Atom bomb movie Oppenheimer crowned best picture at Oscars

Published March 12, 2024
AMERICA Ferrera, nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Barbie, and Ryan Piers Williams, walk on the red carpet before the ceremony.—Reuters
AMERICA Ferrera, nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Barbie, and Ryan Piers Williams, walk on the red carpet before the ceremony.—Reuters

• Christopher Nolan takes top directing honours
• Cillian Murphy and Emma Stone adjudged best actors
• Only one golden statuette for Barbie

ROBERT Downey Jr. after winning the Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Oppenheimer.—AFP
ROBERT Downey Jr. after winning the Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Oppenheimer.—AFP

LOS ANGELES: Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, the blockbuster biopic about the race to build the first atomic bomb, claimed seven Academy Awards, including the prestigious best picture trophy, on Sunday as Hollywood celebrated a triumphant year in film.

Irish actor Cillian Murphy won best actor for playing theoretical physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, leader of the US effort in the 1940s to create a weapon that ended World War Two. Director Christopher Nolan took home the directing Oscar.

“We made a film about the man who created the atomic bomb, and for better or worse we are living in Oppenheimer’s world,” Murphy said as he held his trophy on stage. “So I would really like to dedicate this to the peacemakers everywhere.”

A three-hour historical drama about science and politics, Oppenheimer became an unlikely box office hit and grossed $953.8 million, in addition to widespread critical praise.

It was the first of Nolan’s films to win best picture. The director has previously won acclaim for The Dark Knight Batman trilogy, Inception and Memento.

As he accepted his gold statuette, Nolan noted that the movie business was a century old and still evolving.

“To know you think I’m a meaningful part of this means the world to me,” he said.

Emma Stone wins best actress

Emma Stone was named best actress for playing a woman revived from the dead in the dark and wacky comedy, Poor Things. It was the second Academy Award for Stone, who landed the best actress honour in 2016 for musical La La Land.

EMMA Stone poses with the Oscar for Best Actress.—AFP
EMMA Stone poses with the Oscar for Best Actress.—AFP

“This is really overwhelming,” she said on stage.

The best actress race had been considered one of the tightest competitions with Lily Gladstone nominated for Killers of the Flower Moon. Had she prevailed, Gladstone would have been the first Native American to win an acting Oscar.

In supporting actor categories, Robert Downey Jr of Oppenheimer and “The Holdovers star Da’Vine Joy Randolph claimed their first Academy Awards.

Downey, who was nominated for an Oscar in 1993 before his career was derailed by drug use, won his honour on Sunday for playing Oppenheimer’s professional nemesis, Lewis Strauss.

“I’d like to thank my terrible childhood and the Academy, in that order,” Downey joked before he saluted his wife Susan, who he said found him as a “snarly rescue pet” and “loved him back to life”.

Randolph received the best supporting actress trophy for playing a grieving mother and cafeteria worker in the comedy set in a New England boarding school.

“For so long, I always wanted to be different, and now I realise I just need to be myself,” she said. “I thank you for seeing me.”

Winners were chosen by the roughly 10,500 members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.

After 2023 was marred by labour strikes by actors and writers, the Oscars gave Hollywood a chance to celebrate two blockbusters, Oppenheimer and Barbie, which brought in a combined $2.4 billion at theatres and made movies the centre of pop culture last summer.

Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell landed best original song for the ballad from Barbie, What Was I Made For? The pair had performed the song on stage earlier with Eilish singing at a microphone next to O’Connell, her brother and co-writer, on piano.

Ryan Gosling donned a hot pink suit, gloves and a cowboy hat to belt out rock ballad I’m Just Ken, surrounded by male dancers dressed in black.

Amid the upbeat moments, international conflicts were on the minds of attendees, winners and protesters outside the theatre.

When Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest was named best international feature, director Jonathan Glazer addressed the Gaza crisis in his acceptance speech.

A handful of celebrities, including Eilish, Mahershala Ali and Mark Ruffalo, wore red pins calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

Published in Dawn, March 12th, 2024

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