
Director/producer Chloe Zhao, winner of the award for
best picture for Nomadland, poses in the press room at the Oscars on
Sunday, April 25, 2021, at Union Station in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris
Pizzello, Pool)

Best supporting actress went to Yuh-Jung Youn for the matriarch of
Lee Isaac Chung’s tender Korean-American family drama Minari. The
72-year-old Youn, a well-known actress in her native South Korea, is the
first Asian actress to win an Oscar since 1957 and the second in
history. She accepted the award from Brad Pitt, an executive producer on
Minari. Youn is seen in the photo arriving at the Oscars on
Sunday, April 25, 2021, at Union Station in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris
Pizzello, Pool)

Director Chloe Zhao, left, appears with actress Frances McDormand on
the set of Nomadland. (Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures)
Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland wins best picture at
a social distanced Oscars
By Jake Coyle
The Associated Press
www.asianreporter.com
April 25, 2021
Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland, a wistful portrait of itinerant lives
on open roads across the American West, won best picture Sunday at the
93rd Academy Awards, where the China-born Zhao also became just the
second woman to win best director, and the first woman of color.
The Nomadland victory, while widely expected, nevertheless
capped the extraordinary rise of Zhao, a lyrical filmmaker whose winning
film is just her third, and which — with a budget less than $5 million
and featuring a cast populated by non-professional actors — ranks as one
of the most modest-sized movies to win Hollywood’s top honor. Zhao’s
next film, Marvel’s Eternals, has a budget approximately 40 times
that of Nomadland. Only Kathryn Bigelow, 11 years ago for The
Hurt Locker, had previously won best director.
But Nomadland, as a plain-spoken meditation on solitude,
grief, and grit, stuck a chord in a pandemic-ravaged year. It made for
an unlikely Oscar champ: A film about people who gravitate to the
margins took center stage.
"I have always found goodness in the people I’ve met everywhere I
went in the world," said Zhao when accepting best director. "This is for
anyone who has the faith and the courage to hold on to the goodness in
themselves and to hold on to goodness in other no matter how difficult
it is to do that."
With a howl, Nomadland star Frances McDormand implored people
to seek out her film and others on the big screen. Released by the
Disney-owned Searchlight Pictures, Nomadland premiered at a
drive-in and debuted in theaters, but found its largest audience on Hulu.
"Please watch our movie on the largest screen possible and one day
very, very soon, take everyone you know into a theater, shoulder to
shoulder in that dark space, and watch every film that’s represented
here tonight," McDormand said.
Soon after, McDormand won best actress, too. The win puts McDormand
(previously a winner for Fargo and Three Billboards Outside
Ebbing, Missouri) in rare company as a three-time acting winner.
Only Katherine Hepburn (a four-time winner) has won best actress more
times.
In the night’s biggest surprise, best actor went to Anthony Hopkins
for the dementia drama The Father. The award had been widely
expected to go to Chadwick Boseman for his final performance in Ma
Rainey’s Black Bottom. Hopkins was not in attendance.
The most ambitious award show held during the pandemic, the Oscars
rolled out a red carpet and restored some glamour to the nearly
century-old movie institution, but with a much transformed — and in some
ways downsized — telecast. It was a year when, to paraphrase Norma
Desmond, the pictures got smaller were overwhelmingly seen in the home,
not in the big screen, during a pandemic year that forced theaters to
close and prompted radical change in Hollywood.
It was also perhaps the most diverse Academy Awards ever, with more
women and more actors of color nominated than ever before — and Sunday
brought a litany of records and firsts across many categories, spanning
everything from hairstyling to composing to acting. It was, some
observers said, a sea change for awards harshly criticized as "OscarsSoWhite"
in recent years, leading the film academy to greatly expand membership.
The ceremony — fashioned as a movie of its own and styled as a
laidback party — kicked off with opening credits and a slinky Regina
King entrance, as the camera followed the actress and One Night in
Miami director in one take as she strode with an Oscar in hand into
Los Angeles’ Union Station and onto the stage. Inside the transit hub
(trains kept running), nominees sat at cozy, lamp-lit tables around an
intimate amphitheater. Some moments — like Glenn Close getting down to "Da
Butt" — were more relaxed, but the ceremony couldn’t just shake off the
past 14 months.
"It has been quite a year and we are still smack dab in the middle of
it," King said.
Daniel Kaluuya won best supporting actor for Judas and the Black
Messiah. The win for the 32-year-old British actor who was
previously nominated for Get Out, was widely expected. Kaluuya
won for his fiery performance as the Black Panther leader Fred Hampton,
whom Kaluuya thanked for showing him "how to love myself."
"You’ve got to celebrate life, man. We’re breathing. We’re walking.
It’s incredible. My mum met my dad, they had sex. It’s amazing. I’m
here. I’m so happy to be alive," said Kaluuya while cameras caught his
mother’s confused reaction.
With the awards capping a year of national reckoning on race and
coming days after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted
for killing George Floyd, police brutality was on the minds of many
attendees. King said that if the verdict had been different, she might
have traded her heels for marching boots.
Travon Free, co-director of the live-action short winner Two
Perfect Strangers, wore a suit jacket lined with the names of those
killed by police. His film dramatizes police brutality as an inescapable
time loop like a tragic Groundhog’s Day for Black Americans.
"Today, the police will kill three people. And tomorrow, the police
will kill three people. And the day after that, the police will kill
three people because on average, the police in America everyday kill
three people, which amounts to about a thousand people a year," said
Free. "Those people happen to disproportionately be Black people."
Best supporting actress went to Yuh-Jung Youn for the matriarch of
Lee Isaac Chung’s tender Korean-American family drama Minari. The
72-year-old Youn, a well-known actress in her native South Korea, is the
first Asian actress to win an Oscar since 1957 and the second in
history. She accepted the award from Brad Pitt, an executive producer on
Minari. "Mr. Brad Pitt, finally," said Youn. "Nice to meet you."
Hairstylists Mia Neal and Jamika Wilson of Ma Rainey’s Black
Bottom became the first Black women to win in makeup and
hairstyling. Ann Roth, at 89 one of the oldest Oscar winners ever, also
won for the film’s costume design.
The night’s first award went to Emerald Fennell, the writer-director
of the provocative revenge thriller Promising Young Woman, for
best screenplay. Fennell, winning for her feature debut, is the first
woman to win solo in the category since Diablo Cody (Juno) in
2007.
The broadcast instantly looked different. It was shot in 24
frames-per-second and in more widescreen format. In a more intimate show
without an audience beyond nominees, winners were given wider latitude
in their speeches.
The telecast, produced by a team led by filmmaker Steven Soderbergh,
moved out of the awards’ usual home, the Dolby Theatre, for Union
Station. With Zoom ruled out for nominees, the telecast included
satellite feeds from around the world. Performances of the song nominees
were pre-taped and aired during the preshow. "Husavik (My Hometown)"
from "Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga," was performed
from the Iceland town’s harbor. Others were sung from atop of the
academy’s new $500 million film museum.
Pixar notched its 11th best animated feature Oscar with Soul,
the studio’s first feature with a Black protagonist. Peter Docter’s
film, about a middle-school music teacher (Jamie Foxx), was one of the
few big-budget movies in the running at the Academy Awards. (It also won
best score, making Jon Batiste the second Black composer to win the
award, which he shared with Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.) Another was
Christopher Nolan’s Tenet, which last September attempted to
resuscitate movie-going during the pandemic, took best visual effects.
David Fincher’s Mank, a lavishly crafted drama of 1940s
Hollywood made for Netflix, came in the lead nominee with 10 nods and
went home with award for cinematography and for production design.
Best adapted screenplay went to the dementia drama The Father.
My Octopus Teacher, a film that found a passionate following on
Netflix, won best documentary. Danish director Thomas Vinterberg’s
Another Round won best international film, an award he dedicated to
his daughter, Ida, who in 2019 was killed in a car crash at age 19.
The red carpet was back Sunday, minus the throngs of onlookers and
with socially distanced interviews. Only a handful of media outlets were
allowed onsite, behind a velvet rope and some distance from the
nominees. Casual wear, the academy warned nominees early on, was a
no-no. Stars, limited to a plus-one, went without their usual battalions
of publicists.
But even a good show may not be enough to save the Oscars from an
expected ratings slide. Award show ratings have cratered during the
pandemic, and this year’s nominees — many of them smaller, lower-budget
dramas — won’t come close to the drawing power of past Oscar
heavyweights like Titanic or Black Panther. Last year’s
Oscars, when Bong Joon Ho’s Parasite became the first non-English
language film to win best picture, was watched by 23.6 million, an
all-time low.
Sunday’s pandemic-delayed Oscars bring to a close the longest awards
season ever — one that turned the season’s industrial complex of
cocktail parties and screenings virtual. Eligibility was extended into
February of this year, and for the first time, a theatrical run wasn’t a
requirement of nominees. Some films — like Sound of Metal —
premiered all the way back in September 2019. The biggest ticket-seller
of the best picture nominees was Promising Young Woman, with $6.4
million in box office.
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