It’s the Holy Grail of Hollywood and you have to earn it: ten feature films are in the running for the Oscar for best film compared to five for the other categories. This shows that the competition is tough. Here is a reminder of the candidates present, including the works of Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, Jonathan Glazer, Alexander Payne and Justine Triet.
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From the race for the atomic bomb to the horrors of Auschwitz, including the adventures of a famous doll or a reanimated corpse with a voracious libido, the variety of contenders for the Oscar for best film this year demonstrates a vintage exceptional. If you missed them, here is a catch-up session to find out the ten candidates for the supreme award.
“American Fiction” by Cord Jefferson
Absolutely hilarious, this comedy mocks the latent racism of progressive elites. Jeffrey Wright plays an African-American writer tired of a publishing industry in the hands of white bourgeois, who only want to hear one type of black story: that of the poverty of difficult neighborhoods, crack cocaine and prisons. Disillusioned, the novelist produces a caricature under a pseudonym. Except that instead of failing, she triumphs…
This acerbic satire, available since February 26, 2024 on Amazon Prime Video, won first prize at the Toronto Film Festival. Jeffrey Wright is nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor and Sterling K. Brown for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
(original version with English subtitles)
“Anatomy of a Fall” by Justine Triet
Palme d’Or in Cannes, Anatomy of a fall, a legal thriller about the collapse of a dysfunctional artist couple, where a writer finds herself accused of the murder of her husband, caused a sensation in the United States, notably winning two Golden Globes. Nominated in five categories (including best director and best actress), Justine Triet’s film is favorite for the Oscar for best original screenplay. Its ingenious promotional campaign, with the dog Messi as the film’s ambassador, may allow it to covet other statuettes.
Until making it the third Palme d’Or to also win the Oscar for best film, like the South Korean film Parasite ? Suspense.
“Barbie” by Greta Gerwig
Appoint barbie was itself a win for the attention-loving Oscars. Greta Gerwig’s feminist satire drew hordes of pink-clad fans into theaters and topped the global box office with $1.4 billion in revenue. No film, even its summer duettist Oppenheimerreleased the same day, only caused as much talk as barbiethanks in particular to an intense marketing campaign.
But can he really win the supreme award, when his director and Margot Robbie, the interpreter of the peroxide doll, have not been nominated? It seems more intended for secondary awards – costumes, best song.
“Winter Break” by Alexander Payne
A moving Christmas story, Winter Break (released in France last December) chronicles the improbable friendship of three lost souls, stuck together for New Year’s Eve in a boarding school in the northeast of the United States in the 1970s. Paul Giamatti plays a psycho-rigid history professor, whose pedantic character hides an intimate wound. A remarkably touching role, which allows him to claim the Oscar for best actor. At his side, Da’Vine Joy Randolph is unanimously acclaimed as an African-American cook grieving the loss of her son, who died in the Vietnam War. The statuette for best supporting actress seems to be hers.
Delicate and subtle, this old-fashioned comedy from Alexander Payne seems best placed to overthrow the ultra-favorite Oppenheimer. But the task remains difficult…
“Killers of the Flower Moon” by Martin Scorsese
It lasts three and a half hours. But Killers of the Flower Moon, Martin Scorsese’s historical mural about the killings of Native Americans in 1920s Oklahoma was simply too beautiful and too important to ignore. Even more than Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, it is the actress Lily Gladstone who bursts into the screen, as a native enriched by the oil of her land and the victim of a toxic love.
This role could earn her an Oscar for best actress.
“Maestro” by Bradley Cooper
Often nominated, but never rewarded, Bradley Cooper hoped to ward off fate with Maestro. For this biopic of legendary conductor Leonard Bernstein, he is both in front of and behind the camera and received seven nominations.
But the film will probably only walk away with the Oscar for best makeup. A bittersweet reward in view of the controversy which preceded its release: the prominent false nose worn by the actor had been accused of reinforcing anti-Semitic stereotypes, and the composer’s children had to intervene to defend him.
“Oppenheimer” by Christopher Nolan
Oppenheimer :rHardly a film will have arrived at the Oscars with such solid favorite status. Christopher Nolan’s portrait of the father of the atomic bomb claims a billion dollars in revenue and won almost all the Hollywood awards of the season.
If his name doesn’t come out of the envelope on Sunday, it would be the biggest surprise since 2017, when La La Land was mistakenly announced as best film, instead of Moonlight.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2DdcW8TNEO
“Past Lives – Our lives before” by Celine Song
Past Lives – Our lives before is the film least likely to win, and yet it moved the audience at the Sundance festival to tears. Directed by Celine Song, this drama tells the story of two Korean soulmates, who find themselves in New York after being separated for many years by the whirlwind of life. A powerful reflection on destiny and the chances capable of forging an existence.
“Poor Creatures” by Yorgos Lanthimos
This baroque tale was crowned at the Venice Film Festival, and plays the originality card. In Poor creatures by Yorgos Lanthimos, we follow Emma Stone in the role of a female Frankenstein’s monster. A corpse brought back to life with a child’s brain, this creature with a devouring libido travels through 19th century Europe, in a universe with a retrofuturist aesthetic. The emancipation of this being without shame or modesty constantly comes up against the misogyny of the world.
Absurd and funny, this feminist comedy marks the second collaboration of Yorgos Lanthimos with Emma Stone, after The Favorite. It could allow her to win a new Oscar for best actress, after that obtained for La La Land.
“The Area of Interest” by Jonathan Glazer
This drama makes you feel the full horror of the Holocaust, without ever showing it. A strong bias, with which Jonathan Glazer follows the life of a family of Nazis whose father commands the Auschwitz camp. Just on the other side of the wall, they live a routine existence in their villa with swimming pool, flower beds and vegetable garden, and remain completely impervious to the screams behind the barbed wire.
The Area of Interest is a tour de force on the banality of evil which won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival. It is widely considered for the Oscar for best international film.