Thursday, January 22, 2026

Oscar Nominations 2026

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The nominations are out!  And they look...a lot like the Critics' Choice nominations.  This is to be expected.  However!  There was a lot more love for horror movies this year, which is a hugely positive development.  

Best Picture

Bugonia
F1
Frankenstein
Hamnet
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
The Secret Agent
Sentimental Value
Sinners
Train Dreams

F1 is a little surprising for Best Picture but the rest are basically the same as Critics' Choice and Golden Globes.  I'm already two up, so yay, me.

Best Director

Chloe Zhao - Hamnet
Josh Safdie - Marty Supreme
Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another
Joachim Trier - Sentimental Value
Ryan Coogler - Sinners

Again, no surprises.  This category has historically been dominated by the same names over and over so it's nice to see some relatively new faces.  Not really refuting the #OscarsSoWhite but Zhao is pulling double duty as both the token woman and a POC.

Best Actor

Timothee Chalamet - Marty Supreme
Leonardo DiCaprio - One Battle After Another
Ethan Hawke - Blue Moon
Michael B. Jordan - Sinners
Wagner Moura - The Secret Agent

In a just world, Jordan walks away with this.  It's a dual performance, meaning he literally did twice the work.

Best Actress

Jessie Buckley - Hamnet
Rose Byrne - If I Had Legs, I'd Kick You
Kate Hudson - Song Sung Blue
Renate Reinsve - Sentimental Value
Emma Stone - Bugonia

As usual, this is a much more competitive category.  Buckley is the favorite but you can't discount Byrne or Stone.  Hudson is a surprise contender, sneaking the spot from Ariana Grande or Cynthia Erivo, I suspect.

Best Supporting Actor

Benecio Del Toro - One Battle After Another
Jacob Elordi - Frankenstein
Delroy Lindo - Sinners
Sean Penn - One Battle After Another
Stellan Skarsgard - Sentimental Value

I would love to see Lindo win for this.  He gave a phenomenal performance and he is overdue to be recognized.

Best Supporting Actress

Elle Fanning - Sentimental Value
Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas - Sentimental Value
Amy Madigan - Weapons
Wunmi Mosaku - Sinners
Teyana Taylor - One Battle After Another

Interesting that Fanning got put in Supporting when she was up for Lead in the Critics' Choice and Golden Globes.  Madigan is the big upset inclusion and it would be great (for all horror fans) if she won but I don't think it's super likely.  Likewise, it's great to see Mosaku (who has quietly been putting out great performance after great performance for years) get recognized but that's probably all she's getting.

Best Adapted Screenplay

Bugonia
Frankenstein
Hamnet
One Battle After Another
Train Dreams

No surprises here.

Best Original Screenplay

Blue Moon
It Was Just an Accident
Marty Supreme
Sentimental Value
Sinners

My fear is that Sinners will only win here, like Straight Outta Compton, because the Academy is more interested in looking progressive than actually being progressive. Hope I'm wrong.

Best Animated Feature

Arco
Elio
KPop Demon Hunters
Little Amelie or the Character of Rain
Zootopia 2

This is the exact same lineup as the Critics' Choice.

Best International Feature

The Secret Agent - Brazil
It Was Just an Accident - France
Sentimental Value - Norway
Sirat - Spain
The Voice of Hind Rajab - Tunisia

Lockstep with the other awards.

Best Documentary Feature

The Alabama Solution
Come See Me in the Good Light
Cutting Through Rocks
Mr. Nobody Against Putin
The Perfect Neighbor

The only two I've heard anything about are Come and See Me, which looks depressing as fuck, and Perfect Neighbor, which is on Netflix.

Best Animated Short

Butterfly
Forevergreen
The Girl Who Cried Pearls
Retirement Plan
The Three Sisters

Best Casting

Nina Gold - Hamnet
Jennifer Venditti - Marty Supreme
Cassandra Kulukundis - One Battle After Another
Gabriel Domingues - The Secret Agent
Francine Maisler - Sinners

This is a new category and interestingly, a career field dominated by women.  I feel like it's going to go however the nominees for Best Picture go, but we'll see.

Best Cinematography

Frankenstein - Dan Laustsen
Marty Supreme - Darius Khondji
One Battle After Another - Michael Bauman
Sinners - Autumn Durald Arkapaw
Train Dreams - Adolpho Veloso

All new names this year.  Exciting.

Best Costume Design

Avatar: Fire and Ash
Frankenstein
Hamnet
Marty Supreme
Sinners

Okay, so I have some quibbles with Avatar being included here.  Nearly the entire movie is CGI, so exactly which costumes are we highlighting here?  Like, I get it, but I am side-eyeing it.

Best Documentary Short

All the Empty Rooms
Armed Only with a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud
Children No More: "Were and Are Gone"
The Devil is Busy
Perfectly a Strangeness

Best Film Editing

F1
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
Sentimental Value
Sinners

Best Live-Action Short

Butcher's Stain
A Friend of Dorothy
Jane Austen's Period Drama
The Singers
Two People Exchanging Saliva

Best Makeup and Hairstyling

Frankenstein
Kokohu
Sinners
The Smashing Machine
The Ugly Stepsister

Several surprises here.  More horror!  The Smashing Machine kind of feels like even more of a snub, somehow, by being included here.  And I've never even heard of Kokohu.  No idea.

Best Original Score

Bugonia - Jerskin Fendrix
Frankenstein - Alexandre Desplat
Hamnet - Max Richter
One Battle After Another - Jonny Greenwood
Sinners - Ludwig Goransson

Best Original Song

"Dear Me" - Diane Warren: Relentless
"Golden" - KPop Demon Hunters
"I Lied to You" - Sinners
"Sweet Dreams of Joy" - Viva Verdi!
"Train Dreams" - Train Dreams

Couple of odd little inclusions considering the distinct absence of Wicked: For Good.

Best Production Design

Frankenstein
Hamnet
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
Sinners

All these categories are the same movies.  It just makes for such a boring ceremony.

Best Sound

F1
Frankenstein
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Sirat

Best Visual Effects

Avatar: Fire and Ash
F1
Jurassic World: Rebirth
The Lost Bus

Sinners

Rebirth flopped super hard so I am surprised it's included here.  Like the Academy thought it should have been a blockbuster because it's a franchise.

So there you have it.  Ceremony is March 15th so we have a little less than two months to get everything in bold watched.  The good news is that, thanks to all the repeats, we've knocked out a few of the major contenders already.  

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Speed Racer (2008)

  I thought I had reviewed this before but I can't find any evidence to support that.  This flopped really hard when it came out but I think it is due for a reevaluation.

Speed Racer (Emile Hirsch) comes from a line of racecar drivers and mechanics, a legacy tainted by the apparent criminality and sudden death of his older brother, Rex (Scott Porter).  Speed is courted as a driver for Royalton Industries, but chooses to stay with his family company, which pisses off Royalton's CEO, Arnold Royalton (Roger Allam).  Royalton uses his wealth and underworld connections to threaten Speed's family, forcing the teen to work with Inspector Detector (Benno Fürmann) of the Corporate Crimes Division and Racer X (Matthew Fox), a mysterious masked racer who frequently goes undercover, to enter a dangerous cross-country rally, the Casa Cristo, the same race that killed Rex.  Winning means a chance to expose Royalton for the shameless crook that he is, but losing is certain death.

This movie is like having melted Starbursts candies poured directly into your retinas.  To call it a live-action cartoon movie is to do injustice to the sheer visual splendor of it.  The plot is a little silly, sure, but it is based on a children's cartoon from the 60s.  Who cares?  It is amazing.  Possibly in the I've-eaten-too-much-sugar-and-now-I-can-see-sounds-right-before-I-technicolor-barf kind of way.  

The chimp is legitimately terrifying if you know anything about chimps, but that's a different kind of post.

Anyway, Speed Racer is so fun and so colorful and fast that you will either immediately love it or turn it off after three minutes.  It's streaming on Kanopy, which is free if you have a library card.  I own it because my cousin bought it and hated it, so she gave it to me.  Best ADHD present ever.

Monday, January 12, 2026

Anyone But You (2023)

  I'm just going to say it:  I don't get the Sydney Sweeney fascination.  Sure, she's got a great rack, but she's not particularly charismatic.  

After a disastrous one night stand, Ben (Glen Powell) and Bea (Sydney Sweeney) find themselves stuck together at a destination wedding for mutual friends.  In order to keep the peace, they agree to fake a relationship but soon find that feelings are complicated.

This is meant to be an updated version of Much Ado About Nothing that cuts out all the stuff that isn't Benedict and Beatrice, but there's a reason those are side characters.  They cannot carry a whole movie on banter.  Maybe other actors could and Powell is certainly game (although he really gets screwed by the script) but there's no chemistry and the bickering is forced and juvenile.  Ironically, the side characters really shine.  Alexandra Shipp, GaTa, and Bryan Brown understood the assignment and carried on like loyal soldiers.  

Again, I'm not a rom-com person so feel free to take my opinion with a grain of salt, but this bears no comparison to the Branagh-Thompson movie.  It is streaming on Hulu, though.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Wicked: For Good (2025)

  So there were actually THREE supernatural musicals released in 2025 but this one I didn't see until after the new year.  

Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo), now branded the Wicked Witch of the West, has been trying to change the hearts and minds of Ozians to make them see that their Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) is a con man, but she can't compete with Madame Morrible's (Michelle Yeoh) propaganda machine.  Madame M has positioned Glinda (Ariana Grande) to charm and distract the good people with a huge, glamorous wedding to Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey), even though they weren't engaged, little realizing that news alone was enough to strike a blow to several hearts: Elphaba, who was secretly in love with Fiyero, and Boq (Ethan Slater), the Munchkin man in love with Glinda.  Boq's revelation of his feelings sends Elphaba's sister, Nessarose (Marissa Bode) into a jealous rage, setting in motion a chain of events that leads to a cyclone and the beginning of a new story.

The movie makes explicit some plot aspects that the stage musical kept more subtle, which I don't hate, and the music is of course fantastic.  Still not sure why everything has to be three hours long now, but whatever.  I watched this with friends and it was a great time.  We made macarons in pink and green.  It was a whole thing.  If you don't like musicals or the first one wasn't your thing, go ahead a skip this one.  It is strictly for the fans.  It's available on Amazon to buy or rent.  I'm obviously going to buy it but I think I'll wait to see if there's a double-disc option.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Master Z: Ip Man Legacy (2018)

  You have no idea how long it has taken me to actually finish this movie.  I started trying in July of last year.  Content warning:  some blood, overdose, drug use

Cheung Tin-chi (Max Zhang) was the new Grandmaster of Wing Chun until he challenged and got his ass beat by Ip Man (Donnie Yen) behind closed doors.  Humiliated, Cheung sold out as a gangster for hire for awhile, then gave up crime to open a grocery store.  He runs afoul of local tough guy Tso Sai-Kit (Kevin Cheng) on a delivery when he accidentally interrupts Tso's harassment of Julia (Liu Yan) and Nana (Chrissie Chau).  Tso firebombs the grocery store in retaliation.  Julia gets Cheung a job at her brother's bar, and Tso starts selling heroin because he's mad at his sister (Michelle Yeoh).  

This is not a great movie.  The plot is a pastiche of like 6 other, better films.  But it is a very good martial arts wire fu movie.  The legendary action choreographer Cory Yuen Woo-Ping directed it and every fight scene is great.  You just kind of have to slog along in between them while it tries to plot at you.  It does feature a surprisingly good performance from Dave Bautista, like way better than his cardboard cutout character deserved.  He totally could have phoned that in but didn't.  And his fight with Max Zhang is hilarious because of their size differences.  It reminded me of Kate Bishop going up against Kingpin in the Hawkeye series.  

I started trying to watch this on the Roku Channel but the ad breaks were super annoying.  Then it was on Netflix but my subtitles were messed up.  And I finally finished it on Hulu.  A journey was taken.  Just watch it on Hulu.

Monday, January 5, 2026

The Mouse and His Child (1977)

  Still working my way through Christmas.  Content warning:  cartoon violence?, some indefinable thing but you should definitely watch it before you show it to your kids

A clockwork mouse (Alan Barzman) and his child (Marcy Swenson) are joined by the hands.  After accidentally falling into the trash, they wind up at the dump and under the power of Manny the rat (Peter Ustinov), who uses discarded windup toys as slave labor.  He wants the mouse and child to rob a bank holding his favorite sweets, but is foiled when the henchman he sends with them is too stupid and allows Mouse and Child to escape.  They wander through the land, searching for a muskrat (Bob Holt) who can allegedly give them the power to be self-winding.  

This is some late 70s animated nightmare fuel!  And on top of that, there's the existential crisis of the central plot.  Zero reason this had to go so hard!  Fully insane that there's a clock that tells the characters that their paths in life are predetermined and immutable.  The whole movie is on YouTube on what appears to be a VHS transfer, which frankly only adds to the fever dream of it all.  Vet this before you show it to your kids.  I'm so serious.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas (1977)

  I watched this for Movie Club several weeks ago but didn't get a chance to post it, with all that was going on.  

Emmet Otter (Jerry Nelson) and his Ma (Marilyn Sokol) live on the river.  Ma takes in washing and Emmet does odd jobs.  Both hear about a talent show where the prize is $50.  That would be a significant sum, so they each independently sign up, Ma as a singer and Emmet with some locals in a band, without telling the other, each figuring that a win will allow them to buy the other one a present.

If you ever thought "Gee, I wish the Muppets could deal with abject poverty and be depressed," 1) what the fuck is wrong with you and 2) here's your movie!

This is the Jim Henson version of O. Henry's "Gift of the Magi" short story.  It is still pretty heart-warming but it is also a huge downer.  But like, in an important life lessons kind of way.  All the music is (of course) by Paul Williams and Kermit even makes a guest appearance.  It's a legitimate Muppet movie that I had somehow never seen.  I don't think I'd rush to watch it again, but I would definitely recommend it to people looking for kind of an off-beat Christmas movie to show their kids.

I think I had to actually rent this one from Amazon.