All at Once Everywhere,
by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, has earned 11 Oscar nominations.
Behind them are
Lost Souls by Inisherin,
by Martin McDonagh, and
All Quiet on the Front,
by Edward Berger, with nine nominations;
Inisherin's Banshee,
by Martin McDonagh, with eight, and
Elvis,
by Baz Luhrrman, with seven.
In a year in which there were no great favourites, a film as special and different as Everything at the same time everywhere has managed to place itself first with its commitment to a different and delirious science fiction.
By the way, four of its interpreters have been nominated.
Michelle Yeoh is up against Cate Blanchett for Best Actress for
Tár's Conductor;
Michelle Williams, who plays Spielberg's mother on
The Fabelmans;
Andrea Riseborough, for
To Leslie
(a small film that in recent days has received numerous accolades from Riseborough's fellow performers), and the Spanish-Cuban Ana de Armas, the only nomination that
Blonde has achieved.
Argentina, 1985,
by Santiago Mitre, is in the category for best international film.
The quintet is completed by the Belgian
Close,
by Lukas Dhont;
the Irish
The Quiet Girl,
by Colm Bairéad;
the Polish Eo, by Jerzy Skolimowski, and the German All Quiet on the Front, by Edward Berger, Netflix's bet, which has fared very well in this reading of nominations: it has obtained nine nominations without having any finalists in the categories of interpretation
This noon, the nominations for the 95th edition of the Oscars have been read, which will be delivered on Sunday, March 12, 2023 at the Dolby Theater and will present the comedian Jimmy Kimmel for the third time.
It will be the first time in the last five years that the awards have a single master of ceremonies.
The Hollywood Film Academy has experimented with the format of the gala in the face of falling audiences.
The last solo presenter, in 2018, was precisely Kimmel, a veteran comedian in front of ABC's
late night
(the chain that broadcasts the awards).