China Daily

Hollywood braced for best picture photo finish at Oscars

This year’s gala being seen as an opportunit­y to support female filmmaking

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HOLLYWOOD, California — Hollywood is set for a reallife cliffhange­r on Sunday at the Oscars — the race for best picture is coming down to the wire to cap an awards season overshadow­ed by scandal over sexual misconduct in showbiz.

Dark crime comedy Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri has begun to pull away in late betting for the industry’s biggest prize, but Oscarologi­sts believe fairy tale romance The Shape of Water and socially-conscious horror movie Get Out will make it a photo finish.

“I don’t remember a year with so much uncertaint­y. There are at least four strong possibilit­ies to win,” Variety’s awards editor Tim Gray said, adding Christophe­r Nolan’s sweeping war epic Dunkirk to the mix.

The 90th Academy Awards — hosted for the second straight year by late night funnyman Jimmy Kimmel — will be beamed live around the world by ABC from Hollywood’s Dolby Theatre.

The show caps a difficult few months during which the industry has declared war on the pervasive culture of sexual impropriet­y unearthed by the downfall of movie mogul and alleged serial sex attacker Harvey Weinstein.

With the #MeToo and Time’s Up campaigns against sexual misconduct and gender inequality dominating the 2018 awards circuit, this year’s Oscars gala is seen as an opportunit­y for Tinseltown to support female filmmaking.

Greta Gerwig is only the fifth woman in Oscars history to be nominated for best director, but faces tough competitio­n from Guillermo Del Toro, the runaway favorite for The Shape of Water.

There was also the first nod in history for a female cinematogr­apher, Rachel Morrison, who shot Dee Rees’s racial drama Mudbound.

Traditiona­lly, the previous year’s best actor winner would present that statuette, but Casey Affleck, who triumphed in 2017 for Manchester by the Sea, withdrew under a cloud of sexual harassment accusation­s he denies.

Organizers are looking to rebound after last year’s flubbed announceme­nt by Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway of the best picture winner — the trophy was initially given to La La Land, when the actual winner was Moonlight.

Box office record

The Shape of Water, a Cold War-set story of love between a mute cleaning woman and a mystery merman-like creature, tops the nomination­s with 13, although observers expect the spoils to be fairly evenly spread.

Dunkirk heads into Sunday’s gala in second place with eight nods, while Three Billboards picked up seven.

Frances McDormand (Three Billboards) and British veteran Gary Oldman (Darkest Hour), who have dominated the awards season, are expected to bag the lead acting statuettes.

The Oscars come this year with theaters registerin­g the biggest February in domestic box office history, the $996.4 million total largely driven by the record-breaking success of Marvel’s Black Panther.

“Reports on the death of movie theaters have, again, been greatly exaggerate­d,” BoxOffice.com chief analyst Shawn Robbins wrote in a commentary on the new figures.

The Post ($18.1 million), The Shape of Water ($16.1 million) and Three Billboards ($12.2 million) were the month’s top three earners among the best picture nominees.

According to the National Weather Service, the intermitte­nt weekend rain is expected to die down in time for Sunday’s ceremony, as around 3,400 guests descend on Hollywood Boulevard.

 ?? MARK RALSTON / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? People take photos in front of an Oscars themed backdrop on the red carpet on the eve of Sunday’s 90th Oscars ceremony, in Hollywood, California, on Saturday.
MARK RALSTON / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE People take photos in front of an Oscars themed backdrop on the red carpet on the eve of Sunday’s 90th Oscars ceremony, in Hollywood, California, on Saturday.

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