’The Power of the Dog’ leads Oscar nominations
LOS ANGELES
Jane Campion’s gothic Western “The Power of the Dog” led the Oscars nominations on Feb. 8, as the Netflix film fended off big-screen studio movies from a year in which COVID-weary audiences slowly headed back into theaters.
The eerie, psychological drama about a repressed 1920s cattle rancher in Montana earned 12 nods ahead of next month’s Oscars gala, including best director, making Campion the first female auteur nominated twice in Academy Award history.
“The Power of the Dog” was also nominated for best picture, and landed acting nods for Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons and Kodi Smit-McPhee.
Campion was last nominated 28 years ago for “The Piano.”
“I’m so deeply honored. And over the moon to say the least that we were all recognized for our work together,” Smit-McPhee said on Twitter.
The streaming film held off a number of giant cinematic spectacles -- many of which were pushed back into 2021, as theaters were closed the year before due to the coronavirus pandemic in the diverse race for Hollywood’s biggest awards.
Sprawling sci-fi epic “Dune,” which premiered in theaters and on HBO Max simultaneously, landed in second place overall with 10 nods, including one for best picture.
As expected, the adaptation of Frank Herbert’s popular 1965 novel set on a desert planet plagued by monstrous sandworms scored well across technical categories including cinematography, visual effects and sound. But its director Denis Villeneuve was surprisingly overlooked by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Other coveted directing nods went to Kenneth Branagh for black-and-white childhood drama “Belfast” and Steven Spielberg for musical “West Side Story,” with each film securing seven nominations.
Spielberg’s decision to remake the most honored musical in Oscars history had been criticized as unnecessary by some, but it won over voters to earn a best picture nomination, and another for supporting actress for Ariana DeBose as Anita.
The directing category was rounded out by Paul Thomas Anderson for coming-of-age movie “Licorice Pizza,” and Japanese filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi, whose subtitled, three-hour drama “Drive My Car” also earned a best picture nomination, rare for a foreign language film.
As widely predicted, frontrunner Will Smith earned recognition for his portrayal of the father of tennis greats Serena and Venus Williams in “King Richard,” which took six nods overall.
He is up against Cumberbatch, Denzel Washington (“The Tragedy of Macbeth”), Andrew Garfield (“tick, tick...BOOM!”) and Javier Bardem (“Being the Ricardos”).
Lady Gaga was the surprise omission in the best actress category, with “House of Gucci” earning just one nomination for best hair and make-up.
Instead, best actress will be contested by Jessica Chastain (“The Eyes of Tammy Faye”), Olivia Colman (“The Lost Daughter”), Penelope Cruz (“Parallel Mothers”), Nicole Kidman (“Being the Ricardos”) and Kristen Stewart (“Spencer”).
In Madrid, Bardem told reporters that winning would be “impossible” for him, but he has “high hopes” for Cruz’s chances.
The best original song category also featured a number of starry names such as Beyonce, Billie Eilish, Van Morrison and Lin-Manuel Miranda.
The plethora of A-listers among Tuesday’s nominees will be a welcome sight for the Academy, after last year’s Oscars gala -- which featured many smaller movies barely known to the wider public -- suffered from abysmal television ratings.
But hopes that larger-than-life, unapologetically commercial box office hits such as “Spider-Man: No Way Home” and 007 outing “No Time To Die” could break into the best picture race and boost flagging Oscars audiences were thwarted.
The $1.8 billion-grossing “Spider-Man” film landed only a visual effects nomination, while Daniel Craig’s final James Bond film earned three nods, including one for Eilish’s theme song.
The nominated movies, actors and filmmakers were unveiled on Feb. 8 in a pre-dawn live-streamed ceremony hosted by actors Leslie Jordan and Tracee Ellis Ross.
The Academy’s increasingly global membership again recognized non-English-language movies made outside Hollywood, in particular “Drive My Car.”
The movie based on Haruki Murakami’s short story of the same name earned an adapted screenplay nomination, as well as best picture and best director nods, while Norway’s “The Worst Person in the World” grabbed an original screenplay nomination.
Both were nominated for best international feature alongside Italy’s “The Hand of God,” Denmark’s “Flee” and in a first for the tiny Himalayan nation Bhutan’s “Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom.”
And while it was a very good day for Netflix, Apple TV+ also joined the race between traditional Hollywood studios and streamers, earning its first best picture nod for “CODA,” a moving drama about a deaf family and their daughter who can hear.
The 94th Academy Awards gala is scheduled for March 27.