NEW YORK â After a tumultuous movie year marked by strikes and work stoppages, the Academy Awards showered nominations Tuesday on Christopher Nolanâs blockbuster biopic, âOppenheimer,â which came away with a leading 13 nominations.
Nolanâs three-hour opus, viewed as the best picture frontrunner, received nods for best picture and Nolanâs direction; acting nominations for Cillian Murphy, Robert Downey Jr. and Emily Blunt; and multiple honors for the sweeping craft of the J. Robert Oppenheimer drama.
Recommended Videos
Though Nolan is regarded as the big-canvas auteur of his era, heâs never won an Academy Award â nor have any of his films won best picture. This, though, could be his year. Reflecting on the rarity of his film's success â a lengthy drama dense with talk and the convulsions of history that nevertheless grossed nearly $1 billion â Nolan, in an interview Tuesday, called Oppenheimer "one of the great American stories.â
âI grew up loving Hollywood movies and believing studio filmmaking can take on anything,â said Nolan. âSeeing audiences respond to that this summer was incredibly thrilling and getting this kind of recognition from the academy, I donât know what to say, really. It certainly confirms our faith in what studio filmmaking can be.â
The yearâs biggest hit, âBarbie,â came away with a nominations haul slightly less than its partner in Barbenheimer mania.Greta Gerwigâs feminist comedy, with more than $1.4 billion in ticket sales, was nominated for eight awards, including best picture; Ryan Gosling for best supporting actor; and two best song candidates in âWhat Was I Made Forâ and âIâm Just Ken.â
Gerwig was surprisingly left out of the best director field. She was nominated for best director in 2018 for her solo directorial debut, âLady Bird.â At the time, Gerwig was just the fifth woman nominated for the award. Since then, ChloĂŠ Zhao (âNomadlandâ) and Jane Campion (âThe Power of the Dogâ) have won best director. Before those wins, Kathryn Bigelow (âThe Hurt Locker,â in 2010) was the only woman to win the Oscarâs top filmmaking honor.
Both Yorgos Lanthimosâ Frankenstein riff âPoor Thingsâ and Martin Scorseseâs Osage epic âKillers of the Flower Moonâ were also widely celebrated, with 11 and 10 nods apiece.
Lily Gladstone, star of âKillers of the Flower Moon,â became the first Native American nominated for best actress. For the 10th time, Scorsese was nominated for best director. Leonardo DiCaprio, though, was left out of best actor. The late Robbie Robertson, who died in August, also became the first Indigenous person nominated for best score.
âIt happens to be that Iâm carrying this honor right now (but) itâs all so long overdue,â Gladstone said by phone from Pawhuska, Oklahoma, where she traveled to be close to her character. âItâs a real moment of restoration, placing Indigenous talent in these roles, spotlighting their humanity, their their characters, just the way that all of the sisters exist on screen, I think is shattering a lot of stereotypes people have about Indigenous women, particularly Native American women.â
âPoor Things,â a dark Victorian era fantasy about Bella Baxter's sexual awakening, received nominations for Lanthimos' direction, Emma Stone's leading performance, Mark Ruffalo's supporting performance and widespread nods for the old-school craft of its fantastical design.
The 10 films nominated for best picture were: âOppenheimer,â âBarbie,â âPoor Things,â âKillers of the Flower Moon,â âThe Holdovers,â âMaestro,â âAmerican Fiction,â âPast Lives,â âAnatomy of a Fallâ and âThe Zone of Interest.â
That group, which mirrored the Producers Guild Awards nominees, went much as expected and, as critics noted, a remarkably strong collection of films. For the first time, three of the best picture nominees were directed by women: âPast Livesâ by Celine Song;âAnatomy of a Fall" by Justine Triet, also nominated for best director; and Gerwig's âBarbie.â
But surprises abounded in other categories.
The best actor category had been seen one of the most competitive. In the end, the nominees were Murphy, Paul Giamatti ("The Holdovers"), Jeffrey Wright ("American Fiction"), Bradley Cooper ("Maestro") and Colman Domingo ("Rustin"). Domingo's nomination, for his performance as civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, made him just the second openly gay man to be nominated for playing a gay character, following Ian McKellen for the 1998 film âGods and Monsters.â
âAmerican Fiction,â Cord Jefferson's insightful drama about a frustrated novelist, had an especially good day, collecting five nominations. That included a nod for Sterling K. Brown for best supporting actor. Robert De Niro ("Killers of the Flower Moon") rounded out that category with Downey, Gosling and Ruffalo.
Best actress was also closely contested. Along with Gladstone and Stone, the nominees were Carey Mulligan ("Maestro"), Annette Bening ("Nyad") and Sandra HĂźller (âAnatomy of a Fall"). That left out Margot Robbie, the star of âBarbie," and Fantasia Barrino from âThe Color Purple.â
In supporting actress, the frontrunner Da'Vine Joy Randolph of âThe Holdoversâ continued her march to her first Oscar. She was joined by Blunt, Danielle Brooks ("The Color Purple"), Jodie Foster ("Nyad") and America Ferrera ("Barbie").
Though âThe Color Purple" had set out with larger Oscar hopes, Brooks ended up the film's sole nominee.
âIâm very humbled by it all, because I know, as we all know, you canât do these things by yourself. Thatâs not how it works,â Brooks said by Zoom from New Zealand, where she's shooting a movie. âI thought it was huge shoes to fill just come in after Miss Oprah Winfrey. But now I feel like Iâm doing this for the team Color Purple, you know?â
Lead nominees âOppenheimer," âBarbie,â âPoor Thingsâ and âKillers of the Flower Moonâ made for a maximalist quartet of Oscar heavyweights. Nolanâs sprawling biopic. Gerwigâs near-musical. Scorseseâs pitch-black Western. Lanthimosâ sumptuously designed fantasy. Each utilized a wide spectrum of cinematic tools to tell big, often disturbing big-screen stories. And each â even Appleâs biggest-budgeted movie yet, âKillers of the Flower Moonâ â had robust theatrical releases that saved streaming for months later.
The Associated Press notched its first Oscar nomination in the news organizationâs 178-year history with â20 Days in Mariupol,â Mstyslav Chernovâs harrowing chronicle of the besieged Ukrainian city and of the last international journalists left there after the Russia invasion. The joint production between the AP and PBS' âFrontlineâ was nominated for best documentary, along with âFour Daughters," âBobi Wine: The People's President,â âThe Eternal Memory" and âTo Kill a Tiger.â
The nominees for best international film were: âSociety of the Snowâ (Spain), âThe Zone of Interestâ (United Kingdom), âThe Teachersâ Loungeâ (Germany), âIo Capitanoâ (Italy) and âPerfect Daysâ (Japan).
John Williams notched his 49th Oscar nomination, for the score to âIndiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.â Meanwhile, Godzilla, after seven decades in movies, is going to the Oscars for the first time. âGodzilla Minus Oneâ was nominated for its visual effects.
The best picture collection of films â all of which played in theaters for at least a month, including Netflixâs âMaestroâ â reflected the industryâs rebalancing after years of experimentation during the pandemic. Netflix came away with a commanding 18 nominations, but industry consensus has, for now, turned back to believing cinemas play a vital role in the rollout of most movies. Apple and Amazon, which in 2022 acquired MGM, have each made theatrical releases a priority.
In heaping nominations on âOppenheimer,â Oscar voters are poised to do something they havenât done in a long time: Hand its top award to a big-budget blockbuster. Granted, âOppenheimerâ isnât your average big-screen spectacle, but the academy has for years favored smaller films for best picture, movies like âCODA,ââNomadlandâ and last yearâs winner, âEverything Everywhere All at Once.â Ben Affleckâs 2012 film âArgoâ was the last best picture winner to surpass $100 million domestically. âOppenheimerâ grossed $326.8 million in the U.S. and Canada, and nearly $1 billion globally.
Historically, blockbusters have helped fueled Oscar ratings. Though the pile-up of award shows (an aftereffect of last yearâs strikes ) could be detrimental to the Academy Awards, the Barbenheimer presence could help lift the March 10 telecast on ABC. Jimmy Kimmel is returning as host, with the ceremony moved up to 7 p.m. EST.
___
AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck and AP journalist Brooke Lefferts contributed to this report.
___
For more coverage of the 2024 Oscars, visit https://apnews.com/hub/academy-awards