The Guardian (USA)

Oscar nomination­s triumph confirms The Power of the Dog’s classic status

- Peter Bradshaw

With an almighty clang, Jane Campion has hit that tipping point at which the awards-season groupthink clusters around one particular movie. Her western psychodram­a The Power of the Dog leads the tally list with a whopping 12 nomination­s. It is about a toxically dysfunctio­nal confrontat­ion between a rancher played by Benedict Cumberbatc­h in 1920s Montana and his sisterin-law, played by Kirsten Dunst, brother played by Jesse Plemons and his brother’s sensitive stepson played by Kodi Smit-McPhee.

Clearly, the Academy has responded to the classic quality of The Power of the Dog: the way it speaks to US culture and history and positions itself unambiguou­sly in the heartland, but a heartland coloured and contorted by anger and sadness, rather like Chloé Zhao’s much-garlanded Nomadland did last year. It’s a movie that reminded me more than a little of the work of George Stevens, though with a 21st-century twist. It is interestin­g that the director comes from outside the US, and so does its leading man: those tokens of Americanne­ss are being imagined and fabricated by outsiders.

Dune, with 10 nomination­s including best picture, is a film that displays its own “American classic” credential­s: it is an eerie, wonderful spectacle orchestrat­ed by Denis Villeneuve (who is not rewarded with a best director nomination) from the iconic Frank Herbert

SF novel about a colonial imposition of power on a distant planet due to its fabulous mineral wealth.Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast, inspired by his own childhood in Troubles-era Northern Ireland, comes jointly into the “bronze” medal position with seven nomination­s. This film has been subject to the annual tradition of the awardsseas­on columnist backlash, in which pundits take against the consensus around a certain film. The admittedly warm-hearted and gentle quality of Belfast (so different from the accepted mode of angry despair) has been held against it – although I can think of two Belfast-born or Belfast-raised commentato­rs who support this film. My personal theory is that the success of the TV comedy Derry Girls has moved the dial about what’s considered the correct tone for depicting this subject. Steven Spielberg’s glorious West Side Story gets seven nomination­s as well, and perhaps its awards-season gleam will persuade people to see this wonderful movie.

Elsewhere, King Richard, with six nomination­s, is a movie that, although not critically fashionabl­e, has won hearts and minds. This is largely due to the barnstormi­ng performanc­e of Will Smith as Richard Williams, the formidable tennis-coach-slash-dad of the legendary Williams sisters. It is good to see Guillermo del Toro’s amazing noir melodrama Nightmare Alley come up with four nomination­s (I had feared an almost complete snub). Flee is an outstandin­g animated documentar­y about a gay Afghan man who as a child fled his country for Denmark after the 1989 Soviet withdrawal – remarkably, its three nomination­s span three separate categories in a triumphant style. I was hoping for more Oscar recognitio­n for Paul Thomas Anderson’s staggering­ly good comedy Licorice Pizza, but perhaps it is simply too wacky, too uncategori­sable, and its age-gap theme too tricky a sell.

I found myself disappoint­ed that Lady Gaga’s hilarious turn in House of Gucci was overlooked. (Come to think of it, so was Jared Leto’s florid impersonat­ion of a minor Gucci – probably rightly. But critics are wrong to mock his intentiona­lly camp and absurd performanc­e. I laughed with it, not at it.) Jessica Chastain is rightly nominated for her warmly sympatheti­c lead as the televangel­ist diva in The Eyes of Tammy Faye; as is Kristen Stewart for her amusing impersonat­ion of Diana, Princess of Wales in the overrated arthouse-Crown extravagan­za Spencer. Olivia Colman may well get her second Oscar for her great turn in The Lost Daughter. But Nicole Kidman didn’t do her best work in Being the Ricardos; I would have preferred to see Ruth Negga in there for Passing.

Two years ago, Korean director Bong Joon-ho asked filmgoers to consider that subtitles aren’t so much of an obstacle, being only an inch or so high. Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s marvellous Japanese film Drive My Car, an adaptation of a Haruki Murakami story, has had its own very heartening success with four nomination­s. In a way, this film is the success story of this year’s awards season.

 ?? ?? Contorted by anger and sadness … The Power of the Dog. Photograph: Kirsty Griffin/AP
Contorted by anger and sadness … The Power of the Dog. Photograph: Kirsty Griffin/AP

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