The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Cruise outshines rivals as Academy readies for Oscars

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LOS ANGELES: Tom Cruise lived up to his billing as the “last true movie star” as nearly 200 of this year’s Oscar nominees gathered to celebrate – and size up their competitio­n – at the Academy’s boozy annual luncheon Monday.

In a room packed with A-listers such as Steven Spielberg and Cate Blanche , there was no doubt Cruise remained the biggest draw, with a crowd of wellwisher­s from Hollywood moguls to Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai lining up to greet him throughout the event.

Cruise is nominated this year as a producer of “Top Gun: Maverick,” in which he also starred. The film is considered a growing frontrunne­r for the best picture Oscar – Hollywood’s most prestigiou­s prize.

“It’s been incredible... I just want to get people into theaters,” Cruise told AFP.

“But this is lovely,” he admi ed, motioning to the Beverly Hills ballroom, packed with Oscar nominees and Academy voters, and ki ed out with giant golden statue es and open champagne bars.

The 95th Academy Awards will be held on March 12.

Academy voters this year handed out various nomination­s for box office smash hits such as “Maverick,” “Avatar:

The Way of Water” and “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” – raising hopes that Oscars TV audiences will pick back up.

“The awards gods have smiled on us – there’s nothing we can do about that,” joked Glenn Weiss, who is returning to produce next month’s Oscars telecast ceremony.

During her luncheon speech, Academy president Janet Yang also reiterated her wish to leave behind the “unpreceden­ted” controvers­y of last year, when Will Smith infamously slapped Chris Rock live on the Oscars stage before being banned.

“What happened on stage was totally unacceptab­le. And the response from our organizati­on was inadequate,” she said.

Smith was allowed to remain at the Oscars and accept his best actor prize a er striking Rock, and was only later banned from a ending the Academy Awards for a decade.

The Academy “must actively compassion­ately and decisively” in times of crisis, said Yang, to applause.

A er lunch, the names of all 182 a ending nominees, plus directors representi­ng their countries in the internatio­nal feature film category, were read out, and the nominees posed for the traditiona­l, giant-sized “class photo.”

“Everything Everywhere All At Once,” a quirky sci-fi with a predominan­tly Asian cast which is many pundits’ tip for best picture winner, earned the most nomination­s this year with 11, and its cast received many of the loudest cheers on Monday.

“We paid them a lot of money to do that!” joked best actress nominee Michelle Yeoh, describing the indie film’s giant success as “a dream come true.”

Colin Farrell and Austin Butler, best actor nominees and stars of best picture rivals “The Banshees of Inisherin” and “Elvis,” also drew raucous cheers from the luncheon crowd.

‘American dream’

Notable by her absence Monday was Andrea Riseboroug­h, who controvers­ially earned a coveted best actress nomination a er an intense, last-minute social media campaign mounted by prominent celebritie­s.

But among the nominees present was Kazuo Ishiguro, nominated for writing the screenplay of British drama “Living,” some five years a er he won the Nobel Prize in Literature in Stockholm. “This is very different... This is like some version of the American dream.

So many people dream about being here,” he said. “The Oscars are more like an election – there’s a lot more campaignin­g” than for other famous awards, he added.

His fellow Nobel prizewinne­r, Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai, a ended as an executive producer of “Stranger at the Gate,” a short documentar­y about a US Marine veteran who plo ed to blow up a mosque in his hometown. “It’s surreal,” she told AFP a er meeting Cruise. “I’ve seen him on the screen and now I’m seeing him in person.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Michelle Yeoh arrives for the 95th Annual Oscars Nominees Luncheon at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.
— AFP photo Michelle Yeoh arrives for the 95th Annual Oscars Nominees Luncheon at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.
 ?? ?? Malala Yousafzai (le ) and Tom Cruise arrive at the 95th Annual Oscars Nominees Luncheon at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California.
Malala Yousafzai (le ) and Tom Cruise arrive at the 95th Annual Oscars Nominees Luncheon at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California.

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