USA TODAY International Edition

How to stream this year’s Oscar films

- Brian Truitt

The Academy Awards nomination­s are out and you’ve officially got less than two months to catch up before the March 12 Oscars ceremony. ● No sweat. ● From box- office blockbuste­rs to film- festival favorites, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded kudos to a bunch of different movies this year, and 10 new films will compete to win best picture. Now’s the time to catch most of the awards fare, with boffo acting performanc­es and technical achievemen­ts aplenty, on streaming services and on- demand platforms. Don’t know where to start ● with your homework? We got you, fam. Here are 15 movies in the running for Oscars that you can watch at home right now:

‘ Everything Everywhere All at Once’

Don’t worry about having your brain broken and just go with the wild flow of this action- packed, multiverse- hopping genre mashup that scored a leading 11 nomination­s, including best picture, original screenplay, directing ( Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert), actress ( Michelle Yeoh), supporting actor ( Ke Huy Quan) and supporting actress ( Jamie Lee Curtis and Stephanie Hsu). Yeoh dazzles as a laundromat owner whose tax issues get shoved aside when she gets a crash course in alternate realities and has to learn from the lives of her other selves to stop a nihilistic villain.

Where to watch: Showtime, Apple TV

‘ The Banshees of Inisherin’

Getting ghosted by a friend or a loved one is a relatable bit of stress and heartbreak. Add a 1920s remote Irish island setting, toss in two of the greatest actors of their generation­s, and you’ve got a best picture nominee with something to say. Martin McDonagh’s wonderfull­y bleak exploratio­n of isolation, desperatio­n and mortality lets Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson loose as ex- best pals in a sudden fiery feud, with nice supporting turns from Kerry Condon and Barry Keoghan as characters caught up in their not- so- civil war.

Where to watch: HBO Max

‘ Elvis’

Not sure if everyone’s heard, but Elvis Presley was a big deal. And Baz Luhrmann’s stylish musical drama – nominated for best picture – pays tribute to the King of Rock ’ n’ Roll from his early 1950s gigs to his later days as a Vegas headliner. When a burgeoning Elvis ( top- notch leading man Austin Butler, who earned his first best actor nod) lays into the rockabilly tune

“Baby Let’s Play House” and wiggles his hips, young women ( and older ones too) scream and swoon in preternatu­ral delight, possessed by the power of a fledgling rock god.

Where to watch: HBO Max

‘ All Quiet on the Western Front’

Like its 1930 counterpar­t ( which won a best picture Oscar), the latest adaptation of the Erich Maria Remarque novel – told from a German point of view – is harrowing and deeply effective with its anti- war message. And the Academy voters loved it, giving it nine nomination­s including best picture and internatio­nal film. A 17- year- old ( Felix Kammerer) lies about his age to proudly go to the front lines of World War I, witnesses carnage and becomes numb to the brutality while an officer ( Daniel Brühl) desperatel­y negotiates for an armistice.

Where to watch: Netflix

‘ The Fabelmans’

Steven Spielberg’s semi- autobiogra­phical coming- of- age tale – which snagged nods for best picture, directing, actress ( Michelle Williams) and supporting actor ( Judd Hirsch) flashes back to the 1950s and ’ 60s and the legendary filmmaker’s childhood growing up in a Jewish family. Newcomer Gabriel LaBelle amazes as teenage Spielberg, here named Sammy Fabelman, a kid whose creative world just explodes when he gets a camera in his hands while also navigating parental drama and antisemiti­c bullying.

Where to watch: Apple TV

‘ Top Gun: Maverick’

Tom Cruise is known for jumping off planes in crazy “Mission: Impossible” stunts but come on, he’s much better in the cockpit of a fighter jet. Even though he didn’t snag a best actor nomination, Cruise still oozes A- list cool as the returning flyboy from the 1986 original training a new crop of young pilots in an endlessly entertaini­ng, nostalgic sequel that scored best picture, screenplay and original song nods.

Where to watch: Paramount+

‘ Tár’

Best actress nominee Cate Blanchett soars in Todd Field’s classical music drama, which also scored nods for best picture, directing and original screenplay. Powered by Blanchett’s baton- wielding tour de force, the film is a modern tale about a cultural giant who uses her power in not- so- great fashion, so there are # MeToo factors at play. However, “Tár” has more of a timeless quality, playing out in the style of a Greek tragedy.

Where to watch: Apple TV, Peacock ( starting Friday)

‘ Triangle of Sadness’

Self- obsessed models, Russian

oligarchs, polite English arms manufactur­ers – everybody’s sent up in Ruben Östlund’s deliciousl­y grotesque class satire nominated for best picture. Harris Dickinson and the late Charlbi Dean play a beautiful couple who are invited on a trip for the super- rich aboard a yacht captained by a gonzo, Marxist- loving American ( Woody Harrelson). The ship hits an unruly storm – leading to the most heinous, vomit- drenched dinner you could ever imagine – and then sinks in a ridiculous fashion, turning the tables on the wealthy and showing who really rules.

Where to watch: Apple TV

‘ Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’

A tech billionair­e ( Edward Norton) invites his longtime crew ( including Janelle Monáe, Dave Bautista, Leslie Odom Jr., Kathryn Hahn and Kate Hudson) for a murder mystery getaway on his posh private Greek island. Daniel Craig’s Southern sleuth Benoit Blanc inexplicab­ly shows up, a body hits the floor and the game is afoot for director Rian Johnson’s fun and twisty sequel, which like the first “Knives Out” earned Johnson a screenplay Oscar nomination.

Where to watch: Netflix

‘ Turning Red’

Like the best Pixar originals, the family- friendly comedy – a contender for best animated feature – takes on a universal aspect of people’s lives in a heartwarmi­ng fashion – in this case, female puberty. A Toronto teen ( voiced by Rosalie Chiang) wakes up to discover that, when overly excited, she turns into an 8- foot- tall giant red panda in director Domee Shi’s funny and empowering tribute to monster movies, 2000s- era boy bands, Asian culture and growing up.

Where to watch: Disney+

‘ Causeway’

Jennifer Lawrence and Brian Tyree

Henry – who nabbed his first Oscar nomination – turn in top- notch performanc­es in this meaningful drama. Lynsey ( Lawrence) is a soldier who returns home to New Orleans after sustaining a brain injury serving in Afghanista­n, but she needs to improve her physical and mental health on multiple levels. Lynsey finds a friend in James ( Henry), an amiable mechanic struggling with his own past.

Where to watch: Apple TV+

‘ Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio’

Guillermo del Toro, a modern master of the macabre, gives the classic fairy tale a twisted bliss with this enjoyable stop- motion animated take set in 1930s Italy. With a precocious, troublemak­ing wooden puppet desperate to be a real boy and a star- studded voice cast ( from Ewan McGregor to Cate Blanchett), the whimsical narrative takes on war and fascism – you haven’t lived until you’ve seen Pinocchio mocking Mussolini – plus tackles dark and fairly mature matters with life- affirming zeal.

Where to watch: Netflix

‘ To Leslie’

Andrea Riseboroug­h’s best actress nomination was the biggest surprise on Oscars announceme­nt morning, thanks to a social media campaign led by A- listers including Kate Winslet and Jane Fonda. In the drama, Riseboroug­h plays a West Texas single mother struggling to provide for her son who wins the lottery, squanders the money, but gets a second chance to make things right years later.

Where to watch: Apple TV

‘ RRR’

An action epic that manages to be more glorious and bromantic than a “Top Gun” movie, the Indian blockbuste­r stars N. T. Rama Rao Jr. and Ram Charan as buff heroes who take on 1920s British colonialis­ts in a must- see movie with love stories and over- the- top spirit. It didn’t get a best picture Oscar nomination but its nominated original song “Naatu Naatu” – which accompanie­s our two protagonis­ts in a dance battle with a smarmy British guy – won a Golden Globe and will compete against the likes of Lady Gaga and Rihanna.

Where to watch: Netflix

‘ Navalny’

Daniel Roher’s film, nominated for best documentar­y, is a riveting and inspiring stranger- than- fiction deep- dive into the life and almost death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. The movie chronicles the investigat­ion into the 2020 poisoning of the charismati­c dissident ( and President Vladimir Putin’s chief political rival), but it also hits on an emotional level.

Where to watch: HBO Max

 ?? PROVIDED BY A24 ?? Michelle Yeoh stars as a laundromat owner- turned- multiverse- hopping martial artist in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
PROVIDED BY A24 Michelle Yeoh stars as a laundromat owner- turned- multiverse- hopping martial artist in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

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