Love and scandal are the best sweeteners of tea. —Henry Fielding

01 March 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 11 of 11 (with Final Predictions)

Final predictions for 2024 after our last three movies of the year:

A Different Man
1 nomination
  • Makeup & Hairstyling
DirectorAaron Schimberg
Cast: Sebastian Stan, Adam Pearson, Renate Reinsve, Miles G. Jackson, Patrick Wang, Neal Davidson

Not to be confused with Better Man, the Robbie-Williams-as-a-chimpanzee biopic, although I've been confusing their titles until today and probably will continue to confuse their titles. One is nominated for makeup and one for visual effects. But... I didn’t get A Different Man. I think it's badly directed. I spent most of this movie unsure how I felt and as though I had absolutely no access to what was going on with the central character. For me this was a huge problem, because the movie is about the protagonist, but it's never on his side. In fact, I would say that the entire film operates through a vague hostility toward its protagonist, rather like the terrible off-Broadway play that they're rehearsing within the movie. Exemplifying this problem—and contributing to it—is that the score is all wrong for this movie. Umberto Smerilli has given A Different Man a kind of haunting horror-score that builds tension insistently. Except that I think the movie wants to be a comedy. I’m very puzzled. I want to add to all of this that I think Coralie Fargeat's The Substance covers many of the same themes as A Different Man, with perhaps a similar outlook on those themes. And The Substance is a more enjoyable film than this—and I say that as someone who wasn't crazy about that movie either.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #85 out of 99

Elton John: Never Too Late
1 nomination
  • Original Song – "Never Too Late": Elton John (Rocketman, The Lion King, The Lion King, The Lion King) & Bernie Taupin (Rocketman) & Brandi Carlile & Andrew Watt (1st time nominees)
DirectorR.J. CutlerDavid Furnish

The problem with Elton John: Never Too Late is that we have all already seen Rocketman, and this hagiographical film doesn’t feel like new territory at all. in fact, this whole movie feels very PG, and very earnest about its toothlessness. It's as if it’s a movie made for families about a family—indeed it is a movie co-directed by David Furnish, who has been in a relationship with Elton John since the early 1990s. Elton’s husband, kids, nephew, and mother, all make appearances. The entire operation is all quite wholesome, and I mean that derogatorily if that isn’t quite clear. It makes for an uninteresting portrait of the singer, or at least certainly one that is a lot less interesting than the one in Rocketman. The film's bright spot for me is a section about Elton’s friendship with John Lennon, and it was cool to learn about how Lennon’s last appearance onstage (with Elton!) brought him and Yoko back together. Could this win the Original Song award? I think maybe it could.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Original Song
My rating: Unranked (I don't rank documentaries)

The Six Triple Eight
1 nomination
  • Original Song – "The Journey": Diane Warren (Flamin' Hot, Tell It like a Woman, Four Good Days, The Life Ahead, Breakthrough, RBG, Marshall, The Hunting Ground, Beyond the Lights, Pearl Harbor, Music of the Heart, Armageddon, Con Air, Up Close & Personal, Mannequin)
DirectorTyler Perry
Cast: Ebony Obsidian, Kerry Washington, Milauna Jackson, Kylie Jefferson, Shanice Shantay, Sarah Jeffery, Pepi Sonuga, Moriah Brown, Jeanté Godlock, Gregg Sulkin, Donna Biscoe, Baadja-Lyne Odums, Susan Sarandon, Sam Waterston, Dean Norris

Here we are with the annual Diane Warren nomination. Usually Diane Warren manages to write a song for one of the worst movies of the year, but I gotta say: this isn't nearly as bad as I expected. The script is horrible, the politics are questionable, and the historiography is inaccurate, but The Six Triple Eight is not without its pleasures. My problem with this is that I am not interested in these candy-coated movies about segregation. Ever since The Help we have had these movies, and I hate the way they serve a kind of US nationalist project by making the argument that Black folks fought for the country and did amazing things in service of the nation. It’s just crazy to me that these films have no critique of that same nation; in fact, they wind up celebrating the nation. It’s so annoying to learn in a movie like The Six Triple Eight that racism isn’t actually a structural issue: there are so many good white folks; racism is just the result of a few (powerful) bad apples. I think this is one of the reasons I liked Nickel Boys so much—it’s about this same period of time, but it tries to get at what was going on in the country in a much more realistic way. The Six Triple Eight instead is a kind of highlight reel of this battalion, with so many overt fictionalizations (those salutes in the train station!) that the movie occasionally just feels absurd. Will Diane Warren win her Oscar this year? I hope she wins soon, honestly, because saving a slot in the nominations for her ever year is silly. Warren has been nominated ten of the last eleven years (2015-2025)—and another six times before that between 1988 and 2002.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #86 out of 99

More 2024 posts:

This has been a very volatile Oscar season, and I have had to switch up many of my final predictions. Things keep changing, and it feels like even Best Picture is a toss-up, really...

Final Oscar Predictions:
Best Picture – Anora
Director – Sean Baker, Anora
Actor – Adrien Brody, The Brutalist
Actress – Demi Moore, The Substance
Adapted Screenplay – Conclave
Original Screenplay – Anora
Supporting Actor – Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain
Supporting Actress – Zoe Saldaña, Emilia Pérez
Film Editing – The Brutalist
Cinematography – Dune: Part Two
International Feature – I'm Still Here
Documentary Feature – Porcelain War
Production Design – Conclave
Original Score – The Brutalist
Costume Design – Wicked
Sound – A Complete Unknown
Animated Feature – The Wild Robot
Visual Effects – Dune: Part Two
Makeup & Hairstyling – The Substance
Original Song – "Never Too Late", Elton John: Never Too Late
Animated Short – Yuck!
Documentary Short – Incident
Live-action Short – Anuja

27 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 10 of 11

And now for the remaining three movies nominated for visual effects:

Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
1 nomination
  • Visual Effects
DirectorWes Ball
Cast: Owen Teague, Freya Allen, Kevin Durand, Peter Macon, William H. Macy, Eka Darville, Travis Jeffery, Lydia Peckham

This was pretty strong. It had lots of good surprises and the main character is great. But act two is kinda boring, I’m afraid, and I frequently felt ahead of our protagonist, Noa. Still, I had lots of fun, there was much good action, and the visual effects were very good. I am ok with them continuing to nominate the Planet of the Apes movies in this category—even if they don't win. Rise of the Planet of the Apes was nominated in 2012, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 2015, and War for the Planet of the Apes in 2018. This movie doesn't really live up to the greatness of those three movies, but they were really good, so I can't be too mad. This had a lot to live up to, and if the pacing of Kingdom wasn't quite great, the effects were still absolutely top notch.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #57 out of 99

Alien: Romulus
1 nomination
  • Visual Effects
DirectorFede Álvarez
Cast: Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson, Archie Renaux, Isabela Merced, Aileen Wu, Spike Fearn, Robert Bobroczkyi, and a CGI version of Ian Holm voiced by Daniel Betts

I am not really into this kind of movie, but this works. It’s just so fucking gross. I know that's part of the appeal of this kind of horror—the fluids and the sheer disgust of it all—and I guess it's not for me. I also find the Alien universe’s interest in babies and pregnancy to be really nasty, as well. Like, as soon as one of the cast of characters in this film (played entirely by models, apparently) told us she was preggers I thought uh oh here we go: it’s Alien: Prometheus all over again. This movie’s third act is pretty great though. I was enjoying myself a lot... while also screaming about how nasty everything was. I felt gross for hours afterward. This is why I don’t watch stuff like this. Yuck. In other words, Alien: Romulus does what it promises it will do.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #73 out of 99

Better Man
1 nomination
  • Visual Effects
DirectorMichael Gracey
Cast: Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton, Raechelle Banno, Kate Mulvaney, Frazer Hadfield, Damon Herriman, Jake Simmance, Alison Steadman

This movie is a conventional musical biopic that is made insanely, amazingly unconventional—to the point of being deranged—by the fact that Robbie Williams, the musician in question, is portrayed for the entire length of the film as a chimpanzee. He is a very realistic looking chimpanzee, too! The effects are great. The musical numbers here are really the highlight, though. Gracey had a movie musical hit with The Greatest Showman, and this is just as much of a musical. “Rock DJ” is insanely good; it's a total blast. “She’s the One” is excellent too. In fact, the whole thing really works. The reason I didn't love this movie is that Better Man's plot is just so conventional. You've seen this story a hundred times. And this makes its overly long running time—140 minutes—very silly indeed. For me, the chimpanzee gimmick really doesn't run out of steam; it keeps working for the entirety of the movie's length. But the story the movie has to tell is not nearly as cool as the style in which it is told, and for the last twenty minutes of this film, I was impatient for it to end..
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #63 out of 99

More 2024 posts:

23 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 9 of 11 (Animated Shorts)

This year's animated short films include some strange selections, but then again they always do!


Beurk! (Yuck!)
1 nomination
  • Animated Short
DirectorLoïc Espuche
Cast: Noé Chabbat, Katell Varvat, Enzo Desmedt, Camille Bouisson, Hugo Chauvel, Roman Freud, Mattias Marcussy, Mokhtar Camara, Olivia Chatain, Théo Costa-Marini, Jean-Pierre Darroussin

This is very cute. It's about two young people who kind of want to kiss one another even though every other kid thinks kissing is, well, yucky. Extra points for the way, in the world of this animated universe, the urge to kiss someone becomes immediately visible on a person’s face, and they have trouble hiding it. What I love about this is that the other person can be turned on (if you will) by the desire of the other. The young people and adults in this film feel a desire to kiss one another and then that desire can be seen instantly by everyone else. This makes for some very funny exchanges. Extra points for it all being hot pink and glittery.
Will win: Animated Short
Could win: N/A
My rating: #2 out of 5

Magic Candies (
あめだま)
1 nomination
  • Animated Short
DirectorNishio Daisuke
Cast: Haruto Shima, Hiroshi Iwaski, Sakiko Uran, Yoshifumi Hasegawa, Ikkei Watanabe, Kazuhiro Yamaji

This is really charming and cute. A magic world of words opens up to a lonely little boy when he purchases a little bag of candies that have him hallucinating. The animation is adorable, and the whole thing is very cute. It has a few surprises up its sleeve, too. I found this really touching. I especially love the way the animators drew the words themselves; the way that words take on life in this movie. Top marks. This is my favorite of the five films.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Short
My rating: #1 out of 5

In the Shadow of the Cypress
1 nomination
  • Animated Short
DirectorsHosseini MolayemiShirin Sohani
Cast: N/A

This is beautifully animated, and it wonderfully captures visually what is happening with the characters internally. In the Shadow of the Cypress is a film about war trauma, about living with trauma and the way that trauma is material, the way it sits in the body or takes up space in the room. This film gorgeously offers the physical feeling of loss or desperation or need by making those feelings material on screen through visual representation. It's just lovely.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Short
My rating: #3 out of 5

Wander to Wonder
1 nomination
  • Animated Short
DirectorNina Gantz
Cast: Neil Salvage, Toby Jones, Amanda Lawrence, Terence Dunn

This is a very strange little film about three tiny people who are performing as little miniature sasquatches in a kind of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood-type show for kids. Things take a strange turn, though, when the host leaves the three tinies on their own. Strange can be cool, of course, but I didn’t really understand this. It sure made me laugh, though. There’s a weirdo Shakespeare lover who has lost his mind in this, and I was into him and his level of crazy. But this is just a little too weird and the characters just a little too distant from human beings for my taste.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #4 out of 5

Beautiful Men
1 nomination
  • Animated Short
DirectorNicolas Keppens
Cast: Peter Van den Begin, Peter De Graef, Tom Dewispelaere, Nayat Sari

This film is about three brothers who have gone to Turkey to get hair transplants. They're getting older, and they struggle with their relationships with one another, and they struggle with aging. Beautiful Men had some good laughs, but the story mostly left me cold. I guess male menopause is not really something to which I fully relate yet.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #5 out of 5

More 2024 posts:

Oscar Nominations 2024: 8 of 11

And now for the remaining three animated features, with thoughts on two non-nominated animated features at the bottom:

Inside Out 2

1 nomination
  • Animated Feature
DirectorKelsey Mann
Cast: Amy Poehler, Maya Hawke, Kensington Tallman, Tony Hale, Lewis Black, Phyllis Smith, Ayo Edibiri, Liza Lapira, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Kyle MacLachlan, Diane Lane, Paul Walter Hauser 

Booooooo. I can't understand why we needed this film or why anyone liked it. Well, actually, no: I understand why people liked it, but I did not. This film repeats almost beat for beat the plot of the first Inside Out, and so I was, to put it mildly, completely bored. Worse yet, this movie purports to be about understanding teenagers, about exploring a teenager's emotional world, but it isn't about that. Instead, we don't follow the teenager at the center of the film or identify with her at all; we identify with a group of people trying to take care of that teenager, keep her out of trouble, make her happy, and turn her into a successful young person. In other words, the audience is asked to identify as her parents. The feelings that are supposedly the teenager's feelings are actually not hers at all; they're her parents'. I resent this bait and switch, and I am opposed to this movie; I think it's one of the worst of the year. 
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Feature
My rating: #95 out of 98

Vengeance Most Fowl

1 nomination
  • Animated Feature
DirectorMerlin CrossinghamNick Park
Cast: Ben Whitehead, Peter Kay, Lauren Patel, Reece Shearsmith

Wallace & Gromit encounter AI. This is charming and cute, and it has some excellent jokes. That Gromit is the most lovable, expressive pup! He speaks no words but his cute little face says it all. This is a long-awaited new Wallace and Gromit feature, and we should all be glad we have it. I think this captures the magic of the previous W&G shorts and features, and the AI touch really makes things interesting. I also gotta say: I love that villainous penguin. He's so terrible but also so funny. Sweet, patient, longsuffering Gromit is the best thing in this, though. He's the star of the movie, but he's also... Well, listen. He's the mother we never had, the sister everybody would want. He's the friend that everybody deserves. Frankly, I don't know a better person. This can't win the Oscar. It's a strong year for animated films this year. But this is a worthy entry in the canon.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #53 out of 98

Memoir of a Snail
1 nomination
  • Animated Feature
DirectorAdam Elliot
Cast: Sarah Snook, Jacki Weaver, Eric Bana, Dominique Pinon, Saxon Wright

I liked how sex positive this was—it's easily the most sex-positive of the five animated features, and maybe the most sex-positive of all the Oscar nominees this year—but mostly I thought Memoir of a Snail was rather dreary. It is an occasionally funny film, but overall this is a very depressing memoir. I was disappointed that this took the fifth Animated Feature slot, even though I expected it. The thing is, there were two other really wonderful animated features this year that got zero end-of-year press, and both were better than Inside Out 2 and Memoir of a Snail. Please go watch Mars Express and Chicken for Linda! The first is visually stunning with exquisite worldbuilding; Mars Express is a very smart movie about AI. It’s the kind of intelligent, generous, and humane exploration of AI that we need. But this movie is also a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants action–crime thriller that kept me guessing and surprised me constantly. It's great stuff; easily the second-best animated film of the year. The other movie I need to recommend is Chicken for Linda! This is absolutely beautiful while also very funny. It’s a madcap farce about dealing with death. And it’s a children’s movie that is actually from the perspective of the kids!—unlike so many US American animated films that purport to be about kids.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #79 out of 98

More 2024 posts:

21 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 7 of 11

Another group with one of my top films of the year in it. See, the Academy did some things right:

The Seed of the Sacred Fig (دانه‌ی انجیر معابد)

1 nomination
  • International Feature: Germany (The Teacher's Lounge, All Quiet on the Western Front, Never Look Away, Toni Erdmann, The White Ribbon, The Baader Meinhof Complex, The Lives of Others, Sophie Scholl: the Final Days, Downfall, Nowhere in Africa, Beyond Silence, Schtonk, The Nasty Girl)
DirectorMohammad Rasoulof
Cast: Soheila Golestani, Missagh Zareh, Setareh Maleki, Mahsa Rostami, Niousha Akhshi, Reza Akhlaghirad, Shiva Ordooie

This is one of the best movies of the year. The Seed of the Sacred Fig is not fucking around. This is a tense, extraordinary thriller about the present moment in Iran. This is a film invested in justice and truth and opposed to the theocratic regime in Iran. It stages really brilliantly the way that patriarchy as an ideology must insist upon controlling others, the way it damages the world, and the way patriarchy cleverly and insidiously frames everything as "for your own good" and "really doing this all for you" because those who are not "adult" (whatever that means) and "male" (they're happy to exclude people from this category as well) couldn't possibly make decisions for themselves and couldn't possibly understand the world that we all live in. Mohammad Rasoulof's film is not only tense and exciting and smart, it also analyzes this world and this ideology, taking it to its logical conclusion. The movie itself was made in secret and then smuggled out of Iran, but the film's editor—who, frankly, also deserves an Oscar nomination—has edited in smartphone footage of protests, police violence, forced disappearances, and killings that were taken by people in Iran living under this regime. Although the movie takes a slight turn toward melodrama and chase scenes by its final act, I can't say I minded at all. The movie already had me in its grip long before that.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #6 out of 98

Pigen med Nålen (The Girl with the Needle)

1 nomination
  • International Feature: Denmark (Flee, Another Round, Under the Sand, A War, The Hunt, A Royal Affair, In a Better World, After the Wedding, Memories of a Marriage, Pelle the Conqueror, Babette's Feast, Harry and the Butler, Paw, Qivitoq: the Mountain Wanderer)
DirectorMagnus von Horn
Cast: Vic Carmen Sonne, Trine Dyrholm, Besir Zeciri, Ava Knox Martin, Joachim Fjelstrup, Tessa Hoder, Benedikte Hansen, Per Thiim Thim

I am honestly stunned that this movie was nominated for International Feature. Not that it isn't a good movie; it's a good movie. But it's a really rough watch. As I wrote in my earlier review of this movie, I loved the score of this, and I loved it's insanely expressionist visuals. I also adored the central performances—particularly Trine Dyrholm's—but this is a bleak, dark, terrifying post-war portrait, and it doesn't really see a way out of the terror it portrays. Like... is there any way a movie called The Girl with the Needle isn't about murdered infants? Because that is definitely what this is about. What Magnus von Horn does so well, though, is to create in addition a kind of wonderful visual puzzle, where we see things in a distorted way: faces overlap and begin to look like other faces, we hallucinate along with the main character as she drugs herself, the world of the film reflects the distortion already present in society. I certainly appreciated this; I'm just not sure there's much to enjoy, if you know what I mean. It's just a really strange choice for the Academy. I was surprised it made the December shortlist, and I'm surprised it made the list of nominees. Anyway, it has no chance of winning the Oscar, and I find its inclusion here really shocking.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #42 out of 98

Gladiator II
1 nomination
  • Costume Design: Dave Crossman (Napoleon) & Janty Yates (Napoleon, Gladiator)
DirectorRidley Scott
Cast: Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Denzel Washington, Connie Nielsen, Fred Hechinger, Joseph Quinn, Matt Lucas, Derek Jacobi, Tim McInnerny, Lior Raz, Peter Mensah, Alexander Karim, Yuval Gonen

Although I thought this movie was sort of bland and generic—I thought the same about Ridley Scott's last movie, Napoleon, as well—all of its technical elements were fairly wonderful. I loved Harry Gregson-Williams' score; I loved the production design; I loved the costumes; I even loved the special effects (except for those fucking sharks in the naumachia). I also really enjoyed (most of) the acting. Fred Hechinger and Joseph Quinn were very good, and Denzel chewed the scenery in the most pleasurable way. The movie itself has lots of problems, but it isn't quite bad. It just doesn't really live up to the promise of a fun romp through the Roman empire. It's not quite fun enough, you know? But this costume design nomination is well deserved, and actually I'm a bit surprised this didn't land one or two more below-the-line nominations. It at least should have gotten more nominations—three—than Napoleon did last year. Not that it will win anything. It won't.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #59 out of 98

More 2024 posts:

19 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 6 of 11

We've made it to the single-digit movies, and this is another group with one of my top films of the year in it:

Straume (Flow)
2 nominations
  • International Feature: Latvia (1st time nominee)
  • Animated Feature
DirectorGints Zilbalodis
Cast: N/A

The reason that every critics group said that Flow was the best animated film of the year is because it is the best animated film of the year. It's not going to win the Oscar, and that's just absurd, honestly. This movie is wonderful. It's a deeply moving, heartwarming, scary, and also quite funny odyssey as a cat experiences an apocalypse, an apparently worldwide flood that drowns everything. But this is not an adventure film so much as it is a film about working together, living together, being together. Flow also has wonderfully spiritual sequences. It's just exquisite. As for the nomination for International Feature, this is Latvia's first nomination, which is cool, but I am surprised by this nomination. A few years ago, when this award was called "Best Foreign Language Picture", Flow would have been disqualified for having no dialogue. Apparently that rule is out with the change in award title. I'm not mad, either way, because this movie is in my top ten for the year.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Feature
My rating: #8 out of 97

September 5
1 nomination
  • Original Screenplay: Moritz Binder & Alex David & Tim Fehlbaum
DirectorFehlbaum
Cast: John Magaro, Peter Sarsgaard, Ben Chaplin, Leonie Benesch, Marcus Rutherford, Benjamin Walker, Georgina Rich, Zinedine Soualem, Cory Johnson, Rony Herman

This movie is tight and clever and absolutely never feels exploitative. Instead it feels really smart about the violence at its center despite the fact that this is a thriller about telling a good story via television news. I think my favorite part of this is how careful and intelligent it is. For one thing, the movie demonstrates that "terrorist" comes into being to describe these particular guerrillas in the 1970s, which is super interesting. September 5 also make the argument that this didn’t need to happen if these local Munich police had been better, if the Germans hadn’t also already attempted to commit genocide a mere thirty years prior, and if the Israeli government would have negotiated. It really puts this violence in context in a very smart way, I think. But this is also gripping drama, even though most of us probably know how it ends. The acting is really fucking fantastic too, and John Magaro, Ben Chaplin, and Leonie Benesch are absolutely great. I was very into this.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #27 out of 97

Maria
1 nomination
  • Cinematography: Edward Lachman (El Conde, Carol, Far from Heaven)
DirectorPablo Larraín
Cast: Angelina Jolie, Pierfrancesco Favino, Alba Rohrwacher, Haluk Bilginer, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Stephen Ashfield, Vincent Macaigne, Lydia Koniordu

I wrote in my initial thoughts on this movie, that it is overwrought and melodramatic and excessive, but that to me it seemed to get to something true after all. Everyone I've spoken to about this film, though, has found the film to be fairly bad. I kinda get it, but I didn't hate this. I love me some Angelina, and I adore Maria Callas, so I was bound to mostly like this, I guess. Ed Lachman definitely deserves his nomination here—his second in two years after not being nominated for twenty years!—and indeed the visuals really were the most stunning part of Maria.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #65 out of 97

More 2024 posts:

12 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 5 of 11

This next group includes two of my favorite movies of the year:

Nickel Boys
2 nominations
  • Picture
  • Adapted Screenplay: Joslyn Barnes & RaMell Ross (1st time nominees)
DirectorRoss
Cast: Ethan Herisse, Brandon Wilson, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Jimmie Fails, Daveed Diggs, Craig Tate, Najah Bradley, Hamish Linklater, Fred Hechinger, Luke Tennie, Bryant Tardy, Trey Perkins, Sean Tyrik, Gralen Bryant Banks

RaMell Ross’s film takes a little getting used to. It’s shot from a first-person perspective, and it also jumps around in time. Which is to say that I spent the first second or two of each shot—a good deal of the film—figuring out what I was watching. The overall effect is unsettling and mysterious—one just isn’t used to watching a film this way—and eventually this all had a hypnotic effect on me. The cinematography works like a spell on the viewer, and I began to feel a bit like I was in a dream or as if I was in the way it feels to remember something that one only half-remembers or wants to forget. Nickel Boys is emotionally powerful and smart. The sequences, especially, with the men long after they’ve left the prison, are deeply moving, and I thought Craig Tate gave us a wonderful performance in Older Chickie Pete. I fell hard for this and have moved it to my #1 for the year. It's just so ambitious and exciting and intriguing while also being smart and emotionally moving. The fact that this got nominated for Best Picture is a real win. I think it speaks very well of the Academy, honestly. I must admit that I am surprised that this isn't nominated in the Cinematography category, but who knows what those guys were thinking. I am also very, very puzzled that Nickel Boys is not on the Best Picture list for the Image Awards, which seems really strange. But this movie has run a very strange campaign, and the movie was only wide in theatres in late January. It feels to me like this should have done better in awards season all around. But, hey, a good movie is its own award, and this movie is great.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Adapted Screenplay
My rating: #1 out of 97

The Apprentice
2 nominations
  • Actor: Sebastian Stan (1st time nominee)
  • Supporting Actor: Jeremy Strong (1st time nominee)
DirectorAli Abassi
Cast: Stan, Strong, Maria Bakalova, Martin Donovan, Catherine McNally, Charlie Carrick, Mark Rendal, Ben Sullivan

This is a really strange movie. Like Ali Abassi’s previous movie, Holy Spider, The Apprentice mainly follows a person whom we are supposed to understand as reprehensible. In this case it is a young Donald J. Trump, who will learn how to be evil, selfish, and petty from the American Republican bureaucrat and lawyer Roy Cohn. Well, no, DJT doesn’t learn how to be selfish and petty from Cohn, but he does learn some very important tactics related to blackmail and other villainies. He also adopts wholesale Cohn's three rules for life—attack attack attack, never admit wrongdoing, always claim victory. Sebastian Stan is honestly quite good in this, offering us a very human portrayal of a rather soulless individual, while the film goes about its business critiquing him. I was less impressed with Jeremy Strong’s Roy Cohn, which is much more subdued than the men played by James Woods in Citizen Cohn or Al Pacino in Angels in America, but who knows: maybe Strong’s Cohn is the more realistic of the three. (I haven’t seen either of the two famous Roy Cohn documentaries, Where's My Roy Cohn? or Bully. Coward. Victim., because I don’t like documentaries and I hate Roy Cohn.) Either way Cohn was an evil, horrible man. And The Apprentice outlines just how much of an influence he was on DJT. And overall I think this is actually an interesting film despite its awful subject matter and occasionally strange tone.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #60 out of 97

A Real Pain
2 nominations
  • Supporting Actor: Kieran Culkin (1st time nominee)
  • Original Screenplay: Jesse Eisenberg (1st time nominee in this category)
DirectorEisenberg
Cast: Eisenberg, Culkin, Liza Sadovy, Daniel Oreskes, Will Sharpe, Jennifer Grey, Kurt Egyiawan, Ellora Torchia

This is simple and sweet and very funny. I also found this deeply, profoundly moving with some really excellent performances. Kieran Culkin gives a great lead actor performance, for which he will win a supporting actor Oscar, but the acting is wonderful all around, and the movie is one of the best of the year. It's in my top ten, and it really ought to have made it into the Academy's top ten, too. Still, I'm glad Eisenberg got a screenplay nomination at least. It's well deserved. This movie is absolutely great.
Will win: Supporting Actor
Could win: N/A
My rating: #7 out of 97

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09 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 4 of 11

 Three nominations apiece for our next three movies:

Ainda Estou Aqui (I'm Still Here)
3 nominations
  • Picture
  • Actress: Fernanda Torres (1st time nominee)
  • International Feature: Brazil (Central Station, Four Days in September, O Qu4trilho, O Pagador de Promessas)
DirectorWalter Salles
Cast: Torres, Selton Mello, Valentina Herszage, Luiza Kosovski, Barbara Luz, Guilherme Silveira, Gabriela Carneiro da Cunha, Marjorie Estiano, Antonio Saboia, Cora Mora, Fernanda Montenegro, Olivia Torres

This movie received a surprise Best Picture nomination that I still can't believe! Will I'm Still Here actually win International Feature? It might! Smart money two weeks ago would have said that no movie could beat Emilia Pérez for the International Feature Oscar, but here we are in mid-February, and it's beginning to look like the tables have turned. I'm actually going to switch my prediction. As more and more people see I'm Still Here, they're going to appreciate how good Walter Salles's drama is. There's something reassuring, too, about a film that is actually based in historical fact and that sticks much better to generic conventions. I'm Still Here is a taut historical thriller about a family living under a military dictatorship that is pretending to be a democracy. The movie documents many of the terrors of living through the two decades of Brazilian military dictatorship, and the whole thing is rooted in the true story of survivor Eunice Paiva who became a lawyer fighting for human rights and Indigenous sovereignty. The movie is impeccably made. Somehow I wound up seeing this movie in a theatre filled with fifteen to twenty Brazilian college students. At the end of the movie there was not a dry eye in this theatre. 
Will win: International Feature
Could win: Actress
My rating: #33 out of 97

Sing Sing
3 nominations
  • Actor: Colman Domingo (Rustin)
  • Adapted Screenplay: Greg Kwedar & Clarence Maclin & John "Divine G" Whitfield (all 1st time nominees)
  • Original Song – "Like a Bird": Abraham Alexander & Adrian Quesada (1st time nominees)
DirectorKwedar
Cast: Domingo, Maclin, Sean San José, Paul Raci, David "Dap" Giraudy, Patrick "Preme" Griffin, James "Big E" Williams, Mosi Eagle, Sean Dino Johnson, Sharon Washington

The trailer makes Sing Sing look like some Sundance bullshit, but Greg Kwedar's movie is so much better than that. Sing Sing does have structural problems, but this is because the film is interested in telling us true stories about incarcerated men and their lives more than it is interested in narrative structure per se. I didn’t mind this. I think the stories of these men are more important than a storyline that works well. I was really into this movie, and I forgive every one of its shortcomings; it (like I'm Still Here) is a true story. This one is about incarcerated men finally being granted freedom, and it tells true stories of these men in a way that is respectful and that I appreciated a great deal. I am very glad this movie doesn't hit any of us over the head with, like, messages about the healing power of theatre or anything like that, because that would cheapen the real value of arts in the prison. It isn't magic. It's practical: it gives focus, it helps with teamwork, it demands responsibility, and it creates empathy. This is a very good movie, and it moved me deeply.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #32 out of 97

The Wild Robot
3 nominations
  • Original Score: Kris Bowers (1st time nominee)
  • Sound
  • Animated Feature
DirectorChris Sanders
Cast: Lupita Nyong'o, Pedro Pascal, Kit Connor, Bill Nighy, Stephanie Hsu, Matt Berry, Ving Rhames, Mark Hamill, Catherine O'Hara

This has a couple of heart-tugging moments and a few fabulous visuals. But The Wild Robot has no surprises in its programming. It’s generic and cheesy and—like seemingly every single well-made children’s movie—it isn’t about kids at all; it’s about parenting! (This won’t surprise you if you’ve seen Inside Out 2 or Toy Story or nearly any other animated movie from one of the big studios.) Mostly The Wild Robot is here for the cheese, though. Use your heart and not your head. You can do it if you just try hard enough and work at it. Even though you don’t like others, you have to work together to save your home, etc., etc. You already know all these things, actually. This movie repeats them all with pretty music behind the sententiousness and pretends to be improvising when it’s really just running through a whole litany of pre-programmed platitudes. The actors—who are all doing amazing work—deserved better. I did appreciate the charming little nod to Karl Čapek’s 1938 play Rossum’s Universal Robots in the name of this movie’s robot but this is a warmed-over set of clichés. The Academy disagrees with me, nominating the movie's saccharine score, and even the film's sound! Trust and believe that the Academy will also give this movie the Oscar for Animated Feature come March.
Will win: Animated Feature
Could win: N/A
My rating: #71 out of 97

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07 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 3 of 11

 The next three movies on our list are heavy hitters below the line:

The Substance
5 nominations
  • Picture
  • Director: Coralie Fargeat (1st time nominee)
  • Actress: Demi Moore (1st time nominee)
  • Original Screenplay: Fargeat (1st time nominee)
  • Makeup & Hairstyling
DirectorFargeat
Cast: Moore, Margaret Qualley, Dennis Quaid, Hugo Diego Garcia, Christian Erickson, Oscar Lesage, Robin Greer, Edward Hamilton Clark, Gore Abrams

This movie wasn't my favorite—mostly I was frustrated with the way it kept acting like it was very deep when all of its analysis felt very shallow to me. This was especially evident in Dennis Quaid's cartoony characterization. (Which isn't to say that he's bad in it; only that his character lacks dimension.) But the news here is that a horror-adjacent movie is doing well with the Oscars and that Demi Moore has had an extraordinary, wonderful comeback. I am actually very glad that Margaret Qualley missed on a supporting actress nomination here because it just lets Demi Moore be the film's shining light. Perhaps more surprising is Coralie Fargeat's nomination in the directing category. I don't quite understand this nomination, but who can be mad about it? The Substance is an instantly iconic movie—drag queens were already doing the Demi Moore look last Halloween—and Fargeat's direction is grotesque and outrageous. This film is a fan favorite, and its five nominations (quite a haul, actually) are a way of honoring one of the year's most iconic wild rides. 
Will win: Actress
Could win: Original Screenplay, Makeup & Hairstyling
My rating: #68 out of 94

Dune: Part Two
5 nominations
  • Picture
  • Cinematography: Greig Fraser (Dune: Part One, Lion)
  • Production Design: Patrice Vermette (Dune: Part One, Arrival, The Young Victoria) & Shane Vieau (Nightmare Alley, The Shape of Water)
  • Sound
  • Visual Effects
DirectorDenis Villeneuve
Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Austin Butler, Florence Pugh, Stellan Skarsgård, Dave Bautista, Christopher Walken, Léa Seydoux, Charlotte Rampling, Giusi Merli, Alison Halstead

Well at least one of the best films of the year—and probably the epic cinematic event of the year—was nominated for five Oscars. Dune: Part Two is extraordinary, deeply pleasurable, visually stunning, emotionally rich, and brilliantly crafted. The acting is great, the effects are spectacular, and I've been listening to the original score since the movie came out (somehow the nepotistic music branch failed to nominate Hans Zimmer, but I guess it's ok since he already has a dozen nominations and two statues, including one for Dune: Part One). I do wonder how you get off a sand worm, though. It's one thing to board the old girl for some trans-planetary travel, but how does one dismount? Extra points for the sequences in grayscale under that planet's black sun. What a visually stunning choice!
Will win: Cinematography
Could win: Production Design, Sound, Visual Effects
My rating: #11 out of 94

Nosferatu
4 nominations
  • Cinematography: Jarin Blaschke (The Lighthouse)
  • Production Design: Beatrice Brentnerová & Craig Lathrop (1st time nominees)
  • Costume Design: Linda Muir (1st time nominee)
  • Makeup & Hairstyling
DirectorRobert Eggers
Cast: Nicholas Hoult, Lily-Rose Depp, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Bill Skarsgård, Willem Dafoe, Emma Corrin, Simon McBurney

I've already written about my problems with the film's real lack of eroticism here (despite its ranking as #69 for me for the year), so I won't belabor the point again. But let's take time to talk about the production design and costume design, which really were breathtaking. At one point my companions and I were really stunned by how real the town looked as Nicholas Hoult walked to work. It looked to me as if it was built from scratch, and it looked absolutely gorgeous. The costumes were exquisite. The suiting was impeccable. The whole thing looked so good and perfect that Nosferatu can best be compared to a slow, vaguely scary, sexless Wes Anderson movie. Like imagine the immaculately designed intricate detail of The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou but with no jokes or songs.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Makeup & Hairstyling
My rating: #69 out of 94

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02 February 2025

Oscar Nominations 2024: 2 of 11

The next three movies on our list; all nominated for Best Picture and one likely and eventual winner:

A Complete Unknown
8 nominations
  • Picture
  • Director: James Mangold (1st time nominee)
  • Actor: Timothée Chalamet (Call Me by Your Name)
  • Adapted Screenplay: Jay Cocks (Gangs of New York, The Age of Innocence) & Mangold (Logan)
  • Supporting Actor: Edward Norton (Birdman or (the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), American History X, Primal Fear)
  • Supporting Actress: Monica Barbaro (1st time nominee)
  • Costume Design: Arianne Phillips (Once upon a Time... in Hollywood, W./E., Walk the Line)
  • Sound
DirectorMangold
Cast: Chalamet, Norton, Elle Fanning, Barbaro, Eriko Hatsune, P.J. Byrne, Joe Tippet, Dan Fogler, Scoot McNairy, Boyd Holbrook, Norbert Leo Butz, David Alan Basche

This is an utterly conventional mid-century singer biopic from the director of last year's truly wackadoodle Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. The movie works, though, by which I mean it functions in every single way expected of it. It hits all the right beats and it simply refuses to disappoint. Better still, the film is a musical—despite the Golden Globes' usual absurd classifications—every single emotional beat in the film is part of a song, and the movie is positively filled with music. This is a very good thing. It's a musical disguised as something else, and so it allows people who think they hate musicals to reap all of the emotional benefits of watching a musical while pretending they're watching a drama. Even more impressive, all of the principals sing their own songs, and they all do a good job with the music. When the smoke clears, I expect this to win Best Picture. I think this is the least divisive of the movies nominated, and it's a movie that I find impossible to dislike. In fact, it delivers in all of the ways it promises to deliver, and so watching it actually feels satisfying. 
Will win: Picture, Sound
Could win: Director
My rating: #49 out of 93

Conclave
8 nominations
  • Picture
  • Actor: Ralph Fiennes (The English Patient, Schindler's List)
  • Adapted Screenplay: Peter Staughan (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy)
  • Supporting Actress: Isabella Rossellini  (1st time nominee)
  • Film Editing: Nick Emerson (1st time nominee)
  • Production Design: Suzie Davies (Mr. Turner) & Cynthia Sleiter (1st time nominee)
  • Original Score: Volker Bertelmann (All Quiet on the Western Front)
  • Costume Design: Lisy Christl (Anonymous)
DirectorEdward Berger
Cast: Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, Lucian Msmamati, Jack Koman, Brían F. O'Byrne, Rossellini, Bruno Novelli, Thomas Loibl, Carlos Diehz, Rony Kramer, Sergio Castellito

I was really into this movie, and it's a superb follow-up to Berger's last film, All Quiet on the Western Front. One of my favorite things about Conclave is how well you know the central character, played by Ralph Fiennes, and know him so quickly. We know him so well that when Stanley Tucci's character accuses him of harboring a secret desire to be the pope himself, I immediately felt how much he had misjudged, how wrong he was. And I knew this about this character without doubt. The movie makes us confident in some things and suspicious of others. In this way, the movie constantly surprises its viewers. We see some things coming, but the movie has other surprises in store. I don't see Conclave doing very well on Oscar night, though. It's a very respectable movie that I think will take home the production design Oscar, but it might not win anything at all.
Will win: Production Design
Could win: N/A
My rating: #19 out of 93

Anora
6 nominations
  • Picture
  • Director: Sean Baker (1st time nominee)
  • Actress: Mikey Madison (1st time nominee)
  • Original Screenplay: Baker (1st time nominee)
  • Supporting Actor: Yura Borisov (1st time nominee)
  • Film Editing: Baker (1st time nominee)
DirectorSean Baker
Cast: Madison, Mark Eydelshteyn, Karren Karagulian, Borisov, Vache Tovmasyan, Lindsey Normington, Emily Weider, Aleksey Serebryakov, Darya Ekamasova, Paul Weissman

I liked this movie too! I really tend to hate Sean Baker's movies, or at least I go back and forth about them about four or five times during the movie, and I almost always hate the way he ends his movies. I find his gaze toward his characters really unkind and mocking. I think this is true in Anora, too. Baker spends most of the movie making fun of his central characters. They're figures of derision and hilarity—much of the film's comedy is very broad and silly—and this works quite well, even if the gaze toward the characters is cold. But with Anora, Baker really crafts a moving, heartfelt ending that shows a wonderful generosity toward his protagonist. For me, this movie's ending made Anora into something special.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Picture, Original Screenplay, Editing
My rating: #44 out of 93

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