2023
The winner will be listed first, in CAPITAL letters.
Filmsite's Greatest Films
of 2023
Best Picture
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OPPENHEIMER (2023)
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American Fiction (2023)
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Anatomy of a Fall (2023, Fr.)
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Barbie (2023)
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The Holdovers (2023)
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Killers of the Flower Moon (2023)
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Maestro (2023)
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Past Lives (2023)
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Poor Things (2023)
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The Zone of Interest (2023)
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Best Animated Feature Film
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THE BOY AND THE HERON (2023)
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Elemental (2023)
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Nimona (2023)
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Robot Dreams (2023)
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Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023)
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Actor:
CILLIAN MURPHY in "Oppenheimer," Bradley Cooper in "Maestro," Colman
Domingo in "Rustin," Paul Giamatti in "The Holdovers," Jeffrey
Wright in "American Fiction"
Actress:
EMMA STONE in "Poor Things," Annette Bening in "Nyad," Lily
Gladstone in "Killers
of the Flower Moon," Sandra Hüller in "Anatomy
of a Fall," Carey Mulligan in "Maestro"
Supporting Actor:
ROBERT DOWNEY, JR. in "Oppenheimer," Sterling K. Brown
in "American Fiction," Robert De Niro in "Killers
of the Flower Moon," Ryan Gosling in "Barbie," Mark
Ruffalo in "Poor Things"
Supporting Actress:
DA'VINE JOY RANDOLPH in "The Holdovers," Emily
Blunt in "Oppenheimer," Danielle
Brooks in "The
Color Purple," America Ferrera in "Barbie," Jodie
Foster in "Nyad"
Director:
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN for "Oppenheimer," Jonathan Glazer for "The
Zone of Interest," Yorgos Lanthimos for "Poor Things," Martin
Scorsese for "Killers of the Flower Moon," Justine Triet
for "Anatomy of a Fall"
In this 96th
Academy Awards ceremony, presented by the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), with 23 categories of awards,
there were 10 nominees for Best Picture.
This was the second straight year in which the #
1 movie at the domestic box office, Barbie, was nominated
for Best Picture. (Last year, it was Top Gun: Maverick (2022).)
This is a fairly recent phenomenon, since it's rare for the major
crowd-pleasing blockbuster of the year to be a major Oscar-awarded
or winning film. (Note: In the distant past, there are only a few
instances of this happening: My Fair Lady
(1964), The Sound of Music (1965), The
Godfather (1972), The Sting (1973), Rocky
(1976), Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), Rain Man (1988), Titanic
(1997), and The Lord
of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003).)
The Best Picture Category:
For the first time in Oscar history, three of the
Best Picture nominees: Barbie, Anatomy of a Fall,
and Past Lives were directed by women. It was also the 5th
consecutive year that at least one film was nominated for Best
Picture that was directed by a woman. Also,
four of the 10 Best Screenplay nominees were written (or cowritten)
by women (the most female writers in a single year). There
was a mix of genres, films, and diverse performers in this year's
nominations.
The tally of
studio nominations by releasing company was very competitive: Netflix:
18, Apple Original Films: 13, Searchlight: 13, Universal: 13, Warner
Bros: 9, A24: 7, and Neon: 7. In terms of Oscar
wins, only four distributors/studios did well -- Universal: 7, Searchlight:
4, A24: 2, and Toho: 2. Many of the big studios were shut out, including:
Netflix, Sony, Paramount and Disney.
Although the fantasy comedy Barbie (with 8
nominations) was the box-office favorite for 2023 (and was the
most successful film ever directed by a woman), it had mixed results
in the race for Oscars with only one Oscar win - Best Original
Song.
The Best Picture Winner:
The ultimate Best Picture winner, Christopher Nolan's
epic biopic Oppenheimer garnered
7 Oscar wins from its 13 nominations (the biggest total number
of nominations since The
Shape of Water (2017)), winning in many of the major categories
- Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, and Best Supporting
Actor, plus three others. It joined only six
other Best Picture-winning films that are now tied for second place
with a whopping 13 nominations, behind the top three leaders with
14 nominations.
Out of the 10 Best Picture nominees (sorted by the
number of wins), the Best Picture winner was:
- the biopic and epic WWII saga about
the father of the A-bomb, Universal's Oppenheimer (with
13 nominations, and seven wins). Its major wins included Best
Picture (represented by Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas), a
Best Director win for Christopher Nolan, a Best Actor win for
Cillian Murphy as the title character (father of the "atomic
bomb"), and a Best Supporting Actor win for Robert Downey,
Jr. as Oppenheimer's rival - the US Atomic Energy Comm. member
Lewis Strauss. It also won Best Film Editing (Jennifer Lame),
Best Original Score (Ludwig Göransson),
and Best Cinematography (Hoyte Van Hoytema)
Six other Best Picture nominees with Oscar wins
included:
- director Yorgos Langthimos' and Searchlight's
fantasy Poor
Things (with
11 nominations, and four wins) - was a
feminist, coming-of-age version of Frankenstein; it
had a Best Actress win for Emma Stone, and three technical wins
for Best Makeup and Hairstyling, Best Costume Design and Best
Production Design
- Brit director Jonathan Glazer's radically inventive
Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest (with five nominations,
and two wins), from A24, was also the UK's entry for Best International
Feature Film (win), although it was largely in German; it became
the first ever British film to win in the category; its plot
was a horror story about a Nazi commandant at Auschwitz who lived
with his family next-door to the concentration camp; its other
win was the Oscar for Best Sound
- American Fiction (with five nominations,
and one win), from Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios - it marked
the directorial debut of Cord Jefferson, with strong acting performances
by black actors Jeffrey Wright (who played an author who decided
to write more "black") and Sterling K. Brown (as the
author's estranged brother); Cord Jefferson won the Best Adapted
Screenplay Oscar
- Justine Triet's multi-lingual, dramatic courtroom
thriller Anatomy of a Fall (with five nominations, and
one win) from Neon - was about a mysterious death that occurred
at a chalet in the French Alps (and the ensuing investigation
and case); Sandra Hüller portrayed German bisexual novelist
Sandra Voyter who was on-trial for her husband Samuel's murder;
it won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar (for Justine Triet and
her co-writer Arthur Harari) - Triet's win was the first for a
female in this category; it was the first French screenplay to
win since Claude Lelouch’s A Man and A Woman (1966)
- Focus Features' The Holdovers (with five
nominations, and one win) received two strong nominations for
its two main performers: Da'Vine Joy Randolph as a grieving food
service employee won Best Supporting Actress, and Best Actor-nominated
Paul Giamatti portrayed a lonely teacher at a prep-school
during the holidays who had to supervise "holdovers" during
the Christmas holidays
- director Greta Gerwig's and Warner Bros.' fantasy
comedy Barbie (with 8 nominations, and one win) told of
the travels of Barbie and Ken to the real world to see what it
was like to be human; Gerwig was snubbed in the Best Director
category, and Margot Robbie was also snubbed for a nomination
as the title character - Stereotypical Barbie; it won a single
Oscar for Best Original Song ("What Was I Made For?" by
Billie Eilish and Finneas O'Connell) [Note: Billie Eilish's win
at the age of 22, with her 26 year-old brother, became the youngest
two-time Oscar winners in history - she previously won, with
O'Connell, the Best Original Song Oscar award for the Bond theme
song for No
Time to Die (2021).]
There were three Best Picture nominees
that came away completely empty-handed:
- director Martin Scorsese's crime drama from Apple
Original Films - Killers
of the Flower Moon (with 10 nominations, and 0 wins) was
a lengthy historical crime drama (at 206 minutes) about the theft
of the Osage Nation's oil wealth in the 1920s, orchestrated by
an influential, wealthy cattle rancher William "King" Hale
(Robert De Niro)
- actor/director Bradley Cooper's and Netflix's
biographical romantic drama Maestro (with
7 nominations, and 0 wins) - told about the relationship between
symphony conductor/composer Leonard Bernstein (Bradley Cooper)
and his wife Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan). [Note: Bradley
Cooper joined a small group of other directors who were nominated
for Acting, Producing, and Writing for the same film.] The
film's nominations included Best Original Screenplay and Cinematography,
and acting nominations for both Bradley Cooper and Carey Mulligan.
[Note: One of the film's producers, 3-time Oscar winner Steven
Spielberg, made Oscar history with his 13th nomination for Best
Picture.]
- South Korean writer/director Celine Song's and
A24's emotional, semi-autobiographical romantic drama Past
Lives (with
two nominations, and 0 wins) received
the lowest number of nominations of the top 10 contenders;
Celine Song's directorial debut feature film was a heart-wrenching
tale about two childhood friends, Na Young/Nora Moon (Greta
Lee) and Hae Sung (Teo Yoo), who reunited years later as adults
and began to reevaluate their relationship
Other films nominated in various other categories,
but without any Oscar wins included Rustin, Nyad,
Napoleon, May-December, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, Mission:
Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One, The
Color Purple, and Indiana
Jones and the Dial of Destiny.
A surprise winner in the Oscar category of Visual Effects was Godzilla
Minus One. [Note: It became the first
Godzilla film to earn both an Oscar nomination and an Oscar.] Films
that were shut-out altogether (without nominations) included Ben
Affleck's Air,
the British romance All
of Us Strangers, Michael Mann's Ferrari,
Ava DuVernay's Origin, and Emerald Fennell's Saltburn.
The Best Director Category:
The Best Director winner was:
- 53 year-old British-American director Christopher
Nolan, for Oppenheimer with his first Best Director win
[Note: Nolan's previous Oscar nominations include Best Original
Screenplay for Memento
(2000), Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay for Inception
(2010),
and Best Picture and Best Director for Dunkirk (2017).]
The other nominees were:
- 81 year-old Martin Scorsese became the most-nominated
'living' director of all time, for Killers of the Flower Moon,
with 10 nominations
[Note: The only other director with more
Best Director nominations was William Wyler with 12 nominations.
Scorsese has only won one Best Director Oscar, for The Departed
(2006). He also became the oldest nominee in the category.]
- 45 year-old French director Justine Triet was
the sole female nominee in the Best Director category,
for the Best-Picture nominated Anatomy
of a Fall.
[Note: Justine Triet's nomination, her first,
was the 9th Best Director nomination for a woman. She was the 8th
Best-Director nominated woman, since Jane Campion received two similar
nominations: The Piano (1993) and The Power of the Dog
(2021).]
- 50 year-old Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos,
for Poor
Things
[Note: Previous nominations include Best Original
Screenplay for The Lobster (2016), and Best Director
and Best Picture for The
Favourite (2018).]
- 58 year-old British film-director Jonathan Glazer,
for The
Zone of Interest
[Note: This was a first-time nomination
for Glazer, who was also nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay
for his Best Picture-nominated film.]
In the acting or performance categories, ten performers
were first-time nominees.
There were three previous acting winners (Robert De Niro, Jodie
Foster and Emma Stone). Three of the 20 nominees in these four
categories finally attained 5 acting nominations (Bradley Cooper,
Annette Bening, and Jodie Foster). This year marked the first time
since 1931 that all of the acting nominees were over 30 years of
age.
Among the acting nominees (in all four acting contests),
there were seven nominees representing diversity: two African-American
actors (Jeffrey Wright and Sterling K. Brown),
two African-American actresses (Da'Vine Joy Randolph and Danielle
Brooks), one Native-American (Lily Gladstone), and two Latinos
(American Ferrera of Honduran descent, and Afro-Latino Colman
Domingo). Three were openly LGBTQ performers (Jodie Foster, Lily
Gladstone and Colman Domingo).
The Best Actor Category:
In this category, there were five nominees, three
of whom were first-time nominees. None were previous Oscar
winners. The Best Actor winner was:
- 47 year-old Irish-born actor Cillian Murphy (with
his first nomination) was nominated for his role as the titular
character J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the A-bomb, in
Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer [Note: He was the first
ever Irish-born winner in the category]
The other nominees were:
- 49 year-old Bradley Cooper (with his 5th Best
Actor nomination, and no wins) became the fourth individual to
direct himself to an Oscar nomination with his role as American
composer Leonard Bernstein, in Maestro.
[Note: Cooper did not receive a directing nomination, although
he was nominated for co-writing the film’s screenplay. Cooper's
previous Best Actor nominations were for Silver Linings Playbook
(2012), American Hustle (2013), American Sniper (2014),
and A
Star is Born (2018).]
Trivia: Bradley Cooper joined three others who
directed themselves to an acting nomination in more than one
film (Laurence Olivier: Henry V (1944); Hamlet (1948),
and Richard
III (1955), Warren Beatty: Heaven Can Wait (1978), and Reds
(1981), and Clint Eastwood: Unforgiven
(1992), and Million
Dollar Baby (2004). Bradley Cooper: A Star Is Born (2018),
and Maestro (2023).
- 56 year-old Paul Giamatti (with his 2nd career
nomination and first as leading actor) was nominated for his
role as curmudgeonly, snobby boarding school teacher Paul Hunham,
in The
Holdovers [Note:
Giamatti was previously nominated as Best Supporting Actor for Cinderella
Man (2005).]
- 58 year-old Jeffrey Wright (with his first nomination)
for his role as underappreciated and frustrated novelist Thelonious
'Monk' Ellison, in
American Fiction [Note: It was the first time in Academy
history that a black Best Actor (Wright) was nominated
alongside a Best Supporting Actor (Sterling K. Brown)
for the same film. See below]
- 54 year-old Colman Domingo (with his first nomination)
as early 1960s gay civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, Martin
Luther King Jr.'s adviser, in Rustin [Note:
Domingo was the second openly LGBTQ Best
Actor nominee after Ian McKellen in Gods and Monsters
(1998). He was also the first Afro-Latino nominated in the
category. Colman Domingo, Lily Gladstone, and Jodie Foster
made dual Oscar history - it marked the first time three openly
LGBTQ actors were nominated for playing LGBTQ characters.]
The Best Actress Category:
In this category, there were five nominees, two
of whom were first-time nominees. Emma Stone was the only
previous Oscar winner. The Best Actress winner was:
- 35 year-old Emma Stone (with her 4th career acting
nomination, now with two wins) for her role as childlike and Frankenstein-like
heroine Bella Baxter, in the fantasy Poor Things. It was
considered the biggest upset of the 2023 awards season, since Lily
Gladstone was the expected favorite.
[Note: Stone previously won
the Best Actress Oscar for La
La Land (2016),
and was twice nominated for Best Supporting Actress, for Birdman
or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014) and The
Favourite (2018).] In addition, Emma Stone became the 2nd
woman to be nominated for Acting and Best Picture for the same
film, following Frances McDormand in Nomadland (2020).
The other nominees were:
- 65 year-old Annette Bening (with her 5th career
acting nomination, with no wins) for her role as competitive
60 year-old swimmer Diana Nyad who achieved her dream of swimming
across 110 miles from Cuba to Florida, in Nyad (with only
two Oscar nominations overall). [Note:
Her three previous Best Actress nominations included American
Beauty (1999), Being
Julia (2004), and The Kids Are Alright (2010), and
one Best Supporting Actress nomination for The Grifters (1990).]
- 38 year-old English actress Carey Mulligan (with
her 3rd Best Actress career nomination, with no wins) was nominated
for her role as Leonard Bernstein's loyal wife Felicia Montealegre,
in the biopic Maestro.
[Note: Her two previous nominations were Best Actress for An
Education (2009)
and Promising
Young Woman (2020).]
- 37 year-old Lily Gladstone (with her first nomination)
was selected for her role as Osage Mollie Kyle Burkhart whose
family owned oil-rights, in Killers
of the Flower Moon.
[Note: Gladstone became the first Native American (indigenous)
acting nominee for Best Actress.]
- 45 year-old German born actress Sandra Hüller
(with her
first nomination) was nominated for her role as Sandra Voyter
- a wife on trial for the murder of her husband, in Anatomy
of a Fall [Note: Hüller was the first German-born actress
nominated since Luise Rainer was nominated and won Best Actress
for The
Good Earth (1937).] She also played a major character (the
Auschwitz Commandant's wife Hedwig Höss) in Jonathan Glazer's
Holocaust drama The
Zone of Interest.
The Best Supporting Actor Category:
In this category, there were five nominees, one of
whom was a first-time nominee. De Niro was the only previous Oscar
winner. The Best Supporting Actor winner was:
- 58 year-old Robert Downey, Jr. (with his 3rd nomination,
and first win) for his role as US Atomic Energy Commission member
Lewis Strauss, Oppenheimer's rival and nemesis, in Oppenheimer.
[Note: Downey's previous nominations were Best Actor for Chaplin
(1992) and
Best Supporting Actor for Tropic Thunder (2008).]
The other nominees were:
- 80 year-old Robert De Niro (with his 8th nomination,
and two previous wins), was nominated for his role as manipulative,
murderous cattleman William King Hale, in Killers
of the Flower Moon.
[Note: De Niro previously won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor
for The
Godfather Part II (1974), and Best Actor for Raging
Bull (1980). His other nominations included Best Actor
for Taxi Driver (1976), The
Deer Hunter (1978), Awakenings
(1990), and Cape Fear (1991), and Best Supporting
Actor for Silver
Linings Playbook (2012). At an elapsed 49 years of time,
De Niro surpassed Katharine Hepburn (at 48 years) for the longest
period of time between his first and most recent Oscar nomination
for acting. He was first nominated and won Best Supporting Actor
for The
Godfather, Part II (1974) and then 49 years later was
nominated for Best Supporting Actor for Killers of the Flower
Moon (2023).]
- 56 year-old Mark Ruffalo (with his 4th nomination,
with no wins) was nominated for his role as the rakish, vain,
debauched lawyer Duncan Wedderburn, in the black comedy Poor
Things.
[Note Ruffalo's previous nominations were all Best Supporting
Actor nods for The
Kids Are All Right (2010), Foxcatcher (2014), and Spotlight
(2015).]
- 43 year-old Canadian-born actor Ryan Gosling (with
his 3rd nomination, with no wins) secured a surprise Oscar nomination
for his role as Ken, in the fantasy comedy Barbie.
[Note: Gosling's two previous nominations were Best Actor for
Half Nelson (2006) and for La La Land (2016).]
- 47 year-old black American actor Sterling K. Brown
(with his first nomination) for his role as Clifford "Cliff"
Ellison, his co-actor Monk's (Jeffrey Wright) estranged and drug-abusing
brother, in the satirical comedy American
Fiction
The Best Supporting Actress Category:
In this category, there were five nominees, four
of whom were first-time nominees. Foster was the only previous
Oscar winner. The Best Supporting Actress winner was:
- 37 year-old black actress Da'Vine Joy Randolph (with
her first nomination) for her role as a grieving mother and boarding
school cook Mary Lamb, in The Holdovers
The other nominees were:
- 61 year-old Jodie Foster (with her 5th career
nomination, with two previous Best Actress wins), for her role
as Diana Nyad's best friend, one-time lover, and swimming coach
Bonnie Stoll, in the biographical sports drama-biopic Nyad;
it was Foster’s
first lesbian role to date. [Note: Colman Domingo, Lily Gladstone,
and Jodie Foster made dual Oscar history - it marked the first
time three openly LGBTQ actors were nominated for playing LGBTQ
characters.] [Note: Jodie Foster previously won the Best Actress
Oscar for The
Accused (1988) and
The Silence of the Lambs (1991),
and was nominated as Best Supporting Actress for Taxi
Driver (1976), and as Best Actress for Nell (1994)].
- 40 year-old British actress Emily Blunt (with
her first nomination), for her role as the title character's
wife Katherine "Kitty" Oppenheimer, a biologist and
ex-Communist Party member, in Oppenheimer
- 39 year-old American Ferrara (of Honduran descent)
(with her first nomination) - with a surprise nomination for
her role as Mattel employee Gloria who met Barbie in the real-world,
noted for a crucial and inspiring monologue that she delivered
to Barbie about double-standards for women, in Barbie [Note:
Ferrara became the first-ever nominee of Honduran descent in
any Oscars category.]
- 34 year-old black actress Danielle
Brooks (with her first nomination), for her role as Sofia, in Blitz
Bazawule's film adaptation of the musical The
Color Purple [Note: Danielle Brooks played the same part
in the 2015 Broadway revival of the musical.]
Snubs or Overlooked Films or Nominees:
- Leonardo DiCaprio was snubbed for a nomination
for Best Actor, for his role as Mollie's dim-witted husband Ernest
Burkhart, in Killers
of the Flower Moon. Also, the film was snubbed in the Best
Adapted Screenplay race.
- Alexander Payne was missing from the nominees
in the Best Director category, for The Holdovers, as was
Cord Jefferson for American Fiction.
- Bradley Cooper was not nominated in the Best Director
category, for Maestro.
- Margot Robbie did not acquire a Best Actress nomination
for the title role in Barbie, although she did receive
a Best Picture nomination as the film’s producer.
- Greta Gerwig didn’t score a Best Director
nomination for Barbie. (It was the 9th time in Academy history
that a woman was nominated for Best Picture (without a corresponding
Best Director nomination); also, Gerwig's first three feature
films were nominated in the Best Picture category, beginning with
Lady Bird (2017) and Little Women (2019), but Gerwig
has only been nominated once for Best Director, for Lady
Bird (2017).
- Celine Song was denied a Best Director nomination, despite Past
Lives earning a Best Picture nomination.
- Todd Haynes' May December, a grim story
inspired by real-life Mary Kay Letourneau, had
just one nomination, for Best Original Screenplay. Charles Melton
also missed out on a Best Supporting Actor nomination for his
role as Joe Yoo. Todd Haynes has yet to be nominated as Best
Director, although his films include Safe (1995), Velvet
Goldmine (1998), Far
From Heaven (2002), I’m
Not There (2007), and Carol (2015).
- Willem Dafoe was not nominated in the Best Supporting
Actor category for his role as eccentric Dr. Godwin "God" Baxter,
in
Poor Things.
- Overall, there was only one nomination for the
musical remake The Color Purple - for Danielle
Brooks in the Best Supporting Actress category. Fantasia Barrino
was overlooked for Best Actress.
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