Tag: Oscars 2023

  • Oscar winner and 2015 Nepal quake survivor Michelle Yeoh has an India connect

    By IANS

    NEW DELHI: Malaysia-born Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh, who has become the first Asian woman to win the Academy Award for Best Actress for her multifaceted performance, survived the deadly earthquake that struck Nepal while she was visiting the landlocked Himalayan nation in April 2015.

    Yeoh, famous for her roles in the James Bond film ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’ and ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’, has won the Academy Award for Best Actress and made history for her role in ‘Everything, Everywhere All At Once’.

    Michelle Yeoh has an India connection, too. In the ‘background’ of her life is Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa, the spiritual head of the Drukpa Order based in India with over 1,000 monasteries across the Himalayas.

    A disciple of His Holiness, in 2015, Michelle raised charity from Hollywood for Nepal earthquake victims on the advice of Gyalwang Drukpa for his ‘Live to Love’ foundation.

    At that time she was the brand ambassador of the foundation.

    With the earthquake, killing 9,000 people and causing massive destruction, Michelle was stranded in Nepal with fiance Jean Todt, then head of the International Automobile Federation (FIA), which governs the Formula One circuit.

    After the couple’s evacuation, she returned to the disaster-hit country again to help rehabilitate affected people.

    Gyalwang Drukpa is also the founder and spiritual director of the award-winning Druk White Lotus School in Ladakh, famous for being depicted as ‘Rancho’s school’ from Aamir Khan’s film ‘3 Idiots’.

    “Raising awareness for Nepal was and still is an important role for me. What’s happening is very real and there is so much work to be done to help rebuild the lives of the Nepalese,” the Malaysian actor, who believes her best performance is yet to come, had told IANS in an interview in post-quake.

    Quoting the spiritual leader, she had said: “Without appreciation, our life is like plastic. Not only do we have to remove the non-biodegradable rubbish from our external environment, we have to clear that from our mind too.”

    “Every little positive step we make individually, collectively we can make a huge difference. For me, this is what ‘Live to Love’ is about,” Michelle, who made her name as an action star in Hong Kong in 1990, had added.

    The honour at the 95th Academy Awards to her came after a long career in martial arts and action movies like ‘Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon’.

    “Ladies, don’t ever let anyone tell you that you are past your prime,” was an inspirational remark of Michelle at the award ceremony. “For all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight, this is a beacon of hope and possibility.”

    She recalled being so scared after the Nepal disaster that she left the country with a sense of helplessness.

    “We were so lucky that we were unhurt and able to go back home. I must say at that time, I didn’t feel that I could do anything for them. I felt as helpless as the other victims.

    “I was scared of the earth rattling. But when I left the place, I felt guilty. I thought I must go back. So a month after the disaster, I reached there again as the brand ambassador of the ‘Live to Love’ foundation of His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa,” she told IANS.

    The actor, who stars as Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi in ‘The Lady’ directed by Luc Besson, also wanted to focus on climate change.

    “Global warming is a big issue now, it’s threatening humanity. All this can be changed if we begin to have a little appreciation and a little more understanding about the interconnectivity between nature and us.”

    Asked about her role in Aung San Suu Kyi’s biopic, she had told IANS: “Out of deep respect to Daw Suu (Suu Kyi) and the people of Burma, we did our utmost to stay true to her story,” although for better story-telling, “some liberties had be to taken.”

    The former Miss Malaysia has also been involved in the fight against AIDS for many years.

    She was also the UNDP Goodwill Ambassdor for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “It’s a spiritual journey for me every time. This land of high mountain passes always reminds me of a stronghold of Buddhist art, culture and spirituality and this spirit of purity is rarely seen elsewhere in the world,” she had told IANS at the famed 17th century Hemis monastery, where she came to attend the Naropa festival, a celebration of the 1,000th birth anniversary of the great Indian saint Naropa.

    Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa heads the 17th-century Hemis monastery, some 40 km from Leh.

    The action heroine, who believes Buddhism is a philosophy, had said that the UNDP was working closely with ministries across the globe. “We are advocating that if we build safe roads now, you don’t have to come back 10 years later to correct the mistakes and after so many lives have been lost. So we have to work very closely with different departments.”

    NEW DELHI: Malaysia-born Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh, who has become the first Asian woman to win the Academy Award for Best Actress for her multifaceted performance, survived the deadly earthquake that struck Nepal while she was visiting the landlocked Himalayan nation in April 2015.

    Yeoh, famous for her roles in the James Bond film ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’ and ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’, has won the Academy Award for Best Actress and made history for her role in ‘Everything, Everywhere All At Once’.

    Michelle Yeoh has an India connection, too. In the ‘background’ of her life is Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa, the spiritual head of the Drukpa Order based in India with over 1,000 monasteries across the Himalayas.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    A disciple of His Holiness, in 2015, Michelle raised charity from Hollywood for Nepal earthquake victims on the advice of Gyalwang Drukpa for his ‘Live to Love’ foundation.

    At that time she was the brand ambassador of the foundation.

    With the earthquake, killing 9,000 people and causing massive destruction, Michelle was stranded in Nepal with fiance Jean Todt, then head of the International Automobile Federation (FIA), which governs the Formula One circuit.

    After the couple’s evacuation, she returned to the disaster-hit country again to help rehabilitate affected people.

    Gyalwang Drukpa is also the founder and spiritual director of the award-winning Druk White Lotus School in Ladakh, famous for being depicted as ‘Rancho’s school’ from Aamir Khan’s film ‘3 Idiots’.

    “Raising awareness for Nepal was and still is an important role for me. What’s happening is very real and there is so much work to be done to help rebuild the lives of the Nepalese,” the Malaysian actor, who believes her best performance is yet to come, had told IANS in an interview in post-quake.

    Quoting the spiritual leader, she had said: “Without appreciation, our life is like plastic. Not only do we have to remove the non-biodegradable rubbish from our external environment, we have to clear that from our mind too.”

    “Every little positive step we make individually, collectively we can make a huge difference. For me, this is what ‘Live to Love’ is about,” Michelle, who made her name as an action star in Hong Kong in 1990, had added.

    The honour at the 95th Academy Awards to her came after a long career in martial arts and action movies like ‘Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon’.

    “Ladies, don’t ever let anyone tell you that you are past your prime,” was an inspirational remark of Michelle at the award ceremony. “For all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight, this is a beacon of hope and possibility.”

    She recalled being so scared after the Nepal disaster that she left the country with a sense of helplessness.

    “We were so lucky that we were unhurt and able to go back home. I must say at that time, I didn’t feel that I could do anything for them. I felt as helpless as the other victims.

    “I was scared of the earth rattling. But when I left the place, I felt guilty. I thought I must go back. So a month after the disaster, I reached there again as the brand ambassador of the ‘Live to Love’ foundation of His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa,” she told IANS.

    The actor, who stars as Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi in ‘The Lady’ directed by Luc Besson, also wanted to focus on climate change.

    “Global warming is a big issue now, it’s threatening humanity. All this can be changed if we begin to have a little appreciation and a little more understanding about the interconnectivity between nature and us.”

    Asked about her role in Aung San Suu Kyi’s biopic, she had told IANS: “Out of deep respect to Daw Suu (Suu Kyi) and the people of Burma, we did our utmost to stay true to her story,” although for better story-telling, “some liberties had be to taken.”

    The former Miss Malaysia has also been involved in the fight against AIDS for many years.

    She was also the UNDP Goodwill Ambassdor for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “It’s a spiritual journey for me every time. This land of high mountain passes always reminds me of a stronghold of Buddhist art, culture and spirituality and this spirit of purity is rarely seen elsewhere in the world,” she had told IANS at the famed 17th century Hemis monastery, where she came to attend the Naropa festival, a celebration of the 1,000th birth anniversary of the great Indian saint Naropa.

    Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa heads the 17th-century Hemis monastery, some 40 km from Leh.

    The action heroine, who believes Buddhism is a philosophy, had said that the UNDP was working closely with ministries across the globe. “We are advocating that if we build safe roads now, you don’t have to come back 10 years later to correct the mistakes and after so many lives have been lost. So we have to work very closely with different departments.”

  • Oscar winner and 2015 Nepal quake survivor Michelle Yeoh has an India connect

    By IANS

    NEW DELHI: Malaysia-born Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh, who has become the first Asian woman to win the Academy Award for Best Actress for her multifaceted performance, survived the deadly earthquake that struck Nepal while she was visiting the landlocked Himalayan nation in April 2015.

    Yeoh, famous for her roles in the James Bond film ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’ and ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’, has won the Academy Award for Best Actress and made history for her role in ‘Everything, Everywhere All At Once’.

    Michelle Yeoh has an India connection, too. In the ‘background’ of her life is Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa, the spiritual head of the Drukpa Order based in India with over 1,000 monasteries across the Himalayas.

    A disciple of His Holiness, in 2015, Michelle raised charity from Hollywood for Nepal earthquake victims on the advice of Gyalwang Drukpa for his ‘Live to Love’ foundation.

    At that time she was the brand ambassador of the foundation.

    With the earthquake, killing 9,000 people and causing massive destruction, Michelle was stranded in Nepal with fiance Jean Todt, then head of the International Automobile Federation (FIA), which governs the Formula One circuit.

    After the couple’s evacuation, she returned to the disaster-hit country again to help rehabilitate affected people.

    Gyalwang Drukpa is also the founder and spiritual director of the award-winning Druk White Lotus School in Ladakh, famous for being depicted as ‘Rancho’s school’ from Aamir Khan’s film ‘3 Idiots’.

    “Raising awareness for Nepal was and still is an important role for me. What’s happening is very real and there is so much work to be done to help rebuild the lives of the Nepalese,” the Malaysian actor, who believes her best performance is yet to come, had told IANS in an interview in post-quake.

    Quoting the spiritual leader, she had said: “Without appreciation, our life is like plastic. Not only do we have to remove the non-biodegradable rubbish from our external environment, we have to clear that from our mind too.”

    “Every little positive step we make individually, collectively we can make a huge difference. For me, this is what ‘Live to Love’ is about,” Michelle, who made her name as an action star in Hong Kong in 1990, had added.

    The honour at the 95th Academy Awards to her came after a long career in martial arts and action movies like ‘Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon’.

    “Ladies, don’t ever let anyone tell you that you are past your prime,” was an inspirational remark of Michelle at the award ceremony. “For all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight, this is a beacon of hope and possibility.”

    She recalled being so scared after the Nepal disaster that she left the country with a sense of helplessness.

    “We were so lucky that we were unhurt and able to go back home. I must say at that time, I didn’t feel that I could do anything for them. I felt as helpless as the other victims.

    “I was scared of the earth rattling. But when I left the place, I felt guilty. I thought I must go back. So a month after the disaster, I reached there again as the brand ambassador of the ‘Live to Love’ foundation of His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa,” she told IANS.

    The actor, who stars as Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi in ‘The Lady’ directed by Luc Besson, also wanted to focus on climate change.

    “Global warming is a big issue now, it’s threatening humanity. All this can be changed if we begin to have a little appreciation and a little more understanding about the interconnectivity between nature and us.”

    Asked about her role in Aung San Suu Kyi’s biopic, she had told IANS: “Out of deep respect to Daw Suu (Suu Kyi) and the people of Burma, we did our utmost to stay true to her story,” although for better story-telling, “some liberties had be to taken.”

    The former Miss Malaysia has also been involved in the fight against AIDS for many years.

    She was also the UNDP Goodwill Ambassdor for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “It’s a spiritual journey for me every time. This land of high mountain passes always reminds me of a stronghold of Buddhist art, culture and spirituality and this spirit of purity is rarely seen elsewhere in the world,” she had told IANS at the famed 17th century Hemis monastery, where she came to attend the Naropa festival, a celebration of the 1,000th birth anniversary of the great Indian saint Naropa.

    Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa heads the 17th-century Hemis monastery, some 40 km from Leh.

    The action heroine, who believes Buddhism is a philosophy, had said that the UNDP was working closely with ministries across the globe. “We are advocating that if we build safe roads now, you don’t have to come back 10 years later to correct the mistakes and after so many lives have been lost. So we have to work very closely with different departments.”

    NEW DELHI: Malaysia-born Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh, who has become the first Asian woman to win the Academy Award for Best Actress for her multifaceted performance, survived the deadly earthquake that struck Nepal while she was visiting the landlocked Himalayan nation in April 2015.

    Yeoh, famous for her roles in the James Bond film ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’ and ‘Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon’, has won the Academy Award for Best Actress and made history for her role in ‘Everything, Everywhere All At Once’.

    Michelle Yeoh has an India connection, too. In the ‘background’ of her life is Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa, the spiritual head of the Drukpa Order based in India with over 1,000 monasteries across the Himalayas.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    A disciple of His Holiness, in 2015, Michelle raised charity from Hollywood for Nepal earthquake victims on the advice of Gyalwang Drukpa for his ‘Live to Love’ foundation.

    At that time she was the brand ambassador of the foundation.

    With the earthquake, killing 9,000 people and causing massive destruction, Michelle was stranded in Nepal with fiance Jean Todt, then head of the International Automobile Federation (FIA), which governs the Formula One circuit.

    After the couple’s evacuation, she returned to the disaster-hit country again to help rehabilitate affected people.

    Gyalwang Drukpa is also the founder and spiritual director of the award-winning Druk White Lotus School in Ladakh, famous for being depicted as ‘Rancho’s school’ from Aamir Khan’s film ‘3 Idiots’.

    “Raising awareness for Nepal was and still is an important role for me. What’s happening is very real and there is so much work to be done to help rebuild the lives of the Nepalese,” the Malaysian actor, who believes her best performance is yet to come, had told IANS in an interview in post-quake.

    Quoting the spiritual leader, she had said: “Without appreciation, our life is like plastic. Not only do we have to remove the non-biodegradable rubbish from our external environment, we have to clear that from our mind too.”

    “Every little positive step we make individually, collectively we can make a huge difference. For me, this is what ‘Live to Love’ is about,” Michelle, who made her name as an action star in Hong Kong in 1990, had added.

    The honour at the 95th Academy Awards to her came after a long career in martial arts and action movies like ‘Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon’.

    “Ladies, don’t ever let anyone tell you that you are past your prime,” was an inspirational remark of Michelle at the award ceremony. “For all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight, this is a beacon of hope and possibility.”

    She recalled being so scared after the Nepal disaster that she left the country with a sense of helplessness.

    “We were so lucky that we were unhurt and able to go back home. I must say at that time, I didn’t feel that I could do anything for them. I felt as helpless as the other victims.

    “I was scared of the earth rattling. But when I left the place, I felt guilty. I thought I must go back. So a month after the disaster, I reached there again as the brand ambassador of the ‘Live to Love’ foundation of His Holiness Gyalwang Drukpa,” she told IANS.

    The actor, who stars as Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi in ‘The Lady’ directed by Luc Besson, also wanted to focus on climate change.

    “Global warming is a big issue now, it’s threatening humanity. All this can be changed if we begin to have a little appreciation and a little more understanding about the interconnectivity between nature and us.”

    Asked about her role in Aung San Suu Kyi’s biopic, she had told IANS: “Out of deep respect to Daw Suu (Suu Kyi) and the people of Burma, we did our utmost to stay true to her story,” although for better story-telling, “some liberties had be to taken.”

    The former Miss Malaysia has also been involved in the fight against AIDS for many years.

    She was also the UNDP Goodwill Ambassdor for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “It’s a spiritual journey for me every time. This land of high mountain passes always reminds me of a stronghold of Buddhist art, culture and spirituality and this spirit of purity is rarely seen elsewhere in the world,” she had told IANS at the famed 17th century Hemis monastery, where she came to attend the Naropa festival, a celebration of the 1,000th birth anniversary of the great Indian saint Naropa.

    Buddhist leader Gyalwang Drukpa heads the 17th-century Hemis monastery, some 40 km from Leh.

    The action heroine, who believes Buddhism is a philosophy, had said that the UNDP was working closely with ministries across the globe. “We are advocating that if we build safe roads now, you don’t have to come back 10 years later to correct the mistakes and after so many lives have been lost. So we have to work very closely with different departments.”

  • Oscars 2023: Check out the list of winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’, women create history

    By Online Desk

    India stamps its presence in the Oscars

    While the global hit, ‘Naatu Nattu’ from SS Rajamouli’s blockbuster RRR won the Best Original Song, the Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ emerged as the winner at the 95th Academy Awards making it a maiden victory for India in the Documentary Short Subject category.

    Filmmaker Shaunak Sen’s ‘All That Breathes’ was nominated in the Best Documentary Feature Film category, which was won by Navalny.

    First Indian track to win Oscars

    Filmmaker SS Rajamouli’s period action blockbuster “RRR” charted history by becoming the first Indian track to win the Academy Award in the Best Original Song category for “Naatu Naatu”.

    Indian composer M.M. Keeravaani (R) and lyricist Chandrabose accept the Oscar for Best Music (Original Song) for ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’. (Photo | AFP)

    ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ conquers Oscars 2023

    The surreal sci-fi film “Everything Everywhere All at Once” dominated the Oscars on Sunday, winning seven golden statuettes including best picture, Hollywood’s most coveted prize.

    WATCH |

    The comedy-drama film written and directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert features multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers. It won the best director, best actress, best original screenplay, best editing, and both the best supporting actor and actress prizes.

    Daniel Scheinert, left, and Daniel Kwan accept the award for best original screenplay for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ at the Oscars. (Photo | AP)

    First Asian woman to win best actress

    Michelle Yeoh, a Malaysian, made history by becoming the first Asian woman to win the best actress Oscar, for her exuberant portrayal of an immigrant business owner thrust into a zany multiverse in the sci-fi trip “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    First Black woman to win two Oscars

    Ruth E. Carter the costume designer behind the “Black Panther” films became the first Black woman to win two Oscars. Carter took home best costume design Sunday night at the 95th Academy Awards for the Marvel sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” Carter also won in 2018 for “Black Panther,” which made her the first African American to win in the category.

    The Oscars were hosted by Jimmy Kimmel (for the third time) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    ​Time-appropriate

    A wrenching German adaptation of the classic war novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” clinched the Academy Award for best international feature Sunday with its timely anti-militarist message.

    Deepika Padukone presents awards

    Indian actress Deepika Padukone who was one of the presenters at the Oscars on Sunday to introduce the performance of best original song “Naatu Naatu,” from “RRR.”

    In presenting the song, she noted its anti-colonialist themes — but it’s also “a total banger,” she said.

    Padukone is the third Indian star to present at the Oscars after Persis Khambatta and Priyanka Chopra. She introduced the live Naatu Naatu performance on stage.

    ​Deepika Padukone arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo | AP)​

    Key winners of Oscars 2023

    Best documentary short: “The Elephant Whisperers” (Kartiki Gonsalves and Guneet Monga)

    Best original song: “Naatu Naatu” from “RRR”

    Best picture: “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best director: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best actor: Brendan Fraser, “The Whale”

    Best actress: Michelle Yeoh, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actor: Ke Huy Quan, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actress: Jamie Lee Curtis, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best international feature film: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Germany)

    Best cinematography: “All Quiet on the Western Front”

    Best animated feature: “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

    Best documentary feature: “Navalny”

    Best original score: “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Volker Bertelmann

    Best editing: “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Paul Rogers)

    Best adapted screenplay: “Women Talking” (Sarah Polley)

    Best animated short: “The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse” (Charlie Mackesy and Matthew Freud)

    Best costume design: “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Ruth Carter)

    Best makeup and hairstyling: “The Whale” (Adrien Morot, Judy Chin and Annemarie Bradley)

    Best live-action short: “An Irish Goodbye” (Tom Berkeley and Ross White)

    Best visual effects: “Avatar: The Way of Water” (Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon and Daniel Barrett)

    Best sound: “Top Gun: Maverick” (Mark Weingarten, James Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon and Mark Taylor)

    Best production design: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Christian M. Goldbeck and Ernestine Hipper)

    India stamps its presence in the Oscars

    While the global hit, ‘Naatu Nattu’ from SS Rajamouli’s blockbuster RRR won the Best Original Song, the Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ emerged as the winner at the 95th Academy Awards making it a maiden victory for India in the Documentary Short Subject category.

    Filmmaker Shaunak Sen’s ‘All That Breathes’ was nominated in the Best Documentary Feature Film category, which was won by Navalny.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    First Indian track to win Oscars

    Filmmaker SS Rajamouli’s period action blockbuster “RRR” charted history by becoming the first Indian track to win the Academy Award in the Best Original Song category for “Naatu Naatu”.

    Indian composer M.M. Keeravaani (R) and lyricist Chandrabose accept the Oscar for Best Music (Original Song) for ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’. (Photo | AFP)

    ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ conquers Oscars 2023

    The surreal sci-fi film “Everything Everywhere All at Once” dominated the Oscars on Sunday, winning seven golden statuettes including best picture, Hollywood’s most coveted prize.

    WATCH |

    The comedy-drama film written and directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert features multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers. It won the best director, best actress, best original screenplay, best editing, and both the best supporting actor and actress prizes.

    Daniel Scheinert, left, and Daniel Kwan accept the award for best original screenplay for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ at the Oscars. (Photo | AP)

    First Asian woman to win best actress

    Michelle Yeoh, a Malaysian, made history by becoming the first Asian woman to win the best actress Oscar, for her exuberant portrayal of an immigrant business owner thrust into a zany multiverse in the sci-fi trip “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    First Black woman to win two Oscars

    Ruth E. Carter the costume designer behind the “Black Panther” films became the first Black woman to win two Oscars. Carter took home best costume design Sunday night at the 95th Academy Awards for the Marvel sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” Carter also won in 2018 for “Black Panther,” which made her the first African American to win in the category.

    The Oscars were hosted by Jimmy Kimmel (for the third time) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    ​Time-appropriate

    A wrenching German adaptation of the classic war novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” clinched the Academy Award for best international feature Sunday with its timely anti-militarist message.

    Deepika Padukone presents awards

    Indian actress Deepika Padukone who was one of the presenters at the Oscars on Sunday to introduce the performance of best original song “Naatu Naatu,” from “RRR.”

    In presenting the song, she noted its anti-colonialist themes — but it’s also “a total banger,” she said.

    Padukone is the third Indian star to present at the Oscars after Persis Khambatta and Priyanka Chopra. She introduced the live Naatu Naatu performance on stage.

    ​Deepika Padukone arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo | AP)

    Key winners of Oscars 2023

    Best documentary short: “The Elephant Whisperers” (Kartiki Gonsalves and Guneet Monga)

    Best original song: “Naatu Naatu” from “RRR”

    Best picture: “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best director: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best actor: Brendan Fraser, “The Whale”

    Best actress: Michelle Yeoh, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actor: Ke Huy Quan, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actress: Jamie Lee Curtis, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best international feature film: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Germany)

    Best cinematography: “All Quiet on the Western Front”

    Best animated feature: “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

    Best documentary feature: “Navalny”

    Best original score: “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Volker Bertelmann

    Best editing: “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Paul Rogers)

    Best adapted screenplay: “Women Talking” (Sarah Polley)

    Best animated short: “The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse” (Charlie Mackesy and Matthew Freud)

    Best costume design: “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Ruth Carter)

    Best makeup and hairstyling: “The Whale” (Adrien Morot, Judy Chin and Annemarie Bradley)

    Best live-action short: “An Irish Goodbye” (Tom Berkeley and Ross White)

    Best visual effects: “Avatar: The Way of Water” (Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon and Daniel Barrett)

    Best sound: “Top Gun: Maverick” (Mark Weingarten, James Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon and Mark Taylor)

    Best production design: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Christian M. Goldbeck and Ernestine Hipper)

  • Oscars 2023: Check out the list of winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’, women create history

    By Online Desk

    India stamps its presence in the Oscars

    While the global hit, ‘Naatu Nattu’ from SS Rajamouli’s blockbuster RRR won the Best Original Song, the Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ emerged as the winner at the 95th Academy Awards making it a maiden victory for India in the Documentary Short Subject category.

    Filmmaker Shaunak Sen’s ‘All That Breathes’ was nominated in the Best Documentary Feature Film category, which was won by Navalny.

    First Indian track to win Oscars

    Filmmaker SS Rajamouli’s period action blockbuster “RRR” charted history by becoming the first Indian track to win the Academy Award in the Best Original Song category for “Naatu Naatu”.

    Indian composer M.M. Keeravaani (R) and lyricist Chandrabose accept the Oscar for Best Music (Original Song) for ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’. (Photo | AFP)

    ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ conquers Oscars 2023

    The surreal sci-fi film “Everything Everywhere All at Once” dominated the Oscars on Sunday, winning seven golden statuettes including best picture, Hollywood’s most coveted prize.

    WATCH |

    The comedy-drama film written and directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert features multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers. It won the best director, best actress, best original screenplay, best editing, and both the best supporting actor and actress prizes.

    Daniel Scheinert, left, and Daniel Kwan accept the award for best original screenplay for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ at the Oscars. (Photo | AP)

    First Asian woman to win best actress

    Michelle Yeoh, a Malaysian, made history by becoming the first Asian woman to win the best actress Oscar, for her exuberant portrayal of an immigrant business owner thrust into a zany multiverse in the sci-fi trip “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    First Black woman to win two Oscars

    Ruth E. Carter the costume designer behind the “Black Panther” films became the first Black woman to win two Oscars. Carter took home best costume design Sunday night at the 95th Academy Awards for the Marvel sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” Carter also won in 2018 for “Black Panther,” which made her the first African American to win in the category.

    The Oscars were hosted by Jimmy Kimmel (for the third time) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    ​Time-appropriate

    A wrenching German adaptation of the classic war novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” clinched the Academy Award for best international feature Sunday with its timely anti-militarist message.

    Deepika Padukone presents awards

    Indian actress Deepika Padukone who was one of the presenters at the Oscars on Sunday to introduce the performance of best original song “Naatu Naatu,” from “RRR.”

    In presenting the song, she noted its anti-colonialist themes — but it’s also “a total banger,” she said.

    Padukone is the third Indian star to present at the Oscars after Persis Khambatta and Priyanka Chopra. She introduced the live Naatu Naatu performance on stage.

    ​Deepika Padukone arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo | AP)​

    Key winners of Oscars 2023

    Best documentary short: “The Elephant Whisperers” (Kartiki Gonsalves and Guneet Monga)

    Best original song: “Naatu Naatu” from “RRR”

    Best picture: “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best director: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best actor: Brendan Fraser, “The Whale”

    Best actress: Michelle Yeoh, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actor: Ke Huy Quan, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actress: Jamie Lee Curtis, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best international feature film: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Germany)

    Best cinematography: “All Quiet on the Western Front”

    Best animated feature: “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

    Best documentary feature: “Navalny”

    Best original score: “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Volker Bertelmann

    Best editing: “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Paul Rogers)

    Best adapted screenplay: “Women Talking” (Sarah Polley)

    Best animated short: “The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse” (Charlie Mackesy and Matthew Freud)

    Best costume design: “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Ruth Carter)

    Best makeup and hairstyling: “The Whale” (Adrien Morot, Judy Chin and Annemarie Bradley)

    Best live-action short: “An Irish Goodbye” (Tom Berkeley and Ross White)

    Best visual effects: “Avatar: The Way of Water” (Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon and Daniel Barrett)

    Best sound: “Top Gun: Maverick” (Mark Weingarten, James Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon and Mark Taylor)

    Best production design: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Christian M. Goldbeck and Ernestine Hipper)

    India stamps its presence in the Oscars

    While the global hit, ‘Naatu Nattu’ from SS Rajamouli’s blockbuster RRR won the Best Original Song, the Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ emerged as the winner at the 95th Academy Awards making it a maiden victory for India in the Documentary Short Subject category.

    Filmmaker Shaunak Sen’s ‘All That Breathes’ was nominated in the Best Documentary Feature Film category, which was won by Navalny.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    First Indian track to win Oscars

    Filmmaker SS Rajamouli’s period action blockbuster “RRR” charted history by becoming the first Indian track to win the Academy Award in the Best Original Song category for “Naatu Naatu”.

    Indian composer M.M. Keeravaani (R) and lyricist Chandrabose accept the Oscar for Best Music (Original Song) for ‘Naatu Naatu’ from ‘RRR’. (Photo | AFP)

    ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ conquers Oscars 2023

    The surreal sci-fi film “Everything Everywhere All at Once” dominated the Oscars on Sunday, winning seven golden statuettes including best picture, Hollywood’s most coveted prize.

    WATCH |

    The comedy-drama film written and directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert features multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers. It won the best director, best actress, best original screenplay, best editing, and both the best supporting actor and actress prizes.

    Daniel Scheinert, left, and Daniel Kwan accept the award for best original screenplay for ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ at the Oscars. (Photo | AP)

    First Asian woman to win best actress

    Michelle Yeoh, a Malaysian, made history by becoming the first Asian woman to win the best actress Oscar, for her exuberant portrayal of an immigrant business owner thrust into a zany multiverse in the sci-fi trip “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    First Black woman to win two Oscars

    Ruth E. Carter the costume designer behind the “Black Panther” films became the first Black woman to win two Oscars. Carter took home best costume design Sunday night at the 95th Academy Awards for the Marvel sequel “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.” Carter also won in 2018 for “Black Panther,” which made her the first African American to win in the category.

    The Oscars were hosted by Jimmy Kimmel (for the third time) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

    ​Time-appropriate

    A wrenching German adaptation of the classic war novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” clinched the Academy Award for best international feature Sunday with its timely anti-militarist message.

    Deepika Padukone presents awards

    Indian actress Deepika Padukone who was one of the presenters at the Oscars on Sunday to introduce the performance of best original song “Naatu Naatu,” from “RRR.”

    In presenting the song, she noted its anti-colonialist themes — but it’s also “a total banger,” she said.

    Padukone is the third Indian star to present at the Oscars after Persis Khambatta and Priyanka Chopra. She introduced the live Naatu Naatu performance on stage.

    ​Deepika Padukone arrives at the Oscars on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo | AP)

    Key winners of Oscars 2023

    Best documentary short: “The Elephant Whisperers” (Kartiki Gonsalves and Guneet Monga)

    Best original song: “Naatu Naatu” from “RRR”

    Best picture: “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best director: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best actor: Brendan Fraser, “The Whale”

    Best actress: Michelle Yeoh, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actor: Ke Huy Quan, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best supporting actress: Jamie Lee Curtis, “Everything Everywhere All at Once”

    Best international feature film: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Germany)

    Best cinematography: “All Quiet on the Western Front”

    Best animated feature: “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

    Best documentary feature: “Navalny”

    Best original score: “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Volker Bertelmann

    Best editing: “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Paul Rogers)

    Best adapted screenplay: “Women Talking” (Sarah Polley)

    Best animated short: “The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse” (Charlie Mackesy and Matthew Freud)

    Best costume design: “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Ruth Carter)

    Best makeup and hairstyling: “The Whale” (Adrien Morot, Judy Chin and Annemarie Bradley)

    Best live-action short: “An Irish Goodbye” (Tom Berkeley and Ross White)

    Best visual effects: “Avatar: The Way of Water” (Joe Letteri, Richard Baneham, Eric Saindon and Daniel Barrett)

    Best sound: “Top Gun: Maverick” (Mark Weingarten, James Mather, Al Nelson, Chris Burdon and Mark Taylor)

    Best production design: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (Christian M. Goldbeck and Ernestine Hipper)

  • ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ wins best picture, is everywhere at Oscars 2023

    By Associated Press

    LOS ANGELES: The metaphysical multiverse comedy “Everything Everywhere All at Once” wrapped its hot dog fingers around Hollywood’s top prize Sunday, winning best picture at the 95th Academy Awards, along with awards for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.

    Though worlds away from Oscar bait, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert’s anarchic ballet of everything bagels, googly-eyed rocks and one messy tax audit emerged as an improbable Academy Awards heavyweight. The indie hit, A24’s second best-picture winner following “Moonlight,” won seven Oscars in all.

    Fifty years after “The Godfather” won at the Oscars, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed with a much different immigrant experience. Its eccentric tale about a Chinese immigrant family – just the second feature by the Daniels, as the filmmaking duo is known – blended science fiction and alternate realities in the story of an ordinary woman and laundromat owner.

    “Everything Everywhere,” released all the way back in March 2022, helped revive arthouse cinemas after two years of pandemic, racking up more than $100 million in ticket sales. And despite initially scant expectations of Oscar glory, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” toppled both blockbusters (“Top Gun: Maverick,” “Avatar: The Way of Water”) and critical darlings (“Tar,” “The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    Yeoh became the first Asian woman to best actress, taking the award for her lauded performance in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” The 60-year-old Malaysian-born Yeoh won her first Oscar for a performance that relied as much on her comic and dramatic chops as it did her kung fu skills. She’s the first best actress win for a non-white actress in 20 years.

    “Ladies, don’t let anyone ever tell you you’re past your prime,” said Yeoh, who received a raucous standing ovation.

    In winning best director, the Daniels — both 35 years old — won for just their second and decidedly un-Oscar bait feature. They’re just the third directing pair to win the award, following Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins (“West Side Story”) and Joel and Ethan Coen (“No Country for Old Men”). Scheinert dedicated the award “to the moms of the world.”

    Best actor went to Brendan Fraser, culminating the former action star’s return to center stage for his physical transformation as a 600-lb. reclusive professor in “The Whale.” The best-actor race had been one of the closest contests of the night, but Fraser in the end edged Austin Butler.

    “So this is what the multiverse looks like,” said a clearly moved Fraser, pointing to the “Everything Everywhere All at Once” crew.

    READ HERE | Oscar for ‘RRR’: ‘This is just the beginning’, says Jr NTR, ‘Still feels like I’m living in a dream, says Charan

    The former child star Quan capped his own extraordinary comeback with the Oscar for best supporting actor for his performance in the indie hit “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” Quan, beloved for his roles as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and Data in “Goonies,” had all but given up acting before being cast in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    His win, among the most expected of the night, was nevertheless one of the ceremony’s most moving moments. The audience — including his “Temple of Doom” director, Steven Spielberg — gave Quan a standing ovation as he fought back tears.

    “Mom, I just won an Oscar!” said Quan, 51, whose family fled Vietnam in the war when he was a child.

    “They say stories like this only happen in the movies. I can’t believe it’s happening,” said Quan. “This is the American dream.”

    Minutes later, Quan’s castmate Jamie Lee Curtis won for best supporting actress. Her win, in one of the most competitive categories this year, denied a victory for comic-book fans. Angela Bassett (“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”) would have been the first performer to win an Oscar for a Marvel movie.

    It also made history for Curtis, a first-time winner who alluded to herself as “a Nepo baby” during her win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. She’s the rare Oscar winner whose parents were both Oscar nominees, something she emotionally referenced in her speech. Tony Curtis was nominated for “The Defiant Ones” in 1959 and Janet Leigh was nominated in 1961 for “Psycho.” Curtis thanked “hundreds” of people who put her in that position.

    The German-language WWI epic “All Quiet on the Western Front” — Netflix’s top contender this year — took four awards as the academy heaped honors on the craft of the harrowing anti-war film. It won for cinematography, production design, score and best international film.

    Though Bassett missed on supporting actress, Ruth E. Carter won for the costume design of “Wakanda Forever,” four years after becoming the first Black designer to win an Oscar, for “Black Panther.” This one makes Carter the first Black woman to win two Oscars.

    “Thank you to the Academy for recognizing the superhero that is a Black woman,” said Carter. “She endures, she loves, she overcomes, she is every woman in this film.”

    Carter dedicated the award to her mother, who she said died last week at 101.

    The telecast, airing live on ABC, opened traditionally: with a montage of the year’s films (with Kimmel edited into a cockpit in “Top Gun: Maverick”) and a lengthy monologue. Kimmel, hosting for the third time, didn’t dive right into revisiting Will Smith’s slap of Chris Rock at last year’s ceremony.

    The late-night comedian struggled to find lessons from last year’s incident, which was followed by Smith winning best actor. If anyone tried any violence this year, Kimmel said, “you will be awarded the Oscar for best actor and permitted to give a 19-minute-long speech.”

    But Kimmel, hosting for the third time, said anyone who wanted to “get jiggy with it” this year will have to come through a fearsome battalion of bodyguards, including Michael B. Jordan, Michelle Yeoh, Steven Spielberg and his show’s “security guard” Guillermo Rodriguez.

    After landmark wins for Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”) and Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”), no women were nominated for best director. Sarah Polley, though, won best adapted screenplay for the metaphor-rich Mennonite drama “Women Talking.”

    “Thank you to the academy for not being mortally offended by the words ‘women’ and ‘talking,’” said Polley.

    Daniel Roher’s “Navalny,” about the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, took best documentary. The film’s win came with clear overtones to Navalny’s ongoing imprisonment and Vladimir Putin’s continued war in Ukraine. Yulia Navalnaya joined the filmmakers on the stage.

    “My husband is in prison just for telling the truth,” said Navalnaya. “Stay strong my love.”

    Some big names weren’t in attendance for other reasons. Neither Tom Cruise, whose “Top Gun: Maverick” is up for best picture, nor James Cameron, director of best-picture nominee “Avatar: The Way of Water,” were at the ceremony. Both have been forefront in Hollywood’s efforts to get moviegoers back after years of pandemic.

    “The two guys who asked us to go back to theater aren’t in the theater,” said Kimmel, who added that Cruise without his shirt on in “Top Gun: Maverick” was “L. Ron Hubba Hubba.”

    After last year’s Oscars, which had stripped some categories from being handed out in the live telecast, the academy restored all awards to the show and leaned on traditional song and and dance numbers. That meant some show-stopping numbers, including the elastic suspenders dance of “Naatu Naatu” from the Telugu action-film sensation “RRR,” an intimate, impassioned performance by Lady Gaga of “Hold My Hand” from “Top Gun: Maverick,” and an Super Bowl follow-up by Rihanna. Best song went to “Naatu Naatu.”

    It also meant a long show. “This kind of makes you miss the slapping a little bit, right?” Kimmel said mid-show.

    The night’s first award went to “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” for best animated film. That handed Netflix its first Oscar in the category.

    After last year’s slap, the academy created a crisis management team to better respond to surprises. Neither Rock, who recently made his most forceful statement about the incident in a live special, nor Smith, who was banned by the academy for 10 years, attended.

    ALSO READ | Oscars 2023: Check out the winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’, women create history

    ALSO READ | Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ triumphs at Oscars 2023

    The Academy Awards is attempting to recapture some of its old luster. One thing working in its favor: This year’s best picture field was stacked with blockbusters. Ratings usually go up when the nominees are more popular, which certainly goes for “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water.”

    Neither won much, though. “The Way of Water,” with more than $2.28 billion in box office, won for best visual effects. The “Top Gun” sequel ($1.49 billion), took best sound.

    Last year, Apple TV’s “CODA” became the first streaming movie to win best picture. But this year, nine of the 10 best picture nominees were theatrical releases. After the movie business cratered during the pandemic, moviegoing recovered to about 67% of pre-pandemic levels. But it was an up and down year, full of smash hits and anxiety-inducing lulls in theaters.

    This year, ticket sales have been strong thanks to releases like “Creed III” and “Cocaine Bear” — which made not one but two cameos at Sunday’s show. But there remain storm clouds on the horizon. The Writers Guild and the major studios are set to begin contract negotiations March 20, a looming battle that has much of the industry girding for the possibility of a work stoppage throughout film and television.

    The Oscars, too, are seeking steadiness. Last year’s telecast drew 16.6 million viewers, a 58% increase from the scaled-down 2021 edition, watched by a record low 10.5 million.

    LOS ANGELES: The metaphysical multiverse comedy “Everything Everywhere All at Once” wrapped its hot dog fingers around Hollywood’s top prize Sunday, winning best picture at the 95th Academy Awards, along with awards for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.

    Though worlds away from Oscar bait, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert’s anarchic ballet of everything bagels, googly-eyed rocks and one messy tax audit emerged as an improbable Academy Awards heavyweight. The indie hit, A24’s second best-picture winner following “Moonlight,” won seven Oscars in all.

    Fifty years after “The Godfather” won at the Oscars, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed with a much different immigrant experience. Its eccentric tale about a Chinese immigrant family – just the second feature by the Daniels, as the filmmaking duo is known – blended science fiction and alternate realities in the story of an ordinary woman and laundromat owner.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “Everything Everywhere,” released all the way back in March 2022, helped revive arthouse cinemas after two years of pandemic, racking up more than $100 million in ticket sales. And despite initially scant expectations of Oscar glory, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” toppled both blockbusters (“Top Gun: Maverick,” “Avatar: The Way of Water”) and critical darlings (“Tar,” “The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    Yeoh became the first Asian woman to best actress, taking the award for her lauded performance in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” The 60-year-old Malaysian-born Yeoh won her first Oscar for a performance that relied as much on her comic and dramatic chops as it did her kung fu skills. She’s the first best actress win for a non-white actress in 20 years.

    “Ladies, don’t let anyone ever tell you you’re past your prime,” said Yeoh, who received a raucous standing ovation.

    In winning best director, the Daniels — both 35 years old — won for just their second and decidedly un-Oscar bait feature. They’re just the third directing pair to win the award, following Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins (“West Side Story”) and Joel and Ethan Coen (“No Country for Old Men”). Scheinert dedicated the award “to the moms of the world.”

    Best actor went to Brendan Fraser, culminating the former action star’s return to center stage for his physical transformation as a 600-lb. reclusive professor in “The Whale.” The best-actor race had been one of the closest contests of the night, but Fraser in the end edged Austin Butler.

    “So this is what the multiverse looks like,” said a clearly moved Fraser, pointing to the “Everything Everywhere All at Once” crew.

    READ HERE | Oscar for ‘RRR’: ‘This is just the beginning’, says Jr NTR, ‘Still feels like I’m living in a dream, says Charan

    The former child star Quan capped his own extraordinary comeback with the Oscar for best supporting actor for his performance in the indie hit “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” Quan, beloved for his roles as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and Data in “Goonies,” had all but given up acting before being cast in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    His win, among the most expected of the night, was nevertheless one of the ceremony’s most moving moments. The audience — including his “Temple of Doom” director, Steven Spielberg — gave Quan a standing ovation as he fought back tears.

    “Mom, I just won an Oscar!” said Quan, 51, whose family fled Vietnam in the war when he was a child.

    “They say stories like this only happen in the movies. I can’t believe it’s happening,” said Quan. “This is the American dream.”

    Minutes later, Quan’s castmate Jamie Lee Curtis won for best supporting actress. Her win, in one of the most competitive categories this year, denied a victory for comic-book fans. Angela Bassett (“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”) would have been the first performer to win an Oscar for a Marvel movie.

    It also made history for Curtis, a first-time winner who alluded to herself as “a Nepo baby” during her win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. She’s the rare Oscar winner whose parents were both Oscar nominees, something she emotionally referenced in her speech. Tony Curtis was nominated for “The Defiant Ones” in 1959 and Janet Leigh was nominated in 1961 for “Psycho.” Curtis thanked “hundreds” of people who put her in that position.

    The German-language WWI epic “All Quiet on the Western Front” — Netflix’s top contender this year — took four awards as the academy heaped honors on the craft of the harrowing anti-war film. It won for cinematography, production design, score and best international film.

    Though Bassett missed on supporting actress, Ruth E. Carter won for the costume design of “Wakanda Forever,” four years after becoming the first Black designer to win an Oscar, for “Black Panther.” This one makes Carter the first Black woman to win two Oscars.

    “Thank you to the Academy for recognizing the superhero that is a Black woman,” said Carter. “She endures, she loves, she overcomes, she is every woman in this film.”

    Carter dedicated the award to her mother, who she said died last week at 101.

    The telecast, airing live on ABC, opened traditionally: with a montage of the year’s films (with Kimmel edited into a cockpit in “Top Gun: Maverick”) and a lengthy monologue. Kimmel, hosting for the third time, didn’t dive right into revisiting Will Smith’s slap of Chris Rock at last year’s ceremony.

    The late-night comedian struggled to find lessons from last year’s incident, which was followed by Smith winning best actor. If anyone tried any violence this year, Kimmel said, “you will be awarded the Oscar for best actor and permitted to give a 19-minute-long speech.”

    But Kimmel, hosting for the third time, said anyone who wanted to “get jiggy with it” this year will have to come through a fearsome battalion of bodyguards, including Michael B. Jordan, Michelle Yeoh, Steven Spielberg and his show’s “security guard” Guillermo Rodriguez.

    After landmark wins for Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”) and Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”), no women were nominated for best director. Sarah Polley, though, won best adapted screenplay for the metaphor-rich Mennonite drama “Women Talking.”

    “Thank you to the academy for not being mortally offended by the words ‘women’ and ‘talking,’” said Polley.

    Daniel Roher’s “Navalny,” about the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, took best documentary. The film’s win came with clear overtones to Navalny’s ongoing imprisonment and Vladimir Putin’s continued war in Ukraine. Yulia Navalnaya joined the filmmakers on the stage.

    “My husband is in prison just for telling the truth,” said Navalnaya. “Stay strong my love.”

    Some big names weren’t in attendance for other reasons. Neither Tom Cruise, whose “Top Gun: Maverick” is up for best picture, nor James Cameron, director of best-picture nominee “Avatar: The Way of Water,” were at the ceremony. Both have been forefront in Hollywood’s efforts to get moviegoers back after years of pandemic.

    “The two guys who asked us to go back to theater aren’t in the theater,” said Kimmel, who added that Cruise without his shirt on in “Top Gun: Maverick” was “L. Ron Hubba Hubba.”

    After last year’s Oscars, which had stripped some categories from being handed out in the live telecast, the academy restored all awards to the show and leaned on traditional song and and dance numbers. That meant some show-stopping numbers, including the elastic suspenders dance of “Naatu Naatu” from the Telugu action-film sensation “RRR,” an intimate, impassioned performance by Lady Gaga of “Hold My Hand” from “Top Gun: Maverick,” and an Super Bowl follow-up by Rihanna. Best song went to “Naatu Naatu.”

    It also meant a long show. “This kind of makes you miss the slapping a little bit, right?” Kimmel said mid-show.

    The night’s first award went to “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” for best animated film. That handed Netflix its first Oscar in the category.

    After last year’s slap, the academy created a crisis management team to better respond to surprises. Neither Rock, who recently made his most forceful statement about the incident in a live special, nor Smith, who was banned by the academy for 10 years, attended.

    ALSO READ | Oscars 2023: Check out the winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’, women create history

    ALSO READ | Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ triumphs at Oscars 2023

    The Academy Awards is attempting to recapture some of its old luster. One thing working in its favor: This year’s best picture field was stacked with blockbusters. Ratings usually go up when the nominees are more popular, which certainly goes for “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water.”

    Neither won much, though. “The Way of Water,” with more than $2.28 billion in box office, won for best visual effects. The “Top Gun” sequel ($1.49 billion), took best sound.

    Last year, Apple TV’s “CODA” became the first streaming movie to win best picture. But this year, nine of the 10 best picture nominees were theatrical releases. After the movie business cratered during the pandemic, moviegoing recovered to about 67% of pre-pandemic levels. But it was an up and down year, full of smash hits and anxiety-inducing lulls in theaters.

    This year, ticket sales have been strong thanks to releases like “Creed III” and “Cocaine Bear” — which made not one but two cameos at Sunday’s show. But there remain storm clouds on the horizon. The Writers Guild and the major studios are set to begin contract negotiations March 20, a looming battle that has much of the industry girding for the possibility of a work stoppage throughout film and television.

    The Oscars, too, are seeking steadiness. Last year’s telecast drew 16.6 million viewers, a 58% increase from the scaled-down 2021 edition, watched by a record low 10.5 million.

  • ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ wins best picture, is everywhere at Oscars 2023

    By Associated Press

    LOS ANGELES: The metaphysical multiverse comedy “Everything Everywhere All at Once” wrapped its hot dog fingers around Hollywood’s top prize Sunday, winning best picture at the 95th Academy Awards, along with awards for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.

    Though worlds away from Oscar bait, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert’s anarchic ballet of everything bagels, googly-eyed rocks and one messy tax audit emerged as an improbable Academy Awards heavyweight. The indie hit, A24’s second best-picture winner following “Moonlight,” won seven Oscars in all.

    Fifty years after “The Godfather” won at the Oscars, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed with a much different immigrant experience. Its eccentric tale about a Chinese immigrant family – just the second feature by the Daniels, as the filmmaking duo is known – blended science fiction and alternate realities in the story of an ordinary woman and laundromat owner.

    “Everything Everywhere,” released all the way back in March 2022, helped revive arthouse cinemas after two years of pandemic, racking up more than $100 million in ticket sales. And despite initially scant expectations of Oscar glory, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” toppled both blockbusters (“Top Gun: Maverick,” “Avatar: The Way of Water”) and critical darlings (“Tar,” “The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    Yeoh became the first Asian woman to best actress, taking the award for her lauded performance in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” The 60-year-old Malaysian-born Yeoh won her first Oscar for a performance that relied as much on her comic and dramatic chops as it did her kung fu skills. She’s the first best actress win for a non-white actress in 20 years.

    “Ladies, don’t let anyone ever tell you you’re past your prime,” said Yeoh, who received a raucous standing ovation.

    In winning best director, the Daniels — both 35 years old — won for just their second and decidedly un-Oscar bait feature. They’re just the third directing pair to win the award, following Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins (“West Side Story”) and Joel and Ethan Coen (“No Country for Old Men”). Scheinert dedicated the award “to the moms of the world.”

    Best actor went to Brendan Fraser, culminating the former action star’s return to center stage for his physical transformation as a 600-lb. reclusive professor in “The Whale.” The best-actor race had been one of the closest contests of the night, but Fraser in the end edged Austin Butler.

    “So this is what the multiverse looks like,” said a clearly moved Fraser, pointing to the “Everything Everywhere All at Once” crew.

    READ HERE | Oscar for ‘RRR’: ‘This is just the beginning’, says Jr NTR, ‘Still feels like I’m living in a dream, says Charan

    The former child star Quan capped his own extraordinary comeback with the Oscar for best supporting actor for his performance in the indie hit “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” Quan, beloved for his roles as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and Data in “Goonies,” had all but given up acting before being cast in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    His win, among the most expected of the night, was nevertheless one of the ceremony’s most moving moments. The audience — including his “Temple of Doom” director, Steven Spielberg — gave Quan a standing ovation as he fought back tears.

    “Mom, I just won an Oscar!” said Quan, 51, whose family fled Vietnam in the war when he was a child.

    “They say stories like this only happen in the movies. I can’t believe it’s happening,” said Quan. “This is the American dream.”

    Minutes later, Quan’s castmate Jamie Lee Curtis won for best supporting actress. Her win, in one of the most competitive categories this year, denied a victory for comic-book fans. Angela Bassett (“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”) would have been the first performer to win an Oscar for a Marvel movie.

    It also made history for Curtis, a first-time winner who alluded to herself as “a Nepo baby” during her win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. She’s the rare Oscar winner whose parents were both Oscar nominees, something she emotionally referenced in her speech. Tony Curtis was nominated for “The Defiant Ones” in 1959 and Janet Leigh was nominated in 1961 for “Psycho.” Curtis thanked “hundreds” of people who put her in that position.

    The German-language WWI epic “All Quiet on the Western Front” — Netflix’s top contender this year — took four awards as the academy heaped honors on the craft of the harrowing anti-war film. It won for cinematography, production design, score and best international film.

    Though Bassett missed on supporting actress, Ruth E. Carter won for the costume design of “Wakanda Forever,” four years after becoming the first Black designer to win an Oscar, for “Black Panther.” This one makes Carter the first Black woman to win two Oscars.

    “Thank you to the Academy for recognizing the superhero that is a Black woman,” said Carter. “She endures, she loves, she overcomes, she is every woman in this film.”

    Carter dedicated the award to her mother, who she said died last week at 101.

    The telecast, airing live on ABC, opened traditionally: with a montage of the year’s films (with Kimmel edited into a cockpit in “Top Gun: Maverick”) and a lengthy monologue. Kimmel, hosting for the third time, didn’t dive right into revisiting Will Smith’s slap of Chris Rock at last year’s ceremony.

    The late-night comedian struggled to find lessons from last year’s incident, which was followed by Smith winning best actor. If anyone tried any violence this year, Kimmel said, “you will be awarded the Oscar for best actor and permitted to give a 19-minute-long speech.”

    But Kimmel, hosting for the third time, said anyone who wanted to “get jiggy with it” this year will have to come through a fearsome battalion of bodyguards, including Michael B. Jordan, Michelle Yeoh, Steven Spielberg and his show’s “security guard” Guillermo Rodriguez.

    After landmark wins for Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”) and Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”), no women were nominated for best director. Sarah Polley, though, won best adapted screenplay for the metaphor-rich Mennonite drama “Women Talking.”

    “Thank you to the academy for not being mortally offended by the words ‘women’ and ‘talking,’” said Polley.

    Daniel Roher’s “Navalny,” about the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, took best documentary. The film’s win came with clear overtones to Navalny’s ongoing imprisonment and Vladimir Putin’s continued war in Ukraine. Yulia Navalnaya joined the filmmakers on the stage.

    “My husband is in prison just for telling the truth,” said Navalnaya. “Stay strong my love.”

    Some big names weren’t in attendance for other reasons. Neither Tom Cruise, whose “Top Gun: Maverick” is up for best picture, nor James Cameron, director of best-picture nominee “Avatar: The Way of Water,” were at the ceremony. Both have been forefront in Hollywood’s efforts to get moviegoers back after years of pandemic.

    “The two guys who asked us to go back to theater aren’t in the theater,” said Kimmel, who added that Cruise without his shirt on in “Top Gun: Maverick” was “L. Ron Hubba Hubba.”

    After last year’s Oscars, which had stripped some categories from being handed out in the live telecast, the academy restored all awards to the show and leaned on traditional song and and dance numbers. That meant some show-stopping numbers, including the elastic suspenders dance of “Naatu Naatu” from the Telugu action-film sensation “RRR,” an intimate, impassioned performance by Lady Gaga of “Hold My Hand” from “Top Gun: Maverick,” and an Super Bowl follow-up by Rihanna. Best song went to “Naatu Naatu.”

    It also meant a long show. “This kind of makes you miss the slapping a little bit, right?” Kimmel said mid-show.

    The night’s first award went to “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” for best animated film. That handed Netflix its first Oscar in the category.

    After last year’s slap, the academy created a crisis management team to better respond to surprises. Neither Rock, who recently made his most forceful statement about the incident in a live special, nor Smith, who was banned by the academy for 10 years, attended.

    ALSO READ | Oscars 2023: Check out the winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’, women create history

    ALSO READ | Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ triumphs at Oscars 2023

    The Academy Awards is attempting to recapture some of its old luster. One thing working in its favor: This year’s best picture field was stacked with blockbusters. Ratings usually go up when the nominees are more popular, which certainly goes for “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water.”

    Neither won much, though. “The Way of Water,” with more than $2.28 billion in box office, won for best visual effects. The “Top Gun” sequel ($1.49 billion), took best sound.

    Last year, Apple TV’s “CODA” became the first streaming movie to win best picture. But this year, nine of the 10 best picture nominees were theatrical releases. After the movie business cratered during the pandemic, moviegoing recovered to about 67% of pre-pandemic levels. But it was an up and down year, full of smash hits and anxiety-inducing lulls in theaters.

    This year, ticket sales have been strong thanks to releases like “Creed III” and “Cocaine Bear” — which made not one but two cameos at Sunday’s show. But there remain storm clouds on the horizon. The Writers Guild and the major studios are set to begin contract negotiations March 20, a looming battle that has much of the industry girding for the possibility of a work stoppage throughout film and television.

    The Oscars, too, are seeking steadiness. Last year’s telecast drew 16.6 million viewers, a 58% increase from the scaled-down 2021 edition, watched by a record low 10.5 million.

    LOS ANGELES: The metaphysical multiverse comedy “Everything Everywhere All at Once” wrapped its hot dog fingers around Hollywood’s top prize Sunday, winning best picture at the 95th Academy Awards, along with awards for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.

    Though worlds away from Oscar bait, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert’s anarchic ballet of everything bagels, googly-eyed rocks and one messy tax audit emerged as an improbable Academy Awards heavyweight. The indie hit, A24’s second best-picture winner following “Moonlight,” won seven Oscars in all.

    Fifty years after “The Godfather” won at the Oscars, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed with a much different immigrant experience. Its eccentric tale about a Chinese immigrant family – just the second feature by the Daniels, as the filmmaking duo is known – blended science fiction and alternate realities in the story of an ordinary woman and laundromat owner.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “Everything Everywhere,” released all the way back in March 2022, helped revive arthouse cinemas after two years of pandemic, racking up more than $100 million in ticket sales. And despite initially scant expectations of Oscar glory, “Everything Everywhere All at Once” toppled both blockbusters (“Top Gun: Maverick,” “Avatar: The Way of Water”) and critical darlings (“Tar,” “The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    Yeoh became the first Asian woman to best actress, taking the award for her lauded performance in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” The 60-year-old Malaysian-born Yeoh won her first Oscar for a performance that relied as much on her comic and dramatic chops as it did her kung fu skills. She’s the first best actress win for a non-white actress in 20 years.

    “Ladies, don’t let anyone ever tell you you’re past your prime,” said Yeoh, who received a raucous standing ovation.

    In winning best director, the Daniels — both 35 years old — won for just their second and decidedly un-Oscar bait feature. They’re just the third directing pair to win the award, following Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins (“West Side Story”) and Joel and Ethan Coen (“No Country for Old Men”). Scheinert dedicated the award “to the moms of the world.”

    Best actor went to Brendan Fraser, culminating the former action star’s return to center stage for his physical transformation as a 600-lb. reclusive professor in “The Whale.” The best-actor race had been one of the closest contests of the night, but Fraser in the end edged Austin Butler.

    “So this is what the multiverse looks like,” said a clearly moved Fraser, pointing to the “Everything Everywhere All at Once” crew.

    READ HERE | Oscar for ‘RRR’: ‘This is just the beginning’, says Jr NTR, ‘Still feels like I’m living in a dream, says Charan

    The former child star Quan capped his own extraordinary comeback with the Oscar for best supporting actor for his performance in the indie hit “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” Quan, beloved for his roles as Short Round in “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and Data in “Goonies,” had all but given up acting before being cast in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    His win, among the most expected of the night, was nevertheless one of the ceremony’s most moving moments. The audience — including his “Temple of Doom” director, Steven Spielberg — gave Quan a standing ovation as he fought back tears.

    “Mom, I just won an Oscar!” said Quan, 51, whose family fled Vietnam in the war when he was a child.

    “They say stories like this only happen in the movies. I can’t believe it’s happening,” said Quan. “This is the American dream.”

    Minutes later, Quan’s castmate Jamie Lee Curtis won for best supporting actress. Her win, in one of the most competitive categories this year, denied a victory for comic-book fans. Angela Bassett (“Black Panther: Wakanda Forever”) would have been the first performer to win an Oscar for a Marvel movie.

    It also made history for Curtis, a first-time winner who alluded to herself as “a Nepo baby” during her win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. She’s the rare Oscar winner whose parents were both Oscar nominees, something she emotionally referenced in her speech. Tony Curtis was nominated for “The Defiant Ones” in 1959 and Janet Leigh was nominated in 1961 for “Psycho.” Curtis thanked “hundreds” of people who put her in that position.

    The German-language WWI epic “All Quiet on the Western Front” — Netflix’s top contender this year — took four awards as the academy heaped honors on the craft of the harrowing anti-war film. It won for cinematography, production design, score and best international film.

    Though Bassett missed on supporting actress, Ruth E. Carter won for the costume design of “Wakanda Forever,” four years after becoming the first Black designer to win an Oscar, for “Black Panther.” This one makes Carter the first Black woman to win two Oscars.

    “Thank you to the Academy for recognizing the superhero that is a Black woman,” said Carter. “She endures, she loves, she overcomes, she is every woman in this film.”

    Carter dedicated the award to her mother, who she said died last week at 101.

    The telecast, airing live on ABC, opened traditionally: with a montage of the year’s films (with Kimmel edited into a cockpit in “Top Gun: Maverick”) and a lengthy monologue. Kimmel, hosting for the third time, didn’t dive right into revisiting Will Smith’s slap of Chris Rock at last year’s ceremony.

    The late-night comedian struggled to find lessons from last year’s incident, which was followed by Smith winning best actor. If anyone tried any violence this year, Kimmel said, “you will be awarded the Oscar for best actor and permitted to give a 19-minute-long speech.”

    But Kimmel, hosting for the third time, said anyone who wanted to “get jiggy with it” this year will have to come through a fearsome battalion of bodyguards, including Michael B. Jordan, Michelle Yeoh, Steven Spielberg and his show’s “security guard” Guillermo Rodriguez.

    After landmark wins for Chloé Zhao (“Nomadland”) and Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”), no women were nominated for best director. Sarah Polley, though, won best adapted screenplay for the metaphor-rich Mennonite drama “Women Talking.”

    “Thank you to the academy for not being mortally offended by the words ‘women’ and ‘talking,’” said Polley.

    Daniel Roher’s “Navalny,” about the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, took best documentary. The film’s win came with clear overtones to Navalny’s ongoing imprisonment and Vladimir Putin’s continued war in Ukraine. Yulia Navalnaya joined the filmmakers on the stage.

    “My husband is in prison just for telling the truth,” said Navalnaya. “Stay strong my love.”

    Some big names weren’t in attendance for other reasons. Neither Tom Cruise, whose “Top Gun: Maverick” is up for best picture, nor James Cameron, director of best-picture nominee “Avatar: The Way of Water,” were at the ceremony. Both have been forefront in Hollywood’s efforts to get moviegoers back after years of pandemic.

    “The two guys who asked us to go back to theater aren’t in the theater,” said Kimmel, who added that Cruise without his shirt on in “Top Gun: Maverick” was “L. Ron Hubba Hubba.”

    After last year’s Oscars, which had stripped some categories from being handed out in the live telecast, the academy restored all awards to the show and leaned on traditional song and and dance numbers. That meant some show-stopping numbers, including the elastic suspenders dance of “Naatu Naatu” from the Telugu action-film sensation “RRR,” an intimate, impassioned performance by Lady Gaga of “Hold My Hand” from “Top Gun: Maverick,” and an Super Bowl follow-up by Rihanna. Best song went to “Naatu Naatu.”

    It also meant a long show. “This kind of makes you miss the slapping a little bit, right?” Kimmel said mid-show.

    The night’s first award went to “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” for best animated film. That handed Netflix its first Oscar in the category.

    After last year’s slap, the academy created a crisis management team to better respond to surprises. Neither Rock, who recently made his most forceful statement about the incident in a live special, nor Smith, who was banned by the academy for 10 years, attended.

    ALSO READ | Oscars 2023: Check out the winners; ‘Naatu Naatu’, women create history

    ALSO READ | Tamil documentary ‘The Elephant Whisperers’ triumphs at Oscars 2023

    The Academy Awards is attempting to recapture some of its old luster. One thing working in its favor: This year’s best picture field was stacked with blockbusters. Ratings usually go up when the nominees are more popular, which certainly goes for “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water.”

    Neither won much, though. “The Way of Water,” with more than $2.28 billion in box office, won for best visual effects. The “Top Gun” sequel ($1.49 billion), took best sound.

    Last year, Apple TV’s “CODA” became the first streaming movie to win best picture. But this year, nine of the 10 best picture nominees were theatrical releases. After the movie business cratered during the pandemic, moviegoing recovered to about 67% of pre-pandemic levels. But it was an up and down year, full of smash hits and anxiety-inducing lulls in theaters.

    This year, ticket sales have been strong thanks to releases like “Creed III” and “Cocaine Bear” — which made not one but two cameos at Sunday’s show. But there remain storm clouds on the horizon. The Writers Guild and the major studios are set to begin contract negotiations March 20, a looming battle that has much of the industry girding for the possibility of a work stoppage throughout film and television.

    The Oscars, too, are seeking steadiness. Last year’s telecast drew 16.6 million viewers, a 58% increase from the scaled-down 2021 edition, watched by a record low 10.5 million.

  • ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ enters Sunday’s Oscars as unlikely favorite

    By AFP

    HOLLYWOOD: “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a wacky sci-fi film featuring multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers, enters Sunday’s Oscars ceremony as the highly unorthodox frontrunner for best picture.

    Academy bosses hope audiences will tune in to see whether the zany $100 million-grossing hit can claim Hollywood’s most coveted prize — and draw a line under Will Smith’s infamous slap at last year’s gala.

    “Everything Everywhere” — which leads the overall nominations count at 11 — follows a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner locked in battle with an inter-dimensional supervillain who happens to also be her own daughter.

    Michelle Yeoh’s heroine Evelyn must harness the power of her alter egos living in parallel universes, which feature hot dogs as human fingers, talking rocks and giant dildos used as weapons.

    The film has dominated nearly every awards show in Hollywood, with its charismatic, predominantly Asian stars becoming the feel-good story of the season.

    “It’s a group of very likable people behind the movie who it’s impossible to not be happy for,” Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg told AFP.

    But although the quirky film is widely expected to dominate Oscars night, it could hit a stumbling block for best picture.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences uses a special “preferential” voting system for that award, in which members rank films from best to worst.

    The approach punishes polarizing films.

    One Oscars voter who asked not to be identified told AFP that some members — particularly among the Academy’s older ranks — are “more divided about ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once.’”

    “It was very bold and unique, but not a traditional movie… it could be further down the ballot for a lot of people,” the voter said.

    If any rival can benefit, it is likely “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Netflix’s German-language World War I movie that dominated Britain’s BAFTAs.

    Another potential beneficiary is “Top Gun: Maverick,” the long-awaited sequel from Tom Cruise — no less a figure than Steven Spielberg recently said the actor and his film “might have saved the entire theatrical industry” from the pandemic.

    “It was that movie that brought audiences back to movie theaters,” said the anonymous Oscars voter.

    REVIEW | ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’: This multiversal madness is absurdist comedy at its best

    Toss-ups

    While the best picture race has a clear favorite, the acting contests are incredibly tight.

    “I can’t remember a year, at least in the time I’ve been doing it, where three of the four acting categories were true toss-ups,” said Feinberg.

    For best actress, Cate Blanchett had long been favorite to win a third Oscar for “Tar,” but “Everything Everywhere” love could propel Yeoh to a historic first win by an Asian woman in the category.

    “I think that Michelle Yeoh will probably win,” said the Oscars voter. “Cate Blanchett has already won twice… some people vote with that in the back of their mind.”

    Best actor is a three-horse race between Austin Butler (“Elvis), Brendan Fraser (“The Whale”) and Colin Farrell (“The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    And the supporting actress race may be even closer.

    Angela Bassett, the first Marvel superhero actor ever nominated with “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” is up against “Everything Everywhere” star Jamie Lee Curtis and “Banshees” actress Kerry Condon.

    One category does appear to be locked.

    Ke Huy Quan, the former child star of “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and “The Goonies,” has won every best supporting actor prize going and looks near-certain to complete a comeback story for the ages.

    ‘The Slap’

    Hanging over the ceremony is the specter of “The Slap” — the shocking moment at last year’s Oscars when Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage for cracking a joke about his wife.

    At a press conference this week, Oscars executive producer Molly McNearney said: “We’re going to acknowledge it, and then we’re going to move on.”

    Organizers were criticized last year for allowing Smith to remain at the show after the attack, and even collect his best actor award.

    He was later banned from Oscars events for a decade, meaning he cannot present the best actress statuette this year, as is traditional.

    A “crisis team” has been set up for the first time, to immediately respond to any unexpected developments.

    READ MORE | ‘Larger than life’: Indian film-maker Rajamouli shoots for Oscar fame

    Blockbusters

    Partly thanks to “The Slap,” last year’s Oscars TV ratings improved from record lows, but remained well below their late 1990s peak, as interest in awards shows wanes and doomsayers continue to predict the demise of theatergoing.

    This year, organizers have brought back Jimmy Kimmel as host for a third stint, and hope that nominations for widely watched blockbusters like “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” will bring viewers back.

    In 1997, when the wildly popular “Titanic” won 11 Oscars, a record 57 million tuned in.

    “If the public cares about the movies, they care about the Oscars, relatively more,” said Feinberg.

    HOLLYWOOD: “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a wacky sci-fi film featuring multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers, enters Sunday’s Oscars ceremony as the highly unorthodox frontrunner for best picture.

    Academy bosses hope audiences will tune in to see whether the zany $100 million-grossing hit can claim Hollywood’s most coveted prize — and draw a line under Will Smith’s infamous slap at last year’s gala.

    “Everything Everywhere” — which leads the overall nominations count at 11 — follows a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner locked in battle with an inter-dimensional supervillain who happens to also be her own daughter.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    Michelle Yeoh’s heroine Evelyn must harness the power of her alter egos living in parallel universes, which feature hot dogs as human fingers, talking rocks and giant dildos used as weapons.

    The film has dominated nearly every awards show in Hollywood, with its charismatic, predominantly Asian stars becoming the feel-good story of the season.

    “It’s a group of very likable people behind the movie who it’s impossible to not be happy for,” Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg told AFP.

    But although the quirky film is widely expected to dominate Oscars night, it could hit a stumbling block for best picture.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences uses a special “preferential” voting system for that award, in which members rank films from best to worst.

    The approach punishes polarizing films.

    One Oscars voter who asked not to be identified told AFP that some members — particularly among the Academy’s older ranks — are “more divided about ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once.’”

    “It was very bold and unique, but not a traditional movie… it could be further down the ballot for a lot of people,” the voter said.

    If any rival can benefit, it is likely “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Netflix’s German-language World War I movie that dominated Britain’s BAFTAs.

    Another potential beneficiary is “Top Gun: Maverick,” the long-awaited sequel from Tom Cruise — no less a figure than Steven Spielberg recently said the actor and his film “might have saved the entire theatrical industry” from the pandemic.

    “It was that movie that brought audiences back to movie theaters,” said the anonymous Oscars voter.

    REVIEW | ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’: This multiversal madness is absurdist comedy at its best

    Toss-ups

    While the best picture race has a clear favorite, the acting contests are incredibly tight.

    “I can’t remember a year, at least in the time I’ve been doing it, where three of the four acting categories were true toss-ups,” said Feinberg.

    For best actress, Cate Blanchett had long been favorite to win a third Oscar for “Tar,” but “Everything Everywhere” love could propel Yeoh to a historic first win by an Asian woman in the category.

    “I think that Michelle Yeoh will probably win,” said the Oscars voter. “Cate Blanchett has already won twice… some people vote with that in the back of their mind.”

    Best actor is a three-horse race between Austin Butler (“Elvis), Brendan Fraser (“The Whale”) and Colin Farrell (“The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    And the supporting actress race may be even closer.

    Angela Bassett, the first Marvel superhero actor ever nominated with “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” is up against “Everything Everywhere” star Jamie Lee Curtis and “Banshees” actress Kerry Condon.

    One category does appear to be locked.

    Ke Huy Quan, the former child star of “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and “The Goonies,” has won every best supporting actor prize going and looks near-certain to complete a comeback story for the ages.

    ‘The Slap’

    Hanging over the ceremony is the specter of “The Slap” — the shocking moment at last year’s Oscars when Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage for cracking a joke about his wife.

    At a press conference this week, Oscars executive producer Molly McNearney said: “We’re going to acknowledge it, and then we’re going to move on.”

    Organizers were criticized last year for allowing Smith to remain at the show after the attack, and even collect his best actor award.

    He was later banned from Oscars events for a decade, meaning he cannot present the best actress statuette this year, as is traditional.

    A “crisis team” has been set up for the first time, to immediately respond to any unexpected developments.

    READ MORE | ‘Larger than life’: Indian film-maker Rajamouli shoots for Oscar fame

    Blockbusters

    Partly thanks to “The Slap,” last year’s Oscars TV ratings improved from record lows, but remained well below their late 1990s peak, as interest in awards shows wanes and doomsayers continue to predict the demise of theatergoing.

    This year, organizers have brought back Jimmy Kimmel as host for a third stint, and hope that nominations for widely watched blockbusters like “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” will bring viewers back.

    In 1997, when the wildly popular “Titanic” won 11 Oscars, a record 57 million tuned in.

    “If the public cares about the movies, they care about the Oscars, relatively more,” said Feinberg.

  • ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ enters Sunday’s Oscars as unlikely favorite

    By AFP

    HOLLYWOOD: “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a wacky sci-fi film featuring multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers, enters Sunday’s Oscars ceremony as the highly unorthodox frontrunner for best picture.

    Academy bosses hope audiences will tune in to see whether the zany $100 million-grossing hit can claim Hollywood’s most coveted prize — and draw a line under Will Smith’s infamous slap at last year’s gala.

    “Everything Everywhere” — which leads the overall nominations count at 11 — follows a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner locked in battle with an inter-dimensional supervillain who happens to also be her own daughter.

    Michelle Yeoh’s heroine Evelyn must harness the power of her alter egos living in parallel universes, which feature hot dogs as human fingers, talking rocks and giant dildos used as weapons.

    The film has dominated nearly every awards show in Hollywood, with its charismatic, predominantly Asian stars becoming the feel-good story of the season.

    “It’s a group of very likable people behind the movie who it’s impossible to not be happy for,” Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg told AFP.

    But although the quirky film is widely expected to dominate Oscars night, it could hit a stumbling block for best picture.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences uses a special “preferential” voting system for that award, in which members rank films from best to worst.

    The approach punishes polarizing films.

    One Oscars voter who asked not to be identified told AFP that some members — particularly among the Academy’s older ranks — are “more divided about ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once.’”

    “It was very bold and unique, but not a traditional movie… it could be further down the ballot for a lot of people,” the voter said.

    If any rival can benefit, it is likely “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Netflix’s German-language World War I movie that dominated Britain’s BAFTAs.

    Another potential beneficiary is “Top Gun: Maverick,” the long-awaited sequel from Tom Cruise — no less a figure than Steven Spielberg recently said the actor and his film “might have saved the entire theatrical industry” from the pandemic.

    “It was that movie that brought audiences back to movie theaters,” said the anonymous Oscars voter.

    REVIEW | ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’: This multiversal madness is absurdist comedy at its best

    Toss-ups

    While the best picture race has a clear favorite, the acting contests are incredibly tight.

    “I can’t remember a year, at least in the time I’ve been doing it, where three of the four acting categories were true toss-ups,” said Feinberg.

    For best actress, Cate Blanchett had long been favorite to win a third Oscar for “Tar,” but “Everything Everywhere” love could propel Yeoh to a historic first win by an Asian woman in the category.

    “I think that Michelle Yeoh will probably win,” said the Oscars voter. “Cate Blanchett has already won twice… some people vote with that in the back of their mind.”

    Best actor is a three-horse race between Austin Butler (“Elvis), Brendan Fraser (“The Whale”) and Colin Farrell (“The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    And the supporting actress race may be even closer.

    Angela Bassett, the first Marvel superhero actor ever nominated with “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” is up against “Everything Everywhere” star Jamie Lee Curtis and “Banshees” actress Kerry Condon.

    One category does appear to be locked.

    Ke Huy Quan, the former child star of “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and “The Goonies,” has won every best supporting actor prize going and looks near-certain to complete a comeback story for the ages.

    ‘The Slap’

    Hanging over the ceremony is the specter of “The Slap” — the shocking moment at last year’s Oscars when Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage for cracking a joke about his wife.

    At a press conference this week, Oscars executive producer Molly McNearney said: “We’re going to acknowledge it, and then we’re going to move on.”

    Organizers were criticized last year for allowing Smith to remain at the show after the attack, and even collect his best actor award.

    He was later banned from Oscars events for a decade, meaning he cannot present the best actress statuette this year, as is traditional.

    A “crisis team” has been set up for the first time, to immediately respond to any unexpected developments.

    READ MORE | ‘Larger than life’: Indian film-maker Rajamouli shoots for Oscar fame

    Blockbusters

    Partly thanks to “The Slap,” last year’s Oscars TV ratings improved from record lows, but remained well below their late 1990s peak, as interest in awards shows wanes and doomsayers continue to predict the demise of theatergoing.

    This year, organizers have brought back Jimmy Kimmel as host for a third stint, and hope that nominations for widely watched blockbusters like “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” will bring viewers back.

    In 1997, when the wildly popular “Titanic” won 11 Oscars, a record 57 million tuned in.

    “If the public cares about the movies, they care about the Oscars, relatively more,” said Feinberg.

    HOLLYWOOD: “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” a wacky sci-fi film featuring multiple universes, sex toys and hot dog fingers, enters Sunday’s Oscars ceremony as the highly unorthodox frontrunner for best picture.

    Academy bosses hope audiences will tune in to see whether the zany $100 million-grossing hit can claim Hollywood’s most coveted prize — and draw a line under Will Smith’s infamous slap at last year’s gala.

    “Everything Everywhere” — which leads the overall nominations count at 11 — follows a Chinese immigrant laundromat owner locked in battle with an inter-dimensional supervillain who happens to also be her own daughter.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    Michelle Yeoh’s heroine Evelyn must harness the power of her alter egos living in parallel universes, which feature hot dogs as human fingers, talking rocks and giant dildos used as weapons.

    The film has dominated nearly every awards show in Hollywood, with its charismatic, predominantly Asian stars becoming the feel-good story of the season.

    “It’s a group of very likable people behind the movie who it’s impossible to not be happy for,” Hollywood Reporter awards columnist Scott Feinberg told AFP.

    But although the quirky film is widely expected to dominate Oscars night, it could hit a stumbling block for best picture.

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences uses a special “preferential” voting system for that award, in which members rank films from best to worst.

    The approach punishes polarizing films.

    One Oscars voter who asked not to be identified told AFP that some members — particularly among the Academy’s older ranks — are “more divided about ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once.’”

    “It was very bold and unique, but not a traditional movie… it could be further down the ballot for a lot of people,” the voter said.

    If any rival can benefit, it is likely “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Netflix’s German-language World War I movie that dominated Britain’s BAFTAs.

    Another potential beneficiary is “Top Gun: Maverick,” the long-awaited sequel from Tom Cruise — no less a figure than Steven Spielberg recently said the actor and his film “might have saved the entire theatrical industry” from the pandemic.

    “It was that movie that brought audiences back to movie theaters,” said the anonymous Oscars voter.

    REVIEW | ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’: This multiversal madness is absurdist comedy at its best

    Toss-ups

    While the best picture race has a clear favorite, the acting contests are incredibly tight.

    “I can’t remember a year, at least in the time I’ve been doing it, where three of the four acting categories were true toss-ups,” said Feinberg.

    For best actress, Cate Blanchett had long been favorite to win a third Oscar for “Tar,” but “Everything Everywhere” love could propel Yeoh to a historic first win by an Asian woman in the category.

    “I think that Michelle Yeoh will probably win,” said the Oscars voter. “Cate Blanchett has already won twice… some people vote with that in the back of their mind.”

    Best actor is a three-horse race between Austin Butler (“Elvis), Brendan Fraser (“The Whale”) and Colin Farrell (“The Banshees of Inisherin”).

    And the supporting actress race may be even closer.

    Angela Bassett, the first Marvel superhero actor ever nominated with “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” is up against “Everything Everywhere” star Jamie Lee Curtis and “Banshees” actress Kerry Condon.

    One category does appear to be locked.

    Ke Huy Quan, the former child star of “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” and “The Goonies,” has won every best supporting actor prize going and looks near-certain to complete a comeback story for the ages.

    ‘The Slap’

    Hanging over the ceremony is the specter of “The Slap” — the shocking moment at last year’s Oscars when Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage for cracking a joke about his wife.

    At a press conference this week, Oscars executive producer Molly McNearney said: “We’re going to acknowledge it, and then we’re going to move on.”

    Organizers were criticized last year for allowing Smith to remain at the show after the attack, and even collect his best actor award.

    He was later banned from Oscars events for a decade, meaning he cannot present the best actress statuette this year, as is traditional.

    A “crisis team” has been set up for the first time, to immediately respond to any unexpected developments.

    READ MORE | ‘Larger than life’: Indian film-maker Rajamouli shoots for Oscar fame

    Blockbusters

    Partly thanks to “The Slap,” last year’s Oscars TV ratings improved from record lows, but remained well below their late 1990s peak, as interest in awards shows wanes and doomsayers continue to predict the demise of theatergoing.

    This year, organizers have brought back Jimmy Kimmel as host for a third stint, and hope that nominations for widely watched blockbusters like “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” will bring viewers back.

    In 1997, when the wildly popular “Titanic” won 11 Oscars, a record 57 million tuned in.

    “If the public cares about the movies, they care about the Oscars, relatively more,” said Feinberg.

  • ‘Stranger at the Gate’: An Oscar nominee on love after hate

    By Associated Press

    NEW YORK: When Richard McKinney was getting married last year, friends stepped in to help. Bibi Bahrami cooked Afghan dishes — from rice with carrots and raisins to chicken and beef — for the wedding guests. Her husband officiated the Islamic part of the ceremony.

    At first glance, nothing seems unusual about that off-camera wedding scene — until you know the on-camera story of how McKinney and the Bahramis met. The short version is this: Angry and filled with hate for Muslims, the broad-shouldered, tattooed veteran once wanted to bomb the Bahramis’ Islamic Center of Muncie in Indiana and inflict mass casualties on its congregation.

    The longer version of what followed, how the kindness he’s encountered from congregation members helped change not just his plans but his life’s course, is chronicled in “Stranger at the Gate.” The 30-minute movie is nominated for best documentary short film at the 95th Academy Awards, held this Sunday.

    “We have been friends for years,” Bahrami, a former Afghan refugee and a grandmother of seven (the eighth is on the way), said of McKinney in an interview. “He’s like family at this point.”

    McKinney acknowledged that their unlikely bond is probably “mind-boggling” to many. “This whole journey has been very surreal,” he said.

    His is a story of second chances and transformation. It’s also one of love conquering hate, said “Stranger at the Gate” director Joshua Seftel.

    “It’s easy to feel hopeless these days; when I saw this story, I thought, ‘Wow, maybe there is a reason to believe in humanity,’” Seftel said. “If these two people can be friends, then why can’t any of us?”

    Seftel came across McKinney’s story when he was working on a documentary series titled the “Secret Life of Muslims,” featuring American Muslims of diverse backgrounds and seeking to shatter negative stereotypes.

    “It’s easy to hate someone that we don’t know,” Seftel said. “The power of film and storytelling is that you can get to know someone through a film and it can change the way people think.”

    The inspiration for that series, he said, was rooted in his own memories of antisemitism that he’s encountered and being called names as a Jewish kid.

    “After 9/11, I saw that kind of hate toward Muslims and I just thought, ‘Maybe I can do something with my film work to try to help,’” he said.

    A poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted ahead of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in 2021 found that 53% of Americans have unfavourable views toward Islam.

    McKinney was once one of those — fervently so.

    The end of a long military career left him angry, bitter, feeling worthless and drinking too much. His “destiny” to die in combat and return home in a flag-draped coffin, a hero, never panned out. He would look at himself and wonder who he was.

    He focused his hate on Muslims, some of whom, he said, had been his battlefield enemies when he was serving overseas.

    “My plan was to detonate an IED,” or improvised explosive device, outside the Islamic center on a Friday when worshippers would be gathered, he said in the film. “I was hoping for at least 200 or more, dead, injured.”

    He started going to the mosque in 2009, introducing himself as someone who wanted to learn about Islam.

    “I didn’t trust them. … I figured they would have me in the basement with a sword to my throat,” he recalled in the film.

    In reality, he said, he was welcomed and embraced by congregation members.

    Bahrami, who viewers learn is a fan of country music and whose husband dubbed her “the Mother Teresa of the Muslim community,” recounted comforting McKinney and giving him attention. Eventually, he found the sense of belonging he so craved.

    “I said I need to be Muslim,” McKinney said.

    “Stranger at the Gate” is not the only nominee with a religious theme this year.

    For instance, “Women Talking,” nominated for best picture, is based on a Miriam Toews novel that itself is based on a horrifically true story at a Mennonite colony in Bolivia. Men from that community were convicted of the rape of scores of women and girls. In the movie, survivors wrestle with whether to leave or stay in their insulated religious community, where they will be pressured to forgive the perpetrators.

    Today, McKinney and Bahrami say they see the impact of the message behind their story in interactions with audiences after talks or screenings.

    “One of the best compliments I’ve ever received was when somebody told me after seeing the film that ‘You have given me a lot to think about,’” McKinney said. “I want people to think because we live in a society where, unfortunately, there’s a lot of followers.”

    Someone told him how hearing his story saved him as it made him think that everyone has a purpose to find.

    Bahrami, who Seftel said shows up at screenings with cookies for the audience, has had people hug her. Some have come up to her with tears, told her she gave them hope and courage or asked if they could “borrow” her for their own community.

    Others have posed a tough question: How did she forgive McKinney?

    She said that when she heard, in disbelief, of the plans McKinney once harbored, she invited him for dinner and asked him what he was thinking.

    “I’m a strong believer,” she said. “I think my faith is a big part of this forgiveness.”

    Another aspect, she added, was the vulnerability she saw in him and how apologetic he was.

    Bahrami recalled how when Seftel approached her to participate in the film, she was experiencing vulnerability of a different kind herself; she was in a coma. As she later considered his request while recovering, she had one thought:

    “God gave me a second life,” she said, “and if I die again, the story could live.”

    NEW YORK: When Richard McKinney was getting married last year, friends stepped in to help. Bibi Bahrami cooked Afghan dishes — from rice with carrots and raisins to chicken and beef — for the wedding guests. Her husband officiated the Islamic part of the ceremony.

    At first glance, nothing seems unusual about that off-camera wedding scene — until you know the on-camera story of how McKinney and the Bahramis met. The short version is this: Angry and filled with hate for Muslims, the broad-shouldered, tattooed veteran once wanted to bomb the Bahramis’ Islamic Center of Muncie in Indiana and inflict mass casualties on its congregation.

    The longer version of what followed, how the kindness he’s encountered from congregation members helped change not just his plans but his life’s course, is chronicled in “Stranger at the Gate.” The 30-minute movie is nominated for best documentary short film at the 95th Academy Awards, held this Sunday.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “We have been friends for years,” Bahrami, a former Afghan refugee and a grandmother of seven (the eighth is on the way), said of McKinney in an interview. “He’s like family at this point.”

    McKinney acknowledged that their unlikely bond is probably “mind-boggling” to many. “This whole journey has been very surreal,” he said.

    His is a story of second chances and transformation. It’s also one of love conquering hate, said “Stranger at the Gate” director Joshua Seftel.

    “It’s easy to feel hopeless these days; when I saw this story, I thought, ‘Wow, maybe there is a reason to believe in humanity,’” Seftel said. “If these two people can be friends, then why can’t any of us?”

    Seftel came across McKinney’s story when he was working on a documentary series titled the “Secret Life of Muslims,” featuring American Muslims of diverse backgrounds and seeking to shatter negative stereotypes.

    “It’s easy to hate someone that we don’t know,” Seftel said. “The power of film and storytelling is that you can get to know someone through a film and it can change the way people think.”

    The inspiration for that series, he said, was rooted in his own memories of antisemitism that he’s encountered and being called names as a Jewish kid.

    “After 9/11, I saw that kind of hate toward Muslims and I just thought, ‘Maybe I can do something with my film work to try to help,’” he said.

    A poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted ahead of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in 2021 found that 53% of Americans have unfavourable views toward Islam.

    McKinney was once one of those — fervently so.

    The end of a long military career left him angry, bitter, feeling worthless and drinking too much. His “destiny” to die in combat and return home in a flag-draped coffin, a hero, never panned out. He would look at himself and wonder who he was.

    He focused his hate on Muslims, some of whom, he said, had been his battlefield enemies when he was serving overseas.

    “My plan was to detonate an IED,” or improvised explosive device, outside the Islamic center on a Friday when worshippers would be gathered, he said in the film. “I was hoping for at least 200 or more, dead, injured.”

    He started going to the mosque in 2009, introducing himself as someone who wanted to learn about Islam.

    “I didn’t trust them. … I figured they would have me in the basement with a sword to my throat,” he recalled in the film.

    In reality, he said, he was welcomed and embraced by congregation members.

    Bahrami, who viewers learn is a fan of country music and whose husband dubbed her “the Mother Teresa of the Muslim community,” recounted comforting McKinney and giving him attention. Eventually, he found the sense of belonging he so craved.

    “I said I need to be Muslim,” McKinney said.

    “Stranger at the Gate” is not the only nominee with a religious theme this year.

    For instance, “Women Talking,” nominated for best picture, is based on a Miriam Toews novel that itself is based on a horrifically true story at a Mennonite colony in Bolivia. Men from that community were convicted of the rape of scores of women and girls. In the movie, survivors wrestle with whether to leave or stay in their insulated religious community, where they will be pressured to forgive the perpetrators.

    Today, McKinney and Bahrami say they see the impact of the message behind their story in interactions with audiences after talks or screenings.

    “One of the best compliments I’ve ever received was when somebody told me after seeing the film that ‘You have given me a lot to think about,’” McKinney said. “I want people to think because we live in a society where, unfortunately, there’s a lot of followers.”

    Someone told him how hearing his story saved him as it made him think that everyone has a purpose to find.

    Bahrami, who Seftel said shows up at screenings with cookies for the audience, has had people hug her. Some have come up to her with tears, told her she gave them hope and courage or asked if they could “borrow” her for their own community.

    Others have posed a tough question: How did she forgive McKinney?

    She said that when she heard, in disbelief, of the plans McKinney once harbored, she invited him for dinner and asked him what he was thinking.

    “I’m a strong believer,” she said. “I think my faith is a big part of this forgiveness.”

    Another aspect, she added, was the vulnerability she saw in him and how apologetic he was.

    Bahrami recalled how when Seftel approached her to participate in the film, she was experiencing vulnerability of a different kind herself; she was in a coma. As she later considered his request while recovering, she had one thought:

    “God gave me a second life,” she said, “and if I die again, the story could live.”

  • ‘Stranger at the Gate’: An Oscar nominee on love after hate

    By Associated Press

    NEW YORK: When Richard McKinney was getting married last year, friends stepped in to help. Bibi Bahrami cooked Afghan dishes — from rice with carrots and raisins to chicken and beef — for the wedding guests. Her husband officiated the Islamic part of the ceremony.

    At first glance, nothing seems unusual about that off-camera wedding scene — until you know the on-camera story of how McKinney and the Bahramis met. The short version is this: Angry and filled with hate for Muslims, the broad-shouldered, tattooed veteran once wanted to bomb the Bahramis’ Islamic Center of Muncie in Indiana and inflict mass casualties on its congregation.

    The longer version of what followed, how the kindness he’s encountered from congregation members helped change not just his plans but his life’s course, is chronicled in “Stranger at the Gate.” The 30-minute movie is nominated for best documentary short film at the 95th Academy Awards, held this Sunday.

    “We have been friends for years,” Bahrami, a former Afghan refugee and a grandmother of seven (the eighth is on the way), said of McKinney in an interview. “He’s like family at this point.”

    McKinney acknowledged that their unlikely bond is probably “mind-boggling” to many. “This whole journey has been very surreal,” he said.

    His is a story of second chances and transformation. It’s also one of love conquering hate, said “Stranger at the Gate” director Joshua Seftel.

    “It’s easy to feel hopeless these days; when I saw this story, I thought, ‘Wow, maybe there is a reason to believe in humanity,’” Seftel said. “If these two people can be friends, then why can’t any of us?”

    Seftel came across McKinney’s story when he was working on a documentary series titled the “Secret Life of Muslims,” featuring American Muslims of diverse backgrounds and seeking to shatter negative stereotypes.

    “It’s easy to hate someone that we don’t know,” Seftel said. “The power of film and storytelling is that you can get to know someone through a film and it can change the way people think.”

    The inspiration for that series, he said, was rooted in his own memories of antisemitism that he’s encountered and being called names as a Jewish kid.

    “After 9/11, I saw that kind of hate toward Muslims and I just thought, ‘Maybe I can do something with my film work to try to help,’” he said.

    A poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted ahead of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in 2021 found that 53% of Americans have unfavourable views toward Islam.

    McKinney was once one of those — fervently so.

    The end of a long military career left him angry, bitter, feeling worthless and drinking too much. His “destiny” to die in combat and return home in a flag-draped coffin, a hero, never panned out. He would look at himself and wonder who he was.

    He focused his hate on Muslims, some of whom, he said, had been his battlefield enemies when he was serving overseas.

    “My plan was to detonate an IED,” or improvised explosive device, outside the Islamic center on a Friday when worshippers would be gathered, he said in the film. “I was hoping for at least 200 or more, dead, injured.”

    He started going to the mosque in 2009, introducing himself as someone who wanted to learn about Islam.

    “I didn’t trust them. … I figured they would have me in the basement with a sword to my throat,” he recalled in the film.

    In reality, he said, he was welcomed and embraced by congregation members.

    Bahrami, who viewers learn is a fan of country music and whose husband dubbed her “the Mother Teresa of the Muslim community,” recounted comforting McKinney and giving him attention. Eventually, he found the sense of belonging he so craved.

    “I said I need to be Muslim,” McKinney said.

    “Stranger at the Gate” is not the only nominee with a religious theme this year.

    For instance, “Women Talking,” nominated for best picture, is based on a Miriam Toews novel that itself is based on a horrifically true story at a Mennonite colony in Bolivia. Men from that community were convicted of the rape of scores of women and girls. In the movie, survivors wrestle with whether to leave or stay in their insulated religious community, where they will be pressured to forgive the perpetrators.

    Today, McKinney and Bahrami say they see the impact of the message behind their story in interactions with audiences after talks or screenings.

    “One of the best compliments I’ve ever received was when somebody told me after seeing the film that ‘You have given me a lot to think about,’” McKinney said. “I want people to think because we live in a society where, unfortunately, there’s a lot of followers.”

    Someone told him how hearing his story saved him as it made him think that everyone has a purpose to find.

    Bahrami, who Seftel said shows up at screenings with cookies for the audience, has had people hug her. Some have come up to her with tears, told her she gave them hope and courage or asked if they could “borrow” her for their own community.

    Others have posed a tough question: How did she forgive McKinney?

    She said that when she heard, in disbelief, of the plans McKinney once harbored, she invited him for dinner and asked him what he was thinking.

    “I’m a strong believer,” she said. “I think my faith is a big part of this forgiveness.”

    Another aspect, she added, was the vulnerability she saw in him and how apologetic he was.

    Bahrami recalled how when Seftel approached her to participate in the film, she was experiencing vulnerability of a different kind herself; she was in a coma. As she later considered his request while recovering, she had one thought:

    “God gave me a second life,” she said, “and if I die again, the story could live.”

    NEW YORK: When Richard McKinney was getting married last year, friends stepped in to help. Bibi Bahrami cooked Afghan dishes — from rice with carrots and raisins to chicken and beef — for the wedding guests. Her husband officiated the Islamic part of the ceremony.

    At first glance, nothing seems unusual about that off-camera wedding scene — until you know the on-camera story of how McKinney and the Bahramis met. The short version is this: Angry and filled with hate for Muslims, the broad-shouldered, tattooed veteran once wanted to bomb the Bahramis’ Islamic Center of Muncie in Indiana and inflict mass casualties on its congregation.

    The longer version of what followed, how the kindness he’s encountered from congregation members helped change not just his plans but his life’s course, is chronicled in “Stranger at the Gate.” The 30-minute movie is nominated for best documentary short film at the 95th Academy Awards, held this Sunday.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “We have been friends for years,” Bahrami, a former Afghan refugee and a grandmother of seven (the eighth is on the way), said of McKinney in an interview. “He’s like family at this point.”

    McKinney acknowledged that their unlikely bond is probably “mind-boggling” to many. “This whole journey has been very surreal,” he said.

    His is a story of second chances and transformation. It’s also one of love conquering hate, said “Stranger at the Gate” director Joshua Seftel.

    “It’s easy to feel hopeless these days; when I saw this story, I thought, ‘Wow, maybe there is a reason to believe in humanity,’” Seftel said. “If these two people can be friends, then why can’t any of us?”

    Seftel came across McKinney’s story when he was working on a documentary series titled the “Secret Life of Muslims,” featuring American Muslims of diverse backgrounds and seeking to shatter negative stereotypes.

    “It’s easy to hate someone that we don’t know,” Seftel said. “The power of film and storytelling is that you can get to know someone through a film and it can change the way people think.”

    The inspiration for that series, he said, was rooted in his own memories of antisemitism that he’s encountered and being called names as a Jewish kid.

    “After 9/11, I saw that kind of hate toward Muslims and I just thought, ‘Maybe I can do something with my film work to try to help,’” he said.

    A poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research conducted ahead of the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in 2021 found that 53% of Americans have unfavourable views toward Islam.

    McKinney was once one of those — fervently so.

    The end of a long military career left him angry, bitter, feeling worthless and drinking too much. His “destiny” to die in combat and return home in a flag-draped coffin, a hero, never panned out. He would look at himself and wonder who he was.

    He focused his hate on Muslims, some of whom, he said, had been his battlefield enemies when he was serving overseas.

    “My plan was to detonate an IED,” or improvised explosive device, outside the Islamic center on a Friday when worshippers would be gathered, he said in the film. “I was hoping for at least 200 or more, dead, injured.”

    He started going to the mosque in 2009, introducing himself as someone who wanted to learn about Islam.

    “I didn’t trust them. … I figured they would have me in the basement with a sword to my throat,” he recalled in the film.

    In reality, he said, he was welcomed and embraced by congregation members.

    Bahrami, who viewers learn is a fan of country music and whose husband dubbed her “the Mother Teresa of the Muslim community,” recounted comforting McKinney and giving him attention. Eventually, he found the sense of belonging he so craved.

    “I said I need to be Muslim,” McKinney said.

    “Stranger at the Gate” is not the only nominee with a religious theme this year.

    For instance, “Women Talking,” nominated for best picture, is based on a Miriam Toews novel that itself is based on a horrifically true story at a Mennonite colony in Bolivia. Men from that community were convicted of the rape of scores of women and girls. In the movie, survivors wrestle with whether to leave or stay in their insulated religious community, where they will be pressured to forgive the perpetrators.

    Today, McKinney and Bahrami say they see the impact of the message behind their story in interactions with audiences after talks or screenings.

    “One of the best compliments I’ve ever received was when somebody told me after seeing the film that ‘You have given me a lot to think about,’” McKinney said. “I want people to think because we live in a society where, unfortunately, there’s a lot of followers.”

    Someone told him how hearing his story saved him as it made him think that everyone has a purpose to find.

    Bahrami, who Seftel said shows up at screenings with cookies for the audience, has had people hug her. Some have come up to her with tears, told her she gave them hope and courage or asked if they could “borrow” her for their own community.

    Others have posed a tough question: How did she forgive McKinney?

    She said that when she heard, in disbelief, of the plans McKinney once harbored, she invited him for dinner and asked him what he was thinking.

    “I’m a strong believer,” she said. “I think my faith is a big part of this forgiveness.”

    Another aspect, she added, was the vulnerability she saw in him and how apologetic he was.

    Bahrami recalled how when Seftel approached her to participate in the film, she was experiencing vulnerability of a different kind herself; she was in a coma. As she later considered his request while recovering, she had one thought:

    “God gave me a second life,” she said, “and if I die again, the story could live.”