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Here are all the Canadian Oscar nominees to cheer for at the Academy Awards

- Kevin Maimann

The 96th Academy Awards are coming up this weekend, and there is no shortage of Canadian nom‐ inees.

One of the country's biggest stars, Ryan Gosling, will be front and centre at Sunday's ceremony with a highly anticipate­d perfor‐ mance of the power ballad I'm Just Ken - in the running for best original song - from the blockbuste­r Barbie.

Here are some of the Canadians who will be com‐ peting for Hollywood's top prizes Sunday.

Ryan Gosling

Best supporting actor, Barbie

Barbie was 2023's top grossing film, raking in nearly $1.5 billion U.S. and notching eight Academy Award nomi‐ nations, including one for best picture.

Hailing from London, Ont., Gosling is known for starring in films including Dri‐ ve, The Notebook and Blade Runner 2049. Not everyone was happy to see him get the Oscars nod this year, how‐ ever, with some Barbie fans arguing that lead actress Margot Robbie and director Greta Gerwig were unfairly snubbed. Gosling said he was "disappoint­ed" by their exclusion but still honoured to be nominated.

WATCH | The trailer for Barbie:

Celine Song

Best original screenplay, Past Lives

The acclaimed playwright, who moved from South Ko‐ rea to Markham, Ont., at age 12, has seen a meteoric rise to success in her move to film, earning an Oscar nod for her feature directoria­l de‐ but Past Lives.

Written and directed by Song, the film tells the story of a Korean woman who emi‐ grated to Canada as a child and has her childhood sweet‐ heart from Seoul show up in New York, where she lives with her American husband. Song saysPast Lives, which garnered rave reviews at last summer's Sundance Festival, is a semi-autobiogra­phical tale.

WATCH | The trailer for Past Lives:

Nisha Pahuja

Best documentar­y fea‐ ture film, To Kill a Tiger

The Toronto-based direc‐ tor spent eight years working on this documentar­y that fol‐ lows Ranjit, a man from Jharkhand, India, as he seeks justice for his teenage daugh‐ ter, who was brutally sexually assaulted in an event that fiercely divided their village.

Pahuja, whose 2012 docu‐ mentary The World Before Her won numerous Canadian film festival awards, raised hundreds of thousands of dollars and drummed up sev‐ eral star endorsemen­ts to fund To Kill a Tiger's distribu‐ tion, and the film is sched‐ uled to hit Netflix Friday.

"It's been a long, long road. And Netflix was the ic‐ ing on the cake," Pahuja said to CBC's Eli Glasner Thursday after arriving in Los Angeles for this weekend's festivitie­s. "It was unexpected." Canadi‐ an producers Cornelia Prin‐ cipe and David Oppenheim are also nominated alongside Pahuja.

WATCH | The trailer for To Kill a Tiger:

Robbie Robertson

Best original score, Killers of the Flower Moon

Martin Scorsese dedi‐ cated the epic western drama Killers of the Flower Moon to Robertson, a legen‐ dary Toronto musician who completed the film's score shortly before his death in August at age 80, marking the end of a storied career.

Robertson played guitar and sang in The Band in the 1970s and also slung the axe in Bob Dylan's band for sev‐ eral years, as well as scoring numerous films dating back to 1980. Killers of the Flower Moon, starring Leonardo Di‐ Caprio, Lily Gladstone and

Robert DeNiro, has received a whopping 10 Oscar nomi‐ nations.

WATCH | The trailer for Killers of the Flower Moon: Vincent René-Lortie

Best live action short, Invincible

The Montreal director, nominated alongside pro‐ ducer Samuel Caron, said it was the "craziest morning" of his life when he learned In‐ vincible had been nominated in the live-action short film category. Not bad for the first release from his production company, Telescope Films.

The 30-minute film was inspired by the true story of René-Lortie's childhood friend, who died at age 14, and follows a teenage boy who was incarcerat­ed in a youth detention centre and will go to great lengths to avoid having to go back after a weekend out on furlough.

"Everything has been a to‐ tal surprise for us since we've been nominated," René-Lor‐ tie told CBC News on Thurs‐ day. "The word that we keep repeating is surreal, because it's our first film together so it is quite surreal what we're living right now."

WATCH | The trailer for

Invincible:

Ben Proudfoot

Best documentar­y short film, The Last Repair Shop

Proudfoot, originally from Halifax, co-directed The Last Repair Shop with L.A.'s Kris

Bowers to tell the story of kids whose lives have been changed by the L.A. Unified School District Musical In‐ strument Repair Shop, where technician­s service thou‐ sands of instrument­s each year free of charge for more than 1,300 schools across the city.

Proudfoot previously won an Oscar in 2022 for his short documentar­y The Queen of Basketball, and said the thrill of an Oscar nomination never diminishes. "It's always exciting. New new film, new story, new group of people you get to spend time with and go through this exciting process with," Proudfoot said Thursday. "So it's been an amazing thrill, just as always.

WATCH | The trailer for The Last Repair Shop:

Troy Quane

Best animated feature film, Nimona

An adaptation of the sci-fi graphic novel of the same name, Nimona was almost crushed before its release. Initially produced by Blue Sky studios, Disney purchased the studio in 2021 and an‐ nounced it was shutting down the studio and the film's production.

Former staff members later alleged Disney leader‐ ship pushed back on the film's 2SLGBTQ+ themes. Quane and co-director Nick Bruno were brought on after Annapurna Pictures picked it up in 2022, making it the first release for the company's new animation division.

"We went from this movie not existing, to standing shoulder to shoulder at the heights of what this industry has to celebrate," Quane said Thursday, calling Nimona "the dark horse nomination." Canadian co-producer Julie Zackary is also nominated alongside Quane.

WATCH | The trailer for Nimona:

Jeff Sutherland and Stephen Ceretti

Best visual effects, Mis‐ sion Impossible and Guardians of the Galaxy 3

Sutherland, a three-time Oscar winner and grad of Ot‐ tawa's Carleton University, is up for his work on the Tom Cruise blockbuste­r Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One, while Ceretti, who served as visual effects su‐ pervisor on major films like The Matrix sequels and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, is hoping for his first win for his work on Marvel flick Guardians of the Galaxy 3.

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