It’s time to argue about movies again. This morning, the nominees for the 95th Academy Awards were unveiled at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ annual announcement event. This year the announcement honors went to Riz Ahmed—a recent Best Actor nominee of The Sound of Metal and recent winner for his short film “The Long Goodbye”—and Allison Williams. (Williams has yet to be nominated for an Oscar but, hey, it’s not too early to start the drumbeat for her work in M3GAN.) As usual, the nominations were a mix of the predictable and the surprising with plenty of shoo-ins, like Cate Blanchett’s Best Actress nomination for TÁR and Steven Spielberg’s nod for The Fabelmans, but also some unexpected inclusions and exclusions. Here are a few of the most notable takeaways from this year’s list of nominees.
The Everything Everywhere All at Once love is real. It’s not surprising that Everything Everywhere All at Once has been successful, but the scale of that success remains kind of staggering. The film debuted to an appreciative audience at SXSW last March shortly before beginning a long, successful theatrical run. A defiantly odd movie starring Michelle Yeoh, a revered actress who’s rarely the lead in English language movies, and directed by the innovative team of Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, it looked likely to become a cult favorite rather than a bonafide hit. Ten months later, however, it’s been a box office smash that’s slowly accumulated honors, including Golden Globe awards for Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan for, respectively, Best Actress, Comedy or Musical and Best Supporting Actor, Comedy or Musical.
Its success in picking up nominations today isn’t surprising but, as with seemingly every other aspect of EEAAO, the volume of nominations is. Yeoh and Kwan were joined by Jamie Lee Curtis and Stephanie Hsu, who were both nominated in the Best Supporting Actress field. The film is also up for Best Picture, Best Director(s), Best Original Screenplay, and four other prizes for a total of eleven nominations. Could this be a sweep? Maybe. But if the Globes are any bellwether (and, to be fair, they’re often not) the film might have to content itself with acting prizes. Then again, this movie has defied expectations at every turn, so who knows?
Dark horse campaigns, large and small, paid off. The nine nominations for All Quiet on the Western Front, a film that barely played in theaters or attracted much attention of any kind, can be easily explained with one word: Netflix. Make that two words: Netflix money. The first German language adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque’s classic 1929 novel about the experiences of young German soldiers in World War I (which was previously adapted into a harrowing Best Picture-winning film in 1930 by Lewis Milestone) is Netflix’s best hope for Oscar glory this year. It’s benefitted from the streamer’s all-chips-in campaign in the form of nine nominations. (That puts it behind EEAAO and tied for second place with The Banshees of Inisherin.)
By contrast, Andrea Riseborough’s (sort of) surprise nomination for To Leslie was driven not by studio money but by word-of-mouth. Riseborough has benefitted from support from fellow actors like Edward Norton and Kate Winslet — who’ve hosted screenings and Q&As — a celeb-driven push that extended to a social media campaign of tweets referring to it as a “small film with a giant heart” and variations of that phrasing. It’s easy to get cynical and note that Riseborough shares representation with some (but not all) with those supporting her. But she’s also a terrific actress who’s been doing remarkable, often under-the-radar work for years. This might just be a case of all that hard work being recognized (with more than a touch of behind-the-scenes coordination).