How can I complain about these Oscar nominations?
Alcatraz has reopened, so I can now visit another prison besides my own home. The Dodgers are selling single-game tickets, though it feels like my chances of scoring some are about as promising as escaping from Alcatraz back in the day. But we still have the ocean and the dream that maybe someday we could take a walking journey covering all 1,270 miles of Californiaâs coast. Just watch your step when traveling through that nice, quiet little beach community that is Malibu.
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
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And Oscar nominations arrived this week. Did your favorites find some love?
Iâm Glenn Whipp, awards columnist for the Los Angeles Times, host of The Envelopeâs Friday newsletter. And Iâve had a rough week, so Iâd appreciate it if you didnât play the Eagles right about now. Thanks.
Oscar nominations are in
How can I complain about an Oscar year that gave us, for the first time, two women nominated for director (ChloĂŠ Zhao for âNomadlandâ and Emerald Fennell for âPromising Young Womanâ), two Black actors nominated from the same movie (LaKeith Stanfield and Daniel Kaluuya for âJudas and the Black Messiahâ) and an anthem about screaming seagulls and gentle whales nominated for original song?
Short answer: I canât. But I can rejoice. Sure, you can look at the eight movies nominated for best picture and wish that the strange, mysterious math the motion picture academy uses to determine the nominees could have somehow included a ninth film, perhaps either âMa Raineyâs Black Bottomâ or âOne Night in Miami ...â â excellent adaptations of plays looking at Black artists fighting for their place in the world.
But voters did deliver the most diverse group of acting nominees ever â including Steven Yeun, the first Asian American actor to land a lead actor nomination, and Riz Ahmed, the first Muslim nominated in a lead category and first performer of Pakistani descent to land in any acting race. Theyâre both in a category that, for the first time, is not mostly white.
Iâm disappointed that âSoulâ somehow wasnât nominated for original screenplay (much less best picture, where it should have landed too), but I can get over that. The movies, performances and craftsmanship celebrated this year reflect a wealth of considered, thoughtful choices and again confirm that this is no asterisk year for the Oscars.
I ran down a list of surprises and omissions (call them âsnubsâ if you must) on nominations morning. Thereâs a video conversation accompanying the story with Times film writer Jen Yamato. One of us combed our hair. Youâll have to click on the link to find out who (though I bet you can guess).
âWith great freedom comes great responsibilityâ
Now that we know the invitees for the 93rd Oscars, all thatâs left is the show, which will be held April 25. The ceremonyâs producers â Steven Soderbergh, Jesse Collins and Stacey Sher â sent a letter to nominees outlining expectations for the evening, described as âan intimate, in-person event at Union Station in Los Angeles, with additional show elements live from the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.â
Of note: Only nominees and their guests and presenters can attend. There will be no video calls. Dress code is described as a âfusion of Inspirational and Aspirational, which in actual words means formal is totally cool if you want to go there but casual is really not.â Good thing Jason Sudeikis is not nominated, I guess.
There was also a speech about speeches. âIt is our belief the show isnât âtoo longâ because of the speeches. HAVING SAID THAT, weâd like to say THIS: With great freedom comes great responsibility, and if youâre wondering what we mean by that exactly, we mean READ THE ROOM. Tell a STORY.â And, in case youâre wondering, Soderbergh practiced what he preaches when he won the Oscar for âTrafficâ 20 years ago.
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What do the Oscars mean in 2021? We asked the best picture producers
Itâs a strange year to be thinking about awards. Believe me, I know. So we thought weâd ask a producer from each of the eight movies nominated this year for best picture where their head is at and what they think the future might hold.
âItâs been a year of such solitude and sorrow and grief,â âMankâ producer Eric Roth told me. âI got my second vaccine and I immediately went and hugged my grandchildren for the first time in a year until they said, âStop, Papa!â [Laughs] The joy of the movie getting nominated doesnât completely balance anything because there is this kind of 100 years of solitude and all the grief that people have felt.â
Feedback?
Iâd love to hear from you. Email me at [email protected].
Canât get enough about awards season? Follow me at @glennwhipp on Twitter.
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whippâs must-read analysis.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.