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Tag: Rodrigo Prieto

  • Here Are All the 2024 Oscar Winners

    Here Are All the 2024 Oscar Winners

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    Poor Things
    Image: Searchlight

    After enduring the pandemic and a pair of industry-stopping strikes, Hollywood seemed extra jazzed about celebrating itself at this year’s Oscars. While there weren’t a ton of genre movies on the ballot—truly, last year’s Everything Everywhere All at Once sweep still feels rather validating—a few did find their way to the podium.

    Most notably it was Poor Things leading the charge for genre, including a Best Lead Actress win for Emma Stone for her portrayal of Bella Baxter—arguably only rivalled by Oppenheimer, which took home the trio of big wins in Best Lead Actor, Best Director, and Best Picture. Barbie, amid a sea of discourse after nominees were initially announced earlier this year about perceived snubs, home only one win for original song out of its slate of nominations. Here are all the winners (plus their fellow nominees) from the 2024 Academy Awards. And may we just say, if Best Visual Effects winner Godzilla Minus One does get a sequel, we hope it makes it into more categories than its Best Picture-worthy predecessor.

    Best Supporting Actor

    • Sterling K. Brown (American Fiction)
    • Robert De Niro (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Winner: 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)
    • Winner: Da’vine Joy Randolph (The Holdovers)

    Best Animated Feature Film

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

    Best Animated Short Film

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

    Best Costume Design

    • Barbie (Jacqueline Durran)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Jacqueline West)
    • Napoleon (David Crossman & Janty Yates)
    • Oppenheimer (Ellen Mirojnick)
    • Winner: Poor Things (Holly Waddington)

    Best Live-Action Short

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

    Best Makeup and Hairstyling

    • Golda
    • Maestro
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: Poor Things
    • Society of the Snow

    Best Original Score

    • American Fiction (Laura Karpman)
    • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (John Williams)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Robbie Robertson)
    • Winner: Oppenheimer (Ludwig Göransson)
    • Poor Things (Jerskin Fendrix)

    Best Sound

    • The Creator
    • Maestro
    • Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: The Zone of Interest

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    • Winner: American Fiction (Cord Jefferson)
    • Barbie (Noah Baumbach & Greta Gerwig)
    • Oppenheimer (Christopher Nolan)
    • Poor Things (Tony McNamara)
    • The Zone of Interest (Jonathan Glazer)

    Best Original Screenplay

    • Winner: Anatomy of a Fall (Arthur Harari & Justine Triet)
    • The Holdovers (David Hemingson)
    • Maestro (Bradley Cooper & Josh Singer)
    • May December (Samy Burch & Alex Mechanik)
    • Past Lives (Celine Song)

    Best Cinematography

    • El Conde (Edward Lachman)
    • Killers of the Flower Moon (Rodrigo Prieto)
    • Maestro (Matthew Libatique)
    • Winner: Oppenheimer (Hoyte van Hoytema)
    • Poor Things (Robbie Ryan)

    Best Documentary Feature Film

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

    Best Documentary Short Film

    • The ABCs of Book Banning
    • The Barber of Little Rock
    • Island in Between
    • Winner: The Last Repair Shop
    • Nai Nai & Wài Pó

    Best Film Editing

    • Anatomy of a Fall
    • The Holdovers
    • Killers of the Flower Moon
    • Winner: Oppenheimer
    • Poor Things

    Best International Feature Film

    • Io Capitano
    • Perfect Days
    • Society of the Snow
    • The Teacher’s Lounge
    • Winner: The Zone of Interest

    Best Original Song

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

    Best Production Design

    • Barbie
    • Killers of the Flower Moon
    • Napoleon
    • Oppenheimer
    • Winner: Poor Things

    Best Visual Effects

    • The Creator
    • Winner: Godzilla Minus One
    • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
    • Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning, Part One
    • Napoleon

    Best Lead Actor

    • Bradley Cooper (Maestro)
    • Colman Domingo (Rustin)
    • Paul Giamatti (The Holdovers)
    • Winner: Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer)
    • Jeffrey Wright (American Fiction)

    Best Lead 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 Director

    • Justine Triet (Anatomy of a Fall)
    • Martin Scorcese (Killers of the Flower Moon)
    • Winner: Christopher Nolan (Oppenheimer)
    • Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things)
    • Johanathan Glazer (Zone of Interest)

    Best Picture

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

    What did you think of this year’s winners? Any favorite moments from the ceremony? Share in the comments below!


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Blow Up the Patriarchy, Or: The Barbenheimer Experience

    Blow Up the Patriarchy, Or: The Barbenheimer Experience

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    Perhaps what they don’t warn you about with regard to “the Barbenheimer experience” is just how jarring it actually is. Certainly, that’s the entire “point” of pairing these two films together, the reason the internet has gone apeshit: because they’re so “divergent.” In fact, the phenomenon has proven to be such an excitement to people that they’ve gone “through the archives” to find similar instances of unlikely movie pairings released the same week. Such examples include Jumanji and Heat, The Matrix and 10 Things I Hate About You and The Dark Knight and Mamma Mia! It’s really only the latter example (complete with also featuring a Christopher Nolan movie) that comes vaguely close to capturing the sort of genre/color palette dichotomy that Barbie and Oppenheimer do. But, on a deeper level than that, watching Oppenheimer the same day or week serves as an even more blatant method for underscoring the horrifying patriarchal system that Barbie does. 

    In Oppenheimer’s case, of course, it’s unintentional. Because never was patriarchy in America at its strongest and most accepted than in the mid-twentieth century. Nor could Nolan have planned for a movie about garden-variety male toxicity to have coincided so seamlessly with an actual moviegoing trend/phenomenon. The pairing of these two films fundamentally speaking to how patriarchy destroys lives in far more literal ways than figurative ones. While Barbie (Margot Robbie) at least gets to experience life as it should be under matriarchy in Barbie Land, maybe it’s almost worse to know what that sense of peace and freedom is like only to be forced to enter Real World territory, where males rule with an iron/button-pushing (a bomb allusion) fist. 

    Upon seeing how things are done in Real World, Ken (Ryan Gosling) decides he can no longer be subjected to the “tyranny” of matriarchal dominance. Of being unable to force a Barbie to do anything he wants them to (i.e., return his affection), least of all the specific one he’s pining over. Because, in Barbie Land, men a.k.a. Kens are just background. In J. Robert Oppenheimer’s (Cillian Murphy) world, it’s women who are very much peripheral, serving only as vague sexual impressions. Yet there’s never any issue with making a woman “his.” Except his on-again, off-again paramour, Jean Tatlock (Florence Pugh). Unfortunately for Oppenheimer, she’s the type of “Berkeley free spirit” who can never seem to be pinned down. Oppenheimer’s eventual wife, Katherine (Emily Blunt), on the other hand, is only too eager to take a fourth husband in “Oppi.” 

    And yet, for as important as these women are in Oppenheimer’s life (not to mention being the only sign of women anywhere within this filmic landscape), they’re really just cursory and occasional “presences” that only interrupt the “real” work he’s doing. The truly “significant” aspect of his life. Which becomes helping male politicians destroy the world in the name of war. With Oppenheimer himself growing (like a mushroom cloud) so consumed and titillated by the resources (financial or otherwise) the government provides him with in the name of scientific research, he loses sight of the monster he’s actually creating. Perhaps as Ruth Handler (Rhea Perlaman) once did as well. Not knowing that the woman she unleashed onto the world—the one quite literally made to show girls that they could be anything—only served to further highlight all the things they would never be, both body-wise and career-wise. Therefore, Handler ended up actually accenting a more palpable and depressing divide between reality and what should be…as opposed to conjuring a beacon of hope and feminism in Barbie. And yes, it bears noting that, despite all her evolutions, Mattel has never seen fit to release a “Body Positivity” Barbie. Maybe because they know just how hollow that would come across at this juncture. Though false intentions never stopped a capitalist from trying to make a fast buck. In short, to capitalize

    Obviously, Handler and Oppenheimer are by no means comparable for what they created—though each one did offer up, in some sense, a kind of Frankenstein. Gerwig appears to know that only too well by making Handler a prominent character in Barbie. A conceit that might seem a bit out of left field to some, but is actually entirely appropriate considering she was the brainchild behind Mattel’s best-selling and most iconic toy. And it’s cruelly ironic that Handler’s “ghost” should be left to haunt the seventeenth floor of corporate headquarters while the suits with no insight into women benefit from her invention. For yes, she was eventually forced to resign from Mattel in 1974 after the taxman cracked down on her for false financial reporting (something Gerwig refers to with a joke that Ruth herself makes in the movie).

    Difficulty getting along with the government appears to be a common characteristic in those who simply want to create. For Oppenheimer, too, was viewed with malice and contempt by the very political machine that was dependent upon him for developing an atomic weapon. One that turned out, in the end, to be rather needless as Japan would have surely surrendered without it. But such is the nature of patriarchy, with every man “in charge” needing to prove that his power is authoritative and incontrovertible by swinging his dick around while lives hang in the balance. 

    Oppenheimer makes that disgustingly clear when Henry L. Stimson (James Remar), the Secretary of War at the time, decides they shouldn’t bomb Kyoto because he and his wife honeymooned there and it’s a “lovely” place that has cultural value not just to him, but the Japanese. In other words, fuck those arbitrary shitholes, Hiroshima and Nagasaki. To see a scene like this play out is indicative of just how damaging patriarchy is, for it is a system run by a gender that thrives on violence, ego and heartless decision-making. A gender that proves, ultimately, gender is no illusion; for this particular one feeds on destruction, whereas the female one is founded metaphorically and literally on creation. The great yin and yang endeavors of each type of being. 

    So yes, more than merely a means to appreciate the contrasting cinematography styles of Hoyte van Hoytema and Rodrigo Prieto, the Barbenheimer experience does feel somehow essential. Like it shouldn’t get reduced to being categorized as “frivolous pandering to internet tastemaking,” but rather, seen as a brutal and unique way to watch how patriarchy upends male and female lives alike on a daily basis. All because someone wanted to prove he has clout and “intelligence.” Though the dumbest thing of all is to assume that one has any significance whatsoever in the grand scheme. 

    Especially a grand scheme that might now invariably include going “kabluey” because a man wanted to show off the prowess of his mind knowing full well that said result would be used for evil. Indeed, quoting from a Hindu scripture, Oppenheimer would say of his creation, “Now I am become Death, destroyer of worlds.” In some sense, Barbie destroyed worlds as well. Bringing “fire” to the “cavewomen” who were still stuck playing with (read: playing at mothering) baby dolls throughout their childhood. Accordingly, this is the very scene Greta Gerwig rightly chooses to commence Barbie with. And would that playing with/learning to emulate a “slutty” doll was the most affronting and harmful thing a man (/man-boy) ever did. 

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    Genna Rivieccio

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