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Tag: Academy Awards 2024

  • Oscars 2024: Here’s how to watch, what to expect on Hollywood’s biggest night

    Oscars 2024: Here’s how to watch, what to expect on Hollywood’s biggest night

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    LOS ANGELES — When Hollywood gathers for the 96th Academy Awards on Sunday, the blockbuster biopic “Oppenheimer” is widely expected to overpower all competition – including its release-date companion, “Barbie” – at an election-year Oscars that could turn into a coronation for Christopher Nolan.

    The Oscars, kicking off on ABC at 4 p.m. PDT Sunday, are springing forward an hour earlier than usual due to daylight saving time. But aside from the time shift, this year’s show is going for many tried-and-true Academy Awards traditions. Jimmy Kimmel is back as host. Past winners are flocking back as presenters. And a big studio epic is poised for a major awards haul.

    Still, much is circling around this year’s show. Demonstrators are expected to protest the Israel-Hamas war near the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. Police have beefed up their already extensive presence. The war in Ukraine will be on some attendees’ minds, particularly those of the journalist filmmakers behind the documentary favorite, “20 Days in Mariupol.” And with the presidential election in full swing, politics could be an unavoidable topic despite an awards season that’s played out largely in a vacuum.

    Hollywood also has plenty of its own storm clouds to concern itself with.

    Jimmy Kimmel says his partnership with his wife and producer Molly McNearney is what makes it possible for him to host the Oscars for the fourth time with confidence.

    The 2023 movie year was defined by a prolonged strike over the future of an industry that’s reckoning with the onset of streaming, artificial intelligence and shifting moviegoer tastes that have tested even the most bankable brands. The academy, while also widely nominating films like “Killers of the Flower Moon” and “Poor Things,” embraced both “Oppenheimer,” the lead nominee with 13 nods, and Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie,” the year’s biggest hit with more than $1.4 billion in ticket sales and eight nominations.

    HOW TO WATCH

    Ahead of the broadcast on ABC, a red carpet preshow will begin at 3:30 p.m. PDT.

    The show will be available to stream via ABC.com and the ABC app with a cable subscription. You can also watch through services including Hulu Live TV, YouTubeTV, AT&T TV and FuboTV.

    WHAT’S IN STORE FOR THE TELECAST

    Five past winners in each acting category will together announce winners for the first time since 2009. Among the many announced presenters are: Zendaya, Al Pacino, Jennifer Lawrence, Michelle Yeoh, Steven Spielberg, Dwayne Johnson, Matthew McConaughey, Lupita Nyong’o, Mahershala Ali, Nicolas Cage and Bad Bunny.

    All of the best original song nominees will be performed, including the most likely winner, “What Was I Made For” from “Barbie,” to be performed by Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell. The others are: “I’m Just Ken,” with Ryan Gosling and Mark Ronson; “The Fire Inside,” from “Flamin’ Hot,” to be performed by Becky G; Jon Batiste’s “It Never Went Away” from “American Symphony”; and “Wahzhazhe (A Song for My People),” from “Killers of the Flower Moon,” to be performed by Scott George and the Osage Singers.

    WHO ARE THE FAVORITES?

    “Oppenheimer” comes in having won at the producers, directors and actors guilds, making it the clear front-runner for best picture. The film is widely expected to win in a number of other categories, too. Nolan is tipped to win his first best director Oscar, while Robert Downey Jr. (best supporting actor) and Cillian Murphy (best actor) are also predicted to win their first Academy Award. Paul Giamatti (“The Holdovers”) could challenge Murphy.

    With the forecasted “Oppenheimer” romp, the night’s biggest drama is in the best actress category. Emma Stone (“Poor Things”) and Lily Gladstone (“Killers of the Flower Moon”) are nearly even-odds to win. While an Oscar for Stone, who won for her performance “La La Land,” would be her second statuette, an win for Gladstone would make Academy Awards history. No Native American has ever won a competitive Oscar.

    While “Barbie” bested (and helped lift) “Oppenheimer” at the box office, it appears likely it will take a back seat to Nolan’s film at the Oscars. Gerwig was notably overlooked for best director, sparking an outcry that some, even Hillary Clinton, said mimicked the patriarchy parodied in the film.

    In supporting actress, Da’Vine Joy Randolph has been a lock all season for her performance in Alexander Payne’s “The Holdovers.”

    WHAT ELSE TO LOOK FOR

    Composer John Williams, 92, is expected to attend the ceremony where he’s nominated for the 49th time for best score, for “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny ” Meanwhile Godzilla is going to the Oscars for the first time, with “Godzilla Minus One” notching a nomination for best visual effects.

    Also for the first time, two non-English language films are up for best picture: the German-language Auschwitz drama “The Zone of Interest” and the French courtroom drama “Anatomy of a Fall.” “The Zone of Interest” is the heavy favorite to win best international film.

    Historically, having big movies in the mix for the Oscars’ top awards has been good for broadcast ratings. The Academy Awards’ largest audience ever came when James Cameron’s “Titanic” swept the 1998 Oscars.

    Last year’s ceremony, where a very different best-picture contender in “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed, was watched by 18.7 million people, up 12% from the year prior. ABC and the academy are hoping to continue the upward trend after a nadir in 2021, when 9.85 million watched a pandemic-diminished telecast relocated to Los Angeles’ Union Station.

    DON’T MISS the 2024 Oscars live Sunday on ABC! Red carpet coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET 10 a.m. PT with “Countdown to Oscars: On The Red Carpet Live.” At 4 p.m. ET 1 p.m. PT, live coverage continues with “On The Red Carpet at the Oscars,” hosted by George Pennacchio with Roshumba Williams, Leslie Lopez and Rachel Brown.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years, followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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    AP

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  • Why an Oscar Nomination Was On Sterling K. Brown’s Vision Board

    Why an Oscar Nomination Was On Sterling K. Brown’s Vision Board

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    An Academy Award nomination wasn’t on Sterling K. Brown’s bingo card for 2024.

    In fact, when he heard the news, albeit a bit delayed, on Jan. 23, his response, he tells THR, was, “Well, I’ll be damned.”

    Winning an Oscar, however, was always a dream of the actor’s and part of a long-term goal of one day becoming an EGOT. That desire grew out of his winning three Primetime Emmy Awards, first in 2016 for outstanding supporting actor in a limited series or movie for his portrayal of Christopher Darden in American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson, again in 2017 for outstanding lead actor in a drama series for his role as Randall Pearson in This Is Us, and, most recently, in 2021 for outstanding narrator for Lincoln: Divided We Stand.

    “After getting a few Emmys or whatnot, you realize, all right, that’s a quarter of the way to the EGOT, let’s see if we can figure out ways to get the other ones,” he says in the conversation below. “But I didn’t think that it was going to necessarily be from this role or this film.”

    Brown is up for best supporting actor for his role in American Fiction, Cord Jefferson’s adaptation of Percival Everett’s 2001 novel Erasure. He plays opposite Jeffrey Wright’s studious Thelonious “Monk” Ellison, starring as his brother Cliff, a plastic surgeon coping with grief and his newly embraced sexuality somewhat disruptively after divorcing his ex-wife whom he dismissively refers to as his “beard.”

    The film, which uses the literary world to make a statement about the entertainment industry’s embrace of stereotypical portrayals of Black life in the media as a whole, received a total of five Academy Award nominations, including best picture, best adapted screenplay, best score, and best actor for Wright.

    “I think what Cord did with this script and with this film is absolutely wonderful in terms of expanding the collective consciousness and imagination of what Black life on screen can be,” says Brown, who recently predicted he’ll lose the Oscar to Robert Downey, Jr. who’s nominated for his role in Oppenheimer.

    “I was just happy to be a part of it and see the film be recognized and to see Jeffrey be recognized,” he added. “I didn’t think that it was going to be my turn, but I would love to one day, if I’m blessed enough, be considered amongst the people who get the EGOT. I would not be upset.”

    Brown talks with THR about his Oscar nomination and what American Fiction’s critical acclaim could mean for Black storytelling moving forward.

    Where were you when you got the Oscar news?

    I was at home. I was asleep and my phone had died, and I fell asleep on my kids’ floor. So I woke up in the middle of the night, got to my bed, charged the phone, and then went to go get breakfast ready for them and get them ready for school. When I came back to my phone after it had charged, I realized that I had 126 missing messages and all of them said, “Congratulations,” “Congratulations,” “Congratulations.” So that’s where I was.

    It’s funny because I was at a Super Bowl party with one of my wife’s best friends and she asked my wife, “How was this morning?” and my wife said, “I think he’s in shock. He’s acting like nothing happened.” And it was funny to hear how my wife saw it because it wasn’t like nothing happened, it was just, I got to get these kids to school and then after they were fed and they were in school, I was just returning messages throughout the rest of the day. When you receive that kind of love, you want to know that it’s been received in the spirit in which it was intended.

    AMERICAN FICTION, Sterling K. Brown, 2023.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Did you purposely tap out of the news cycle that day knowing the nominations were coming out?

    The nominations are read at 5:30 in the morning Pacific Standard Time; I’m asleep. That’s daddy’s sleep time. If I don’t get sleep, kids don’t get to school. My wife [actress Ryan Michelle Bathe] does not set an alarm in the morning. She will sleep until 10 a.m. on her day. So Brown is the morning dude and 6:45, 7 o’clock is normally when I get up. So it wasn’t that I was tapped out, but, honest to goodness, I was legitimately surprised because I don’t think it was anything that I personally was anticipating. I was happy to have received the attention that I had received up to that point. I knew that I was on a lot of people’s lists, but maybe falling just outside of the top five or what have you. So when it happened, I was like, “Well, I’ll be damned.”

    Was an Oscar nomination or winning an Academy Award on your actor vision board?

    I would say so. After getting a few Emmys or whatnot, you realize, all right, that’s a quarter of the way to the EGOT, let’s see if we can figure out ways to get the other ones. But I didn’t think that it was going to necessarily be from this role or this film. I’m fully aware that it is a marathon and not a sprint. I’m here for the long haul. And so the fact that the nomination came with this project is very pleasing because I think the project is awesome. I think what Cord did with this script and with this film is absolutely wonderful in terms of expanding the collective consciousness and imagination of what Black life on screen can be. I was just happy to be a part of it and see the film be recognized and to see Jeffrey be recognized. I didn’t think that it was going to be my turn, but I would love to one day, if I’m blessed enough, be considered amongst the people who get the EGOT. I would not be upset.

    Do you plan to go to the ceremony with a speech prepared?

    It’ll be very much in the moment, which most of my speeches are. There may be some bullet points or what have you, but it’s really just Brown coming off the dome. You know, just set a cypher up for your boy and see what kind of freestyle we can make. But — and I don’t mean for this to sound cliché — the honor is in the nomination. Gosling and De Niro and Ruffalo and Downey Jr.; the company that I get a chance to be amongst is really, really wonderful. I’m just happy to be there.

    I imagine your phone has been ringing off the hook since the nomination. Are you feeling overwhelmed at all this award season?

    I’ll be honest with you, it is at times a bit overwhelming, especially when it comes to clothes and gear and all the different things. There’s the Oscars, and Film Independent Spirit Awards, the SAG Awards, NAACP Image Awards. You can’t just go back and get your same suit every time, you gotta come with a fit that’s got a little bit drip to it. There’s also the unspoken truth that your wife wants to look just as good as you do. So there are conversations that are had. Strategies that are employed. The wife is not playing around. We have to make sure that everybody in the house is feeling good about how they look.

    You told THR at the top of the year,I don’t ever make the mistake of equating critical and popular success with each other.” Do you still feel that way in light of the Oscar nominations American Fiction has received and how do you feel about its performance at the box office?

    I feel like the nominations gave us a really nice bump in terms of the way in which it went into the consciousness. I think we had probably one of our best box office weekends after we received five nominations for an Academy Award so I’m really thankful for that. I’m really thankful that investors get some sort of return on their investment with regards to this project because that incentivizes people to do it again. If it was just a “prestige film” and not popular, then that’s not as easy to get a green light a second time around, especially when it comes to us. So, yeah, I feel the same way, but I feel like we’re doing all right.

    What’s next after award season?

    Well, before award season is even over, we start production on a new TV show with Dan Fogelman called Paradise City at the end of the month. We’ll air sometime later on in the year, but I’m really excited for that. My wife and I recorded our first podcast together entitled We Don’t Always Agree, which is more appropriate than you know, and hopefully sometime in March that’ll be coming to wherever you can observe podcasts. And I do have a movie, Atlas, with Jennifer Lopez and Simu Liu, Mark Strong, and a few other people dropping on Netflix. It’s a sci-fi, sort of AI-premised film, which is really cool. A lot of green screen, a lot of action, some funky things happen, so I’m looking forward to that. Right now is just one of those wonderful moments where you get a chance to take meetings with the industry and see who’s interested in doing things with you and if there are any other new doors that are open to you with this nomination that may have been closed to you in the past. It’s an exciting time of discovery for your boy.

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    Degen Pener

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  • Sterling K. Brown Predicts He’ll Lose the Oscar to Robert Downey Jr.: “He’s Incredibly Deserving”

    Sterling K. Brown Predicts He’ll Lose the Oscar to Robert Downey Jr.: “He’s Incredibly Deserving”

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    Sterling K. Brown said he isn’t expecting to take home an Oscar this year, but he’s “totally fine” with it.

    The actor, who is up for best supporting actor for his role in American Fiction, recently joked during an appearance on The Graham Norton Show, “There’s no losing yet — it’ll happen in its own due time.”

    Brown proceeded to say that “Colman [Domingo] will probably win,” adding, “I know that I’m not going to win.” Domingo was also a guest on the BBC show, as well as scored a best leading actor Oscar nomination for Rustin.

    Though Graham Norton and the other guests pushed back, telling Brown that he still has a good chance at winning, the This Is Us actor admitted he’s “totally fine” if he doesn’t take home the trophy.

    Robert Downey Jr. is going to win, and he’s incredibly deserving,” Brown said of the Oppenheimer star and his fellow nominee. “He’s an incredible actor. You should give him love. And the fact that I get a chance to be nominated along with him and Mr. [Robert] De Niro and Ryan Gosling and [Mark] Ruffalo, I’m just happy to be in the room.”

    Norton went on to tease Brown on his perspective should he end up winning the Academy Award. “On the night, this will all be very humble,” the host quipped. “’I can’t believe I won!’”

    Brown told The Hollywood Reporter last month that he thought the Cord Jefferson-directed movie, adapted from Percival Everett’s 2001 novel Erasure, “was one of the best scripts I’d ever read.”

    “It was able to make fun of an industry and also challenge it to say there are ways in which you could be better,” he said of American Fiction. “You are narrow in terms of Black life that you are willing to portray for mass consumption. I’m going to tell you that, and at the same time, I’m going to give you an idea of other stories that would be viable for mass consumption.”

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    Carly Thomas

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  • Oscars: Jimmy Kimmel Back as 2024 Host

    Oscars: Jimmy Kimmel Back as 2024 Host

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    Jimmy Kimmel will return to the Oscar stage once again.

    The ABC late night host has signed on to host the 96th Academy Awards, marking his fourth time in the role. The appointment is hardly surprising, of course, as Kimmel has decades of live TV experience and a longstanding relationship with Disney.

    His announcement follows the mid-October news that the Academy set a producing team, a returning director and a first-time showrunner in Raj Kapoor, a live TV and go-to Las Vegas residency producer, who’s worked on the Academy Awards telecast for the last seven years. Kimmel’s wife and Jimmy Kimmel Live co-head writer Molly McNearney is also back as an executive producer for the telecast.

    Though there were rumblings about a potential Oscar date move during the darker days of Hollywood’s dual strikes, such a thing is no longer necessary and the town’s top talent is already back in full campaign mode. Many have been scrambling to make up for lost time. In fact, Kimmel’s ABC show is poised to benefit from the parade of A-listers hungry to promote this year’s Oscar hopefuls.

    Jimmy Kimmel Live! was off the air for the duration of the writers strike, though Kimmel himself maintained a presence through his popular “Strike Force Five” podcast with his fellow late night hosts. Proceeds from the latter went to the shows’ out-of-work staffs. Kimmel revealed on one of the episodes that he had been “very intent on retiring” prior to the strike, but he formally re-upped with Disney last year and his ABC show will continue through season 23.

    The 96th Oscars will air live on ABC, Sunday, March 10, 2024, from the Dolby Theatre.

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    Lacey Rose

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