The 2024 Oscars ceremony is less than two months away, and details about the show, the nominees and who may win are coming into focus.
Read on below for answers to all your questions about this year’s Academy Awards.
The ceremony takes place on March 10 this year at 5 p.m. PT / 8 p.m. ET on ABC.
ABC usually hosts the official red carpet pre-show, Countdown to the Oscars, beginning at 3:30 p.m. PT/6:30 p.m. ET.
Jimmy Kimmel is hosting the show, marking the fourth time and second straight year that the Jimmy Kimmel Live! mainstay has taken the gig.
Oppenheimer leads the field with 13 nominations. Poor Things is next with 11 noms. Killers of the Flower Moon is up for consideration in 10 categories. This year’s box office champ, Barbie, earned eight nominations, including for Best Picture and Best Supporting Actress.
The list of nominated actors includes big names such as Bradley Cooper, Robert De Niro, Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, Robert Downey Jr. and Jodie Foster. It also includes a large number of first-timers. Seven out of the 20 acting Oscar nominees this year are people of color. For all of them — Lily Gladstone, Danielle Brooks, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, America Ferrera, Colman Domingo, Sterling K. Brown and Jeffrey Wright – it is their first nomination.
See the full list of nominees here.
See Deadline’s original reviews of all this year’s Best Picture-nominated films here.
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One of the big surprises was the omission of Leonardo DiCaprio for Killers of the Flower Moon in the Best Actor category. Margot Robbie was also left out for her performance in Barbie. Comedic performances like Robbie’s are not frequently nominated for Oscars. Don’t worry, she could win Best Picture as a producer on Barbie. Directors Greta Gerwig (Barbie) and Alexander Payne (The Holdovers), both former winners in the screenplay categories, who made their respective comedies work so well this year, were left out of the Best Director race. Surprisingly, the documentary Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie and American Symphony was shut out in that category.
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In the Best Actor category, it is shaping up as a real race between Oppenheimer’s Cillian Murphy and Paul Giamatti for The Holdovers, but Jeffrey Wright, Bradley Cooper and Colman Domingo also turned in strong performances.
Best Actress has long been thought to be Gladstone’s race to lose. Today’s nominations likely didn’t change that.
Best Supporting Actor will be a fascinating one to watch. Sterling K. Brown, Robert De Niro, Gosling and Ruffalo all turned in strong work, but then there is Robert Downey Jr, delivering what might be the best performance of his career in Oppenheimer.
The Best Supporting Actress category also bears watching. The frontrunner is Da’Vine Joy Randolph, who grounds The Holdovers as the boarding-school cook grieving the death of her student son in Vietnam; Danielle Brooks in The Color Purple, America Ferrara in Barbie, Emily Blunt in Oppenheimer and Nyad‘s Jodie Foster make this a competitive field.
See our full Oscar nomination analysis and prediction piece here.
Academy members will cast their final votes from February 22-27.
The Academy Awards again will be handed out at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.
The first batch of presenters named includes Zendaya, Nicolas Cage, Jamie Lee Curtis, Brendan Fraser, Matthew McConaughey, Michelle Yeoh, Al Pacino, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mahershala Ali, Jessica Lange, Ke Huy Quan and Sam Rockwell. It’s traditional to have some of last year’s winners in the big acting categories present those statuettes this year. Michelles Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Jamie Lee Curtis and Brendan Fraser all fit that pattern.
Details have not yet been announced, but last year’s show was available on ABC stations and also on ABC.com and the ABC app with authentication and via streaming services carrying ABC, including Hulu Live TV, Fubo TV, YouTube TV and AT&T TV.
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