The 13 most egregious snubs from the 2024 Oscar nominations | CBC Arts - Action News
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ArtsMy Favourite Season

The 13 most egregious snubs from the 2024 Oscar nominations

Team Oppenheimer rejoiced this morning, but it wasn't such a great time for fans of All of Us Strangers or all of them Gretas.

Team Oppenheimer rejoiced this morning, but fans of some of the year's greatest films did not

Margot Robbie as Barbie in Greta Gerwig's film, Barbie.
Margot Robbie (pictured here in Barbie) and Greta Gerwig both got Oscar nominations this morning... but not all the ones they deserved. (Warner Bros.)

My Favourite Season is a column by CBC Arts producer Peter Knegt that runs through the six-month "season" that is both his favourite andMoira Rose's. It explores all things awards in the lead-up to the big one: the Oscars, which are currently scheduled to take place on March 10, 2024.

The nominations for the 96th Academy Awards were announced very early this AM, and there was lots to celebrateparticularly if you were a big fan of Oppenheimer, Poor Things andKillers of the Flower Moon (for what it's worth, I consider myself a big fan of exactly one of those films). But for many of us, this was amorning of mourning for the Oscar chances of a lot of favourite work this past year, even if we knew some of them never stood a chance against an awards season machine that favours a certain kind of movie.

The following are the mostoffensiveof the omissions, at least to me personally.And while I do understand that cinema is a subjective medium,I also do admittedlybelieve that if you don't agree with at least a few of them then you are not a serious person (I joke!).

Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie

The two biggest "snubs" were technically both people who got Oscar nominations: Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie, who were nominated for best adapted screenplay and best picture for their work writingand producing Barbie, respectively. However, they were not nominated in the two categories that clearly meant the most to fans of their work (including this one): best director (Gerwig) and best actress (Robbie). While Oppenheimer dominated the festivitieswith a near-record 13 nominations, these two Barbie snubsfeltlike a pretty big slap in the face to the two primarycreative forces behind the other half of the year's major moviephenomenon.

Natalie Portman (left) and Julianne Moore in May December.
Natalie Portman (left) and Julianne Moore in May December. (Netflix)

May December

May we not forgetback in early December when we were all talking about how Charles Melton might end up winning best supporting actor, how Julianne Moore was a shoo-in for her first nomination since winning for Still Aliceand howthe Academy might finally give a Todd Haynes film the best picture and best director honours so many of his previous films have deserved (see: Far From Heaven and Carol in particular). That hype dwindled, and it turned out Oscar voters once again could not handle the queer brilliance of Haynes, giving it a sole (and extraordinarily deserved) nomination for Samy Burch's screenplay.

All of Us Strangers

Speaking of overlooked queer brilliance (an unfortunate trend during most awards seasons), Andrew Haigh'sprofoundly movingmeditation on memory, grief, death andtraumaAll of Us Strangers deserved all the Oscar nominations. And it received exactlyzero. Not even lead actorAndrew Scott who at one point seemed poised to be therare example of a queer actor being nominated for queer roleended up with a nod (though notably Colman Domingo and Jodie Foster both pulled this feat off instead). If it were up to me, its entire cast Scott, Paul Mescal, Jamie Bell and Claire Foy would have received mentions, and Haigh would have at least got an adapted screenplay nomination.

Teo Yoo (left) and Greta Lee in Past Lives.
Teo Yoo (left) and Greta Lee in Past Lives. (A24)

Greta Lee and TeoYoo for best actress and actor

While I am very grateful for the two big nominations (best picture and best original screenplay)the Academy bestowed on the wonder that is Celine Song'sPast Lives, it is hard to truly enjoy them knowing they did not come with acting nods for the film's two tremendous leads. Greta Lee and Teo Yoohad been getting nominations all season (Lee got a Golden Globe nod, Yoo a BAFTA), though we knew it was going to be tough for them to break through here. Still, it was a surprise I was hoping to have this morning that sadly did not come.

John Wick: Chapter4 for best cinematography

You think I'm kidding? Watch (or re-watch) Danish cinematographer Dan Laustsen's absolutely stunning work in the fourth installment of the John Wick series and honestly tell me it shouldn't have made the cut. Laustsen (who receivedOscar nominations for his Guillermo del Toro collaborations The Shape of Water and Nightmare Alley) has been a huge partof why Wick has been such an elevated franchise, working on the last 3 "chapters." It's too bad it couldn't have been celebrated.

Teyana Taylor for best actress

Teyana Taylor'sperformance in A.V. Rockwell'sA Thousand and Oneis nothing short of a revelation. As asingle mother who decides to kidnap her son out of the foster care system, Taylor offers anelectrifying emotional intensity in her work that should have at least made her a serious contender for a nomination.But while the film was a big award winner at the Sundance Film Festival lastJanuary, its March release in cinemas came and went without the fanfare that the movie and Taylor deserved. That didn't given Taylor the traction she needed to compete in what was admittedly a pretty epic best actress race, though hopefully we see her namein a future one very soon.

The Boy and the Heron and The Zone of Interest for best original score

Potentially the singlemost ridiculous thing Oscar voters did today came in the best original score category, where they failed to nominate two of the year's most undeniably powerful compositions: Mica Levi's forThe Zone of Interest and Joe Hisaishi'sfor The Boy and the Heron. This was particularly hard to take given they did nominate John Williams for the 54th time for a forgettable rehashing of his own previous work on Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

Rachel McAdams for best supporting actress

For those who swooned over our fellow Canadians Rachel McAdams and Ryan Gosling's early 2000s on-and-offscreen romance, seeing both actors nominated this morning sure woulda been fun. It would also have been incredibly deserved. Gosling, of course, ended up getting his due as Ken in Barbie. But McAdams was nowhere to be seen for her deeply heartfelt work as the titular character's mother inthe Judy Blume adaptationAre You There God? It's Me, Margaret (though she did end up getting the second most critics awards in the category after Oscar frontrunner Da'Vine Joy Randolph).McAdams still has just the one Oscar nomination (for Spotlight), though she now has three more in my heart: for this, Game Night and Mean Girls.

One of the many incredible tops designer Khadija Zegga has Franz Rogowski wear in Passages.
One of the many incredible tops designer Khadija Zegga has Franz Rogowski wear in Passages. (MUBI)

Passages for best costume design

If it were up to me, Ira Sachs' Passages would have had five or six nominations (including best picture), but if I had but one Oscar wish to bestow it, it would be that costume designer Khadija Zeggawould have been nominated for creating the most stylish movie of 2023. The shirts she put on actor Franz Rogowski aloneshould have propelled her to a nom, even if I suppose I understand why the 5 films that did make the cut (Barbie, Killers of the Flower Moon, Napoleon, Oppenheimer and Poor Things) warranted attention too.

Messifrom Anatomy of a Fall for best supporting dog

I fully understand that there is not currently a category at the Oscars for performances by canines, but thanks to Anatomy of a Fall,the case for one has never felt stronger.Messi the dog's performance as Snoop in that film is nothing short of astonishing (if you've seen it, you know), and it led the film's distributor Neon to even legitimately campaignMessifor awards attention:

May Messi and all of the humans I mentioned alltake solace in the fact that they now have joined films likeCarol, Children of Men and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (not one of them best picture nominees!)and performances like Tilda Swinton (We Need To Talk About Kevin),Bjrk (Dancer in the Dark) and Reese Witherspoon (Election) in this Oscar nerd's hall of fame for the most egregious exclusions from an awards body that let's face it gets it wrong as much as it gets it right.

Check outour predictions for the 2024 Academy Awards, which have now been updated toinclude all of this year's nominations and our bets on who will win.

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