aSamuel Goldwyn falsely stated in 1945, “This atomic bomb is dynamite!!” With his 13 BAFTA nominations under his belt, director Christopher Nolan's epic historical biographical epic Oppenheimer continues to do well throughout awards season. Cillian Murphy plays J. Robert Oppenheimer, the wartime inventor of nuclear weapons, excited by America's race to get the bomb before the Nazis and excited by the success of the Trinity test in the New Mexico desert. Transfixed by dark ecstasy, he then struggles with the burden of the post-war years. Guilt and fear. BAFTA voters responded passionately to the scale, ambition and seriousness of this outstanding British director's work. The wartime setting also strengthens its prestige credentials (as in last year's BAFTA shortlist, which overwhelmingly favored All Quiet on the Western Front).
#Barbenheimer On the other side of the coin, Barbie has been received a little more leniently by BAFTA voters, with leading actress roles for Margot Robbie, supporting actor roles such as Ryan Gosling's Ken Daring, Ken Transthing, and film Five nominees have been nominated, including production design. Great work by Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer. However, second only to Oppenheimer is Yorgos Lanthimos' blockbuster black comic spectacle Poor Things, which received 11 nominations (although Lanthimos himself was not nominated for Best Director). Emma Stone won a well-deserved Best Actress award for her performance as Vera Baxter, an alt-Victorian depraved suicidal who is brought back to life by a bizarre Frankenstein experiment. It would be foolhardy to bet on Stone winning.
Elsewhere, German actress Sandra Hüller received an impressive Best Actress nomination for her role as a fashionable writer on trial for the murder of her husband in Justine Triet's legal drama Anatomy of Fall. , was nominated for Best Actress. She was also nominated for Best Supporting Actress for Jonathan Glazer's harrowing Holocaust nightmare, Zone of Interest, in which she plays the modest wife of the Auschwitz camp commandant who lives a peaceful life. Bürgerlich He has a great position in a nice house just outside a barbed wire fence. It's interesting to compare this film to Oppenheimer, as a study of denied guilt and shame.
Martin Scorsese's haunting true-crime film Killers of the Flower Moon won the attention of awards voters despite missing the performances of Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio. , which also has a genocidal theme and is probably the closest. A common theme emerging from this awards season. It depicts the mass murder of the Osage people in the early 20th century to undermine oil rights, and is a chilling imitation of the large-scale attempts to wipe out Native Americans in American history. Director Alexander Payne's melancholy '70s drama The Holdovers is doing well. BAFTA Best Actor nominee Paul Giamatti, who plays a difficult boarding school teacher, became a social media sensation after having dinner at his home late after winning the Golden Globe. Popular In-N-Out Burger Restaurants In LA. Perhaps after winning the BAFTAs, he could end up hooking up with Nando's.
As for the detractors, it's a travesty that Celine Song's Past Lives has only been nominated three times, and it's a shame that it was left off the list of best movies and best directors. Emerald Fennell's Brideshead 2.0 psychological thriller Saltburn rivals Barbie Doll with five nominations, but that doesn't really reflect how much buzz it got, mainly because… It is said that this is because it is uncritical, lacks satire, and is obsessed with the luxury of Tatler magazines. perhaps. But the film was directed and shot with great enthusiasm, and Rosamund Pike won a well-deserved Best Supporting Actress award for her role as Saltburn's beautiful but shy Chatelaine.

The Soul of the BAFTAs is always in the Outstanding British Film and Outstanding British Debut categories, and Molly Manning-Walker's wonderful How to How Sex is well-received in both films. However, it was disappointing to see nothing of Glenda Jackson and Michael Caine in The Great. There's nothing in “Escaper” or “Femme,” Sam H. Freeman and Ng Chun Ping's gripping psychodrama.
So the mysterious consensus around the awards is united around one movie, and that's Oppenheimer. Still, “Zone of Interest'' and “Killers of the Flower Moon'' will probably split the “serious” vote for Nolan's films — and “Poor Things'' and Emma Stone will probably In its dysfunctional madness, it would settle that night.





