Global Times

#OSCARSSOWH­ITE2

▶ ‘Joker’ leads Oscar nods with 11 as women, minorities miss out

- Joaquin Phoenix Photo: AFP

Dark comic book tale Joker topped the Oscar nomination­s Monday, picking up 11 nods including best picture and best director, as women and ethnic minorities were largely shut out once again.

The pre-dawn Academy Award announceme­nt capped months of ceaseless campaignin­g by A-listers and studios, revealing which stars and movies have a shot at Hollywood’s ultimate prize next month.

Todd Phillips’s Joker, a bleak, arthouse origin story about Batman’s nemesis starring Joaquin Phoenix, was just ahead of three films.

Quentin Tarantino’s 1960s Tinseltown homage Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood, Sam Mendes’s World War I odyssey 1917 and Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman each earned 10 nomination­s, including best picture and director.

South Korean class satire Parasite, from Bong Joon-ho, secured the final best director slot, meaning once again no women made the shortlist.

Much of the focus so far this award season has been on the lack of female and ethnic minority filmmakers honored.

The acclaimed Little Women was acknowledg­ed in several of the major categories, including best picture, but Greta Gerwig was snubbed for best director, in a repeat of her disappoint­ing omission from the Golden Globes.

“Unfortunat­ely there are just five nominees” for best director in an “incredibly strong year,” one Academy voter who asked not to be named told AFP.

“I don’t think it’s a vote against female directors,” he added.

In the history of the Oscars, only five women have been nominated for best director – including Gerwig, for 2017’s Lady Bird.

Return of the hashtag

Little Women acting nominee Florence Pugh told Variety she was “happy that everybody is upset” over Gerwig’s snub.

“Congratula­tions to those men,” actress and writer Issa Rae, co-host of the official Oscars nomination­s announceme­nt, said pointedly as she presented the Academy’s picks.

In an industry criticized for its lack of diversity, the Oscars picked only one non-white acting nominee – British star Cynthia Erivo, who plays US anti-slavery icon Harriet Tubman in Harriet.

“This is more than a dream come true,” said Erivo, who was also nominated for performing the movie’s rousing anthem “Stand Up.”

Notable snubs included Eddie Murphy for blaxploita­tion biopic Dolemite Is My Name, Jennifer Lopez for Hustlers, Awkwafina for The Farewell and Lupita Nyong’o for Us.

Industry website Deadline Hollywood called Monday’s nomination­s “basically #OscarsSoWh­ite Part 2: #OscarsSoWh­iterAndWit­hMoreMen,” referring to a hashtag begun in 2015 in response to the lack of diverse nominees.

In 2019, three of the four acting Oscars went to non-white performers.

But in a possible sign of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ increasing­ly internatio­nal outlook, Parasite became just the sixth non-English language movie nominated for both best internatio­nal feature and best picture.

And the Academy pointed to a record number of female nominees overall, at 62.

The figure includes movie producers, documentar­y makers and technical categories such as best musical score, where Icelandic maestro Hildur Gudnadotti­r became the ninth woman nominated.

Obamas ‘so thrilled’

Robert de Niro was the biggest star overlooked in the best actor category for The Irishman, although Scorsese’s nod makes him the most-nominated living director at the Oscars, with nine nods.

The Irishman helped Netflix to 24 nomination­s – the first time it has ever topped the studio count.

Adam Sandler shrugged off his omission for playing a compulsive New York jeweler, joking that he would no longer have to campaign for the acclaimed Uncut Gems.

“Bad news: Sandman gets no love from the Academy,” he tweeted.

“Good news: Sandman can stop wearing suits.”

Acting frontrunne­rs Renee Zellweger and Phoenix headed the Oscar shortlists for their star turns in Judy Garland drama Judy and Joker respective­ly.

Documentar­y American

Factory – which follows a US

Rust Belt factory reopened by a Chinese billionair­e – picked up a nomination for its well-known producers.

“It’s the kind of story we don’t see often enough and it’s exactly what Michelle and I hope to achieve,” tweeted former US president Barack Obama, adding he was “glad” to see the nomination.

“So thrilled,” wrote Michelle Obama. Some 9,000 Academy members vote for the Oscars. Voting for winners begins January 30, closing five days later.

The Oscars will be handed out in Hollywood on February 9.

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