An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link The nominations for the 97th Academy Awards were announced on January 23, with the ceremony itself on March 2. This year's crop of nominated ...
Nominations for the 97th annual Academy Awards were announced Thursday morning, with "Emilia Pérez," "A Complete Unknown" and "Conclave" at the top of the heap in nominations.
This year's Oscar best picture nominees have had different lives at theaters so far. “Dune: Part Two” and “Wicked” are among last year's blockbusters that will compete for film's top prize when the Academy Awards are held on March 2.
The Motion Picture Academy has announced winners and set a new ceremony date for the 2025 Sci -Tech Awards including a statuette for Closed Captioning.
This morning’s nominations saw some real shake ups, with new favorites emerging and plenty of interesting picks.
Co-hosts Bruce Miller and Terry Lipshetz discuss the nominees in the biggest categories of the 97th Academy Awards, which will be broadcast on March 2.
The Best Costume Design nominations are “A Complete Unknown,” “Conclave,” “Gladiator II,” “Nosferatu,” and “Wicked,” which is the favorite. However, “A Complete Unknown” the surprise entry, could be a dark horse.
The 49th Student Academy Awards Ceremony will take place on Thursday, October 20, at the David Geffen Theater in Los Angeles. That evening, the winners will receive their medal placements – gold, silver, bronze – in the four award categories.
The Netflix film picked up 13 Oscar nominations including best actress (Karla Sofía Gascón), best director (Jacques Audiard) and best supporting actress (Zoe Saldaña) on Thursday.
The Oscars telecast is a three-hour infomercial for the movie business. But Hollywood is hardly in a celebratory mood.
The movie earned several Academy Award nominations, and passed a major global box office milestone as it continued its overseas roll-out. Conclave pretty much concluded its domestic run before being launched internationally,
An official statement from the Academy did not say ‘Fire! Fire! Heheheheheheh! Fire!’