth Banks and the bear
      Image caption,Elizabeth Banks did her best to control her presenting partner during the ceremony

      An Irish Goodbye star gets birthday singalong

      The directors of best short film, An Irish Goodbye, used their acceptance speech to sing a rendition of Happy Birthday to one of the film’s stars, James Martin.

      After saying their thank yous, director Ross White said: “This award is actually the second most important thing about today because it’s this man’s birthday”, referring to Martin.

      “We’d like to use the rest of our time up here to sing for James,” he added, before leading the audience in song while Martin clasped the Oscars award.

      Source: BBC

    • Oscars 2023: Two decades on the Vanity Fair party red carpet

      Oscars 2023: Two decades on the Vanity Fair party red carpet

      This week, I am heading to Hollywood for my 20th Oscars. To put it crassly, I am now only one behind Meryl Streep.

      Johnny Carson, who hosted the ceremony five times, perfectly described the Academy Awards as “two hours of sparkling entertainment spread out over a four-hour show”.

      There is so much truth in that, but The Oscars are still a gold head and shoulders above any other awards show – the only one where everybody turns up. Even Eminem. Eventually.

      A no-show in 2003 when Lose Yourself won best original song (he was looking after his daughter and slept through the whole thing), there he was in 2020 with a surprise performance of his 8 Mile anthem on the rather contrived 17th anniversary of its win.

      US rapper Eminem performs onstage during the 92nd Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on February 9, 2020
      Image caption, Eminem eventually performed his Oscar-winning single Lose Yourself at the Oscars in 2020

      No matter how cool or counter-cultural the figure, in the end they all want to go.

      Part of the beauty of covering the Oscars is the time difference. UK audiences wake up on a Monday morning, while over in LA it is still Sunday evening, and the winners are heading into the uber-A-list Vanity Fair party, holding Oscars in their hands.

      Over the years, I have broadcast as Danny Boyle danced for joy with the cast of Slumdog Millionaire, congratulated Kate Winslet on no longer being the “Colin Montgomerie of the Oscars” after winning for The Reader, following five defeats in a row, and, in 2011, I witnessed a truly extraordinary encounter involving GMTV’s reporter and Tom Hanks. Media caption,

      Oscars 2023: The best picture contenders in 40 seconds

      She was mid-interview with him, live on TV, when Colin Firth started to walk by, brandishing his Oscar for The King’s Speech. Her decision? Simply to push Tom Hanks away mid-sentence and grab Firth.

      Hanks’ response was magnificent. He spent the whole of Firth’s interview walking back and forth, in shot directly behind him, throwing his hands up in the air in pretend fury, while mouthing his mock incredulity at the camera.

      Then in 2017, there was the excitement of being live on air into Dotun Adebayo’s Radio 5 Live show, at the exact moment (05:08), when La La Land was wrongly read out as the best picture winner.

      Listening back, what is extraordinary is that it takes 2 mins 27 secs for the mistake to be corrected.

      La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz (L) holds up the winner card reading actual best picture winner Moonlight after a presentation error with actor Warren Beatty and host Jimmy Kimmel onstage during the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California
      Image caption, La La Land producer Jordan Horowitz showing the audience the card with the correct best picture winner – Moonlight – in 2017

      I thought that would never be beaten as the biggest Oscars story I would cover, but I was wrong. As wrong as a G.I. Jane joke about Jada Pinkett Smith.

      That is what prompted Will Smith to attack Chris Rock on stage at last year’s ceremony, with “the slap heard around the world”.

      I commentated on Radio 5 Live Breakfast as Smith arrived at Vanity Fair, posing for pictures with his family, for a full five minutes. On air I dubbed the incident “Men in Thwack”, a name which totally failed to catch on.

      Smith is currently banned from attending the Oscars until 2033, by which time Clint Eastwood will be 102. That year could be my 30th Oscars. Unlikely.

      So now seemed as good a time as any to reveal the five nominees in my newly made-up category: best Oscars story.

      1. ‘Bono! Bono! Bono!’ (2014)

      Ali Hewson and Bono attend the 2014 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Graydon Carter on March 2, 2014 in West Hollywood, California
      Image caption, Bono with wife Ali Hewson at Vanity Fair’s after-party in 2014 – where Colin Paterson struggled to catch his attention

      On 2 March 2014, the Russian President Vladimir Putin received unanimous approval from the country’s parliament to send troops into Crimea.

      The following day it was me, not that event, which was the subject of an editorial in the Daily Telegraph.

      The reason? I had shouted “Bono” a lot, live on Radio 4’s Today programme. I have just listened back, with a stopwatch. There were 7 Bonos in eighteen seconds.

      U2’s frontman had been nominated in best original song for the Nelson Mandela biopic, Long Walk to Freedom.

      Today’s presenter, Jim Naughtie, threw live to me in LA, where the red carpet was a melee of movie stars.

      I had just started my analysis about how Gravity had won the most awards, but 12 Years A Slave was best picture, when Bono arrived. And I went for it. Again and again.

      “Even 24 hours later, many listeners’ toes remain stubbornly curled,” The Daily Telegraph’s editorial began.

      It went onto explain how my “cries of ‘Bono!’ had no more effect than Alan Partridge shouting after his presumed friend Dan,” and made the fair point that, “the rule seems to be that six times or more is enough to open the gates of the realm of madness.”

      The thing that people forget is Bono did come back. Unfortunately, all he said was, ‘I don’t want to talk about what Nelson Mandela meant to me.” Not an answer worth seven shouts of anyone’s name.

      2. Sandra Bullock wins Oscar and Razzie (2010)

      Actress Sandra Bullock attend the 2010 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Graydon Carter at the Sunset Tower Hotel on March 7, 2010 in West Hollywood, California.
      Image caption, Sandra Bullock with her Oscar for The Blind Side at the 2010 Vanity Fair Oscars Party

      For many of my years reporting on The Oscars, the night before the ceremony was all about the Razzies. These awards “honour” the very worst films of the year and used to be presented during a live show, which all the “winners” avoided.

      In 2010 Sandra Bullock managed what no one had ever done; to win a Razzie and an Oscar on consecutive days.

      There I was in a local community theatre in LA, watching film geeks laugh as they proclaimed her worst actress for All About Steve, a supposed romantic comedy, in which she played a disco-boot-wearing crossword compiler, obsessed with a local TV reporter (played by a pre-fame Bradley Cooper), with whom she ends up trapped down a mine. It is worse than it sounds.

      The huge surprise was that she turned up to collect her Razzie, receiving a standing ovation from the very people who had voted for her awfulness.

      Bullock’s acceptance speech was hilarious: “They said that no-one went to see this film, but I know there are over 700 members here. And if I’ve won, that means the majority have to have voted for it, so that means 352 have seen it.”

      Bullock then wheeled on a cart, full of All About Steve DVDs and announced that she was going to give one to each person there.

      “Thank you,” came a shout from the audience.

      “You say that now…” she replied with superb comic timing, something badly missing in the film.

      The following night she won best actress for The Blind Side. When I spoke to her afterwards, I wanted to bring up the unique double without being rude, so opted for: “How close will you keep your Oscar to your Razzie?”

      Her answer was class: “Right next to each other. It’s all about the balance.”

      3. Steve Guttenberg and The Academy (2001)

      Actor Steve Guttenberg and actress Marlee Matlin attend the 80th Annual Academy Awards at the Kodak Theatre on February 24, 2008 in Los Angeles, California.
      Image caption, Guttenberg with actress Marlee Matlin at the Oscars in 2008

      I covered my first Oscars for Channel 4’s The Big Breakfast, way back in 2001, the year Gladiator was named best picture. The presenter Melanie Sykes was dispatched to the Vanity Fair party, where she ended up in a dispute with Julia Roberts, after touching her best actress Oscar for Erin Brockovich.

      My job was to go to the Oscar party of celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck. The guestlist was not quite as A-list, so few of my interviews made it to air.

      One that did was with the 80s star, Steve Guttenberg. When he arrived, I asked him where he had watched the ceremony.

      “I was there at the Shrine Auditorium,” he replied.

      Failing to hide my surprise I asked: “How did you get a ticket?”

      “I’m a member of the Academy,” he explained.

      My reflex response: “What? The Police Academy?”

      Even now I wince when thinking about this and did not bring it up when I next interviewed him, in 2008 when he was playing Cinderella’s father Baron Hardup in the Bromley pantomime.

      4. Vomity Fair (2012)

      View of the carpet at the 2017 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Graydon Carter at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on February 26, 2017 in Beverly Hills, California

      I have a simple rule for when on work trips; do not eat shellfish. In 2012 I broke that rule and never will again.

      The day before the Oscars, one of my colleagues hit a milestone birthday and to celebrate, we went to a famous Hollywood restaurant where Charlie Chaplin, Marilyn Monroe and Humphrey Bogart used to frequent.

      To my horror, the incredibly kind cameraman Travis, had organised a huge plate of oysters to start the celebrations. One by one people turned them down and I felt a rising sense of panic. I literally took one for the team and started to eat. They were delicious. What happened 24 hours later, less so.

      There I was standing on the red carpet of the Vanity Fair party, when things started to feel very, very wrong. To put it delicately, Vanity Fair became Vomity Fair. The red carpet went all the colours of the rainbow. It is the only time I’ve seen a squeegee mop at The Oscars.

      5. Spike Lee’s ‘cup of tea’ (2019)

      Spike Lee attends the 2020 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on February 09, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California
      Image caption, After realising he was speaking to a Brit, Spike Lee said best picture-winning Green Book wasn’t his “cup of tea”

      In 2019, Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman was nominated for best picture. Word spread that when Green Book was announced as the winner, the veteran director had turned his back and left the auditorium in protest.

      About 90 minutes later he arrived at Vanity Fair and we tried to get to the bottom of what had happened.

      “Green Book seems very similar to Driving Miss Daisy. They just changed the driving positions,” was as far as he would go, before I tried once more.

      “Is there something about Green Book that offends you?” I asked.

      “Offends?” he replied, his eyes suddenly sparkling, knowing he’d come up with something good.

      “Are you British?” he asked me.

      “Are you British?” he asked the BBC’s Dan Johnson who was next to me. We confirmed we both were.

      “Then let me give you a British answer,” he continued.

      “It wasn’t my cup of tea.”

      Lee then let out the most marvellous cackling laugh and hopped around in a circle of self-delight, coming back to our microphones once more to repeat, “not my cup of tea!” whilst waggling a finger, before bouncing off altogether, his work done.

      By the next day, T-shirts with his quote were on sale and Trevor Noah chose it as his Moment of Zen on The Daily Show.

      The Oscars are not everyone’s cup of tea, but come Monday, why not make yourself one, sit back and enjoy the mayhem.

      Colin Paterson will be live from the red carpet at the Vanity Fair Oscars Party on both BBC Breakfast and Radio 5 Live Breakfast, Monday 13 March. He will be shouting. A lot.

    • Chris Rock kids about Will Smith’s slap in Netflix show

      Chris Rock kids about Will Smith’s slap in Netflix show

      The comedian Chris Rock wants to be clear about one thing: Will Smith’s notorious Oscars slap hurt.

      During a live Netflix comedy show, Rock, 58, went into great detail about the 2022 Academy Awards incident.

      “You know what people say, they say, ‘words hurt,’” Rock said. “Anybody that say words hurt has never been punched in the face.”

      Will Smith has since said “bottled” rage led to his actions.

      Because Mr. Smith was permitted to attend the ceremony and later earned his first-ever Oscar for Best Actor, the altercation served as a cultural litmus test for discussions about America’s tolerance for casual violence.

      Rock was lauded for keeping his cool in the wake of the incident.

      The comedian addressed a variety of topics in Chris Rock: Selective Outrage, the streaming service’s inaugural live comedy performance, including woke culture, Meghan Markle, and politics.

      “I’m going to try to do the show without offending anyone,” Rock said, in a nod to the Smith altercation. “Because you never know who might get triggered.”

      Later he added, America “is so screwed up right now if the Russians came here right now, half the country would go ‘let’s hear them out’.”

      But he saved the best for last and used the final moments of the show to address the incident with Will Smith.

      “People are like, ‘Did it hurt?’ It still hurts! I got Summertime ringing in my ears,” Rock said, referring to Smith’s 1991 single.

      “I took that hit like (Manny) Pacquiao,” Rock boasted to cheers from the crowd.

      In a nod to the show’s title, Rock said he believes Smith practices “selective outrage” and that the slap had more to do with Smith and his wife, Jada’s, relationship struggles, than his Oscar’s joke.

      The couple have been candid about the ups and downs of their relationship and even publicly addressed their struggles on Jada’s Facebook Watch show, Red Table Talk.

      “We’ve all been cheated on, everybody in here been cheated on, none of us have ever been interviewed by the person that cheated on us on television,” Rock joked. “She hurt him way more than he hurt me.”

      Social media lit up with reactions to Rock finally addressing the incident, with many noting how artists like Rock often laugh through their pain.

      Others felt the comedian’s jokes about rooting for the slave owners in Will Smith’s latest film, Emancipation, were a step too far.

      In a mic drop moment, Rock ended the special by addressing why he chose not to fight back.

      “I got parents! Because I was raised!” Rock said. “And you know what my parents taught me? Don’t fight in front of white people.”

    • I lost it! – Will Smith opens up about Oscars slap again

      Will Smith opened up to Trevor Noah about the now-famous slap at the Oscars in March during an appearance that aired Monday night on “The Daily Show.”

      While promoting his forthcoming film “Emancipation,” Smith called it “a horrific night” and said he “lost it” when he stormed the stage and slapped presenter Chris Rock.

      “And I guess what I would say, you just never know what somebody is going through,” Smith said. “I was going through something that night. Not that that justifies my behavior at all.”

      Smith said that what was most painful to him was that his actions made it “hard for other people.”

      “And it’s like I understood the idea where they say hurt people hurt people,” he said.

      “That was a rage that had been bottled for a really long time,” Smith said.

      Noah pointed out how Smith had written in his memoir about growing up being afraid of conflict and the talk show host also noted the negative things that have been said about Smith and his family on the internet.

      “It was a lot of things,” Smith said in response. “It was the little boy that watched his father beat up his mother, you know. All of that just bubbled up in that moment.”

      Smith said who he was in that moment was “not who I want to be.”

      In July Smith addressed the slap and issued a public apology on social media.

      The Academy has sanctioned Smith by banning him from attending the Oscars for the next 10 years.

    • Will Smith understands if you don’t want to see his latest film

      “If someone is not ready, I would absolutely respect that and allow them their space to not be ready,” the actor said in an interview.

      Actor Will Smith said he understands why people might not want to see his upcoming movie.

      Smith won the Best Actor Oscar earlier this year for his role in “King Richard,” but garnered more attention that night for slapping comedian Chris Rock, who made a joke onstage about Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.

      As a result, he was banned from attending the Oscars for the next decade ― even though it’s possible he could be nominated and even win an award.

      “Emancipation,” Smith’s first film since the slap, opens in theaters Dec. 2 before streaming on Apple TV a week later.

      The film is loosely based on the life of an enslaved man named Gordon, whose scarred back was photographed in 1863 and was famously used by abolitionists to show the public just how brutal slavery was.

      “Emancipation” is getting some Oscar buzz, but Smith said he understands if filmgoers have second thoughts about watching it considering his behavior at the last ceremony.

      “I completely understand that if someone is not ready, I would absolutely respect that and allow them their space to not be ready,” Smith told film critic Kevin McCarthy in an interview clip posted on social media.

      Smith said that he hopes the reaction to the slap doesn’t affect the film’s chances of success or the award opportunities for the other people who worked on the film.

      “My deepest concern is my team — [director Antoine Fuqua] has done what I think is the greatest work of his entire career,” Smith said.

      “I’m hoping that the material, the power of the film, the timeliness of the story — I’m hoping that the good that can be done — will open people’s hearts at a minimum to see and recognize and support the incredible artists in and around this film,” he said.

      You can watch the full clip below.

      Source: huffpost.com

    • Tanzania ends 20-year wait for Oscars award entry

      A Tanzanian film has been shortlisted for an Oscars award – ending the country’s two-decades wait for an entry in the awards.

      Vuta N’kuvute film – Swahili for tug of war – has been shortlisted in the 95th Oscars’ Best International Film category.

      Released in Swahili and with a majority black cast, the film tells the story of a young Indian-Zanzibari girl whose romance thrives on the back of a political revolt in the dying days of British imperial rule.

      “The future for Tanzanian cinema is finally in our hands. A wave of Swahili filmmakers grows with pride, intellect and audacity every day,” Amil Shivji, a co-producer of the film, posted on Instagram.

       

      View this post on Instagram

       

      A post shared by Amil Shivji (@amilshivji)

      In September 2021, Vuta N’kuvute made history as the first Tanzanian feature film to ever be screened at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).

      Tanzania’s first entry to the Oscars awards was Maangazi: The Ancient One, in 2002.

      The country’s Swahili Bongo films are popular in East Africa.

      Source: BBC

    • Leon Vitali of Stanley Kubrick dies aged 74

      A 2018 documentary on Vitali detailed his contributions to Kubrick’s later films and gave him credit for discovering and securing Danny Lloyd, a child star of The Shining, for the part of Danny, Jack Nicholson’s psychic kid, as well as for coaching Danny’s acting.

      Vitali started his acting career in the early 1970s, with small roles in a number of TV hits, such as Z Cars, Van der Valk, and Dixon of Dock Green.

      After appearing in Please Sir! he went on to have a regular role in its successor The Fenn Street Gang, as the character Peter Craven.

      In 1974, he met Stanley Kubrick and was offered the part of Lord Bullingdon in the film director’s movie Barry Lyndon, and the pair are said to have bonded.

      The film is now much less famous than A Clockwork Orange, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and The Shining, but it won four Oscars and was nominated for three more – more than any of Kubrick’s other films.

      It was the start of a collaboration that would see Vitali act as Kubrick’s assistant for a series of further films, including Golden Globe-nominated Eyes Wide Shut and Oscar-nominated Full Metal Jacket, as well as The Shining.

      He also took on another acting role in Eyes Wide Shut, playing the part of Red Cloak.
      Leon Vitali with co-star Liz Gebhardt in a promotional shot for the 1971 ITV hit series The Fenn Street Gang
      A 2018 documentary on Vitali called Filmworker revealed that since Kubrick’s death in 1999, he had continued to work on the legendary director’s films and legacy.
      Filmworker credits Vitali with finding and recruiting the child star of The Shining, Danny Lloyd, to play the role of Danny, Jack Nicholson’s psychic son, and then coaching him to get the best performance out of him.
      Tributes have been paid by several in the film industry, including the director of Disney’s Coco and Toy Story 3, Lee Unkrich, a major fan of The Shining, who said on Twitter: “Completely heartbroken to hear about the passing of Leon Vitali. He helped me *enormously* with my Shining book and I’m gutted that he won’t see it. He was a sweet, kind, humble, generous man and a vital part of Stanley Kubrick’s team. RIP, dear Leon.”

      Vitali was credited as a casting director for Full Metal Jacket and Eyes Wide Shut and in another of his responsibilities collected Kubrick’s thoughts down in copious amounts of notes, which he then later used as part of his attempts to ensure people remembered his former boss.

      Vitali said that after seeing A Clockwork Orange and admiring the extravagant performances that Kubrick got from his actors he told himself: “I want to work for that man.”

      Once he had secured his position, he was said to have worked so hard for Kubrick that his children later said he saw more of the director than he did of them.

      Full Metal Jacket star Matthew Modine once said: “What Leon did was a selfless act, a kind of crucifixion of himself.”

      He played a few other roles in his later years, including a character in the 1981 film Inter Rail and as an apothecary in the 2013 adaptation of Romeo & Juliet, starring among other Damian Lewis.

      He also worked with filmmaker Todd Field, as a technical consultant on In The Bedroom (2001), and as an associate producer on Little Children (2006).

      He met his future wife Kersti on the set of the 1977 film Terror of Frankenstein, in which he appeared as Victor Frankenstein and she worked as a costume designer.

      Two of his three children, Vera and Max, also work in the film industry.

       

    • Will Smith claims he has spoken with Chris Rock about the Oscars smack.

      After slapping Chris Rock at the Oscars, Will Smith claims he “reached out” to him, but the comic has stated he is “not ready to chat.”

      After the comedian made a joke about Smith’s wife at the Academy Awards in March, the actor smacked Rock on stage.

      Smith renewed his apology in a video that he published on Friday in which he reflected on the slap. This was the first time Smith had been seen talking about the incident.

      “I apologize to Chris. My actions were unacceptable “said he. I’m available whenever you want to talk.

      Smith has previously only issued written statements about the altercation. In the video, on his own YouTube channel, he answers questions that appear to be written by fans.

      He reads out out the questions himself, addressing the camera directly.

      Chris Rock and Will SmithImage source, Getty Images
      Image caption, Smith smacked Rock after the comic made a joke about the actor’s wife Jada

      “I spent the last three months replaying and understanding the nuances and the complexities of what happened in that moment,” the actor said.

      “I wasn’t thinking about how many people got hurt in that moment… There is no part of me that thinks that was the right way to behave in that moment.”

      Smith explained: “I’ve reached out to Chris and the message that came back is that he’s not ready to talk and when he is, he will reach out.”

      Figure caption, He also said his wife Jada Pinkett Smith did not ask him to do something to defend her after Rock made the joke. “Jada had nothing to do with it,” Smith said.

      “I want to say sorry to my kids and my family for the heat that I brought on all of us.”

      Rock had taken aim at Pinkett Smith’s shaved head, a result of the hair-loss condition alopecia.

      Pinkett Smith spoke last month saying it was her “deepest hope” that her husband and Rock could “reconcile” after the incident.

      She had previously posted on her social media after the slap that it was a “season for healing”.

      Will Smith and Jada Pinkett SmithImage source, Getty Images
      Image caption, Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith at the Vanity Fair Oscars party

      Smith also apologised to his fellow nominees at the Oscars ceremony.

      “Knowing that this is a community, it’s almost as though your votes helped me win.
      I feel so terrible for having taken advantage of you and marred your moment.”

      Smith earned his first Oscar for his performance in King Richard, a movie about the father of Serena and Venus Williams, after the incident on stage.

      Smith has been prohibited from attending Academy functions for the next 10 years as a result of what the Oscars have called his “unacceptable and damaging behavior” on stage.

      It was stated that following the slap, Smith was asked to leave the award ceremony, but he refused. A producer later clarified that Rock himself had not intended for Smith to be expelled violently or taken into custody by the police.

      Source:The Independent Ghana

    • Oscars change streaming rules amid battle for future of cinemas

      The body behind the Oscars has changed its rules so films that debut on streaming or video on demand services are eligible for next year’s awards.

      The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ current rules say films can only enter if they have been shown in a Los Angeles cinema for at least a week.

      But with cinemas shut during the coronavirus crisis, organisers said a “temporary” exception was necessary.

      Many film releases have been delayed, with others going straight to digital.

      “The Academy firmly believes there is no greater way to experience the magic of movies than to see them in a theatre,” said Academy president David Rubin and chief executive Dawn Hudson.

      “Nonetheless, the historically tragic Covid-19 pandemic necessitates this temporary exception to our awards eligibility rules.”

      The Academy said the exemption would end when cinemas reopen.

      In recent years, the Oscars have admitted films made by streaming services like Netflix and Amazon – but only if they have also had a cinema release.

      What the pandemic will mean for the Oscars?

      The way the Oscars were going to celebrate the films of 2020 was always going to be different. Now we know a little more about how that’s going to work. But the uncertainty about how cinemas will operate will still play a part in the mix of movies that will be competing.

      In some cases, the studios are choosing to simply delay the release of Academy Award hopefuls until next year in order to stand a better chance of turning a profit when the cinemas are more likely to be operating normally. For example, the big screen adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway musical In The Heights has moved from June this year to June 2021.

      And while others are currently aiming at a release this year – like Christopher Nolan’s mind-bending drama Tenet and Steven Spielberg’s West Side Story – that could still change in the coming months. Especially if, when cinemas do reopen widely, there are large scale restrictions on audience sizes for a significant period.

      At the same time, smaller budget independent movies might find that adjusting their plans from a theatrical release to a digital one before the end of the year works better financially for them than a long delay. The streaming giants like Netflix are likely to be the least affected.

      So the 2021 Oscars could see a different balance of fewer studio movies and more independent films, with the streamers continuing to make strong advances. But the uncertainty about the rest of the year, and the possibility of the Academy Awards making further changes such as amending the eligibility period, means that right now no one can be sure exactly what the next Oscars will look like.

      The rule change comes amid an escalating row about how films are released.

      Universal Pictures recently launched Trolls World Tour online and brought forward the on-demand release date of some other titles.

      The movie studio has since suggested this policy will continue after cinemas reopen, prompting one major chain to say it would ban its films in its cinemas.

      Such a boycott would have an impact on such future Universal releases as Fast & Furious 9 and James Bond film No Time to Die.

      They are both among the blockbusters that have had their scheduled releases put back as a result of the pandemic.

      Before the current upheaval, studios waited 90 days after a cinema opening to release their films digitally.

      Universal has arguably led the way in changing this model by recently bringing forward the VOD releases of such titles as Emma, The Hunt and The Invisible Man.

      Recent UK releases like Military Wives and Misbehaviour have also been released digitally much earlier than would have normally been the case.

      Meanwhile, as well as changing its rules to accommodate streamed films, the Academy has also decided to merge its two sound awards into a single category.

      From 2021, there will be a single award for best sound instead of separate awards for sound mixing and sound editing.

      The 93rd Academy Awards will be held in Los Angeles on 28 February 2021.

      Source: bbc.com