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96th Academy Awards

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96th Academy Awards
Official poster for the 96th Academy Awards
Official poster
DateMarch 10, 2024
SiteDolby Theatre
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Hosted byJimmy Kimmel
Preshow hostsAmelia Dimoldenberg
Produced byRaj Kapoor
Katy Mullan
Directed byHamish Hamilton
Highlights
Most nominationsOppenheimer (13)
TV in the United States
NetworkABC

The 96th Academy Awards is an upcoming ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), which will honor the best films of 2023, and is expected to take place at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, on March 10, 2024.[1]

The ceremony, to be televised in the United States by ABC, will be produced by Raj Kapoor and Katy Mullan, with Hamish Hamilton serving as director.[2] Comedian Jimmy Kimmel will host the show for the fourth time, following the 2017, 2018 and 2023 ceremonies.[3]

The nominations were announced on January 23, 2024. Oppenheimer led with 13 nominations, followed by Poor Things and Killers of the Flower Moon with 11 and 10, respectively.[4][5][6]

Schedule

Upcoming key dates leading up to the 96th Academy Awards
Date Event
February 12, 2024 Nominees luncheon[7]
February 22, 2024 Final voting begins[7]
February 23, 2024 Scientific and Technical Awards[7]
February 27, 2024 Final voting ends[7]
March 10, 2024 Ceremony[7]

Nominees

The nominees for the 96th Academy Awards were announced on January 23, 2024, by actors Zazie Beetz and Jack Quaid at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.[1][8][9][10] The winners will be announced during the awards ceremony on March 10, 2024, on ABC.[1]

The cultural phenomenon of "Barbenheimer" received a total of twenty-one nominations (eight for Barbie and thirteen for Oppenheimer); the two films are competing against each other in six categories, including Best Picture.[5][11][12]

With his nomination for Maestro, Steven Spielberg extended his record for the most Best Picture nominations for an individual to thirteen.[13] The film's co-writer, director and star Bradley Cooper, who became the fifteenth person to direct himself to a nomination (for Best Actor) for A Star Is Born (2018),[a] has now become the fifth person to have done so more than once.[14]

This year's acting nominees featured a record number of LGBTQ+ characters amongst the performances nominated, with a total of seven: Annette Bening, Sterling K. Brown, Cooper, Colman Domingo, Jodie Foster, Sandra Hüller, and Emma Stone. These included portrayals from two openly LGBTQ+ actors (Domingo and Foster).[19] Additionally, one other out[citation needed] actor was nominated: Lily Gladstone, who uses she/they pronouns[20] and is the first openly non-binary actor nominated.[citation needed]

With her Best Actress nomination for Killers of the Flower Moon, Gladstone also became the first Indigenous American actress to be nominated for an Academy Award.[21] At age 81, Martin Scorsese, the film's director, earned his tenth nomination for Best Director,[b] garnering more Oscar nominations for that category (including one prior win) than anyone alive.[22] Scorsese also became the oldest Best Director nominee, eclipsing John Huston,[c] who was 79.[23] Thelma Schoonmaker, the film's editor, earned her ninth nomination for Best Film Editing, surpassing the record for most nominations in this category.[24] Robbie Robertson, the film's composer, earned his first Oscar nomination (for Best Original Score), becoming the sixty-fourth individual to earn a posthumous nomination for a competitive category.[25]

Earning his 54th nomination at age 91, composer John Williams extended his record for the most Oscar nominations by a living person and his record as the oldest nominee.[23] Wes Anderson joined the "five-timers club" as just the fifth person to be nominated in five or more categories, which includes Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Animated Feature, and now Best Live Action Short Film (for The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar).[26] Ten actors received their first Oscar nominations: Emily Blunt, Danielle Brooks, Brown, Domingo, America Ferrera, Gladstone, Hüller, Cillian Murphy, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, and Jeffrey Wright.[27] Brooks became the second actor nominated playing the role of Sofia from The Color Purple, after Oprah Winfrey's Oscar-nominated performance from the 1985 original film; both were nominated in the Best Supporting Actress category.[28] American Fiction stars Wright and Brown became the first Black actors in the Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor categories, respectively, to be nominated for their work in the same film.[26][29] Oppenheimer sound mixer Willie D. Burton cemented his status as the most Oscar-nominated Black below-the-line crew member, with eight nominations (and two prior wins).[26][30][31]

Two directors received their first nominations (with each earning a second nom for their writing): Jonathan Glazer and Justine Triet. Glazer became the first Briton nominated for the trio of directing, writing, and Best International Feature Film;[32] Triet became the eighth woman nominated for Best Director, while sharing her Best Original Screenplay nomination with her longtime partner and first-time nominee, Arthur Harari.[33][34][35] Married writers Samy Burch and Alex Mechanik shared their first noms as well; other first-time writing nominees include David Hemingson, Cord Jefferson, and Celine Song.[36][29][37] The latter also became the first Asian-born woman nominated for Best Original Screenplay.[19][37] Overall, six couples received nominations that they shared together for their respective categories.[35] In addition to the aforementioned writing duos, Greta Gerwig and Noah Baumbach were nominated together for composing the Barbie screenplay—and relocated from the Best Original to the Best Adapted Screenplay category.[35][38] Other couples include: Barbie producers Margot Robbie and Tom Ackerley; Oppenheimer producers Christopher Nolan (also nominated for directing and writing) and Emma Thomas; and Best Animated Short Film nominees Jared Hess and Jerusha Hess.[35]

Four out of the five individuals nominated for Best Director were not born in the United States: Glazer and Nolan are British, Yorgos Lanthimos is Greek, and Triet is French; among the nominees, only New Yorker Scorsese is American-born.[39] The last time only one American-born director made it to that year's Best Director lineup was back in 1997, when Miloš Forman (Czech), Scott Hicks (Australian), Mike Leigh and Anthony Minghella (both English) received Oscar nominations with the latter winning for The English Patient; Joel Coen (for Fargo) was the one American in the category.[39] The only time the Oscars ever solely nominated directors born overseas was in 1988, when directors from Canada, Italy, Sweden, and a pair from the UK competed in the category, with Bernardo Bertolucci ultimately winning for The Last Emperor.[39] However, on nine occasions, including this year's ceremony, all but one director was born overseas; it happened four times in the 1960s alone. As international as these director races may have been, the films helmed by the directors were predominantly in English. Since 1961 (the first year a foreign-language film received a Best Director nomination—Jules Dassin for Never on Sunday), 52% of the Best Director lineups have included a foreign-language film.[39] In that same period, only 15% of Best Actor lineups, 37% of Best Actress lineups, 5% of Supporting Actress lineups, and no Supporting Actor lineups featured a foreign-language international film; this excludes foreign-language performances in American productions.[39] The director category also has more international representation than Best Picture, which has seen less than half the number of international films as Best Director has during the same period.[39]

Stone became the second actress and producer, following Frances McDormand for Nomadland in 2021, to earn both a Best Actress and Best Picture nomination for the same film (Poor Things) in the same year.[40] This is also the first year that three female directors saw their films receive Best Picture nominations: Gerwig with Barbie, Song with Past Lives, and Triet with Anatomy of a Fall. For the fifth consecutive year, at least one of the Best Picture nominees was directed by a woman.[41] Seven of the ten films nominated for Best Picture have at least one female producer; those include Robbie (Barbie), Stone (Poor Things), Thomas (Oppenheimer), Amy Durning and Kristie Macosko Krieger (Maestro), Pamela Koffler and Christine Vachon (Past Lives), Marie-Ange Luciani (Anatomy of a Fall), and Ewa Puszczyńska (The Zone of Interest).[42]

The nominations for Best Sound and Best Visual Effects for Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One and the latter category for Godzilla Minus One marked the first time either franchise had received any Academy Award recognition.[43][44][45][46][47] Special effects supervisor Neil Corbould garnered a rare trifecta of Best Visual Effects nominations in a single year, for his work on The Creator, Napoleon and the aforementioned Mission: Impossible installment.[48]

Awards

Winners will be listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡).[5]

Governors Awards

The Academy held its 14th annual Governors Awards ceremony on January 9, 2024,[d] which was hosted by John Mulaney, during which the following awards were presented:[49][50][51]

Academy Honorary Awards

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award

Films with multiple nominations

Ceremony information

Photo of Jimmy Kimmel in June 2022.
Jimmy Kimmel will host the 96th Academy Awards, his fourth overall.

On October 17, 2023, Raj Kapoor and Katy Mullan were announced as executive producers, with Hamish Hamilton serving as director; Mullan is an executive of Hamilton's production company Done and Dusted.[2] On November 15, Jimmy Kimmel was announced as host, returning for the second consecutive year and fourth Academy Awards overall.[3]

On November 30, 2023, ABC and the Academy announced that the ceremony would be moved up by an hour to begin at 4:00 p.m. PT (7:00 p.m. ET), allowing a half-hour in primetime for a new episode of Abbott Elementary as a lead-out. With this change, the pre-show will be shortened to a single half-hour.[53]

On January 29, 2024, comedian and broadcaster Amelia Dimoldenberg, host of the YouTube interview series Chicken Shop Date, was announced as the social media ambassador and red carpet correspondent. Dimoldenberg will be involved in multiple Oscar season events, including the Oscars Nominees luncheon, where she will participate in an Academy video production with nominees. She will also be involved with an "Oscars 96 Behind the Scenes Tour", in addition to interviewing nominees and other talent present at the Oscars red carpet.[54]

Diversity rules

This will be the first year that the diversity rules for the Best Picture category become mandatory. In June 2020, under its Academy Aperture 2025 initiative, the academy established a set of "representation and inclusion standards" that a film would be required to satisfy in order to compete in the category.[55] However, for the 94th and 95th Academy Awards (films released in 2021 and 2022), filmmakers were not required to fulfill the standards and only needed to submit a confidential "Academy Inclusion Standards" form for data purposes only.[56] There are four general standards, of which a film must satisfy two to be considered for Best Picture: (a) "on-screen representation, themes, and narratives"; (b) "creative leadership and project team"; (c) "industry access and opportunities"; and (d) "audience development".[55]

As explained by Alissa Wilkinson of Vox in 2020, the standards "basically break down into two big buckets: standards promoting more inclusive representation and standards promoting more inclusive employment".[56] The standards are intended to provide greater opportunities for employment, in cast, crew, studio apprenticeships and internships, and development, marketing, publicity, and distribution executives, among "underrepresented" racial and ethnic groups, women, LGBTQ+ people, and persons with cognitive or physical disabilities, or who are deaf or hard of hearing.[55]

Barbie director and actress "snubs"

Following the nomination announcements on January 23, 2024, the "snubbing"[e] of Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie from garnering respective Academy Award nominations for Best Director and Best Actress for Barbie received criticism and backlash,[58] with numerous critics and journalists comparing the situation to the plot of the film itself.[59] Best Supporting Actor nominee Ryan Gosling released a statement in response shortly after the announcements, proclaiming his disappointment.[60] Several other Barbie cast members, including Simu Liu and Best Supporting Actress nominee America Ferrera, expressed their discontent as well.[61][62]

Conversely, four-time Academy Awards host Whoopi Goldberg, a prior Oscar winner herself,[f] criticized the concept of "snubs", stating: "Not everybody gets a prize, and it is subjective. Movies are subjective. The movies you love may not be loved by the people who are voting."[64] 2023 Best Actress Oscar-winner Michelle Yeoh stated: "There's [sic] not enough nominations to go around. The only take is it's so competitive out there and there's no guarantee because you're not the only voter."[65]

Additionally, those disputing the criticism also stated that regardless of Gerwig's and Robbie's omissions, both had previously been nominated for Best Director and Best Actress in 2018 (for Lady Bird and I, Tonya, respectively); Barbie still received eight nominations, including one for each of them in other categories, and more films directed by women were nominated for Best Picture than in previous years.[66][67][68] Gerwig is also the first filmmaker to have her first three solo features — Lady Bird (2017), Little Women (2019), and Barbie — nominated for Best Picture.[69]

During a panel at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, after a special screening of the film on January 30, Robbie responded to the criticism: "There's no way to feel sad when you know you're this blessed. Obviously I think Greta should be nominated as a director, because what she did is a once-in-a-career, once-in-a-lifetime thing, what she pulled off, it really is," Robbie said. "But it's been an incredible year for all the films." She continued on by praising the film, stating: "People's reactions to the movie have been the biggest reward of this entire experience ... I've never been a part of something like this. Not like this. I've done comic book stuff and that gets a big reaction, but this felt very different. It still feels very different. And I can't think of a time when a movie's had this effect on culture. And it's amazing to be in the eye of the storm."[70]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Only Warren Beatty, Charlie Chaplin, Clint Eastwood, and Laurence Olivier (who did it thrice) have accomplished this feat.[14] Technically, however, the Academy rescinded Chaplin's array of nominations at the 1st Academy Awards and, in lieu of any individual accolade, presented him with an all-encompassing Honorary Award to recognize his multitude of achievements instead.[15][16][17] Nonetheless, he did ultimately direct himself to a competitive acting nomination: Best Actor for The Great Dictator (1940).[18]
  2. ^ This tenth nomination only includes Scorsese's accolades within the Best Director category; he has additional nominations for writing and producing. Scorsese now has the second most, surpassing Steven Spielberg, who has 9 for directing (and 2 wins).[22] However, William Wyler maintains the record with 12 nominations (and 3 wins).[23]
  3. ^ At age 79, Huston received his final Best Director nomination for Prizzi's Honor (1985).[23]
  4. ^ Initially scheduled for November 18, 2023, the ceremony was postponed due to the 2023 Hollywood labor disputes.
  5. ^ Although Barbie helmer Greta Gerwig and star Margot Robbie did not earn nominations for Best Director and Best Actress,[57] respectively, they nevertheless each earned one nomination in other categories: Gerwig was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay alongside her spouse, Noah Baumbach; Robbie was nominated for Best Picture as one of the film's producers, also alongside her spouse, Tom Ackerley.[35]
  6. ^ Goldberg won Best Supporting Actress for Ghost in 1991.[63]

References

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