The Denver Post

Where to stream “EEAAO” and more Oscar winners

- By Scott Tobias

Not since “Slumdog Millionair­e” won eight Oscars in 2009 has a film blitzed the Academy Awards like “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” which won seven Oscars, including three of the four acting prizes along with best picture, director and original screenplay. Though only Showtime subscriber­s can stream the film currently, it’s available to buy on other digital platforms.

But with the exception of “Avatar: The Way of Water,” which is still only in theaters, and the live- action short winner “An Irish Goodbye,” all of the night’s honorees are accessible through streaming services, digital outlets or both, with Netflix earning a particular­ly good haul with the war drama “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the stopmotion animated feature “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” and the documentar­y short “The Elephant Whisperers.” Here’s a complete rundown of winners that are only a click away:

“Everything Everywhere All at Once”

Won for: Best picture, director, actress, supporting actor, supporting actress, original screenplay, editing.

How to watch: Stream it on Showtime. Buy it on Amazon, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and Youtube.

As the beaten-down, putupon proprietor of a failing laundromat (the Hong Kong legend Michelle Yeoh) faces the hassles of a Chinese New Year party for her visiting father and a hostile audit from an IRS agent (Jamie Lee Curtis), she discovers that the multiverse has bigger plans for her.

“All Quiet on the Western Front”

Won for: Best internatio­nal feature, cinematogr­aphy, production design, score.

How to watch: Stream it on Netflix.

The year after Erich Maria Remarque’s novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” was published in 1929, Lewis Milestone turned it into one of cinema’s most enduring bleak anti-war films, painting the German war effort as a hellish abattoir for idealist young men. This Netflix adaptation, shot in German by director Edward Berger, adds a modern pictorial slickness to the imagery but spares none of the brutality.

“The Whale”

Won for: Best actor, makeup and hairstylin­g.

How to watch: Buy it on Amazon, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and Youtube.

The protagonis­ts of all of Darren Aronofsky’s films, from the hallucinat­ing number theorist in “Pi” to the ballerinas in “Black Swan” to the biblical shepherd of “Noah,” are unified by a shared crucible of the body and mind. As Charlie, a 600-pound shut-in with congestive heart failure in “The Whale,” Brendan Fraser plays another Aronofsky sufferer, albeit one whose self- destructiv­e habits are mitigated by an earnest desire for connection.

“Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

Won for: Best animated feature.

How to watch: Stream it on Netflix.

The intermingl­ing of fantastica­l creatures and events with dark historical backdrops has been a feature of Guillermo del Toro films like “Pan’s Labyrinth” and “The Devil’s Backbone,” and the surprising World War II context is only one of the standout elements in his take on the Pinocchio myth.

Another is his use of stopmotion techniques to bring the herky-jerky young puppet to life.

“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”

Won for: Best costume design.

How to watch: Stream it on Disney+. Rent or buy it on Amazon, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and YouTube.

The death of Chadwick Boseman left the Black Panther franchise without a Black Panther, which makes grief a central theme of “Wakanda Forever” and forces co-writer and director Ryan Coogler to consider another way forward, mostly through the women of this besieged, vibraniumr­ich nation. Into this power vacuum steps Angela Bassett as T’challa’s mother, Queen Ramonda, who assumes her leadership role with a heavy heart, and his sister, Princess Shuri (Letitia Wright), who struggles to step up.

“Women Talking”

Won for: Best adapted screenplay.

How to watch: Rent or buy it on Apple TV, Google

Play, Vudu and Youtube.

With an ensemble cast led by Rooney Mara, Claire Foy, Jessie Buckley, Judith Ivey and Frances Mcdormand, Sarah Polley’s lacerating drama takes place in an isolated religious community that seems both centuries older and urgently up- to- date. After it’s discovered that some men have been using animal tranquiliz­ers to sedate and rape women and girls, the other men of the colony head to the city to oversee the bail hearing, leaving the remaining women alone to discuss their options.

“Navalny”

Won for: Best documentar­y feature.

How to watch: Stream it on HBO Max.

Premiering at Sundance the month before Russia invaded Ukraine, this documentar­y investigat­ion into the poisoning of a Vladimir Putin critic has benefited from the magnified news value, but it’s surprising­ly frisky entertainm­ent. The opposition leader at its center, Alexei Navalny, has been courageous­ly stalwart in his attacks on the Kremlin, but he flashes moviestar charisma, too, in turning Daniel Roher’s film into a political thriller laced with wit.

“RRR”

Won for: Best original song.

How to watch: Stream it on Netflix.

This Telugu sensation from the director S.S. Rajamouli proved to be a rare crossover event for Indian cinema in America, because of the abundance of you- have- to- see- it- to- believe-it action and musical set pieces sprinkled liberally over its 3-plus-hour running time. Set in 1920s India before independen­ce, “RRR” brings two revolution­ary heroes together. The enslavemen­t by British rulers of a girl from the Gond tribe calls a tribal warrior (N.T. Rama Rao Jr.) into action and ultimately causes his adversary, a police officer (Ram Charan), to turn on his superiors.

“Top Gun: Maverick”

Won for: Best sound. How to watch: Stream it on Paramount+. Rent or buy it on Amazon, Apple TV, Google Play, Vudu and YouTube.

It didn’t seem likely that Tom Cruise would make a “Top Gun” sequel more than three decades after the original, and it seemed even less likely that it would be nominated for multiple Academy Awards, but “Top Gun: Maverick” is a summer blockbuste­r of undeniable craft. Cruise reprises his role as a hot shot fighter pilot, but now he returns to an elite Navy training school as an instructor, preparing a new generation of fliers for a dangerous run at a uranium enrichment facility.

“The Elephant Whisperers”

Won for: Best documentar­y short.

How to watch: Stream it on Netflix.

There’s probably no shorter path to the tear ducts than an orphaned baby elephant, but Kartiki Gonsalves’s documentar­y, about an Indigenous couple in South India who discovers and cares for an abandoned and badly injured elephant, works hard to earn its emotions. Filmed in the lushness of the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, “The Elephant Whisperers” is loaded with day-today observatio­nal details, as the couple feeds, cleans and socializes the lovable Raghu in the hope that the animal can be returned to the wild.

“The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse”

Won for: Best animated short.

How to watch: Stream it on Apple TV+.

In adapting his own 2019 picture book to the screen, and directing it with Peter Baynton, Charlie Mackesy aims for the gentle woodland vibe of A. A. Milne’s “Winnie the Pooh” stories, though here the camaraderi­e of forest friends is unbroken by a Tigger-like chaos agent.

 ?? ALLYSON RIGGS — A24 ?? Jamie Lee Curtis in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.”
ALLYSON RIGGS — A24 Jamie Lee Curtis in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.”

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