The Guardian (USA)

Oscars 2021: no real upsets but Chloé Zhao’s Nomadland triumph is a wonderful coup

- Peter Bradshaw

So this strangest of years was matched with the strangest of Oscar ceremonies, a weirdly subdued and anticlimac­tic affair with an ending that had people more discombobu­lated than the final episode of The Sopranos. No central host, none of the usual deployment of clips, and then the evening finished with best actor instead of best picture, leading everyone to expect that it was going to go with a posthumous tribute to Chadwick Boseman for his performanc­e in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. Instead it went – I think justifiabl­y – to Anthony Hopkins for his portrayal of a man with dementia in The Father. But Sir Anthony was not present. No speech. There it all ended.But not before we’d had now heartwrenc­hing tradition of The Pipping of Glenn Close at the Post. Up for best supporting actress, Close once again had to take it on the chin and smile with great generosity and good nature from a seated position when another nominee got the prize and thanked her from the podium. Close’s rather overripe performanc­e as the grizzled grandma in Ron Howard’s Hillbilly Elegy was beaten out by the rival grandma played by the veteran Korean star Youn Yuh-jung in Lee Isaac Chung’s brilliant Minari, and Youn gave us a funny speech making her basically the queen of this year’s awards season.But otherwise #Oscars2021 ran on expected lines with no real upsets to the predicted winners, though it delivered historic wins for a film-maker who is also a woman of colour – Chloé Zhao, director of Nomadland. Nomadland won best picture, best director and best actress for perennial Academy favourite Frances McDormand for her performanc­e as Fern, the woman who in her silver years has to go on the road looking for seasonal work.

In some ways, Nomadland ran both with and against the spirit of the times. Covid has had the world locked down while Nomadland showed people ranging freely around, the camper-van nomads, new American pioneers in a new landscape of financial catastroph­e. But perhaps the film spoke to a new reality of financial woe: the economic crisis of Covid has been as great as the 2008 crash, which is at the centre of Nomadland.

This movie shows people coming to terms with a new reality in the final act of their lives: what they thought would be an uneventful­ly comfortabl­e retirement was to be a reckoning with hardship but also a sense that perhaps the hoarding of income against the challenge of existing in your 60s and 70s had been an illusion. But this trio of wins for Zhao is a wonderful coup for a genuinely original and daring film-maker and it’s a great performanc­e from McDormand.Hopkins deserved his best actor in a strong field for his disturbing performanc­e in The Father, although many would have been happier to see Riz Ahmed get it for his equally heartfelt and intelligen­t portrayal of a man with hearing impairment in Sound of Metal. The Father is a film about something that is set to become one of the great issues in societies where people are living longer: dementia and the stripping away of identity. Hopkins was devastatin­g in this film, especially in its anguished final moments. And again, the best adapted screenplay Oscar for The Father was widely anticipate­d.Daniel Kaluuya’s best supporting actor

Oscar for his muscular and charismati­c performanc­e as the murdered Black Panther leader Fred Hampton in Judas and the Black Messiah cements his reputation as one of cinema’s brightest young stars. Where he had been a slight, vulnerable and almost boyish presence in Jordan Peele’s satire Get Out, now he is more bulky and muscular

 ?? Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AFP/Getty Images ?? Wonderful coup … Frances McDormand and Chloé Zhao with their Oscars.
Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AFP/Getty Images Wonderful coup … Frances McDormand and Chloé Zhao with their Oscars.
 ?? Photograph: Todd Wawrychuk/ AMPAS/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Funny … best supporting actress Youn Yuh-jung.
Photograph: Todd Wawrychuk/ AMPAS/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Funny … best supporting actress Youn Yuh-jung.

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