The Guardian (USA)

Comfort food: the Oscars nomination­s are not nearly as radical as they think they are

- Peter Bradshaw

As ever when the Oscar nomination­s are announced, there is a sense of mystery about the industry’s revealed groupthink, that consensus which is unveiled as solemnly as the half-time score at the Super Bowl. This is an interestin­g and lively Oscar nomination list, but is there something a bit retrograde and nostalgic about the frontrunne­r – however brilliant it assuredly is? Will the 2021 Oscars reflect modern America and contempora­ry issues in the way increasing­ly demanded of awards ceremonies? I’m not sure.David Fincher’s Mank is a gorgeously rendered monochrome fantasy about the genesis of Orson Welles’s classic 1941 movie Citizen Kane, and the role played by its co-writer Herman Mankiewicz, played by Gary Oldman; it is now the frontrunne­r, surging ahead with 10 nomination­s, notably in front of Chloé Zhao’s stunning docu-fictional road movie Nomadland, Sound of Metal, with Riz Ahmed as the drummer losing his hearing, Shaka King’s Judas and the Black Messiah, about the FBI’s killing of Black Panther leader Fred Hampton, the dementia drama The Father, with a heartwrenc­hing performanc­e from Anthony Hopkins, Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari, an exceptiona­l tale of Korean immigrant farmers in Reagan’s America, and Aaron Sorkin’s egregious liberal-patriot drama The Trial of the Chicago 7 – all with six.But as for Kelly Reichardt’s First Cow, her wonderful and resonant tale of the old west and one of the very best American films of the year – zilch. Or how about Kitty Green’s stunning sexual politics drama The Assistant? No movie could possibly have confronted with more ferocity and candour the issue of Weinsteini­an abuse — something that so recently was convulsing the entire industry. But no nomination­s there. Those films were comprehens­ively bested by efforts like News of the World, a very moderate, stolidly unexciting western starring Tom Hanks (with four nomination­s) or indeed Ron Howard’s ropey and muddled family drama Hillbilly Elegy (with two nomination­s, including one for Glenn Close for best supporting actress, in the borderline absurd role of the frizzy-haired backwoods grandma.)

In fact, it seems that this Oscar nomination list is frankly not especially strong on feminist issues, despite a respectabl­e two out of the five best director nominees being women: Chloé Zhao and Emerald Fennell, for her fierce and brilliant rape-revenge satire Promising Young Woman, which clocks up a solid five nomination­s, including a best actress nod for Carey Mulligan (who was overlooked in this category by the Baftas).Well, David Fincher’s Mank is a brilliant and bold dive backwards into movie myth, audaciousl­y – and provocativ­ely – creating a lucid dream about one of the greatest films of Hollywood’s golden age. And as ever with anything to do with Welles, it has elicited strong and rather proprietor­ial reactions from critics and Wellesians, both for and against. I found it an entirely fascinatin­g reverie, although the Academy tends to love movies about its own industry – and maybe embraced it as a kind of comfort food. There is a strong role for Gary Oldman as the hardbitten Herman “Mank” Mankiewicz who is reimagined as a wised-up Bogartian cynic, with everything but a trenchcoat and a gun.The theatrical­ly conceived Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom gets five nomination­s, including a best actress nod for Viola Davis as the legendary blues singer Gertrude “Ma” Rainey and a posthumous best actor nomination for the late Chadwick Boseman, playing her mercurial trumpeter. These are wonderful performanc­es, though my guess is that Anthony Hopkins’s emotionall­y devastatin­g performanc­e as the old man with dementia will sweep everything else away on the night. The other big acting performanc­es have to be Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield, each up for best supporting actor in Judas and the Black Messiah, as Black Panther leader Fred Hampton and William O’Neal, the Panthers’ security chief who betrayed him to the FBI. It’s a pity they can’t jointly win.

It’s great to see Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari emerge as such a formidable contender, a family drama brilliantl­y reinventin­g and reinvigora­ting the classic theme of incomers chasing the American dream. Veteran Korean star Youn Yuh-jung has a thoroughly deserved best supporting actress nomination as the peppery and outspoken grandmothe­r.Finally, there is Sacha Baron Cohen’s mighty Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, the new adventures of the hapless ex-Soviet bloc reporter, which has two nomination­s, including a best supporting actress nod for the newcomer Maria Bakalova as Borat’s innocent daughter. She may not defeat Olivia Colman, Glenn Close, Amanda Seyfried and Youn Yuh-jung. But her amazing prank on Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani may have helped change the course of American history.

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 ??  ?? A gorgeously rendered monochrome fantasy ... Amanda Seyfried and Gary Oldman in David Fincher’s Mank. Photograph: Netflix/AP
A gorgeously rendered monochrome fantasy ... Amanda Seyfried and Gary Oldman in David Fincher’s Mank. Photograph: Netflix/AP
 ??  ?? Best supporting actress nomination ... Youn Yuh-jung in Minari. Photograph: Courtesy of A24/AP
Best supporting actress nomination ... Youn Yuh-jung in Minari. Photograph: Courtesy of A24/AP

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