2019
The winner is listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Filmsite's Greatest Films
of 2019
Best Picture
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PARASITE (2019)
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Ford v Ferrari (2019)
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The Irishman (2019)
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Jojo Rabbit (2019)
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Joker (2019)
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Little Women (2019)
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Marriage Story (2019)
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1917 (2019)
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Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood (2019)
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Best Animated Feature Film
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TOY STORY 4 (2019)
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How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019)
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I Lost My Body (Fr.) (aka J'ai Perdu Mon Corps)
(2019)
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Klaus (Sp./UK) (2019)
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Missing Link (2019)
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Actor:
JOAQUIN PHOENIX in "Joker," Antonio Banderas in "Pain
and Glory," Leonardo
DiCaprio in "Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood," Adam
Driver in "Marriage Story," Jonathan
Pryce in "The Two Popes"
Actress:
RENEE ZELLWEGER in
"Judy," Cynthia Erivo in "Harriet," Scarlett
Johansson in "Marriage
Story," Saoirse Ronan in "Little Women," Charlize
Theron in "Bombshell"
Supporting Actor:
BRAD PITT in "Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood," Tom
Hanks in "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood," Anthony
Hopkins in "The Two Popes," Al Pacino in "The
Irishman," Joe
Pesci in "The Irishman"
Supporting Actress:
LAURA DERN in "Marriage Story," Kathy Bates in "Richard
Jewell," Scarlett Johansson in "Jojo Rabbit," Florence
Pugh in "Little Women," Margot Robbie in "Bombshell"
Director:
BONG JOON HO for "Parasite," Martin
Scorsese for "The Irishman," Todd Phillips for "Joker,"
Sam Mendes for "1917," Quentin Tarantino for "Once
Upon a Time...in Hollywood"
Again
this year, there were 24 categories of awards, amounting to a
total of 124 Oscar nominees. However, the announcement of
nominees and winners (on January 13th and February 9th) was earlier
than in previous years, as part of a strategy to increase television
ratings. Also, for the second year in a row, the televised show
was host-free. One other major change was that the title of
Best Foreign-Language Film was retired and replaced with Best International
Feature.
The Best Picture category may have as many as 10
or as few as five nominees, depending on how the AMPAS voters spread
their votes. This year, there were nine contenders for the top
prize. The nine films nominated
for Best Picture included four films with double-digit nominations.
This was an Academy record - it was the first time four
films achieved double-digit nominations in the same year. Joker received
11 nominations, including Best Picture. Three
films tied for 10 nominations: The Irishman, 1917,
and Once Upon
a Time...in Hollywood.
Four films had six nominations apiece, and the last film, Ford
v Ferrari had only four nominations. Jojo Rabbit lacked
nominations in the lead acting category, and both 1917 and the character-driven Parasite had
no acting nominations at all.
Streaming giant Netflix led the studios
with 24 nominations, the most of any entertainment company, including
Best Picture nominations for Marriage
Story and The Irishman. It bested the newly-formed
Disney-Fox conglomerate (with the largest box-office totals for
the year), one more than Disney and
four more than Sony, which came in third place with 20
nominations. However, by the end of the Oscars show, Netflix had
only two Oscar wins: Best Documentary (American Factory,
produced by Barack Obama and Michelle Obama‘s production
company)
and Laura Dern's Best Supporting Actress award.
Some reviewers
have noted how many of the Best Picture nominees had plots that
were dark, gloomy, hope-deprived, often violent, and despairing.
The Best Picture winner was a surprise upset:
- Parasite (with 6 nominations and 4 wins,
Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best International Feature
Film, and Best Picture), South Korean writer/director Bong Joon
Ho's subtitled psychological thriller, twisting drama and dark
comedy about class struggle and social inequality, in which a
poor family (the Kims) infiltrated into the rich Park family
household by posing as skilled workers. Backed by the small New
York indie upstart Neon, its other two losing nominations included
Best Film Editing, and Best Production Design.
[Note: This was the first
Best Picture nomination for a South Korean film in the Academy's
history. It was the first non-English language film to ever win
the top honor. It was only the 10th foreign-language film to
be nominated for Best Picture. It was the first nomination and
win in the category of Best International Feature Film for a
South Korean film. It also won the Palme d’Or
at Cannes (the first Korean
film to do so). To date, it was one of only 12
films that won Best Picture without receiving a single
acting nomination. The Best Original Screenplay Oscar awarded to
Parasite was the first writing win for
an entirely Foreign-Language film since Talk to Her (2002,
Sp.), and it was the first time Asian writers had ever won
an Oscar.]
Eight of the nine nominated Best Pictures earned
at least one award (arranged in descending order of wins below):
- 1917 (with 10 nominations and 3 wins, Best
Sound Mixing, Best Cinematography, and Best Visual Effects),
Universal's and director Sam Mendes' World War I epic about two
British soldiers racing over no-man's-land to hand-deliver a
critical life-saving message (to save their fellow 1,600 troops),
with nods to its director and screenplay among other accolades
(but without any acting nominations); with superb cinematography
by Oscar-winning Roger Deakins, who received his second career
Cinematography Oscar (with his 15th nomination - noms stretched
way back to 1994), who digitally stitched together the entire
two-hour film to make it look continuous; Deakins had previously
won his first Oscar for Best Cinematography for Blade Runner
2049 (2017)
- Joker (with 11 nominations and 2 wins,
Best Original Score and Best Actor), Warner Bros' and director
Todd Phillips' R-rated, revisionist comic-book portrait of a
DC Comics superhero (an origin story about a mentally-ill Batman
villain), with nods for Best Director and Best Actor (Joaquin
Phoenix) among others
[Note: This marked the most nominations for a comic book-based
superhero movie in Academy history.
It was also only the second comic-book superhero (or super-villain)
movie in history to earn a Best-Picture nomination, following the
previous year's Black
Panther (2018) (with six nominations and three wins).
In addition, the film was the highest-grossing movie nominated
for Best Picture this year, with over $1 billion revenue (worldwide),
and $334 million (domestic) at the time of the nominations. Since
its release, it became the top-grossing R-rated film of all time
(worldwide). Phillips' film paid homage to two classic Martin
Scorsese films: Taxi
Driver (1976), and The King of Comedy (1982).]
- Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood (with 10
nominations and 2 wins, including Best Supporting Actor and Best
Production Design), Sony Pictures' and director Quentin Tarantino's
fictional homage to late-1960s Hollywood show-business during
the rise of the Manson Family (and its notorious murder of Sharon
Tate (Margot Robbie)), with nods to its two actors (Oscar-winning
Brad Pitt as a stuntman and Leonardo DiCaprio as a has-been actor),
and Tarantino (for his Original Screenplay and Directing)
- Ford v Ferrari (with 4 nominations and
2 wins, Best Sound Editing and Best Film Editing), Fox's and
director James Mangold's entertaining action-oriented biography
- based on the true competitive story of the race in the mid-1960s
to make a faster car, a rivalry between the Ford Motor Company's
American car designer Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon) and engineer-driver
Ken Miles (Christian Bale), and Ferrari at the 24 Hours of Le
Mans in 1966
- Jojo Rabbit (with 6 nominations and 1 win
for Best Adapted Screenplay), Fox Searchlight's and writer/director
Taika Waititi's satirical tale of a young German boy named Jojo
(Roman Griffin Davis) who imagined Hitler as his friend, and
found a Jewish girl hidden in his attic by his mother (Scarlett
Johansson)
- Little Women (with 6 nominations and 1
win for Best Costume Design), Sony Pictures' and un-nominated
director Greta Gerwig's coming-of-age version of Louisa May Alcott’s
post-Civil War tale, an exquisite period drama about four sisters
(portrayed by Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, Emma Watson, and
Eliza Scanlen) growing up in Massachusetts with their mother
Marmee March (Laura Dern)
[Note: This version became the most nominated adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's
book ever filmed. It became the 3rd film in Oscar history solely written,
directed and produced by a woman, that also received a Best Picture nomination:]
- Marriage Story (with 6 nominations and
1 win for Best Supporting Actress), Netflix's and writer/director
Noah Baumbach's drama about a vicious divorce and custody battle
between a married couple, Charlie (Adam Driver) and Nicole Barber
(Scarlett Johansson), conducted in part (between New York and
Los Angeles) by Nora's high-powered divorce attorney Nora Fanshaw
(Oscar-winning Laura Dern)
- The Irishman (with 10 nominations and 0
wins), Netflix's and director Martin Scorsese's lengthy mob drama
based on Charles Brandt’s
2004 book I Heard You Paint Houses, with nods to Scorsese
as director, and its two supporting actors (Joe Pesci and Al
Pacino), in a tale of elderly hit-man Frank Sheeran (Robert
DeNiro) recalling his part in the killing of union labor leader
Jimmy Hoffa; it was the only Best Picture nominee that was Oscar-less
- marking it as one of the worst shut-outs in Oscars history
Three additional films received three nominations
each - without receiving Best Picture nominations, but they did
not fare well:
- Liongate's and director Jay Roach's Bombshell (with
a sole win for Best Makeup and Hairstyling), a serious look at
sexual harrassment allegations leveled at former CEO Roger Ailes
at the Fox News Channel in mid-2016
- Disney's Star
Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker (with zero wins),
the newest installment of the sci-fi space saga, with nominations
for Best Sound Editing, Best Visual Effects, and Best Original
Score (John Williams)
[Note: John Williams' nomination was his 52nd Oscar nomination.]
- Netflix's and
director Fernando Meirelles' thoughtful religious drama The
Two Popes (with zero wins), adapted from Anthony McCarten's
play The
Pope (2017), was about conversations between Pope Benedict
(Hopkins) and Pope Francis (Pryce) at the Vatican
For the second
year in a row, there were no women nominated in the Best Director
category. The nominees for
Best Director had an average age of 57. Four out of the five nominees
for Best Director also received nods for their Adapted and Original
Screenplays.
The winner of Best Director was 50 year-old writer/director
Bong Joon Ho (with his first directorial nomination) for Parasite.
He also won the Oscar for Best International Feature Film and Best
Picture. Bong Joon Ho became the 8th director to have accomplished
the 'hat trick' of triple Oscar wins for Producing, Directing, and
Writing in
a single year. He was only the second Asian director
ever to win a directing Oscar, following two-time champ Ang Lee (for Brokeback
Mountain (2005) and Life of Pi (2012)).
The other nominees in the Best Director category were:
- 77 year-old Martin Scorsese (with his ninth nomination)
for The Irishman
[Note: This nomination made Scorsese the most-nominated living director in Academy
history. He surpassed Billy Wilder (with eight career directorial nominations),
although still trailed the 12 nominations held by William Wyler. He became the
second most-nominated director in history. His previous nominations, with one
win, include Raging
Bull (1980), The
Last Temptation of Christ (1988), GoodFellas (1990), Gangs
of New York (2002), The Aviator (2004), The Departed (2006) (win), Hugo
(2011), and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013). If Scorsese had won, he
would have been the oldest director to win a Best Director Oscar.]
- 56 year-old writer/director Quentin Tarantino
(with his third directorial nomination) for Once Upon a Time...in
Hollywood
[Note: Tarantino had never won a Best Director Oscar; he won twice before for
Best Original Screenplay, for Pulp Fiction (1994),
and Django Unchained (2012).]
- 54 year-old writer/director Sam Mendes (with his
second nomination) for 1917
[Note: Mendes previously won Best Director for his directorial debut film American
Beauty (1999).]
- 49 year-old writer/director Todd Phillips (with
his first directorial nomination) for Joker
[Note: Phillips
was previously co-nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay for
Borat (2006), and also received a co-nomination for Best
Adapted Screenplay for this film.]
Within the twenty acting nominations, there were
about a third that were offered to performers who have a
long history with Oscar, including Kathy Bates, Tom Hanks, Anthony
Hopkins, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, Charlize Theron, and Renée
Zellweger. Five of the acting nominees were over 70 years of age.
Black
actors and actresses were largely overlooked this year, however,
with only one nominee among the twenty slots - the British-Nigerian
actress Cynthia Erivo as the sole nominee for Harriet, a
biopic about Harriet Tubman. There was only one nominated international
star as well, Antonio Banderas for Pain and Glory. All of
the winners in the acting categories were predicted to win.
The winner of Best Actor was 45
year-old Joaquin Phoenix (with his third Best Actor nomination
and first Oscar win), for his portrayal of the violent, delusional,
sociopathic Gotham City title character - mentally-ill outcast,
aspiring comedian and party clown Arthur Fleck, in Joker.
[Note: Phoenix' previous nominations included Best Supporting Actor
for Gladiator
(2000), and Best Actor for Walk
the Line (2005) and The Master (2012). He became the
second-ever to win for a role based on a superhero comic book
character. The first was Heath Ledger's posthumous Best Supporting
Actor Oscar for his version of the Joker in The
Dark Knight (2008). Oscar history was also made: it was only
the second time that two actors won Oscars for playing the same
character. The first instance was when Marlon Brando won for playing
Don Corleone in The Godfather (1972) and
Robert De Niro won for the same role in The
Godfather, Part II (1974).]
The other nominees in the Best Actor category were:
- 45 year-old Leonardo DiCaprio (with his fifth
Best Actor nomination), for his role as washed-up, hard-drinking
1950s TV-westerns actor Rick Dalton, in Once Upon a Time...in
Hollywood
[Note: DiCaprio's first nomination was for a supporting
role in What's Eating Gilbert Grape? (1993). He also had
four previous Best Actor nominations with one win: The Aviator
(2004), Blood Diamond (2006), The Wolf of Wall
Street (2013), and The Revenant (2015) (win).]
- 36 year-old Adam Driver (with his first Best Actor
nomination), for his portrayal of a husband - NYC avant-garde
theatre director Charlie Barber whose wife (Johansson)
moved to Los Angeles and filed for divorce, in Marriage
Story
[Note: Driver was previously nominated
as Best Supporting Actor for BlacKkKlansman (2018).]
- 59 year-old Spanish actor Antonio Banderas (with
his first nomination), portraying gravely depressed, ailing and
declining Spanish filmmaker Salvador Mallo, in Pedro Almodóvar’s
little-known and viewed Pain and Glory (Sp.)
- 72 year-old Jonathan Pryce (with his first nomination),
for his portrayal of progressive Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio (later
Pope Francis), in The
Two Popes
The winner of Best Actress was 50
year-old Renée Zellweger (with her third nomination in the
category, and second Oscar win), for her casting as American singer/actress
Judy Garland during the last year of her career in Britain before
her death, in director Rupert Goold's biopic Judy - based
on the Tony-nominated play End of the Rainbow. [Note:
Zellweger was previously nominated twice as Best Actress for Bridget
Jones's Diary (2001), and Chicago (2002). She won Best Supporting
Actress for Cold Mountain (2003). She became the 7th female performer
in Academy history to win both a lead and supporting Oscar.]
The other nominees
in the Best Actress category were:
- 44 year-old Charlize Theron (with her third nomination
in the category, including one win), for her role as FOX News-caster
Megyn Kelly, in the semi-biographical drama Bombshell (with
only one win, Best Makeup and Hairstyling)
[Note: Theron was previously nominated twice for Best Actress, with one win: Monster
(2003) (win) and North Country (2005).]
- 25 year-old Irish actress Saoirse Ronan (with
her third nomination in the category) for playing headstrong
heroine Josephine "Jo" March,
in the re-adaptation of Little Women
[Note: She became the second-youngest four-time nominee, male or female, in Academy
history, behind Jennifer Lawrence. Ronan was previously nominated for: Best Supporting
Actress for Atonement (2007), and Best Actress for Brooklyn (2015) and Lady
Bird (2017).]
- 33 year-old Cynthia Erivo (with her first nomination),
for her portrayal of slave-turned Underground Railroad abolitionist
leader Harriet Tubman (aka Araminta "Minty" Ross),
in director Kasi Lemmons' Harriet
- 35 year-old Scarlett Johansson (with her first
nomination), for her portrayal of an ex-teen film actress Nicole,
married to successful NYC theater director, and undergoing
a difficult marriage breakup, in Marriage
Story
[Note: This was the first double nomination in 13 years
- since Cate Blanchett was nominated for Best Actress and Best Supporting
Actress for Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007) and I'm Not
There (2007). See Johansson's second nomination below.]
The five nominees for Best Supporting Actor included
a very aging group of male performers (and surprisingly, Oscar-winner
Brad Pitt at 56 years of age was the youngest of the group). All
five of the nominees were previous Oscar winners (in various categories).
The Best Supporting Actor winner was Brad Pitt (with
one previous nomination in the category, and three acting nominations
overall). It was Pitt's first acting Oscar win. He was honored
for his role as stoic, loyal stunt double Cliff Booth, the best
friend of aging Hollywood actor Rick Dalton (DiCaprio), in Once
Upon a Time...in Hollywood. [Note: Pitt had three previous
acting nominations: Best Supporting Actor for Twelve Monkeys
(1995),
and Best Actor for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) and Moneyball
(2011). He also was previously nominated as Best Picture producer
for 12
Years a Slave (2013) (win), Moneybal (2011) and The
Big Short (2015).]
The other nominees in the Best Supporting Actor category
were:
- 79 year-old Al Pacino (with his fourth nomination
in the category, and ninth nomination overall), for his role
as Teamsters labor union head Jimmy Hoffa, in The Irishman
[Note: Over his decades-long career, Pacino has a total of eight
previous nominations, five for Best Actor (Serpico (1973), The
Godfather Part II (1974), Dog Day Afternoon (1975), ...And
Justice For All (1979), and a sole win for Scent of a Woman
(1992)). Then, his previous
three Best Supporting Actor nominations include The
Godfather (1972),
Dick Tracy (1990), and Glengarry Glen Ross (1992).
The gap between his last nomination and this year's nomination was
27 years! With this nomination, Pacino tied for third place amongst
the most-nominated male performers, joining Spencer Tracy and Paul
Newman also with 9 nominations each - all running behind Laurence
Olivier (with 10) and Jack Nicholson (with 12).]
- 76 year-old Joe Pesci (with his third nomination
in the category, with one previous win), for his portrayal of
Italian crime family boss Russell Bufalino, the cousin of Jimmy
Hoffa's attorney, in The
Irishman
[Note: Pesci's previous nods were Best Supporting Actor for Raging
Bull (1980),
and a win for GoodFellas
(1990). The gap between his last nomination and this year's nomination
was 29 years!]
- 82 year-old Anthony Hopkins (with his second nomination
in the category), for his role as conservative Pope Benedict
XVI (formerly German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) embroiled in
corruption and cover-up, in director Fernando Meirelles' biopic
drama The
Two Popes
[Note: Hopkins had three previous Best Actor nominations (with one win): The
Silence of the Lambs (1991) (win), The Remains of the Day (1993),
and Nixon (1995), and a Supporting Actor nomination for Amistad (1997).
The gap between his last nomination and this year's nomination was 22 years!]
- 63 year-old Tom Hanks (with his first nomination
in the category), for his role as the beloved television icon
Fred Rogers of the show Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood,
in Sony's and Marielle Heller's biopic
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (the film's sole nomination)
[Note: Hanks had five previous Best Actor nominations, including
two wins: Big (1988), Philadelphia (1993) (win), Forrest
Gump (1994) (win), Saving Private Ryan (1998), and Cast
Away (2000). The gap between his last nomination and this
year's nomination was 19 years!]
The winner of Best Supporting Actress was 52 year-old
Laura Dern (with her first win, with two previous nominations,
one in this category), for her role as persuasive family divorce
attorney Nora Fanshaw on the side of Nicole Barber (Johansson),
in Marriage
Story. [Note:
Dern was nominated for Best Actress for Rambling
Rose (1991), and Best Supporting Actress for Wild (2014).]
The other nominees in the Best Supporting Actress
category were:
- 71 year-old Kathy Bates (with three previous nominations,
two in this category), for her motherly role as Barbara "Bobi" Jewell,
in the Clint Eastwood-directed biographical drama Richard
Jewell (the
film's sole nomination), about the wrongly-accused security guard
who became the main suspect involved in the 1996 Olympics
pipe- bombing case in Atlanta, Georgia; the film was based upon
the 1997 Vanity Fair article The Ballad of Richard
Jewell by Marie Brenner
[Note: Bates won Best Actress for Misery (1990), and had
two previous Best Supporting Actress nominations for Primary Colors
(1998) and About Schmidt (2002).]
- 35 year-old Scarlett Johansson (with a second
nomination this year - spanning two categories), for her role
as single mother Rosie Betzler in Nazi Germany who was hiding
a teenaged Jewish girl in the attic, in Jojo
Rabbit
- 24 year-old English actress Florence Pugh (with
her first nomination), for her role as sullen Amy March, the
youngest of the four sisters, in Little
Women
- 29 year-old Australian actress Margot Robbie (with
one previous nomination), for her role as Kayla Pospisil, a fictional,
newly-hired Fox News employee (a compilation of multiple Fox
employees), in Bombshell
[Note: Robbie was nominated for Best Actress for I,
Tonya (2017).]
Oscar Omissions and Snubs:
Best Picture:
- Lulu Wang’s and A24's sleeper hit The
Farewell (with zero nominations) -
the drama about a Chinese-American family’s
decision to hide the grandmother’s terminal cancer diagnosis
Best Director:
- writer/director Greta Gerwig's Little
Women (with six nominations and only one win) received
a nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay and two acting
nods (Ronan and Pugh), but Gerwig was denied a Best Director nomination.
Gerwig would have made history as the first woman to become
a two-time directing nominee. She remained one of only five
women nominated in the category.
[Note: Gerwig was nominated
as Best Director for Lady Bird (2017).]
- writer/director Lulu
Wang for The
Farewell
[Note:
Wang would have become the first woman of Asian descent to
be nominated].
- other neglected female directors:
Marielle Heller for A
Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, Lorene Scafaria for Hustlers,
Melina Matsoukas for Queen & Slim, and Kasi Lemmons
for Harriet
- writer/director Noah Baumbach
- passed over for his intensely-wrought divorce drama Marriage
Story
Best Actor:
- Eddie Murphy for his role as
black entertainer and blaxploitation legend Rudy Ray Moore (and
star of the 1970s Dolemite movies), in Netflix's and director
Craig Brewer's biopic Dolemite
Is My Name (with zero nominations)
- Adam
Sandler for his role as Howard Ratner, an indebted jeweler and
degenerate gambling addict in NYC's Diamond District, always
in trouble with loan sharks, in the A24 (and Netflix) crime-thriller
and drama Uncut
Gems (with zero nominations)
- Robert De Niro
for his decades-long title role as Frank Sheeran, a truck driver
who turned hit man and was paired up with crime family mobster
Russell Bufalino (Pesci), in Scorsese's expensively-produced
and lengthy Netflix epic crime film The
Irishman
- Christian Bale for his role as a British World
War II veteran, Ford Motor Company car mechanic and hot-headed
professional race car driver, culminating in a 1966 race at Le
Mans against the Ferraris, in Ford
v Ferrari
- Taron Egerton for his portrayal of gay rocker
Elton John / Reginald Dwight and his friendship and musical partnership
with lyricist Bernie Taupin (Jamie Bell), in the biographical
musical Rocketman (with one win from its sole nomination,
Best Original Song: "(I'm Gonna) Love Me Again")
Best Actress:
- Awkwafina for her role as aspiring Chinese-American
writer Billi Wang, who kept a terminal illness diagnosis from
her matriarchial grandmother during a family wedding in China,
in The
Farewell
- Lupita Nyong'o for her role as
the haunted Adelaide Wilson, whose family was attacked
by a group of menacing doppelgängers, in Jordan Peele's
well-received horror film Us (with zero nominations)
- with a great twist ending
Best Supporting Actor:
- Jamie Foxx was snubbed for his role
as wrongly condemned, Alabama death row prisoner Walter McMillian,
in writer/director Destin Daniel Cretton's true-life drama Just
Mercy (with zero nominations)
- Song Kang-Ho was overlooked for his role as
Kim Ki-taek, the impoverished patriarch of the Kim family in
Seoul, involved in a manipulative con against the affluent
Park family to take over their household, in the much-lauded
black comedy-thriller from South Korea, Parasite
Best Supporting Actress:
- Jennifer Lopez was deprived of an expected nomination
for portraying stripper Ramona, in director Lorene Scafaria’s Hustlers (with
zero nominations)
- Nicole Kidman didn't get honored with a nomination
for her role as real-life FOX newscaster Gretchen Carlson,
co-anchor of the Fox & Friends show, who filed suit
against FOX news head Roger Ailes (John Lithgow) for sexual
harrassment, in Bombshell
- Zhao Shuzhen was passed over for her role as
Billi's ailing paternal grandmother Nai Nai with a cancer diagnosis,
hidden from her, in The
Farewell
Best Animated Feature Film:
- Disney's blockbuster sequel Frozen II (with
only one nomination, Best Original Song) was knocked out of
contention by Netflix's two foreign entries: Klaus (Sp./UK),
an origin story about Santa Klaus, and/or by I Lost
My Body (Fr.) (aka J'ai Perdu Mon Corps)
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