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  • Every Emma Stone Movie, Ranked

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Disney, Lionsgate Films, Searchlight Pictures

    This list was originally published on September 20, 2017. Emma Stone’s latest movie, Bugonia, hit theaters on October 24, 2025.

    Emma Stone has said her idol, and role model, as an actress is Diane Keaton, and it makes total sense: Now that you’re thinking about it, it’s hard not to connect them, right? Like Keaton, Stone is instantly likable, dazzlingly funny — you can make an argument she’s a comedienne first and foremost — and relatable while never losing that star wattage. In the span of a decade, she went from making her debut (in Superbad) to being a beloved Hollywood fixture and an Oscar winner to boot. But also like Keaton, it’s not difficult to imagine her expanding on this, pushing herself while never losing that inherent affability. She’s one of us while being the best of us … which is an excellent definition of a movie star. It’s going to be extremely fun updating this list as the years go forward — after all, look where Keaton went. Who’s to say Stone can’t go just as far … or further?

    This week, she returns to theaters with Bugonia, in which she once again teams up with Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, continuing one of modern movies’ most rewarding partnerships. In the film, she flexes both her comedic and dramatic muscles, proving as always how good she is in either mode. But don’t forget that she’s also a producer on Bugonia: Although we’re ranking her finest performances, it’s important to point out how pivotal she’s been in championing other directors’ work as well. (Not for nothing, but two of 2024’s signature movies, A Real Pain and I Saw the TV Glow, were shepherded by her company, Fruit Tree.) Stone swears she has no interest in directing, but it’s hard not to imagine that one day she’ll get the itch to try that, too. Also like Keaton, she’s a creative force who seems capable of just about anything.

    Here are her 24 roles, ranked. We omitted bit parts — though we love her in Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping — and voice roles (although she’s awfully fun in The Croods). And we didn’t include The Curse since that’s television. But no matter how you choose to measure it, she’s had a pretty great career already.

    Year: 2008
    Director: Peter Cattaneo
    Run time: 1h 42m

    It’s insane to think there was a time in human existence that Bradley Cooper, Josh Gad, Christine Applegate, Jane Lynch, Jason Sudeikis, Will Arnett, Fred Armisen, Aziz Ansari, Demetri Martin, Keir Gilchrist, and Emma Stone all played supporting characters in a movie that starred Rainn Wilson, but, hey, 2008 was quite a year. Stone has a thankless, off-brand role as a moping member of a teenage rock band who drafts a former drummer in a Metallica-esque band (Wilson) to fill in so they can play their school prom. This thing is junky — and it’s not Wilson’s fault he has to do so much heavy lifting, in his underwear no less — and Stone escapes dignity intact, barely, from the wreckage.

    Year: 2014
    Director: Woody Allen
    Run time: 1h 37m

    Stone spent two years trying out the role of Woody Allen’s modern muse, not unlike Scarlett Johansson the decade before, but her stint didn’t come with any Match Point–style breakthrough: The two movies she made with Allen were among the director’s most formulaic work. She struggles particularly here as a “mystic” who performs illusions and inspires a cynical fellow magician (Colin Firth), briefly, to suspend his disbelief. Certain actors benefit from Allen’s hands-off approach, but Stone might not be one of them. She looks lost and flailing most of the time, forced to carry way too much of the narrative and the film’s attempts at charm. Stone isn’t necessarily to blame — Magic in the Moonlight is a minor trifle, even for late-career Allen — but this just isn’t a great fit.

    Year: 2013
    Director: Ruben Fleischer
    Run time: 1h 53m

    If you don’t remember Gangster Squad, it’s the other nostalgic, old-school-Hollywood-themed movie in which Stone plays an aspiring actress who moves to Los Angeles to become famous and falls in love with Ryan Gosling. Of her three collaborations with Gosling, this one is easily the worst. A limp attempt at recapturing the snarl and sex appeal of a bygone era’s gangster pictures, the film mostly feels like an excuse for big names to play dress up in fedoras. Stone isn’t terrible as Grace, the girlfriend of an infamous crime boss (Sean Penn) who starts to have feelings for the cop (Gosling) who’s helping to bring him down. But despite the timeless nature of her appeal in most roles — you get the sense that she could have been a star in any era — she doesn’t quite convince as a noir-ish love interest.

    Year: 2011
    Director: Will Gluck
    Run time: 1h 49m

    Stone only really has one scene here, but it’s a silly, fun one: She gets to break up with Justin Timberlake and then leave the movie all together. It’s worth noting that her male counterpart, the guy breaking up with Mila Kunis, is Andy Samberg. Stone is clearly here as comic relief, and it’s telling that the movie (ostensibly a comedy) trusts her to carry that responsibility on her own. Stone and Samberg would have the opportunity to reconnect a few years later with her cameo in Popstar, and even though that part is too slight to make this list, it’s even funnier. (“Turn up the beef!”)

    Year: 2015
    Director: Woody Allen
    Run time: 1h 35m

    The better of Stone’s two Woody Allen films, Irrational Man finds her playing a bright, impressionable college student who’s smitten with her brilliant, morose philosophy professor (Joaquin Phoenix), who starts developing feelings for her, too. If Magic in the Moonlight was Stone’s chance at a frothy Allen period comedy, Irrational Man is more Crimes and Misdemeanors, analyzing morality, guilt, and the absence of God in the midst of a murder plot. Stone’s role is crucial — she comes to understand just how troubled and dangerous her teacher is, and must take action — but the actress doesn’t bring enough gravitas to this drama. Her effervescence gets reduced to blandness in Allen’s movies, which ultimately feels more like his issue than hers.

    Year: 2015
    Director: Cameron Crowe
    Run time: 1h 45m

    Photo: Neal Preston/Columbia

    Our mild defense of Stone’s notorious casting as Allison Ng, an Air Force captain whose father is half-Hawaiian and half-Chinese, is that part of the joke of the character is that she loves bragging about her ethnically diverse background — even though she looks like, well, Emma Stone. But that joke, like many in Aloha, isn’t particularly good, and it also doesn’t help that Stone plays Allison with a little too much earnest adorableness, never establishing much of a rapport with Bradley Cooper’s spiritually adrift military contractor. (That’s a problem, considering they’re supposed to fall in love.) Stone has since apologized for her part in the whitewashed casting, satirizing herself during a 2015 SNL skit in which she auditions for Star Wars based on her ability to play Asian characters. It’s a sign of how flawed Aloha is that its best moment comes when Stone dances with Bill Murray to Hall and Oates’ “I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do).” She’d show off more dance moves in a better movie a year later.

    Year: 2009
    Directors: Michele Mulroney and Kieran Mulroney
    Run time: 1h 50m

    A rambling, moody, mostly dull middle-aged-white-guy-in-crisis movie about a blocked writer (Jeff Daniels) with an imaginary superhero friend (Ryan Reynolds), Paper Man only comes to life when Stone is onscreen as a teenage girl who befriends this sad-sack after losing her twin sister. Daniels is morose and whiny and Reynolds is hammy and over-the-top, which allows Stone to steal the movie, giving it its only modicum of zest and soul. She’s too good to be the fantasy of some old white guys, and soon, she wouldn’t have to be.

    Year: 2013
    Director: Various, Stone’s segment by Griffin Dunne
    Run time: 1h 30m

    This star-studded Kentucky Fried Movie homage — seriously, how did this movie get Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet, Halle Berry, Chris Pratt, Dennis Quaid, Uma Thurman, Naomi Watts, and Richard Gere? — only has two decent segments. One is a cruel but admirably strange joke on homeschooling starring Watts and Liev Schreiber, and the other is a gonzo scene in which Stone and Kieran Culkin exchange supercharged sexual banter in a grocery store over the intercom. It’s as dumb as everything else in this movie, but both Culkin and Stone play it perfectly. Check out the way Stone says, “He was a wizard, Neil! We’re still laughing.

    Years: 2012 and 2014
    Director: Marc Webb
    Run time: 2h16m (The Amazing Spider-Man); 2h 22m (sequel)

    The Marc Webb–Andrew Garfield reboot of the Spider-Man series was pretty much dead on arrival — this might be the least-inspired comic-book sequel since Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer — but the one thing that does work is the relationship between Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy. Garfield and Stone were dating in real life during the film, and it’s telling that the movie essentially stops every time they start talking to each other: They’re incredibly charming. Unfortunately, the comic-book gods must be fed, and thus, the lousiness of the rest of the movie and the end of a franchise flirtation that, all told, Stone is probably pleased to be rid of.

    Year: 2009
    Director: Mark Waters
    Run time: 1h 40m

    Stone plays the actual ghost-girlfriend of the title — a character named Allison who visits Matthew McConaughey’s slick bachelor and shows him the error of his ways with the women in his past. She has crazy wigged-out hair and braces, but she’s also quick and goofy in a way that McConaughey isn’t: This was right before the McConaissance, back when he was still mailing in stuff like this. It’s a small part, but Stone makes it count. When the movie is looking for a final joke beat at the end, it goes back to her, the one person who consistently provided them.

    Year: 2021
    Director: Craig Gillespie
    Run time: 2h 14m

    Photo: Disney+

    A little more than ten years after killing her first starring vehicle (Easy A), Cruella demonstrates how far Stone has come. Playing the future Cruella de Vil in an origin story nobody asked for, she’s at the peak of her movie-star powers as she rocks a British accent and struts through scenes as her glammed-out alter ego, happily wrapping the film around her finger. It’s a showy performance, but because there remains something so self-effacing and charming about her, it’s never overindulgent — you’ll get a kick out of how much of a ball she’s having. Unfortunately … this is an origin story nobody asked for, and the filmmakers have given her so little to work with that she has to do all the heavy lifting herself. This may be the first time that one of her films was too small to contain her.

    Year: 2008
    Director: Fred Wolf
    Run time: 1h 38m

    One of the most underrated and endlessly rewatchable comedies of the last 15 years, The House Bunny is so stupid/funny/sweet that it’s impossible to resist. That’s especially true of Stone as Natalie, a delightfully nerdy member of a loser sorority that’s transformed by the dim-bulb beauty Shelley (Anna Faris), who’s been kicked out of the Playboy Mansion. This geek-to-chic comedy was meant to be Faris’s big breakthrough, but Stone holds her own as the nerdy straight woman to Shelley’s ditzy, kindhearted stupidity. They’re a terrifically funny pair as Stone perfected her adorkable persona just as major stardom beckoned.

    Year: 2025
    Director: Ari Aster
    Run time: 2h 25m

    Stone’s role — to the chagrin of many critics who found Ari Aster’s “pandemic western” snide, formless, and frustrating (we’re among them) — is smaller than the ads make it look. That she’s so haunting during her short screen time speaks even worse of the movie. She plays Louise, the utterly stricken wife of Joaquin Phoenix’s Sheriff Joe, a woman so damaged that her pain and loss threaten to overwhelm the often glib film every time she appears. Stone has never looked quite so broken before, and there is something so raw and upsetting about her performance that you wish it were in a movie more worthy of it.

    Year: 2007
    Director: Greg Mottola
    Run time: 1h 59m

    One of the reasons you like Jonah Hill’s Seth in this movie — even though he’s disgusting, he says horrible things about women, and he can’t even steal a keg properly — is because of the great taste he has in his idealized crush. Stone’s Jules is smarter and kinder than everyone else in the movie. She has her shit together, yet she’s just silly enough to find Seth sort of charming, in spite of herself. This was her first movie role. Who wouldn’t want to see more?

    Year: 2011
    Director: Dan Fogelman
    Run time: 1h 47m

    Photo: Warner Bros.

    If this irritatingly cutesy rom-com had focused more on Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling’s story line, we would have liked it a lot more. The rest of the film strains to be profound about how screwy love can be, but she’s a delight as Hannah, a goody-goody law-school grad who decides she’s had it with her noncommittal boyfriend and takes a chance on Jacob, a seductive womanizer who’s blessed to look like Ryan Gosling. Like several Stone roles, Crazy, Stupid, Love. allows her to start off as slightly nerdy before she gets to show off her wilder side — which, naturally, is still kinda nerdy but very endearing. Hannah may be uptight, but she’s funny as hell, and Stone’s wiseass attitude is on great display when she convinces him to take off his shirt, losing her mind after she finally checks out his abs. The highlight of the movie comes later in the same scene, when Stone and Gosling re-create Dirty Dancing’s most famous moment (with the help of a body double). It’s light on its feet, but also very sexy.

    Years: 2009 and 2019
    Director: Ruben Fleischer
    Run time: 1h 28m (Zombieland); 1h 39m (Zombieland: Double Tap)

    This is another supporting role, but she brings her no-nonsense, brash-but-so-fun persona to the next level as one of the few survivors of the zombie holocaust, foraging throughout the bombed-out landscape with Jesse Eisenberg, Abigail Breslin and Woody Harrelson. (And Bill Murray, of course.) This is a minor part, but she makes it a major one: She grabs the funky, off-kilter Zombieland and ramps it up into something soulful and warm. It was exciting to watch a star being born — while the best you can say about the ill-advised sequel is that, even though she was by then way too famous to be doing something like this, she still seemed to give it her goofy all.

    Year: 2011
    Director: Tate Taylor
    Run time: 2h 26m

    Tate Taylor’s surprise monster hit could have been cloying and white-savior-y — and at times it is — but Stone grounds it with her ability to play characters who are screw-ups and awkward and gangly but also glamorous and more capable than just about everyone else around them. Impressively, she knows when to step aside and cede to her co-stars, giving Octavia Spencer, Viola Davis, and Jessica Chastain the room they need to lead the movie … before reeling it back in to keep the movie centered. It’s a quietly impressive performance, and the mark of a true star.

    Year: 2017
    Directors: Valerie Faris, Jonathan Dayton
    Run time: 2h 2m

    Stone couldn’t have known at the time — Battle of the Sexes was shot before La La Land’s awards campaign really got rolling — but this crowd-pleasing biopic is the perfect soft landing after that Oscar-winning game changer. Here, she plays Billie Jean King, the best player in women’s tennis in the early 1970s, who decides that she and her tour mates shouldn’t be paid so much less than their male counterparts. The film is a feminist parable that can sometimes be too rah-rah — favoring sentiment over nuance — but Stone supplies the heart, showing us a woman fighting for equality but also wrestling with her sexuality, getting involved with a beautiful hairdresser (Andrea Riseborough) but keeping the relationship under wraps for fear of angering fans and promoters. In future years, Battle of the Sexes may be the movie we point to where Stone pivoted away from her more adorable roles to something a little more grown-up and weary. Her King is intelligent and cutting, but she’s also a person who seems to be looking for something just out of reach, which gives the performance real poignancy. Stone and Riseborough’s tentative romance is sensual in a relaxed way; it’s the film’s emotional centerpiece. And when King finally faces off with that showboating Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) in the finale, Stone guides her character to an ending that’s more emotional and tempered than one might expect — even if you know how their match ended up in real life.

    Year: 2025
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 1h 58m

    Photo: Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features

    As you’ll notice from the top rungs of our rankings, we are very high on Stone’s recent collaborations with Yorgos Lanthimos, which have found her enjoying great success while pushing herself into daring new terrain. Put it this way: We think Bugonia is the least effective of their four films, yet look where we placed it on this list. And that’s because Stone is terrific as Michelle, a callous pharmaceutical CEO who is kidnapped by two local conspiracy theorists (Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis) who are convinced she’s an alien with nefarious plans for the human race. Her head shaved bald for most of Bugonia’s run time, Stone captures this darkly comic thriller’s central tension, leaving audiences wondering if Michelle is an extraterrestrial or merely a one-percenter trapped in a terrifying situation. The film’s twists and turns wouldn’t be nearly as effective without Stone’s tightly controlled performance. Michelle is funny, she’s calculating, she’s scared, and she may be harboring a dark secret. Stone delights in leaving us guessing until the final, shocking reveal.

    Year: 2014
    Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
    Run time: 2h

    Stone received her first Oscar nomination for this Best Picture winner, playing Michael Keaton’s prickly daughter Sam, who’s a recovering addict and a hell of a flirt. Birdman was a major changeup for Stone: She’d done other dramas, but she’d never seemed this dangerous. Shedding her cutie-pie image, Stone convincingly berates her character’s delusional father, and then practically steals the movie during a rooftop scene with Edward Norton’s vain leading man. In a movie that, for better and for worse, is a celebration of flashy virtuosity, Stone is a stealth missile, blowing up every scene she’s in.

    Year: 2024
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h 45m

    After winning her second Oscar for Poor Things, Emma Stone and Lanthimos reunited for this freewheeling, super-dark lark that consists of three short films in which Stone and other cast members play different characters in each. The second and third shorts, “R.M.F. Is Flying” and “R.M.F. Eats a Sandwich,” are the ones in which she takes center stage, and she’s predictably terrific as, respectively, a wife lost as sea who returns home (but may not be herself) and a cult member in search of a strange woman. Perhaps you’ve come to expect a certain degree of twisted weirdness from Stone when she hooks up with Lanthimos, but Kinds of Kindness proves that there’s still plenty of nuttiness for her to explore. None of her three performances in this triptych is like the others, and each is a dazzling, tightly controlled tour de force. Plus, nobody dances like her.

    Year: 2018
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h

    Photo: Atsushi Nishijima/Twentieth Century Fox

    As a rule, we tend not to get hung up on so-called category fraud when it comes to which actor gets positioned as the lead for Oscar consideration. That said, as great as Olivia Colman is in The Favourite, technically speaking Emma Stone’s character, the conniving Abigail, is the real main character, driving the action forward and worming her way into the Queen’s heart (and bed). The edginess that Stone brought to her role in Birdman was sharpened for this film, resulting in a darkly comic turn that’s also surprisingly touching. (As much as Abigail is using Queen Anne, she does have some sympathy for this ailing, lonely woman.) Much has been made of the fact that Yorgos Lanthimos’ spiky comedy is like an 18th-century All About Eve, which means Stone is in the Anne Baxter role, and it’s delicious watching this poisonous schemer get exactly what she wants — and still receive the comeuppance that she so richly deserves.

    Year: 2010
    Director: Will Gluck
    Run time: 1h 32m

    This teen riff on The Scarlet Letter was Stone’s first starring role, and she later admitted that the stress of making it led to many sleepless nights. You’d never know from watching the breezy, sneakily emotional Easy A, which is the epitome of Stone’s sweet-and-spiky persona. She plays Olive, a precocious, misfit 17-year-old who lies about losing her virginity, which suddenly makes her unexpectedly popular. Even when the movie’s inspiration starts to flag, Olive is such a likable, original teenager — smart but sensitive, funny but vulnerable — that she’s like a magnet pulling you into the screen.

    Year: 2023
    Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
    Run time: 2h 21m

    Stone’s second collaboration with Yorgos Lanthimos is even wilder than the first, finding her delivering a master class in physical comedy as a naïve innocent named Bella whose body was fished out of the river after she committed suicide. Now reawakened by Dr. Baxter (Willem Dafoe), a mad scientist who lives for his unholy experiments, she doesn’t know who she once was, babbling like an idiot and exuding the emotional intelligence of an infant. But Bella is a quick study, whisked away by a horny lawyer (Mark Ruffalo) in this jet-black comedy, which may be the purest expression of her irreverent, inspired goofball side. She’s a revelation in Poor Things, navigating Bella’s sexual and personal evolution over the course of the film, transforming from a naïf to a fully empowered young woman, consistently hilarious throughout. The movie lets Stone rip, proving that despite winning an Oscar, she’s not afraid to still take big swings. This one she knocks out of the park, and she got Academy Award No. 2 in the process.

    Year: 2016
    Director: Damien Chazelle
    Run time: 2h 8m

    Photo: Dale Robinette/Courtesy of Lionsgate Entertainment Inc

    Many actors win their Oscar for a role that’s not close to their finest work. Happily, that’s not the case with Emma Stone. She’s never been better than she was as Mia, a struggling young actress who’s trying to find herself just as she falls for a suave jazz pianist (Gosling, again). La La Land has been debated, dissected, mocked, and scorned, but the film’s many critics haven’t really complained about Stone. That’s because she’s perfect: Hollywood is full of starlets, but none have just the right combination of wide-eyed optimism, snarky wit, and gal-next-door sweetness that Stone brought to the performance. Which moment in this nostalgic, bittersweet musical won her the Best Actress Oscar? Was it when she and Gosling tap-dance in the Hollywood Hills, or when they swirl among the stars at the Griffith Observatory? Was it the teary speech where Mia admits that maybe she’s not talented enough to make it? All are indelible, but the answer has to be “Audition (The Fools Who Dream),” in which Mia gives the casting directors (and the audience) a four-minute primer on her hopes, fears, and upbringing. Right there, you see an actress who is finally tapping into the greatness that’s always been inside her, just dying to come out. That applies to Mia as much as it does Stone, who, with La La Land, turned her lovable, indomitable spirit into something timeless.

    Grierson & Leitch write about the movies regularly and host a podcast on film. Follow them on Twitter or visit their site.

    Will Leitch,Tim Grierson

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  • The Evolutions of Emma Stone

    The Evolutions of Emma Stone

    Photo-Illustration: Lola Dupre/LOLA_DUPRE

    This article was originally published on December 22, 2023. Emma Stone has since won her second Oscar for the leading role in Poor Things and reportedly shaved her head for her fourth collaboration with director Yorgos Lanthimos, set to release in 2025.

    The quintessential Emma Stone acting choice comes near the end of Battle of the Sexes, a solid but unremarkable 2017 tennis bio-drama in which she plays Billie Jean King to Steve Carell’s Bobby Riggs. King is all nerves before their famous match; as attendants carry her down a hallway on a garish throne, preparing for a grand entrance, she is visibly fretful over the reputational damage of agreeing to this in the first place. She ducks her head as she enters the stadium — and looks up as she emerges into the light, smiling like a superstar.

    It’s a split-second reveal of the machinery behind preternatural charisma. Stone has always known how to let you in on a metamorphosis. Her best roles are those in which her character transforms and ascends: an unknown actress becomes a movie star, a newcomer to the queen’s court acquires power, a talented tennis player turns icon. She doesn’t disappear into her roles; she makes you aware of the games her characters are playing. In All About Eve terms, she’s Bette Davis and she’s Anne Baxter. With her giant eyes — which can project vulnerability or shift into unearthly confidence — and her raspy voice, Stone locates the star inside the striver and vice versa.

    More recently, though, she has expanded into roles that distort these tropes. This winter, she stars in both the Showtime series The Curse, as a deluded house flipper who yearns for basic-cable celebrity, and Yorgos Lanthimos’s film Poor Things, as a woman implanted with the brain of an infant who goes on a journey of steampunk self-discovery. In both, the actress seems to be winking at the narratives that defined her earlier work — and it’s clear that she is hitting a new, more experimental high.

    Stone, 35, made her name with a distinctly millennial kind of role: the sardonic yet earnest girl next door. For a while, her go-to interview anecdote was about how, as a teenager, she had made a PowerPoint to try to convince her parents she needed to move to L.A. to pursue acting. (As she later explained it, “I make presentations because when I feel strongly about something, I cry.”) After scattered roles in comedies like Superbad, her star-is-born moment was Will Gluck’s 2010 film Easy A, a twee teen update of The Scarlet Letter, in which her character, Olive, pretends to have sex with her gay classmate to help him convince everyone he’s straight. Then she pretends to do it with a bunch more people, too, for the social cachet and just for the hell of it. On paper, it’s an impossible role; she has to be an outcast and a smart aleck and a vlogger as well as charming enough that we believe her classmates believe she could hook up with half the school. That’s where Stone excels. When Olive decides to embrace her identity as a woman of ill repute, strutting down a walkway in Ray-Bans while she mugs and blows kisses, she’s doing an uncool person’s imitation of “cool and hot” in addition to being actually cool and hot. Stone makes Olive relatable: You get that she thinks high-school popularity is dumb and that she wants it anyway.

    With Nathan Fielder in The Curse.
    Photo: Richard Foreman Jr./SHOWTIME/Richard Foreman Jr./A24/Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

    Easy A took Stone to a new echelon. She was nominated for a Golden Globe (they love an ingénue), won an MTV Movie Award, and hosted Saturday Night Live for the first time. For a while, her career looked like an attempt to follow the path of early-’90s Julia Roberts, another star with megawatt charisma who knows how to let you in on the joke. Stone kept on doing comedies. She took a tiny role in Gluck’s next movie, Friends With Benefits. She starred opposite Ryan Gosling in Crazy, Stupid, Love. She was Gwen Stacy in the rom-comish The Amazing Spider-Man. Her role as the protagonist’s daughter in Alejandro González Iñárritu’s Birdman, from 2014, earned Stone her first Oscar nomination, but the performance, like a lot of that film, is pitched to 11, manic and attention-grabbing without being artful. Her most infamous role may be that of Allison Ng — whose father is supposed to be half-Chinese and half-Hawaiian — in Cameron Crowe’s directionless 2015 comedy, Aloha. (Stone has apologized for this informally: When Sandra Oh made a joke about it onstage at the 2019 Golden Globes, Stone shouted from her seat, “I’m sorry!”)

    After Aloha, Stone’s prospects looked uncertain. Studio comedies were on the wane. She wasn’t an obvious choice for dramas, nor was she an indie darling. But Stone picked up a part in La La Land, Damien Chazelle’s reconstructed Hollywood love-story musical. As Mia, a barista and wannabe actress, Stone portrayed the apotheosis of a striver. Mia may cloak her ambition in wry self-deprecation, especially when she flirts with Gosling’s Über-serious jazz musician, but the movie depends on the idea that she deserves to be discovered. Stone’s Oscar win for the role seemed almost inevitable from the scene in which Mia auditions for a big Hollywood film. Over the course of one song, she goes from a shrinking unknown — who cites her aunt who “used to live in Paris” as the dreamer who imparted her love of art — to a star and back, her voice gaining power as she builds through the bridge. In a long take, Chazelle brings us close to Stone as emotion overtakes her face, her eyes glimmering; the camera circles her, and when it comes back around she’s suddenly someone else. Maybe it’s a trick of eyeline: A novice looks down and away from the camera; the star, just above and beyond it.

    Stone had her Oscar, but where do you go from there? She did Battle of the Sexes and Netflix’s Maniac, a curio of a series quickly buried by algorithmic churn. But it was during her first collaboration with Lanthimos, in 2018’s The Favourite, when she uncovered a fruitful new valence for her career. She played Abigail, the new girl in the 18th-century court of Olivia Colman’s Queen Anne, who uses her natural star power to scheme her way into the queen’s affections while trying to outflank Anne’s standby, Rachel Weisz. In her most memorable gambit, Stone monologues about her plans while jerking off a young nobleman played by Joe Alwyn. Lanthimos pushes the camera toward Stone’s face, the candlelight bringing out its shadows. Abigail thinks of herself as a victim — “My life is like a maze I continually think I’ve gotten out of,” she mutters — but it’s clear she’s also seizing control of her situation and, literally, of Alwyn.

    The Favourite unlocked a darkness in Stone’s performances. While she had always made her characters self-aware, she began to lean harder into deviousness and delusion. On repeat visits to SNL, Stone explored fully unleashed defensiveness as the mother of a sensitive boy in 2016 and, in 2019, as an actress obsessed with finding the truth of her minor character in a gay porno. When she announces, as the star of 2021’s Cruella, that she was “born brilliant, born bad, and a little bit mad,” she plays it cocky, comedic, and entirely heartfelt, pointing herself in a different, possibly freeing, direction: The dreamer becomes a villain. In an interview about that film — a 101 Dalmatians prequel that barely justifies its existence outside Stone’s go-for-broke performance — she admitted that she had been “asking myself a lot of questions about that charm offensive or ingénue idea in my own life.” She was excited by “this phase of playing these women who are much less concerned with what people think about them.”

    Now when she plays a woman obsessed with likability, Stone knows she can treat it like a joke — or a trap. In The Curse, her character Whitney’s belief in her own charm is just one of her many self-deceptions. She is the daughter of slumlords who, along with her husband, Asher (Nathan Fielder), runs a house-flipping operation in New Mexico. They build “passive homes” that are obvious rip-offs of other people’s designs and that Whitney tries to fill with work by a Native artist who finds her cringe-inducing. Whitney wants her show to be called Green Queen. She is convinced that she deserves what would amount to HGTV stardom.

    It’s a self-immolating role — not least because Stone is from Arizona and played a white savior in The Help. Whitney has all the obliviousness of someone who would take that part in Aloha. In a defining scene, she and Asher stumble into a genuinely sweet moment when he tries to help her out of a sweater and it gets stuck around her head. They collapse into giggles. “This is us, Ash,” Whitney says, then adds, “I wish the network could see this.” She scurries across the room, grabs her phone, and tries to get him to re-create the scene on-camera.

    In Poor Things.
    Photo: Searchlight Pictures

    In Poor Things, Stone performs the most literal kind of becoming. She is Bella Baxter, a once-dead woman who has been zapped back to life but with the brain of a baby and must now grow into a worldly, self-actualized individual. The film has its surreal and twisted qualities as well as its obvious ones; the script and direction tend to overemphasize their points about misogyny. As Bella, though, Stone progresses through this strange personal growth without judgment in a performance that has made her an Oscar front-runner. She works with technical precision: As Bella’s brain ages inside her adult body, her gait changes from stilted lumbering to a posture of confidence and control. Her face, which she can spread open with wonder, scrambles with confusion and interest at new ideas and experiences, especially once she heads out to traipse across Europe in search of enlightenment. She’s gloriously uninhibited in the bedroom or while scarfing down her first pastel de nata. On the dance floor with Mark Ruffalo, she cavorts like a Victorian Raggedy Ann. Although Stone has always been good in close-up — and she’s especially good here, those watery irises offset by that jet-black hair — Bella’s discovery comes through her whole physical being.

    The film invites allegorical readings. You could interpret it as a comment on what it can be like to chart your own way as a woman in Hollywood or how to find some sense of self even when forced into a role. But it’s also, of all Stone’s metamorphoses, one of the simplest — and the most internal. Olive, Mia, Abigail, and even Whitney long for social acceptance. Bella’s hunger, in the end, isn’t social. What she wants from life is pleasure and knowledge, especially of her body’s forgotten history. She’s trying to become herself.


    See All



    Jackson McHenry

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  • Yorgos Lanthimos is Not Your Friend

    Yorgos Lanthimos is Not Your Friend

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Searchlight Pictures

    Last year, Yorgos Lanthimos directed a dark comedy about a woman named Bella who was assembled from the body of an adult and the brain of a fetus in a Frankenstein-like surgery and who went on to fuck her way to self-actualization across a fantastical Europe. It was the most accessible thing the Athens-born director had ever made, which really says more about his overall body of work than it does about Poor Things.

    Lanthimos is one of film’s reigning sadists, though he’s always funny about it — if not funny haha, then funny in a tone so arid as to render the humor borderline subliminal. He makes films set in deadpan universes that sit at Dutch angles to our own and feature characters struggling to live in accordance with arbitrary and frequently cruel conventions. All of which is true of Poor Things as well. What sets it apart is the way that Bella, the wiped-blank heroine played by Emma Stone, rejects the rules and strictures she’s told she has to abide by as she speedruns her way from child to woman of the world. Lanthimos, as unlikely as it seemed, had created a story of empowerment as well as something tailor-made to polarize the internet.

    The frankness of the sexual content — which begins with Bella’s innocent explorations of her own body, progresses to her voracious pursuit of what she calls “furious jumping” with a louche lawyer played by Mark Ruffalo, and eventually brings her to work in a Parisian brothel — kicked off arguments about the degree to which Poor Things is mired in the male gaze. It seemed as though the only person who didn’t care to weigh in on the validity of the film’s feminism was the filmmaker himself, who shied away from the label like someone being introduced as a boyfriend by a person they thought they were just casually dating.

    Watching the world discover Lanthimos by way of one of his least characteristic and, honestly, weakest films has been akin to watching someone you know become the internet’s latest main character, stripped of other context with their actions scrutinized via a very specific lens. Lanthimos is many things — a champion absurdist, an arguable nihilist, an occasional edgelord, and an artist who has maintained a decidedly Euro sensibility despite having worked in English with Hollywood actors since 2015. His movies have the brain-burrowing quality of an insomniac’s thought spiral and are so insistently off-kilter that the Greek Weird Wave, the movement he’s sometimes described as being a part of, feels less like
    a trend in national cinema and more like a summary of how his distinct sensibility has filtered through to some of his peers. If he considers himself a feminist — and there’s no reason to believe he wouldn’t, even if there is a “please clap” quality to Bella’s journey in Poor Things that leaves it lacking in conviction — it has felt largely incidental until this point.

    His work does have an awareness of the role that gender plays in the abuse
    of power and in sexual violence, and his films feature their own fun-house-mirror versions of patriarchy. But when it comes to the degradations his characters are subjected to, he’s equal opportunity. The most challenging aspect of his movies, which run the gamut from the brilliant (Dogtooth, The Favourite) to the irritatingly opaque (Kinetta, The Killing of a Sacred Deer), has more to do with the impassivity of his gaze and the delectable swagger behind it. He skewers his characters like he’s pinning butterflies to corkboard, and it’s not always evident whether that’s done in service of some greater purpose or out of a more basic desire to provoke. Kinds of Kindness, his hilariously hostile follow-up to Poor Things, is a return to the director’s primary interest, which has always been control. In particular, he’s fascinated by what makes people continue to obey, how they fumblingly fit themselves into roles laid out for them, why they might submit to the will of others even when it causes them harm.

    The anthology film, which premiered earlier this year at Cannes, is made up of a trio of surreal fables rife with coercion, druggings, assaults, and self-mutilation. In its first section, Jesse Plemons plays a man who lives his entire life — from the clothes he wears to the house he lives in, the woman he marries, and the size of their family (he puts an abortifacient in his wife’s coffee to maintain their childless state) — according to the dictates of his boss (Willem Dafoe). In the second, Plemons is a cop who subjects a woman (Stone) who claims to be his missing wife to a series of escalating tests in order to prove she’s an impostor. (The ensemble, which includes Joe Alwyn, Mamoudou Athie, Hong Chau, and Margaret Qualley, recurs across each part.) And in the third, Stone belongs to a cult whose members pledge sexual fidelity to its two leaders and are in search of a messiah — a position that involves being able to raise the dead but also having the correct distance between your nipples. Lanthimos has made inroads with American audiences, but Kinds of Kindness brings to mind his earlier and less approachable work, which is in Greek and focuses on the dynamics of people devoted to inscrutable group activities that involve turning yourself over to someone else’s whims.

    There’s also an obsessive cop in Kinetta, Lanthimos’s barely parsable 2005 solo debut, one consumed with coaching a hotel maid and a photoshop clerk through reenactments of violent crimes, a project they keep coming back to despite its appearing to make them miserable. There’s a cultlike collective in his 2011 Alps, a group of four people who, as a service to the bereaved, fill in for people who have died, wearing the deceased’s clothing and parroting past conversations — a process that leads one of its members, played by Lanthimos’s favorite non-American leading lady, Angeliki Papoulia, to become destructively overinvested. These aren’t films about people who overcome limitations and discover themselves but something uneasier: films about people who barely have a sense of self at all and who accept being told what to do because they’re at a loss otherwise.

    It’s fair to say that all of Lanthimos’s movies are meant to be received as comedies, even 2017’s The Killing of a Sacred Deer, which takes on the contours of a thriller when members of a family learn they’re required to sacrifice one of their own. But he isn’t in any way a warm filmmaker, which may have something to do with how so many of the oddball enterprises his characters are involved in read as distorted versions of filmmaking with someone in charge of direction and others playing parts. His characters are unfailingly stilted and juvenile and a little alien, designed to keep the viewer at arm’s length rather than to invite sympathy. Given how regularly his films veer toward debasement, that distance serves as a protective measure, a means of making the ludicrous and disturbing situations he conjures up easier to tolerate.

    The most excruciating sequence in his entire filmography, in 2009’s Dogtooth, rests entirely on the mechanical behavior of its participants. Papoulia, as one of three adult siblings who were raised in stunted isolation, is directed to have sex with her brother by their parents, who have created a whole mythology about the dangers of the outside world but who fully buy into the idea that men have urges that must be tended to. Lanthimos shoots the encounter in a series of frank, static shots that leave nothing to the imagination until the end, when the film cuts to Papoulia’s character in profile, her brother visible only in the reflection of the mirror as he moves above her, her face contorted in an involuntary grimace. This framing is echoed in Kinds of Kindness in a scene in which one of Stone’s characters is roofied and then raped, her head jostling as her unconscious body is assaulted by someone offscreen. These aren’t moments anyone would trumpet as feminist, though what’s upsetting about them isn’t that they feel exploitative — it’s that they’re presented impassively, with no more compassion than prurience and with an unsparing gaze that provides no guidance for what a viewer is supposed to feel aside from discomfort.

    There’s something haunting about how Lanthimos keeps returning to these dynamics. He treats the desire to be dominated as an elemental aspect of human nature, though it’s one he prefers to explore on a granular level. He may not offer empathy to these characters, but he doesn’t hold himself apart from them. If the triumphant found-family ending of Poor Things rings false, that’s only because it provides closure when his efforts are very much ongoing.

    It’s ridiculous to allow the executive you work for to decide what you should read at night and how many children you can have, but it’s worth reflecting on the forces shaping each of our own decisions on those matters. That’s not an especially friendly way to think about how we all exist in the world — but then Yorgos Lanthimos was never your friend.

    Alison Willmore

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  • Scottsdale native Emma Stone wins second Best Actress Oscar

    Scottsdale native Emma Stone wins second Best Actress Oscar

    At the 96th annual Academy Awards held Sunday night, Emma Stone took home her second Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance in “Poor Things” as Bella Baxter, a young woman who goes on a journey of self-discovery after being brought back to life by an eccentric scientist.

    And it all started in the Valley.

    “Yorgos, thank you for the gift of a lifetime in Bella Baxter,” Stone said in her acceptance speech, speaking to “Poor Things” director Yorgos Lanthimos. “I am forever thankful for you.”

    She was born Emily Stone in Scottsdale on Nov. 6, 1988. She began her acting career at local company Valley Youth Theatre, where her first role was in “The Wind in the Willows” at the age of 10.

    VYT artistic director Bobb Cooper told Teen Vogue in 2017, “I knew from a very young age that Emma had the innate ability to bring any character to life. She gives everything to each character she plays and brings truth to the story. Emma knows how to make moments magical.”

    Stone thanked Cooper in her acceptance speech for Best Actress when she won it in 2017 for “La La Land.”

    Though Stone won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical this year, industry experts and oddsmakers favored Lily Gladstone to win the Oscar for “Killers of the Flower Moon,” which would have made her the first Indigenous woman to win the Best Actress award. Indeed, Stone looked shocked when her name was announced.

    Stone referenced her fellow nominees — Sandra Huller, Annette Bening, Carey Mulligan and Gladstone — in her acceptance speech.

    “And the women in this category, Sandra, Annette, Carey, Lily, I share this with you, I am in awe of you. It has been such an honor to do all this together and I hope we keep doing more together,” she said.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkN0sPQ76E0

    Stone now becomes one of 12 women who have won the Best Actress Academy Award twice. (Frances McDormand has won it three times, and Katharine Hepburn has a record four statuettes in that category.)

    Stone also thanked the cast and crew of “Poor Things,” which took home Oscars in the categories of Production Design, Costume Design and Makeup & Hairstyling.

    “Yorgos said to me, ‘Please take yourself out of it,’ and he was right, because it’s not about me. It’s about a team that came together to make something greater than the sum of its parts and that is the best part about making movies: It’s all of us, together. And I am so deeply honored to share this with every cast member, with every crew member, with every single person who poured their love and their care and their brilliance into the making of this film.”

    Lastly, Stone thanked her family, including her husband, Dave McCary, and their daughter, Louise.

    She said, “I know I have to wrap up, but I really just want to thank my family: my mom; my brother, Spencer; my dad; my husband, Dave, I love you so much. And most importantly, my daughter; who’s gonna be 3 in three days and has turned our lives Technicolor. I love you bigger than the whole sky, my girl. Thank you so much.”

    Jennifer Goldberg

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  • ‘Poor Things’ wins 2 Oscars for makeup and hairstyling, production design; film up for 11 Oscars

    ‘Poor Things’ wins 2 Oscars for makeup and hairstyling, production design; film up for 11 Oscars

    March 10 is Oscar Sunday! Watch the 2024 Oscars live 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.

    Watch all the action on the red carpet live on ABC, streaming live on OnTheRedCarpet.com and on the On the Red Carpet Facebook and YouTube pages.

    The 96th Oscars, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, begins at 7 p.m. ET 4 p.m. PT, an hour earlier than past years.

    The Oscars are followed by an all-new episode of “Abbott Elementary.”

    OTRC

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  • This Official Poor Things Party Brought the Film’s Freaky Glam Vibes to Life

    This Official Poor Things Party Brought the Film’s Freaky Glam Vibes to Life

    Photo: Sabina Graves/Gizmodo

    To celebrate the upcoming digital, Blu-ray, and DVD release of Poor Things, io9 attended a party inspired by the Emma Stone-starring film directed by Yorgos Lanthimos. The cinematic soiree was delightfully twisted, just like the parties Stone’s Fraken-creation Bella Baxter enjoys—complete with immersive actors portraying her role.

    The mini-gala, held in Los Angeles, CA, showcased the Oscar-nominated film’s costumes, both on the wandering Bellas as well as displayed on mannequins, allowing attendees to get a close-up look at Holly Waddington’s fanciful designs. To cap the night, Dancing with the Stars’ Val Chmerkovskiy and Jenna Johnson performed their take on the film’s memorable duet between Stone and Mark Ruffalo’s characters.

    Check out this gallery for a peek at the night’s fun, filled with vibes evoking the unique world of Lanthimos’ film.

    Sabina Graves

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  • ‘Oppenheimer’ wins Christopher Nolan a best director prize and more at British Academy Film Awards

    ‘Oppenheimer’ wins Christopher Nolan a best director prize and more at British Academy Film Awards

    Stars from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond converged in London Sunday for the 77th British Academy Film Awards, where atom-bomb epic “Oppenheimer” could smash a 53-year-old record if it makes good on its field-leading 13 nominations.Christopher Nolan ‘s biopic of physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer was up for trophies including best film, best director and best actor for star Cillian Murphy. A good night could see it surpass the record nine awards won by “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” at the BAFTAs in 1971.It was guaranteed at least five prizes when Nolan won his first best-director BAFTA, having also won trophies for editing, cinematography and musical score, as well as the best supporting actor prize for Robert Downey Jr.”Oppenheimer” faced stiff competition in what’s widely considered a vintage year for cinema, and an awards season energized by the end of actors’ and writers’ strikes that shut down Hollywood for months.Holocaust drama ” The Zone of Interest” — a British-produced film shot in Poland with a largely German cast — was named both best British film and best film not in English, a first.Jonathan Glazer’s unsettling drama takes place in a family home just outside the walls of Auschwitz.”Walls aren’t new from before or since the Holocaust and it seems stark right now that we should care about innocent people being killed in Gaza or Yemen or Mariupol or Israel,” producer James Wilson said. “Thank you for recognizing a film that asks us to think in those spaces.”Gothic fantasia “Poor Things” had 11 nominations, including best film, director for Yorgos Lanthimos and actress for Emma Stone. Historical epic “Killers of the Flower Moon” had nine for the awards, officially called the EE BAFTA Film Awards.The ceremony, hosted by “Doctor Who” star David Tennant — who entered wearing a kilt and sequined top while carrying a dog named Bark Ruffalo — is a glitzy, British-accented appetizer for Hollywood’s Academy Awards, closely watched for hints about who might win at the Oscars on March 10.The prize for original screenplay, went to French courtroom drama “Anatomy of a Fall.” The film about a woman on trial over the death of her husband was written by director Justine Triet and her partner, Arthur Harari.”It’s a fiction, and we are reasonably fine,” Triet joked.Da’Vine Joy Randolph was named best supporting actress for playing a boarding school cook in “The Holdovers” and said she felt a “responsibility I don’t take lightly” to tell the stories of underrepresented people like her character Mary.Cord Jefferson won the adapted screenplay prize for the satirical “American Fiction,” about the struggles of an African-American novelistJefferson said he hoped the success of the movie “maybe changes the minds of the people who are in charge of greenlighting films and TV shows, allows them to be less risk-averse.”Ukraine war documentary “20 Days in Mariupol,” produced by The Associated Press and PBS “Frontline,” won the prize for best documentary.”This is not about us,” said filmmaker Mstyslav Chernov, who captured the harrowing reality of life in the besieged city with an AP team. “This is about Ukraine, about the people of Mariupol.”Chernov said the story of the city and its fall into Russian occupation “is a symbol of struggle and a symbol of faith. Thank you for empowering our voice and let’s just keep fighting.”Other leading award contenders included “The Holdovers” and Leonard Bernstein biopic “Maestro” — each with seven nominations — and grief-flecked love story “All of Us Strangers” with six. Barbed class-war dramedy “Saltburn ” has five nominations.” Barbie,” one half of 2023’s “Barbenheimer” box office juggernaut and the year’s top-grossing film, also had five nominations but missed out on nods for best picture and best director. Many saw the omission of “Barbie” director Greta Gerwig — for both the BAFTAs and the Oscars — as a major snub.The best film race pits “Oppenheimer” against “Poor Things,” “Killers of the Flower Moon,” “Anatomy of a Fall” and “The Holdovers.”Britain’s film academy introduced changes to increase the awards’ diversity in 2020, when no women were nominated as best director for the seventh year running and all 20 nominees in the lead and supporting performer categories were white. However, Triet was the only woman among this year’s six best-director nominees.A woman of color could take the best actress BAFTA for the first time, with Fantasia Barrino for “The Color Purple” and Vivian Oparah for “Rye Lane” nominated alongside Sandra Hüller for “Anatomy of a Fall,” Mulligan for “Maestro,” Margot Robbie for “Barbie” and Stone for “Poor Things.”No British performers are nominated in the best-actor category, but Ireland is represented by Murphy for “Oppenheimer” and Barry Keoghan for “Saltburn.” They’re up against Cooper for “Maestro,” Colman Domingo for civil rights biopic “Rustin,” Paul Giamatti for “The Holdovers” and Teo Yoo for “Past Lives.”Before the ceremony, nominees including Bradley Cooper, Carey Mulligan, Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., Rosamund Pike, Ryan Gosling and Ayo Edebiri all walked the red carpet at London’s Royal Festival Hall, along with presenters Andrew Scott, Cate Blanchett and David Beckham.Guest of honor was Prince William, in his role as president of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. He arrived without his wife, Kate, who is recovering from abdominal surgery last month.The ceremony included musical performances by “Ted Lasso” star Hannah Waddingham, singing “Time After Time,” and Sophie Ellis-Bextor, singing her 2001 hit “Murder on the Dancefloor,” which shot back up the charts after featuring in “Saltburn.”Actress Samantha Morton received the academy’s highest honor, the BAFTA Fellowship, and film curator June Givanni, founder of the June Givanni PanAfrican Cinema Archive, was honored for outstanding British contribution to cinema.Sunday’s ceremony was being broadcast on BBC One in the U.K. from 1900GMT, and on streaming service BritBox in the U.S., Canada, Australia and South Africa.___Hilary Fox contributed to this story.

    Stars from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond converged in London Sunday for the 77th British Academy Film Awards, where atom-bomb epic “Oppenheimer” could smash a 53-year-old record if it makes good on its field-leading 13 nominations.

    Christopher Nolan ‘s biopic of physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer was up for trophies including best film, best director and best actor for star Cillian Murphy. A good night could see it surpass the record nine awards won by “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” at the BAFTAs in 1971.

    It was guaranteed at least five prizes when Nolan won his first best-director BAFTA, having also won trophies for editing, cinematography and musical score, as well as the best supporting actor prize for Robert Downey Jr.

    “Oppenheimer” faced stiff competition in what’s widely considered a vintage year for cinema, and an awards season energized by the end of actors’ and writers’ strikes that shut down Hollywood for months.

    Holocaust drama ” The Zone of Interest” — a British-produced film shot in Poland with a largely German cast — was named both best British film and best film not in English, a first.

    Jonathan Glazer’s unsettling drama takes place in a family home just outside the walls of Auschwitz.

    “Walls aren’t new from before or since the Holocaust and it seems stark right now that we should care about innocent people being killed in Gaza or Yemen or Mariupol or Israel,” producer James Wilson said. “Thank you for recognizing a film that asks us to think in those spaces.”

    Gothic fantasia “Poor Things” had 11 nominations, including best film, director for Yorgos Lanthimos and actress for Emma Stone. Historical epic “Killers of the Flower Moon” had nine for the awards, officially called the EE BAFTA Film Awards.

    The ceremony, hosted by “Doctor Who” star David Tennant — who entered wearing a kilt and sequined top while carrying a dog named Bark Ruffalo — is a glitzy, British-accented appetizer for Hollywood’s Academy Awards, closely watched for hints about who might win at the Oscars on March 10.

    The prize for original screenplay, went to French courtroom drama “Anatomy of a Fall.” The film about a woman on trial over the death of her husband was written by director Justine Triet and her partner, Arthur Harari.

    “It’s a fiction, and we are reasonably fine,” Triet joked.

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph was named best supporting actress for playing a boarding school cook in “The Holdovers” and said she felt a “responsibility I don’t take lightly” to tell the stories of underrepresented people like her character Mary.

    Cord Jefferson won the adapted screenplay prize for the satirical “American Fiction,” about the struggles of an African-American novelist

    Jefferson said he hoped the success of the movie “maybe changes the minds of the people who are in charge of greenlighting films and TV shows, allows them to be less risk-averse.”

    Ukraine war documentary “20 Days in Mariupol,” produced by The Associated Press and PBS “Frontline,” won the prize for best documentary.

    “This is not about us,” said filmmaker Mstyslav Chernov, who captured the harrowing reality of life in the besieged city with an AP team. “This is about Ukraine, about the people of Mariupol.”

    Chernov said the story of the city and its fall into Russian occupation “is a symbol of struggle and a symbol of faith. Thank you for empowering our voice and let’s just keep fighting.”

    Other leading award contenders included “The Holdovers” and Leonard Bernstein biopic “Maestro” — each with seven nominations — and grief-flecked love story “All of Us Strangers” with six. Barbed class-war dramedy “Saltburn ” has five nominations.

    ” Barbie,” one half of 2023’s “Barbenheimer” box office juggernaut and the year’s top-grossing film, also had five nominations but missed out on nods for best picture and best director. Many saw the omission of “Barbie” director Greta Gerwig — for both the BAFTAs and the Oscars — as a major snub.

    The best film race pits “Oppenheimer” against “Poor Things,” “Killers of the Flower Moon,” “Anatomy of a Fall” and “The Holdovers.”

    Britain’s film academy introduced changes to increase the awards’ diversity in 2020, when no women were nominated as best director for the seventh year running and all 20 nominees in the lead and supporting performer categories were white. However, Triet was the only woman among this year’s six best-director nominees.

    A woman of color could take the best actress BAFTA for the first time, with Fantasia Barrino for “The Color Purple” and Vivian Oparah for “Rye Lane” nominated alongside Sandra Hüller for “Anatomy of a Fall,” Mulligan for “Maestro,” Margot Robbie for “Barbie” and Stone for “Poor Things.”

    No British performers are nominated in the best-actor category, but Ireland is represented by Murphy for “Oppenheimer” and Barry Keoghan for “Saltburn.” They’re up against Cooper for “Maestro,” Colman Domingo for civil rights biopic “Rustin,” Paul Giamatti for “The Holdovers” and Teo Yoo for “Past Lives.”

    Before the ceremony, nominees including Bradley Cooper, Carey Mulligan, Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., Rosamund Pike, Ryan Gosling and Ayo Edebiri all walked the red carpet at London’s Royal Festival Hall, along with presenters Andrew Scott, Cate Blanchett and David Beckham.

    Guest of honor was Prince William, in his role as president of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. He arrived without his wife, Kate, who is recovering from abdominal surgery last month.

    The ceremony included musical performances by “Ted Lasso” star Hannah Waddingham, singing “Time After Time,” and Sophie Ellis-Bextor, singing her 2001 hit “Murder on the Dancefloor,” which shot back up the charts after featuring in “Saltburn.”

    Actress Samantha Morton received the academy’s highest honor, the BAFTA Fellowship, and film curator June Givanni, founder of the June Givanni PanAfrican Cinema Archive, was honored for outstanding British contribution to cinema.

    Sunday’s ceremony was being broadcast on BBC One in the U.K. from 1900GMT, and on streaming service BritBox in the U.S., Canada, Australia and South Africa.

    ___

    Hilary Fox contributed to this story.

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  • ‘Zone of Interest’ Wins Best Film at London Critics’ Circle Awards, Emma Stone Named Best Actress

    ‘Zone of Interest’ Wins Best Film at London Critics’ Circle Awards, Emma Stone Named Best Actress


    Jonathan Glazer’s German-language drama The Zone of Interest claimed the top honor, film of the year, at the 44th London Critics’ Circle Film Awards on Sunday, along with the best director and a technical award. Emma Stone was honored as actress of the year for her work in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things.

    Meanwhile, All of Us Strangers star Andrew Scott picked up the actor of the year award, with the Andrew Haigh drama overall claiming three nods, just like The Zone of Interest. The London critics also named Da’Vine Joy Randolph supporting actress of the year for her role in The Holdovers and May December‘s Charles Melton supporting actor of the year. Stone, Randolph and Melton accepted their awards via video messages.

    Among the other winners of the night were Paul Mescal, honored as British/Irish performer for his body of work in 2023, and Mia McKenna-Bruce who received the critics group’s first international breakthrough performance award for How to Have Sex. Meanwhile, Celine Song‘s Past Lives was honored as the foreign-language film of the year, while Hayao Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron won the new animated film award.

    Jeffrey Wright and Colman Domingo received special honors at the star-studded ceremony at the May
    Fair Hotel in London. Wright took the stage to receive the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Film, presented to him by American Fiction director Cord Jefferson. And Misan Harriman, Oscar-nominated this year for his short The After, presented the inaugural Derek Malcolm Award for Innovation to Domingo, who had received the honor in a small videotaped ceremony in London two days earlier.

    The London Critics’ Circle Film Awards were voted on by the 210-member film section of the Critics’ Circle, which describes itself as “the U.K.’s longest-standing and most prestigious critics’
    organization.” Films were automatically eligible if they were released in U.K. cinemas or on
    “premiere” streaming services between mid-February 2023 and mid-February 2024.

    Check out the full list of 2024 winners below.

    FILM OF THE YEAR
    The Zone of Interest

    FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR
    Past Lives

    DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR
    20 Days in Mariupol

    ANIMATED FILM OF THE YEAR
    The Boy and the Heron

    DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR
    Jonathan Glazer – The Zone of Interest

    SCREENWRITER OF THE YEAR
    Justine Triet & Arthur Harari – Anatomy of a Fall

    ACTRESS OF THE YEAR
    Emma StonePoor Things

    ACTOR OF THE YEAR
    Andrew Scott – All of Us Strangers

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS OF THE YEAR
    Da’Vine Joy Randolph – The Holdovers

    SUPPORTING ACTOR OF THE YEAR
    Charles Melton – May December

    BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR
    Mia McKenna-Bruce – How to Have Sex

    THE ATTENBOROUGH AWARD: BRITISH/IRISH FILM OF THE YEAR
    All of Us Strangers

    THE PHILIP FRENCH AWARD: BREAKTHROUGH BRITISH/IRISH FILMMAKER
    Molly Manning Walker – How to Have Sex

    BRITISH/IRISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR (for body of work)
    Paul Mescal – All of Us Strangers, God’s Creatures, Foe, Carmen

    YOUNG BRITISH/IRISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR
    Lola Campbell – Scrapper

    BRITISH/IRISH SHORT FILM OF THE YEAR
    The Veiled City – Natalie Cubides-Brady, director

    TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
    The Zone of Interest – music & sound, Mica Levi & Johnnie Burn

    THE DILYS POWELL AWARD: EXCELLENCE IN FILM
    Jeffrey Wright

    THE DEREK MALCOLM AWARD FOR INNOVATION
    Colman Domingo



    Georg Szalai

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  • Yorgos Lanthimos on ‘Poor Things,’ His Friendship with Emma Stone, Unleashing Mark Ruffalo and Why He Doesn’t Like Labels

    Yorgos Lanthimos on ‘Poor Things,’ His Friendship with Emma Stone, Unleashing Mark Ruffalo and Why He Doesn’t Like Labels


    His friendship with Emma Stone, unleashing new sides of Mark Ruffalo and Colin Farrell, his next film and the limitations of language. Those were just some of the topics that Poor Things director Yorgos Lanthimos discussed during an onstage interview organized by the British Film Institute (BFI) in London on Wednesday evening.

    “I don’t really think of themes themselves,” Lanthimos shared when asked by an audience member what topics and themes he was planning to take on in future movies. “It is more about coming up with the stories and the structures and sensing that there’s something there that I’m interested in.” He also said that it was only “after that that you realize what it is about for yourself [since] for other people it could be about another thing. So it’s hard to say what the themes are.”

    The filmmaker said he and his collaborators are “interested in humans and just going in deeper into those kinds of societal structures and behaviors and relationships.”

    He then mentioned his latest project, which is entitled Kinds of Kindness and features Stone, Jesse Plemons, Margaret Qualley and Willem Dafoe, among others. “We’ve just shot this film … which is three different stories,” the director said, calling it “a contemporary film.” He added: “It’s three different stories, and we’re finishing the edit right now, and I still can’t tell you exactly what it is about. But I also wouldn’t want to tell you what I thought the stories are about because it just makes it so small. I try not to even think about it during the process, because I’m afraid that it will make my choices more narrow.”

    The filmmaker behind such acclaimed movies as Dogtooth, The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer and The Favourite also discussed his body of work and creative process during the appearance at the British capital’s Southbank Centre. The event, under the title “Yorgos Lanthimos in Conversation,” drew a big crowd, including Stone, who sat in the front row.

    Their black-comedy sci-fi fantasy Poor Things recently earned 11 nominations each for both the BAFTA Film Awards and the Oscars.

    Asked about his continuing creative partnership with Stone, Lanthimos told the audience: “The funny thing is, which I tell her, but she doesn’t believe me, I thought of her for The Lobster as well.” Stone was heard laughing when he said that, drawing appreciative laughs from the audience as well. “She has this wonderful speech impediment, it feels like a lisp,” he continued. “And in the world of The Lobster that would be very critical, a very particular characteristic. So she could be the lisping woman.”

    How did Stone end up playing Bella Baxter in Poor Things? “We got to know each other really well, even before making The Favourite, because we started discussing it a couple of years before, and it took some time to get made. So we became friends during that time,” Lanthimos explained. “Then when we actually had the working experience, it just was obvious that we got along and we like working together.”

    So he mentioned other projects to the star, “and she immediately jumped on Poor Things as soon as she heard the story. … And the rest is history.”

    Asked about how he showed new sides of Mark Ruffalo in Poor Things, Lanthimos said the credit for the acting work should go to his stars and their creativity. But he did share that Ruffalo had some doubts initially, which the director managed to address.

    “Well, I just set him free, he was ready to go,” the Greek director said, calling Ruffalo “a brilliant actor.”

    “He was a little bit reluctant, I guess, because he hasn’t done anything like that,” he recalled. “Now that I know him better, I think in general he always thinks he’s not good for it.” But then Ruffalo got excited and “completely embraced” his role, Lanthimos recalled. “He came in strong when we started rehearsing. We had two or three weeks of rehearsal. He was the guy who was already there. And we had so much fun during rehearsals.”

    Asked about his reaction to the broad appeal Poor Things has enjoyed, Lanthimos said: “I have been surprised.”

    The filmmaker on Wednesday also lauded other stars he has worked with. Discussing Colin Farrell and his work in The Lobster, Lanthimos said: “He was looking to do different things,” such as In Bruges. ”His comedic sense and, in general, his presence I thought was very strong. And I guess the thing with casting with me is, first of all, I want to try and find people that I want to work with, no matter if they fit the character exactly. That’s why he had to gain so much weight. But it’s mostly about people that I want to work with, meeting them and seeing if we get along.” Concluded the director: “It’s important to find the people that actually have this connection with your work and with you as a person.”

    Farrell, of course, also appeared in The Killing of a Sacred Deer, along with Nicole Kidman and then-new discovery Barry Keoghan. Calling him “incredible,” Lanthimos recalled: “We saw hundreds of American kids” for his role. “It was clear immediately that he was so special.”

    Having a veteran like Kidman on set also helped. “Nicole is extremely generous,” Lanthimos said in singing her praises. “That helps a lot.”

    Overall, Lanthimos said he sees his work with actors as making sure “to give them space … (so) they can try stuff and they are safe.”

    One of the things the director has gotten a reputation for is his unusual approach to his prep work and sets. “I come up with games for the actors to get to know each other and feel comfortable to make a fool of themselves and make the process light and fun,” the Greek filmmaker explained. “We shouldn’t be taking things too seriously. We are making movies.”

    What games does he make his stars play? ”It’s a lot of physical stuff,” he shared, mentioning dancing and “silly walks” as examples, along with “raising the volume of your voice as you speak in a totally nonsensical way.”

    So what does Lanthimos make of people describing his films as absurdist? “It’s always not the most pleasant thing to just be boxed into one thing,” he shared. “I guess there is some kind of absurdity in the films, but I hope they’re more complex than that.”

    The BFI event’s description itself also lauded the filmmaker for “his exquisitely crafted, wild absurdist tales and darkly comic explorations of the human condition.”

    Lanthimos understands such labels. “I understand why people have the need to describe it a certain way or make sense of it by using language,” he told the audience. “But the thing is, the trouble is language is not always sufficient for any kind of work of art.”

    Emma Stone with Ramy Youssef (left) in Poor Things

    Courtesy of Telluride Film Festival/ Yorgos Lanthimos/Searchlight Pictures.



    Georg Szalai

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  • See the full list of Oscar nominations for 2024 Academy Awards

    See the full list of Oscar nominations for 2024 Academy Awards


    Nominees for the 96th Academy Awards announced

    05:32

    The nominations for the 2024 Oscars were announced today with “Oppenheimer” leading the pack with 13 nods followed by “Poor Things” with 11. The 96th annual Academy Awards follow a year that saw the “Barbenheimer” phenomenon of “Barbie” and Christopher Nolan‘s epic World War II biopic pack movie theaters around the world with each raking in hundreds of millions of dollars at the box office.

    Tuesday’s announcement wasn’t without its share of surprises, with no nomination for “Barbie” director Greta Gerwig and no acting nods for the movie’s star Margot Robbie — a producer for the best picture nominee — or past Oscar winner Leonardo DiCaprio, who starred in “Killers of the Flower Moon.” Meanwhile, America Ferrera scored a best supporting actress nod for her performance in “Barbie” after she wasn’t nominated for a Golden Globe. And Justine Triet became the eighth woman nominated for best director for “Anatomy of a Fall.” Here is the full list of this year’s Oscar nominees:

    Best picture

    • “American Fiction”
    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “Barbie”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Past Lives”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Best actor

    • Bradley Cooper, “Maestro”
    • Colman Domingo, “Rustin”
    • Paul Giamatti, “The Holdovers”
    • Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer”
    • Jeffrey Wright, “American Fiction”

    Best actress

    • Annette Bening, “Nyad”
    • Lily Gladstone, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Sandra Hüller, “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • Carey Mulligan, “Maestro”
    • Emma Stone, “Poor Things”

    Best supporting actor

    • Sterling K. Brown, “American Fiction”
    • Robert De Niro, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Robert Downey Jr., “Oppenheimer”
    • Ryan Gosling, “Barbie”
    • Mark Ruffalo, “Poor Things”

    Best supporting actress

    • Emily Blunt, “Oppenheimer”
    • Danielle Brooks, “The Color Purple”
    • America Ferrera, “Barbie”
    • Jodie Foster, “Nyad”
    • Da’Vine Joy Randolph, “The Holdovers”

    Best director

    • Jonathan Glazer, “The Zone of Interest”
    • Yorgos Lanthimos, “Poor Things”
    • Christopher Nolan, “Oppenheimer”
    • Martin Scorsese, “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • Justine Triet, “Anatomy of a Fall”

    International feature film

    • “Io Capitano,” Italy
    • “Perfect Days,” Japan
    • “Society of the Snow,” Spain
    • “The Teachers’ Lounge,” Germany
    • “The Zone of Interest,” United Kingdom

    Animated feature film

    • “The Boy and the Heron”
    • “Elemental”
    • “Nimona”
    • “Robot Dreams”
    • “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”

    Adapted screenplay

    • “American Fiction”
    • “Barbie”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Original screenplay

    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “Maestro”
    • “May December”
    • “Past Lives”

    Visual effects

    • “The Creator”
    • “Godzilla Minus One”
    • “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3”
    • “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One”
    • “Napoleon”

    Original score

    • “American Fiction”
    • “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”

    Original song

    • “It Never Went Away” from “American Symphony”
    • “I’m Just Ken” from “Barbie”
    • “What Was I Made For?” from “Barbie”
    • “The Fire Inside” from “Flamin’ Hot”
    • “Wahzhazhe (A Song For My People)” from “Killers of the Flower Moon”

    Documentary feature film

    • “20 Days in Mariupol”
    • “Bobi Wine: The People’s President”
    • “The Eternal Memory”
    • “Four Daughters”
    • “To Kill a Tiger”

    Cinematography

    • “El Conde”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”

    Costume design

    • “Barbie”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Napoleon”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”

    Animated short film

    • “Letter to a Pig”
    • “Ninety-Five Senses”
    • “Our Uniform”
    • “Pachyderme”
    • “War Is Over! Inspired by the Music of John & Yoko”

    Live action short film

    • “The After”
    • “Invincible”
    • “Knight of Fortune”
    • “Red, White and Blue”
    • “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar”

    Documentary short film

    • “The ABCs of Book Banning”
    • “The Barber of Little Rock”
    • “Island in Between”
    • “The Last Repair Shop”
    • “Nǎi Nai & Wài Pó”

    Film editing

    • “Anatomy of a Fall”
    • “The Holdovers”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”

    Sound

    • “The Creator”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “The Zone of Interest”

    Production design

    • “Barbie”
    • “Killers of the Flower Moon”
    • “Napoleon”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”

    Makeup and hairstyling

    • “Golda”
    • “Maestro”
    • “Oppenheimer”
    • “Poor Things”
    • “Society of the Snow”

    Last week, Nolan’s drama about J. Robert Oppenheimer, the leader of the top-secret Manhattan Project that created the atomic bomb, led the nominations for the BAFTA Film Awards with 13 nods. “Poor Things,” starring Emma Stone and directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, received 11 nominations for the U.K.’s version of the Oscars.

    At the Golden Globes earlier this month, “Oppenheimer” won five awards, including best drama motion picture. Nolan took home the Globe for best director. Cillian Murphy’s portrayal of the title character earned him best actor in a drama, and co-star Robert Downey Jr. won best supporting actor.

    First-time Globe nominee Lily Gladstone won best drama actress for her performance in Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

    “Poor Things” won the Globe for best musical or comedy motion picture, and Stone won the category’s best actress award. Paul Giamatti won best actor in a musical or comedy for Alexander Payne’s “The Holdovers,” and Giamatti’s co-star Da’Vine Joy Randolph — another first-time Globe nominee — won best supporting actress.

    “Barbie” was nominated for nine Globes, including best director. It won two, best original song for Billie Eilish‘s “What Was I Made for?” and the new award for cinematic and box office achievement.

    David Morgan and Caitlin O’Kane contributed reporting.

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  • ‘Oppenheimer’ & ‘Poor Things’ Lead 2024 BAFTA Nominations — The Complete List

    ‘Oppenheimer’ & ‘Poor Things’ Lead 2024 BAFTA Nominations — The Complete List

    Nominations for the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards have been unveiled. Scroll down for the full list.

    Leading the way this year is Christopher Nolan’s atomic biopic Oppenheimer, which snagged 13 noms, including best film, director, and adapted screenplay. Oppenheimer was one nomination away from equaling All Quiet on the Western Front’s record 2023 haul of 14 noms. Trailing Nolan is Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, who clocked 11 nominations with his latest black comedy, Poor Things. Lanthimos’ haul also includes best film and director alongside outstanding british film and adapted screenplay for Tony McNamara. 

    Chasing the leading two is Martin Scorsese’s Osage epic Killers Of The Flower, which clocked nine nominations. The 3-hour plus pic pops up in best film, supporting actor for Robert DeNiro, and cinematography for Rodrigo Prieto. However, the film didn’t land noms in either best director or best actress (Lily Gladstone), where it had been longlisted and earmarked as a frontrunner. Jonathan Glazer’s breakout Cannes drama The Zone Of Interest also netted nine nominations, giving the British filmmaker his best-ever BAFTAs haul. 

    Other leading films include Anatomy of A Fall, The Holdovers, and Maestro, which all clocked seven noms. Andrew Haigh’s enigmatic drama All of Us Strangers landed six nods, and Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn have five apiece. 

    This year, 11 out of 23 nominees in the performance categories have received their first BAFTA nomination, including Sandra Hüller (Anatomy of a Fall and The Zone of Interest), Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer), Fantasia Barrino and Danielle Brooks (The Color Purple), Colman Domingo (Rustin), Paul Giamatti, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Dominic Sessa (The Holdovers), Jacob Elordi (Saltburn), Vivian Oparah (Rye Lane), and Teo Yoo (Past Lives). In other notable acting notes, Paul Mescal and Claire Foy are in their respective supporting categories for All Of Us Strangers, while awards season frontrunners Margot Robbie and Emma Stone fill out the best actress category. 

    In best director, four of the six are first-time director nominees: Jonathan Glazer (The Zone of Interest), Andrew Haigh (All of Us Strangers), Alexander Payne (The Holdovers), and Justine Triet (Anatomy of a Fall). Triet is the sole woman in director. None of the director nominees are previous winners in this category.

    Standout British titles in this year’s crop of noms include Raine Allen Miller’s debut feature Rye Lane, which landed two noms, including Outstanding British Film alongside Oparah’s acting nom, and Molly Manning Walker’s How To Have Sex, which landed three noms: Outstanding British Film, Outstanding Debut, and Casting. 

    This year’s nominations are relatively spread out amongst the studios, with Disney/Searchlight out in front, clocking 22 noms. Trailing behind is Universal (14). Indie studio A24 had a strong showing with nine, all from Jonathan Glazer’s Zone Of Interest. Apple performed the best amongst the streamers with 14 noms, including 4 for Ridley Scott’s Napoleon. Netflix clocked 12 overall. 

    Winners will be announced at the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards ceremony, hosted by actor David Tennant on February 18 at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall in London.

    Breaking down the noms, Jane Millichip, CEO of BAFTA, said: The 38 films nominated by BAFTA voters today span an extraordinary range of genres and stories.  The field this year is incredibly strong. More films were entered, making the selection process particularly tough for our voting members. 

    She added: “The films and talented people nominated represent some of the most talked about films of the year, the most critically acclaimed, and films yet to be released and discovered by audiences. With a month to go until the EE BAFTAs on 18 February, we encourage film fans everywhere to watch as many nominated films as possible and find out more about the people who make them by listening to our new official podcast, Countdown to the BAFTAs, which is available widely on podcast platforms from today.”  

    Full list of 2023 BAFTA Film Awards Nominations:

    BEST FILM

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Marie-Ange Luciani, David Thion

    THE HOLDOVERS Mark Johnson

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Dan Friedkin, Daniel Lupi, Martin Scorsese, Bradley Thomas

    OPPENHEIMER Christopher Nolan, Charles Roven, Emma Thomas

    POOR THINGS Ed Guiney, Yorgos Lanthimos, Andrew Lowe, Emma Stone

    OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM

    ALL OF US STRANGERS Andrew Haigh, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Sarah Harvey

    HOW TO HAVE SEX Molly Manning Walker, Emily Leo, Ivana MacKinnon, Konstantinos Kontovrakis

    NAPOLEON Ridley Scott, Mark Huffam, Kevin J. Walsh, David Scarpa

    THE OLD OAK Ken Loach, Rebecca O’Brien, Paul Laverty

    POOR THINGS Yorgos Lanthimos, Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Emma Stone, Tony McNamara

    RYE LANE Raine Allen-Miller, Yvonne Isimeme Ibazebo, Damian Jones, Nathan Bryon, Tom Melia

    SALTBURN Emerald Fennell, Josey McNamara, Margot Robbie

    SCRAPPER Charlotte Regan, Theo Barrowclough

    WONKA Paul King, Alexandra Derbyshire, David Heyman, Simon Farnaby

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Jonathan Glazer, James Wilson, Ewa Puszczyńska

    OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER

    BLUE BAG LIFE Lisa Selby (Director), Rebecca Lloyd-Evans (Director, Producer), Alex Fry (Producer)

    BOBI WINE: THE PEOPLE’S PRESIDENT Christopher Sharp (Director) [also directed Moses Bwayo]

    EARTH MAMA Savanah Leaf (Writer, Director, Producer), Shirley O’Connor (Producer), Medb Riordan (Producer)

    HOW TO HAVE SEX Molly Manning Walker (Writer, Director)

    IS THERE ANYBODY OUT THERE? Ella Glendining (Director)

    FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

    20 DAYS IN MARIUPOL Mstyslav Chernov, Raney Aronson Rath

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Justine Triet, Marie-Ange Luciani, David Thion

    PAST LIVES Celine Song, David Hinojosa, Pamela Koffler, Christine Vachon

    SOCIETY OF THE SNOW J.A. Bayona, Belen Atienza

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Jonathan Glazer

    DOCUMENTARY

    20 DAYS IN MARIUPOL Mstyslav Chernov, Raney Aronson Rath

    AMERICAN SYMPHONY Matthew Heineman, Lauren Domino, Joedan Okun

    BEYOND UTOPIA Madeleine Gavin, Rachel Cohen, Jana Edelbaum

    STILL: A MICHAEL J. FOX MOVIE Davis Guggenheim, Jonathan King, Annetta Marion

    WHAM! Chris Smith

    ANIMATED FILM

    THE BOY AND THE HERON Hayao Miyazaki, Toshio Suzuki

    CHICKEN RUN: DAWN OF THE NUGGET Sam Fell, Leyla Hobart, Steve Pegram

    ELEMENTAL Peter Sohn, Denise Ream

    SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson, Avi Arad, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Amy Pascal, Christina Steinberg

    DIRECTOR                                                          

    ALL OF US STRANGERS Andrew Haigh

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Justine Triet

    THE HOLDOVERS Alexander Payne

    MAESTRO Bradley Cooper

    OPPENHEIMER Christopher Nolan

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Jonathan Glazer

    ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Justine Triet, Arthur Harari

    BARBIE Greta Gerwig, Noah Baumbach

    THE HOLDOVERS David Hemingson

    MAESTRO Bradley Cooper, Josh Singer

    PAST LIVES Celine Song

    ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

    ALL OF US STRANGERS Andrew Haigh

    AMERICAN FICTION Cord Jefferson

    OPPENHEIMER Christopher Nolan

    POOR THINGS Tony McNamara

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Jonathan Glazer

    LEADING ACTRESS

    FANTASIA BARRINO The Color Purple

    SANDRA HÜLLER Anatomy of a Fall

    CAREY MULLIGAN Maestro

    VIVIAN OPARAH Rye Lane

    MARGOT ROBBIE Barbie

    EMMA STONE Poor Things

    LEADING ACTOR

    BRADLEY COOPER Maestro

    COLMAN DOMINGO Rustin

    PAUL GIAMATTI The Holdovers

    BARRY KEOGHAN Saltburn

    CILLIAN MURPHY Oppenheimer

    TEO YOO Past Lives

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS

    EMILY BLUNT Oppenheimer

    DANIELLE BROOKS The Color Purple

    CLAIRE FOY All of Us Strangers

    SANDRA HÜLLER The Zone of Interest

    ROSAMUND PIKE Saltburn

    DA’VINE JOY RANDOLPH The Holdovers

    SUPPORTING ACTOR

    ROBERT DE NIRO Killers of The Flower Moon

    ROBERT DOWNEY JR. Oppenheimer

    JACOB ELORDI Saltburn

    RYAN GOSLING Barbie

    PAUL MESCAL All of Us Strangers

    DOMINIC SESSA The Holdovers

    CASTING

    ALL OF US STRANGERS Kahleen Crawford

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Cynthia Arra

    THE HOLDOVERS Susan Shopmaker

    HOW TO HAVE SEX Isabella Odoffin

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Ellen Lewis, Rene Haynes

    CINEMATOGRAPHY

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Rodrigo Prieto

    MAESTRO Matthew Libatique

    OPPENHEIMER Hoyte van Hoytema

    POOR THINGS Robbie Ryan

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Łukasz Żal

    EDITING

    ANATOMY OF A FALL Laurent Sénéchal

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Thelma Schoonmaker

    OPPENHEIMER Jennifer Lame

    POOR THINGS Yorgos Mavropsaridis

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Paul Watts

    COSTUME DESIGN

    BARBIE Jacqueline Durran

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Jacqueline West

    NAPOLEON Dave Crossman, Janty Yates

    OPPENHEIMER Ellen Mirojnick

    POOR THINGS Holly Waddington

    MAKE UP & HAIR

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Kay Georgiou, Thomas Nellen

    MAESTRO Sian Grigg, Kay Georgiou, Kazu Hiro, Lori McCoy-Bell

    NAPOLEON Jana Carboni, Francesco Pegoretti, Satinder Chumber, Julia Vernon

    OPPENHEIMER Luisa Abel, Jaime Leigh McIntosh, Jason Hamer, Ahou Mofid

    POOR THINGS Nadia Stacey, Mark Coulier, Josh Weston

    ORIGINAL SCORE

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Robbie Robertson

    OPPENHEIMER Ludwig Göransson

    POOR THINGS Jerskin Fendrix

    SALTBURN Anthony Willis

    SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE Daniel Pemberton

    PRODUCTION DESIGN

    BARBIE Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer

    KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON Jack Fisk, Adam Willis

    OPPENHEIMER Ruth De Jong, Claire Kaufman

    POOR THINGS Shona Heath, James Price, Zsuzsa Mihalek

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Chris Oddy, Joanna Maria Kuś, Katarzyna Sikora

    SOUND

    FERRARI Angelo Bonanni, Tony Lamberti, Andy Nelson, Lee Orloff, Bernard Weiser

    MAESTRO Richard King, Steve Morrow, Tom Ozanich, Jason Ruder, Dean Zupancic

    MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE Chris Burdon, James H. Mather, Chris Munro, Mark Taylor

    OPPENHEIMER Willie Burton, Richard King, Kevin O’Connell, Gary A. Rizzo

    THE ZONE OF INTEREST Johnnie Burn, Tarn Willers 

    SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS

    THE CREATOR Jonathan Bullock, Charmaine Chan, Ian Comley, Jay Cooper

    GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 3 Theo Bialek, Stephane Ceretti, Alexis Wajsbrot, Guy Williams

    MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – DEAD RECKONING PART ONE Neil Corbould, Simone Coco, Jeff Sutherland, Alex Wuttke

    NAPOLEON Henry Badgett, Neil Corbould, Charley Henley, Luc-Ewen Martin-Fenouillet

    POOR THINGS Simon Hughes

    CRAB DAY Ross Stringer, Bartosz Stanislawek, Aleksandra Sykulak

    VISIBLE MENDING Samantha Moore, Tilley Bancroft

    WILD SUMMON Karni Arieli, Saul Freed, Jay Woolley

    BRITISH SHORT FILM

    FESTIVAL OF SLAPS Abdou Cissé, Cheri Darbon, George Telfer

    GORKA Joe Weiland, Alex Jefferson

    JELLYFISH AND LOBSTER Yasmin Afifi, Elizabeth Rufai

    SUCH A LOVELY DAY Simon Woods, Polly Stokes, Emma Norton, Kate Phibbs

    YELLOW Elham Ehsas, Dina Mousawi, Azeem Bhati, Yiannis Manolopoulos

    EE RISING STAR AWARD (voted for by the public)

    PHOEBE DYNEVOR

    AYO EDEBIRI

    JACOB ELORDI

    MIA MCKENNA-BRUCE

    SOPHIE WILDE

    BY DISTRIBUTOR/STUDIO

    A24 (9)
    The Zone of Interest 9
    AMAZON MGM STUDIOS/WARNER BROS (5)
    Saltburn 5
    APPLE ORIGINAL FILMS (14)
    Killers of the Flower Moon 9
    Napoleon 4
    Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie 1
    CONIC FILMS (1)  
    Is There Anybody Out There? 1
    DISNEY & SEARCHLIGHT (22)
    All of Us Strangers 6
    The Creator 1
    Elemental 1
    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 1
    Poor Things 11
    Rye Lane 2
    DOGWOOF (4)
    20 Days in Mariupol 2
    Beyond Utopia 1
    Bobi Wine: The People’s President 1
    ELYSIAN FILM GROUP (1)
    The Boy and the Heron 1
    LIONSGATE (7)
    Anatomy of a Fall 7
    MODERN (1)
    Blue Bag Life 1
    MUBI (3)
    How To Have Sex 3
    NETFLIX (12)
    American Symphony 1
    Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget 1
    Maestro 7
    Rustin 1
    Society of the Snow 1
    Wham! 1
    ORION /AMAZON MGM STUDIOS/CURZON (1)
    American Fiction 1
    PARAMOUNT (2)
    Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One 2
    PICTUREHOUSE (1)
    Scrapper 1
    SKY (1)
    Ferrari 1
    SONY (2)  
    Spider-Man: Across the Spider-verse 2
    STUDIO CANAL (4)  
    The Old Oak 1
    Past Lives 3
    UNIVERSAL (14)  
    Earth Mama 1
    Oppenheimer 13
    UNIVERSAL/FOCUS (7)  
    The Holdovers 7
    WARNER BROS (8)  
    Barbie 5
    The Color Purple 2
    Wonka   1

    Zac Ntim

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  • Come On, Guys, Let Emma Stone On the Real 'Jeopardy!'

    Come On, Guys, Let Emma Stone On the Real 'Jeopardy!'

    Emma Stone has an Oscar, a BAFTA, and, as of Sunday, a second Golden Globe. But there’s one title that still eludes her: Jeopardy! champion. In a recent interview with Variety, the Poor Things star shared that she’s obsessed with the trivia contest and that she would love to compete on the series: “I apply every June.”

    Stone shared her affection for America’s favorite game show while appearing as a guest on the January 11th episode of Variety‘s Award Circuit Podcast. “I watch it every single night, and I mark down how many answers I get right,” she said. “I swear, I could go on Jeopardy!”

    Before you suggest that Stone go on Celebrity Jeopardy!, you should know that she has no interest: “I don’t want to go on Celebrity Jeopardy! ,” said Stone. “I want to earn my stripes.” And Stone has tried her darndest to do so. “You can only take the test once a year with your email address, and I’ve never gotten on the show,” she said. It’s crazy that the Jeopardy! producers saw estone@gmail.com in their inboxes and didn’t immediately roll out the red carpet. 

    Stone is right to refuse to be on Celebrity Jeopardy! At least since Saturday Night Live first spoofed it in the early 90s, everyone worth their salt has known that Celebrity Jeopardy! is the easiest of all the many versions of Jeopardy!—National College Championship, Teen Tournament, Second Chance, and so on. If a celebrity is willing to potentially be humiliated on national television by going  on the real Jeopardy! and facing true brainiacs, they should be allowed to. Let Stone play with the big dogs! We want to see what she knows about geography, ancient history, and eleven-letter words. Stone facing off against 40-game consecutive Jeopardy! champion and fellow redhead Amy Schneider would make for unmissable television. 

    On that note, if you have won Celebrity Jeopardy! you should be required by law to play in regular Jeopardy! to see how you measure up against normal, non-famous smart people. So, Brendan Hunt, Ike Barinholtz, and Patton Oswalt: it’s time to hit the books. Ken Jennings is waiting. 

    Chris Murphy

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  • Golden Globes: ‘Poor Things’ Wins Best Musical or Comedy Film

    Golden Globes: ‘Poor Things’ Wins Best Musical or Comedy Film

    Poor Things took the prize for best motion picture, musical or comedy, on Sunday night at the Golden Globes 2024. The film also won the award for lead actress in a comedy for its star, Emma Stone, earlier in the night.

    Director Yorgos Lanthimos began his speech by fanboying over audience member Bruce Springsteen (they have the same birthday) and then quickly thanked his cast and crew. “Thank you, everybody who worked on the film,” he said, giving his lead, Stone, another shout-out as well. “Emma, of course—she won, you know it: She’s the best.”

    The film, a quirky coming-of-age story, was competing against Air, American Fiction, Barbie, The Holdovers, and May December.

    Poor Things, which had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival, follows a young woman (Emma Stone) whose brain has been replaced by that of a baby’s. As she matures, she ventures out into the world, exploring Lisbon and Paris, along with her own sexuality and maturing desires.

    The film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, and was nominated for seven Golden Globes.


    Listen to Vanity Fair’s Little Gold Men podcast now.

    Rebecca Ford

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  • ‘Guardians 3,’ ‘Maestro’ Lead Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards Feature Competition

    ‘Guardians 3,’ ‘Maestro’ Lead Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild Awards Feature Competition

    The Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild (IATSE Local 706) has revealed the nominees for its annual MUAHS Awards, with Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 leading the feature competition with four nominations and Maestro close behind with three noms.

    Disney/Marvel’s Guardians 3 earned noms in the categories for contemporary makeup, period and/or character makeup, period hairstyling and/or character hairstyling and special makeup effects. Bradley Cooper’s Netflix Leonard Bernstein drama Maestro collected noms for period and/or character makeup, period hairstyling and/or character hair styling and special makeup effects.

    The MUAHS Guild’s feature nominees vary quite bit from this season’s Oscar shortlist for the category. In fact, Guardians 3 was already snubbed in the makeup and hairstyling Oscar race, failing to make the shortlist of 10 films that advanced to the upcoming branch bake-off.

    The films shortlisted for the makeup and hairstyling Oscar are Maestro; Poor Things, which has two MUAHS noms; Golda and Oppenheimer, which collected one Guild nom apiece; and Beau Is Afraid, Ferrari, Killers of the Flower Moon, The Last Voyage of the Demeter, Napoleon and Society of the Snow, all of which failed to earn a single Guild nom.

    Non-shortlisted movies that received two MUAHS noms apiece include Barbie, Candy Cane Lane, NYAD and Saltburn.

    Series that earned multiple Guild noms include Ahsoka, The Bear, The Crown, The Idol, The Last of Us and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. A tie in the nomination voting resulted in six noms in the category for TV special makeup effects, which went to Ahsoka, The Fall of the House of Usher, The Last of Us, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Star Trek: Picard and The Witcher.

    The MUAHS Awards have an uneven track record for predicting the eventual Academy Award winner for makeup and hairstyling. A year ago, The Whale won the category Oscar and one MUAHS Guild Award, for special makeup effects. In 2022, The Eyes of Tammy Faye won the Oscar but was shut out at the MUAHS Awards; and in 2021, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom collected the Academy Award and two Guild awards.

    The complete list of the 2024 MUAHS Guild Awards nominees follows.

    FEATURE-LENGTH MOTION PICTURE

    Best Contemporary Make-up

    Candy Cane Lane

    Tym Shutchai Buacharern, Michele Lewis, Jennifer Zide-Essex, Yvettra Grantham

    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

    Jane Galli, Personal

    The Haunted Mansion

    Kimberly Jones, Dionne Wynn, Bridgit Crider, Carla VanNessa Wallace

    NYAD

    Felicity Bowring, Ann Maree Hurley, Julie Hewett, Mahar Lessner

    Saltburn 

    Siân Miller, Laura Allen  

    Best Period and/or Character Makeup

    Barbie

    Ivana Primorac, Victoria Down, Maha Mimo

    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3

    Alexei Dmitriew, Nicole Sortillon, Amos Samantha Ward, LuAndra Whitehurs

    Maestro

    Siann Grigg, Jackie Risotto, Elisa Tallerico, Nicky Pattison-Illum 

    Oppenheimer

    Luisa Abel, Jason Hamer, Kerrin Jackson, Jamie Loree Hess 

    Poor Things

    Nadia Stacey

    Best Special Makeup Effects 

    Golda

    Karen Thomas, Eva Susanna Johnson Theodosiou

    Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

    Alexei Dmitriew, Lindsay MacGowen, Shane Mahan, Scott Stoddard  

    Maestro

    Kazu Hiro, Sian Grigg, Duncan Jarman, Mike Mekash

    Poor Things

    Nadia Stacey, Mark Coulier

    Rebel Moon: Part One – A Child of Fire

    Ozzy Alvarez, Justin Raleigh, Kelsey Berk, Jonathan Shroyer 

    Best Contemporary Hair Styling

    Candy Cane Lane

    Yvette Shelton, Shian Banks, Stacey Morris, Maisha Oliver

    Joyride

    Jeannie Chow, Kim Lee

    NYAD

    Daniel Curet, Vanessa Columbo, Enzo Angileri, Darlene Brumfeld

    Pain Hustlers

    Michelle Johnson, Dennis Bailey

    Saltburn

    Siân Miller, Laura Allen

    Best Period Hair Styling and/or Character Hair Styling

    Barbie        

    Ivana Primorac, Marie Larkin, Clare Corsick

    Chevalier

    Roo Maurice, Francesco Pegoretti

    The Color Purple

    Lawrence Davis, Andrea Mona Bowman, Tym Wallace

    Guardians of The Galaxy Vol. 3

    Cassandra Lyn Russek, Stephanie Fenner, Peter Tothpal, Connie Criswell

    Maestro

    Kay Georgiou, Lori McCoy-Bell, Jameson Eaton, Amanda Duffy-Evans


    TELEVISION SERIES – LIMITED, MINISERIES OR MOVIE FOR TELEVISION 

    Best Contemporary Makeup

    Abbot Elementary

    Alisha L. Baijounas, Emilia Werynska, Jenn Bennett, Constance Foe

    The Bear

    Ignacia Soto-Aguilar, Nicole Rogers

    The Idol

    Kirsten Sage Coleman, Mandy Artusato, Jessie Bishop, Erin Blinn

    The Last of Us

    Connie Parker, Joanna Mireau, Joanne Preece, Danielle Hanson

    Poker Face

    Amy L. Forsythe, Heidi Pakdel-Payan, Rebecca Levine, Shannon Dollison

    Best Period and /or Character Makeup 

    Ahsoka

    Alexei Dmitriew, Cristina Waltz, Alex Perrone, Cale Thomas

    The Crown

    Cate Hall, Emilie Yong-Mills, Debbie Ormrod, Stacey Holman,

    Daisy Jones & The Six

    Rebecca Wachtel, RJ McCasland, Sherri Simmons, Michele Tyminski Schoenbach

    Lessons in Chemistry

    Miho Suzuki Herpich, Martina Kohl

    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

    Patricia Regan, Joseph A. Campayno, Claus Lulla, Michael Laudati

    Best Special Makeup Effects

    Ahsoka

    Alexei Dmitriew, Cristina Waltz, Ana Gabriela Quinonez, Ian Goodwin

    The Fall of the House of Usher

    Ozzy Alvarez, Justin Raleigh, Kelsey Berk, Harlow MacFarlane

    The Last of Us

    Barrie Gower, Paul Spateri, Sarah Gower, Paula Eden

    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

    Mike Marino, Richard Redlefsen, Kevin Kirkpatrick

    Star Trek: Picard

    James MacKinnon, Hugo Villasenor, Bianca Appice, Vincent VanDyke

    The Witcher

    Mark Coulier, Deb Watson, Stephen Murphy, Josh Weston

    Best Contemporary Hair Styling

    The Bear

    Ally Vickers, Angela Brasington, Melanie Shaw 

    The Idol

    Christopher Fulton, Gloria Conrad,  Kamaura Eley, Kya Bilal

    The Morning Show

    Nicole Venables, Jennifer Petrovich, Janine Thompson, Lona Vigi

    Ted Lasso

    Nicola Austin

    You People

    Tinisha Boyd, Alyson Black-Barrie, Lisa Buford, Tracey Macky

    Best Period and/or Character Hair Styling

    The Crown 

    Cate Hall, Emilie Yong- Mills, Francesca Hissey, Oonagh Bagley

    The Gilded Age 

    Sean Flanigan, Christine Fennell-Harlan, Jonathan Sharpless, Aaron Kinchen 

    Lessons in Chemistry

    Teressa Hill, Carol Mitchell, Juan Nunez, Sharisse Fine

    The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

    Kimberley Spiteri, KeLeen Snowgren

    Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story

    Nic Collins, Giorgio Galliero

    TELEVISION SPECIAL, ONE HOUR OR MORE LIVE PROGRAM SERIES 

    Best Contemporary Makeup

    American Idol – Season 6

    Tonia Green, Gina Ghiglieri, Natalie Malchev, Michael Anthony

    Dancing with the Stars

    Julie Socash, Donna Bard, Lois Harriman, Sarah Woolf

    Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards

    Thad Nalitz, Alison Gladieux, Christina Jimenez, Kathy Santiago

    Saturday Night Live 

    Louie Zakarian, Amy Tagliamonti, Jason Milani, Young Bek

    The Voice

    Darcy Gilmore, Gina Ghiglieri, Kristene Bernard, Marylin Lee Spiege

    Best Period and/or Character Makeup 

    The Boulet Brothers’ Halfway to Halloween TV Special

    Swanthula Boulet, Dracmorda Boulet

    Dancing with the Stars

    Julie Socash, Brian Sipe, James MacKinnon, Tyson Fountaine

    Saturday Night Live

    Louie Zakarian, Amy Tagliamonti, Jason Milani, Joanna Pisani

    Best Special Makeup Effects

    Dancing with the Stars

    Brian Sipe, James MacKinnon, Cary Ayers, Julie Socash

    Saturday Night Live

    Louie Zakarian, Jason Milani, Bradon Grether, Tom Denier Jr.

    Best Contemporary Hair Styling 

    American Idol

    Dean Banowetz, Amber Maher, Kimi Messina, Lalisa Turner

    Dancing with the Stars

    Kimi Messina, Joe Matke, Amber Nicholle Maher, Marion Rogers

    The Voice

    Jerilynn Stephens, Darbie Wieczorek, Lalisa Turner, Suzette Boozer

    Kids’ Choice Awards 2023

    Jerilynn Stephens, Kimi Messina, Joe Matke, Suzette Boozer

    65th Annual Grammy Awards

    Brian Steven Banks

    Best Period and/or Character Hair Styling

    The Academy Awards 2023 

    Anthony Wilson, Jennifer Guerrero, Myo Lai, Florence Witherspoon

    Dancing with the Stars

    Kimi Messina, Dwayne Ross, Joe Matke, Brittany Spaulding

    Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas
    Debbie Dannell, Lewis Pallett, Lisa Houghton

    DAYTIME TELEVISIONGAME SHOW OR TALK SHOW

    Best Makeup

    The Big Nailed It Baking Challenge

    Moira Frazier, Denise Baker, Ryan Randall, LaLisa Turner

    The Bold and the Beautiful

    Christine Lai-Johnson, Hajja Barnes, Briana Garcia, Daniela Delgado 

    The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula

    Swanthula Boulet, Dracmorda Boulet

    The Kelly Clarkson Show

    Chanty LaGrana, Gloria Elias-Foeillet, Valente Frazier, Monica Boyd Lester

    The Young and the Restless

    Stacey Browning, Jamie Kelch, Robert Bolger, Riley Nightingall

    Best Hair Styling

    The Big Nailed It Baking Challenge

    Moira Frazier, Denise Baker, Ryan Randall, LaLisa Turner

    The Bold and the Beautiful

    Stephanie Paugh, Alexis Reyes, Danielle Dubinsky, Karlye Buff

    The Kelly Clarkson Show

    Roberto Ramos Corey Morris Tara Copeland, Adam Long

    Snake Oil

    Crystal Broedel, Karen Stein

    The Young and the Restless

    Lauren Mendoza, Justin Jackson, Michelle Corona, Diana Santana

    CHILDREN AND TEEN TELEVISION PROGRAMMING

    Best Makeup

    American Born Chinese

    Jorjee Linda Douglass, Mara Rouse, Nicole Hawkyard, Ralis Kahn

    Danger Force

    Michael Johnston, Brad Look, Kevin Westmore, Orlando Marin

    Goosebumps

    Zabrina Wanjiru Matiru, Werner Pretorius, Krista Hann, Felix Fox

    Monster High 2

    Leah Ehman, Gila Bois, Kiara Desjarlais, Lindsay Pilkey

    The Santa Clauses

    Erica Preus, Howard Berger, Scott Stoddard, Eryn Krueger Mekash

    Best Hair Styling

    Danger Force

    Joe Matke, Danyell Weinberg Alexis Stafford

    Monster High 2

    Debra Frances Wiebe, Tammy Lim, Julie McHaffie, Sharon Markell

    One Piece

    Amanda Ross-McDonald, Vera Alimanova, Odette Rebok, Ermine Kirstein-Venter

    The Santa Clauses

    Anissa Emily Salazar, Nina Adado, Morgan Ferrando, Patricia Lansingh

    Saturdays

    Ruhamah Taylor, Brittany Powell, Kelvin Ingram Jr., Nadling Fletcher

    COMMERCIALS & MUSIC VIDEOS

    Best Makeup 

    American Horror Story: Delicate

    Kerry Ann Herta Jason Collins Alyssa Morgan Orlando Marin

    Capital One – Quicksilver “Holiday Night Fever” with John Travolta as Santa

    Michael Ornelaz, Scott Stoddard, Alexei Dmitriew, Connie Criswell

    Doja Cat – Demons

    Olha Tarnovetska, Catherine Paschen, Nicolas D. Gonzalez, Patrick Bradberry

    GEICO – The Ease Specialist: Wormhole Edition

    Jennifer Aspinall, Leonard MacDonald, Allasigga Jonsdotti

    GM – NETFLIX: Will Ferrell Super Bowl Ad

    Justin Raleigh, Tony Alvarez, Kelsey Berk, Jamie Kelman

    Best Hair Styling

    American Horror Story: Delicate

    Joe Matke, Jeri Baker, Johnny Lomeli

    Angel (Halle Bailey)

    Tinisha Boyd Nena Davis

    GM – NETFLIX: Will Ferrell Super Bowl Ad 

    Cheryl Marks, Allyson Joyner, Vanessa Price

    HelloFresh|Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.3: From the Cubicle to the Cosmos

    Ashleigh Childers

    Scott for Scotts Ad

    Tiphanie Baum

    THEATRICAL PRODUCTIONS (Live Stage)

    Best Makeup

    Die Frau ohne Schatten Opera by Richard Strauss

    Jeanna Parham, Melanie Birch, Denise Gutierrez, Lisa Patnoe

    Don Giovanni

    Samantha Wiener, Brandi Strona, Nicole Rodrigues, Nathalie Eidt

    Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical

    Robyn-Marie Rebbe, Chloe Nil Acerol, Ashley Roller, Angelina Avallone

    Frida

    Samantha Wiener, Brandi Strona, Nicole Rodrigues, Kelso Millett

    MADCAP – San Francisco Ballet

    Maurisa Rondeau, Gerd Mairandres, Jordan Plath, Toby Mayer

    Best Hair Styling

    The Barber of Seville

    Y. Sharon Peng

    Bolero – San Francisco Ballet

    Thomas Richards-Keyes, Ksenia Antonoff, Melissa Kallstrom, Robert Mrazik

    Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical

    Robyn-Marie Rebbe, Chloe Nil Acerol, Elizabeth Printz, Thomas Augustine

    Jane Austen Unscripted: Tea At Pemberley

    Laura Caponera

    Marriage of Figaro

    Samantha Wiener, Danielle Richter, Jacki Noccerino, Morgan Sellars

    Carolyn Giardina

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  • Will ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon,’ or ‘Barbie’ Be Crowned Best Picture?

    Will ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Killers of the Flower Moon,’ or ‘Barbie’ Be Crowned Best Picture?

    Many industry folks, some of whom are no doubt Oscar voters, are grateful to Nolan for all that he’s done for the business: tethering auteur-ish prestige to marketability, vocally resisting the streaming incursion. That, coupled with the fact that Nolan is widely seen as overdue for his first Oscar, makes him a strong best director contender. But Oppenheimer as a whole should not be discounted. It may not be as screener-friendly as some of its competitors, but Oppenheimer has enjoyed one of the defining film narratives of 2023. A best picture win would be a fitting end to that story.

    As for the other half of the summer box office equation, Greta Gerwig’s Barbie made more money than Oppenheimer, most of it without the advantage of IMAX pricing. It’s not a weighty, masculine affair like Oppenheimer—which better fits the traditional best picture mold—but Barbie’s difference is probably its greatest asset. Gerwig’s film created a new version of branded filmmaking, swaddling its IP commercialism in sociopolitical commentary. If 2023 becomes known for one film, it will be Barbie, a movie that leaned into its cynical origins hard enough that it broke through to some other realm.

    But maybe the Academy, or at least enough of the Academy, isn’t quite ready for that seismic shift. They could, instead, turn to Bradley Cooper’s Maestro, a Leonard Bernstein biopic that is comfortably recognizable as an old-fashioned awards movie while still taking artistic swings. Cooper is mesmerizing in the lead role, as is his costar, Carey Mulligan. While reviews for the film may be somewhat muted, the stars have been almost universally praised. Which might mean that Maestro’s best chances are in the acting categories—or, the film, buoyed by its beloved performances, could snatch best picture as a popular tiered-ballot second choice.

    At this year’s Venice Film Festival, Maestro was perhaps the glitziest competition entry. But it had a bit of its thunder stolen by Yorgos Lanthimos’s sex-happy bildungsroman Poor Things, a movie originally scheduled for release in early September but that was, in a bit of strange luck, pushed to the more prestigious climes of December. Poor Things is in much better position now, with time to build on the momentum created by its top-prize victory at Venice and sustained good notices from subsequent festivals.

    All of the filmmakers I’ve thus far mentioned have directed best picture nominees in the past. So what of the new class? First-time filmmaker Celine Song had a debut for the ages in Past Lives, a Sundance breakout that was a modest summer hit for A24. A decades-spanning romantic drama, Past Lives is gauzy and gentle but far from insubstantial. It offers a bleary, soul-stirring consideration of immigration and aging, animated by lovely performances from Greta Lee, Teo Yoo, and John Magaro.

    Jonathan Glazer is perhaps one of the cinéaste world’s most respected filmmakers, despite having made only four films. His latest is The Zone of Interest, a Holocaust movie focused on the perpetrators rather than the victims. Glazer’s film is harrowing, operating at a clinical remove but certainly not spare in style or effect. The Zone of Interest is such a visceral statement of artistic vision that even the more art-film-averse members of the Academy might embrace it. The Zone of Interest took second place at Cannes; the Palme d’Or winner was Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall, an electrifying drama starring best actress contender Sandra Hüller, who also plays a supporting role in Glazer’s film. Anatomy has played like gangbusters at subsequent film festivals—a frequent Telluride talking point, a hot-ticket sensation at Toronto—and may be the best positioned of any non-American film.

    Richard Lawson

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  • How the 'Poor Things’ Intimacy Coordinator Made All Those Sex Scenes Possible

    How the 'Poor Things’ Intimacy Coordinator Made All Those Sex Scenes Possible

    When Elle McAlpine first met with director Yorgos Lanthimos, he wasn’t 100% sure he needed an intimacy coordinator on his upcoming film Poor Things. He’d never used one on any of his films, which often include bold sex scenes like in The Favourite, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, and Dogtooth. “I think he had the mindset that it would hinder the process,” McAlpine tells Vanity Fair.

    It likely wasn’t the first time McAlpine had heard that. The role of intimacy coordinator is relatively new to the industry, but has become more common in a post–#MeToo era when there’s more demand for protection on set. Intimacy coordinators like McAlpine, who is the cofounder of the UK-based company EK Intimacy, function like stunt coordinators for sex scenes. They work with the actors on character, choreography, and movement, and ensure that intimate or sexual scenes are filmed with consent and comfort for those involved.

    McAlpine got the job by sitting down with Lanthimos to explain her role on set. “At the beginning, this profession felt a little threatening to most filmmakers,” Lanthimos said at the press conference at the Venice Film Festival, “but I think it’s like everything: If you’re with a good person, it’s great and you realize you actually need them. She made everything much easier for everyone.”

    Her initial pitch was that she would work with the actors who would be coming in and out of Emma Stone’s orbit in Poor Things. Stone plays Bella Baxter, a young woman who leaves her sheltered life in London to travel around Europe with a new boyfriend, Duncan (Mark Ruffalo). Along with learning about the world, she also embarks on a sexual awakening, first with Duncan and then later as an employee of a brothel in Paris.

    At first, Stone, who worked with Lanthimos on The Favourite and has a trusting relationship with the filmmaker, wasn’t sure she would need help from McAlpine, so McAlpine offered to work with the other actors in those scenes, many of whom would only be coming in for a day or so of work as part of a montage of sex scenes. “My job would be in helping them in creating a space where the power dynamic is neutralized because I’m there—that they can talk with me as much as they want before getting to set and that I can hopefully work with them so that when they come to set, they’re not nervous or they feel that they’re able to do their job to the best of their abilities,” she says.

    In the end, McAlpine would end up working closely with Stone. After performing in numerous sex scenes for the film, she told Vanity Fair that she felt “completely in a safe space and I had so much agency within it.” McAlpine’s secret recipe for getting to that point with filmmakers and talent that are apprehensive at first? “This role demands that,” she says, before correcting herself. “Well, we don’t demand because that’s not the energy that we bring—but effectively we’re asking people to trust us pretty quickly.”

    The brothel in Poor Things.

    Atsushi Nishijima

    There’s a lot of sex in Poor Things, but Lanthimos emphasized to McAlpine from the beginning that none of it is frivolous. As a woman whose brain has been replaced with a baby’s, she’s rapidly growing up and aging, and her interest in sex is an essential part of her coming of age. McAlpine began her work by studying the script, written by Tony McNamara, and also reading Alasdair Gray’s novel of the same name that it’s adapted from. “I felt that the sexual expression of her character and even of the men that were coming in, and that kind of grotesqueness of them mixed with this woman who just embraced it all and had no judgment for anything, was something so profound and so exciting,” she says.

    Stone and Lanthimos already had a comfortable working relationship, but McAlpine knew it could be taxing to film so many sex scenes day after day. “It can make you feel quite vulnerable,” McAlpine says. “Your body is an incredibly smart vehicle, but it sometimes doesn’t register what’s fantasy and what’s not. So by default, you can sometimes come away from doing sex scenes feeling quite vulnerable.”

    McAlpine would offer little exercises and techniques to Stone to “wash the day off” and says she would “bookend my days on that set with cold showers. We hold a lot of emotions and we hold a lot of space for people and you can take on energy that’s not yours.” They also discussed the female orgasm because, as such an empowered character, Bella navigates sexuality in a unique way in the film, with female pleasure at the center of the story. McAlpine found that aspect of Poor Things to be particularly exciting. “I think a lot of content that is made—it’s changing—shies away from female pleasure. You’ve got the kind of woman on her back having an orgasm, arching her back—it’s so unimaginative, it’s so glamorized,” says McAlpine. “This story was about that liberation and about that sexual freedom and about that experimentation.”

    Rebecca Ford

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  • ‘Poor Things’ Screenwriter Tony McNamara Breaks Down One of Its Most Complex Scenes

    ‘Poor Things’ Screenwriter Tony McNamara Breaks Down One of Its Most Complex Scenes

    When director Yorgos Lanthimos mentioned to Tony McNamara on the set of The Favourite that he was considering adapting Alasdair Gray’s 1992 book Poor Things for his next film, McNamara knew it wouldn’t be an easy task. “It’s quite a massive book and it’s about a lot of different things,” he tells Vanity Fair.

    Not only would it be McNamara’s first adaptation—he previously wrote the script for Lanthimos’s The Favourite, would later cowrite 2021’s Cruella, and is the creator of Hulu’s popular series The Great—but he quickly noticed that the story was told from the perspective of the men who come into and out of the main character’s life, not from Bella Baxter herself. And to both Lanthimos and McNamara, Bella was the key to making this film work. “That was sort of the biggest challenge, but it was also kind of a freedom,” he says. “Her internal experience of what was happening was kind of the big invention of the script, as well as the language.”

    In the film, Bella (played by Emma Stone) starts out with the brain of a baby that has been put into her adult body by an eccentric surgeon whom she now views as her father (Willem DaFoe), named Godwin but literally called “God.” As she grows, the sheltered Bella decides to go on an adventure across Europe with her new boyfriend, Duncan (Mark Ruffalo), where she explores new sights, has a whole lot of sex, and learns about how the world works in many ways.

    McNamara’s script is a rich, wild adventure with unique characters and colorful, playful scenes that always keep Bella at the center of this coming-of-age tale. The Australian writer and Oscar nominee for The Favourite spoke to Vanity Fair about creating Bella’s world, taking inspiration from Fellini, and why he writes so well about women. Plus, McNamara annotated two pages of his incredible script for a deeper dive into Bella’s wild night out in Portugal.

    Vanity Fair: Poor Things, The Great, and The Favourite all have this invented style of language that seemingly combines classic style and a modern sensibility. How do you do that?

    Tony McNamara: I love language and I love dialogue. It’s one of the most exciting things about writing a script for me. We knew it was a big world and I knew Yorgos had a vision for a big world that was also a fantasy. But I was also aware because it’s period, and we were telling this young woman’s story, that I wanted you to be able to access it as a modern audience. So the idea was, yes, the language had to nod that it was a period thing, but it also had to allow the audience to enter her experience. It had to be period enough that you bought the world, but contemporary enough that the audience could access her emotionally. And then this third part of it was her particular way of speaking was a constant evolution, which is not, I guess, normal in a film. You don’t normally have a character who changes the way they speak every 15 minutes.

    What was your approach to the way Bella’s language develops?

    In the end I mapped out how old she was at certain points, and so I mapped out when we start, she’s three. By the time she leaves for Lisbon she’s like 16, 17. And by the time she leaves Lisbon and goes to the boat, she’s like 21. And that was her college years where she discovers books and politics. And then Paris was like mid-20s of making a lot of bad decisions and thinking they’re good decisions. And then you kind of feel like you have to go home and metabolize your past.

    Rebecca Ford

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  • Box Office: Hayao Miyazaki’s ‘The Boy and the Heron’ Soars to Record $12.8M U.S. Opening

    Box Office: Hayao Miyazaki’s ‘The Boy and the Heron’ Soars to Record $12.8M U.S. Opening

    Acclaimed filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki‘s Japanese film The Boy and the Heron flew to a record-breaking $12.8 million opening, making it the first original anime title in history to top the North American box office chart.

    The whimsical movie wisely chose to open on a weekend when there were no new wide releases from the major Hollywood studios. The first and second weekends of December are generally quiet as the studios prepare to unwrap their big Christmas films. (This year, the year-end holiday action gets underway next weekend when Warner Bros. opens Wonka, although it is debuting in select markets overseas this weekend.)

    The Boy and the Heron film shattered other records as well, including already becoming Miyazaki’s top-grossing film domestically after earning $5.6 million on Friday from 2,205 theaters, not adjusted for inflation. His previous best, 2013’s The Wind Rises earned $5.2 million in its entire North American run.

    The film was fueled by younger adults, with 80 percent of the audience between the ages of 18 and 34, including 44 percent between ages 25 and 34. It earned an A- CinemaScore.

    The Boy and the Heron also claims the biggest domestic opening for a Studio Ghibli film and will mark the biggest bow ever for GKIDS, the film’s U.S. distributor. It’s the first foreign production to top the North American chart this year.

    Miyazaki’s movie — which has earned north of $85 million in Japan — had a high-profile presence on the fall film festival circuit, including becoming the first animated title to open the Toronto Film Festival.

    Coming in at No. 2 was Lionsgate’s The Hunger Games: The Ballad of the Songbirds and Snakes with a projected $9 million to $10 million from 3,665 locations in its fourth outing. The film has now earned a pleasing $126.3 million domestically.

    Japanese monster pic Godzilla Minus One placed third place in its second weekend with $8 million to $9 million from 2,450 cinemas. (No one can remember another time when two Japanese titles landed in the top five at the North American box office.)

    Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s Trolls Band Together held at No. 4 with an estimated weekend haul of $6.2 million from 3,451 theaters for a domestic total of $83.1 million.

    Disney’s Wish and AMC Theatres’ Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé found themselves in a close race for No. 5, with both currently pacing to earn $5 million to $5.5 million. The final order will be determined Monday morning.

    Beyoncé‘s concert fell off steeply after opening to No. 1 last weekend and could suffer a drop of as much as 74 percent. The pic is playing in 2,542 locations, while Wish is booked in 3,450 cinemas.

    Elsewhere, Bleecker Street’s Waitress: The Musical opened in 1,214 locations. The film, based on a live stage recording of the 2015 play of the same name, placed No. 9 with and estimated $3.2 million.

    At the specialty box office, Yorgos Lanthimos‘ dark comedy Poor Things did rich business as it opened in nine cinemas. The Victorian era-set pic, starring Emma Stone scored a per-theater average of $72,000, the average of the fall season and the third best of the year as Searchlight Pictures ramps up the film’s awards campaign.

    Poor Things, which won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, went on to be named one of the 10 best films of the year by both the American Film Institute and the National Board of Review.

    More to come.

    This story was originally published Dec. 9 at 8:50 a.m.

    Pamela McClintock

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  • Video: ‘Poor Things’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Poor Things’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    “I’m Yorgos Lanthimos, the director of ‘Poor Things.’” “Understand we never lived outside God’s house.” “What?” “So Bella’s so much to discover. And your sad face makes me discover angry feelings for you.” “This is a scene that takes place in a restaurant in Lisbon, where Bella Baxter and Duncan, played by Emma Stone and Mark Ruffalo, are having dinner. And there’s other people dancing. During that, the music attracts Bella, and just instinctively, gets up and starts wanting to join the dance. It’s a very funny, awkward, physical situation where Bella has never really danced before, and it’s very intuitive, what she does. He’s not a good dancer. He’s trying to keep up with her. We had a lot of help from Constanza Macras, who did the choreography. So the dance, because she’s done it for the first time, it just felt like it should be something quite primitive, slightly baby-like, but then it quickly develops into something that she wants to take hold of and lose control of her self. And Mark, in real life, is also not a great dancer. And on the other hand, Emma is a really good dancer, so we kind of used that dynamic as we were building the choreography. And it actually became funnier than what we thought.” “What do you keep doing that for?” “A man over there repeated blinks at me. I blink back for polite, I think.” [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Mekado Murphy

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  • Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe Praise ‘Poor Things’ Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos: “He’s a Beautiful Director”

    Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe Praise ‘Poor Things’ Filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos: “He’s a Beautiful Director”

    The cast and crew of Yorgos LanthimosPoor Things made their way onto one final red carpet ahead of the film’s theatrical release.

    Stars Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe, Ramy Youssef, Margaret Qualley and Kathryn Hunter, among others, joined Lanthimos and screenwriter Tony McNamara for the New York City premiere of the film on Wednesday night.

    Ruffalo expressed that working with Stone, Lanthimos and the rest of the Poor Things team was like a “dream come true for him,” due partially to his character, Duncan Wedderburn.

    “He gets to say the most outrageous, foul, really poetic things than probably any man in the last 20 years of cinema and do it with panache and charm and total gracelessness,” the actor told The Hollywood Reporter. “I was really into the idea of doing physical comedy and then working, of course, with Emma and this cast.”

    Stone, who portrays Bella Baxter, explained that she couldn’t pinpoint what her favorite part of the film was because she enjoyed every aspect of it and loved her character. She also shared with reporters on the carpet what Lanthimos’ rehearsal processes for Poor Things were, noting they were fun and silly and incorporated lots of theater games.

    “We kind of don’t necessarily rehearse in the traditional way,” the Oscar winner said. “It just sort of bonds the cast. We felt really free and not embarrassed around each other, which is huge when you’re doing a lot of this, so I guess it informed Bella in the sense that I felt really great with everybody that I was doing scenes with.”

    Dafoe echoed Stone’s sentiment in expressing that every part of the film was the best part. The Lighthouse star portrays the Dr. Frankenstein-esque mad scientist Godwin Baxter who creates Bella, which leads to the two of them having “a very complicated relationship.”

    “The best part was the world, the design of the place,” Dafoe shared. “The best part was working with Yorgos. He’s a beautiful director. The best part is working with Tony McNamara’s script. The best part is having the scenes with Emma.”

    He shared that there wasn’t much preparation for him to do before production because his character was as complete as could be, so all he did was prepare an accent and watch videotapes of Alasdair Gray, the author of Poor Things, the book the film is based on. Dafoe found the novelist interesting and felt it was helpful to watch him in conversations because there is a lot of him in Godwin.

    Tony McNamara, Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Kathryn Hunter, Willem Dafoe, Margaret Qualley and Ramy Youssef

    Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    Lanthimos first read the novel 12 years ago but struggled to get people to back the film. Once they did, however, creating the world for his characters to inhabit became a pleasant process, he shared.

    Poor Things reunited the director with Stone after they worked together on The Favourite, for which Stone received a best supporting actress Oscar nomination. The pair also joined forces for the short film Bleat and the upcoming comic anthology And.

    “I think we just get along like as people but also had a really good time working together on The Favourite,” Lanthimos said of his and Stone’s continued collaboration. “We just keep getting to know each other better and better, and we just build on that relationship.”

    McNamara — who is already receiving awards for his Poor Things script — explained that when he and Lanthimos started thinking about adapting the story, the director suggested making the movie about Bella, instead of having other people tell her story like they do in the book.

    After deciding to make Bella their protagonist, McNamara and Lanthimos had to figure out how to create a film that encompassed all the genres they were trying to incorporate: comedy, coming-of-age, satire, sci-fi and fantasy.

    “The challenge was how to do that and make it feel organic and kind of like one thing,” the Oscar-nominated screenwriter said, adding that he found it exciting. “It was period, but it was contemporary. You don’t get often a character who changes the way they speak nonstop throughout a movie. So, that was really fun, to kind of work out how to do that and still make it feel like her all the time.”

    With Bella at the center of the story, Poor Things is being hailed as a feminist masterpiece. THR‘s chief film critic David Rooney called it “an unconventional reflection on female freedom” in his review.

    Hunter, who plays Madame Swiney in the already-award-winning project, appreciates the film asking questions like, “What is a woman? What is a human being? What are the things that we’re born with, and what are the things that we’re capable of?”

    She continued, “I love that it’s a female odyssey. It has to be said that most stories are male odysseys, the journey of the male hero. This is such an original take on the odyssey of the female hero. … It asks those incredible questions about what are we? And it kind of punctures our hypocrisies about received truths and how we should live and conventions.”

    Poor Things hits theaters Dec. 8.

    Christy Pina

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