Trivia Collection for the 96th Academy Awards
Saturday, March 16, 2024 at 8:47AM
NATHANIEL R in Ben Proudfoot, Billie Eilish, Colman Domingo, Godzilla Minus One, Hayao Miyazaki, Hoyte van Hoytema, Oscar Trivia, Oscars (23), Ukraine

Here's what we came up with as the dust settles from Oscar night. Let us know in the comments if there's any other interesting trivia bits you noticed from this season. 

PICTURE / DIRECTOR

Oppenheimer is the third consecutive movie to be released before fall film festival season to win the Best Picture Oscar (after Coda and Everything Everywhere All At Once)... so perhaps distributors can learn to start trusting that movies can be released at any time and still factor into awards season? It's also the first movie to go straight to theaters (no festivals) to win Best Picture in ages (well, since The Departed in 2006)

• Three female-directed films Anatomy of a Fall, Barbie, and Past Lives were nominated in Best Picture which is an all time record...

The previous record was two films which happened four times before, all in the "expanded era" first in 2009 (An Education and The Hurt Locker *which won), then in 2010 (Winter's Bone and The Kids are All Right, both of which incidentally had the lowest nomination counts) and then again in 2020 (Nomadland which won and Promising Young Woman2021 (Power of the Dog and Coda, which happened to be the two frontrunners with the latter winning). This will happen more and more of course with the number of female directors rising exponentially from 20 years ago and with the expansion of Best Picture.

• Oppenheimer is the fifth picture to win both Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor (the previous times were Going My Way, The Best Years of Our Lives, Mystic River, Dallas Buyers Club

• Best Picture nominations for The Zone of Interest, Past Lives, and Anatomy of a Fall, make this the most "foreign" language focused lineup ever. It's an arguable record though since Past Lives and Anatomy of a Fall have significant amounts of English language but it feels like something... More proof that the Academy is more internationally minded than they once were

• With his 10th nomination for Best Director, Martin Scorsese is now the second most-nominated director of all time just two shy of William Wyler (who received 12 nominations and 3 wins during his career). Scorsese was previously tied with Steven Spielberg for second place but now Spielberg is a solo third place. Scorsese also now holds the dubious distinction of being the only filmmaker to have more than one movie (and he has three) to score double-digit nominations that went on to lose everything. The others are Gangs of New York, and The Irishman

ACTING

• With her fifth nod, Annette Bening has now been nominated for acting across four consecutive decades (1990s-2020s) which is not unheard of but still very impressive. She also lost two of those five races to actresses winning their second Oscars (Hilary Swank and Emma Stone). When will it be her year? Or will she have to make do with an Honorary?  Meryl Streep (1970s-2010s) and Denzel Washington (1980s-2020s) currently hold the most consecutive decades with an acting nomination record with five each. Can Annette pull off a nomination in the 2030s to tie them or will Streep and Washington extend their records? ;) 

...in this same vein in terms of careers being marathons rather than sprints, Robert De Niro now holds the record of the longest stretch between first nomination and last. This puts Katharine Hepburn in second place of all time Oscar longevity.

  1. De Niro - 49 years (The Godfather Part II to Killers of the Flower Moon)
  2. Hepburn -48 years (Morning Glory to On Golden Pond)

• Robert Downey Jr is the first previous regular cast member of Saturday Night Live to win an acting Oscar and the sixth to be nominated. He was in the cast for one season (1985-1986). The five other regular cast members who have been acting nominees at the Oscars: Dan Aykroyd, Joan Cusack, Laurie Metcalf, Eddie Murphy, and Randy Quaid (the latter  being the only cast member who was an Oscar-nominee before his time on the show).  

• In the history of "longest gap between Oscar nods" Jodie Foster joins the ranks since 2023's Nyad proved her first nod since 1994's Nell. That's a 29 year gap which is not a record but still impressive! The longest gap between nods are (runner up) Henry Fonda with 41 years between The Grapes of Wrath (1940)and On Golden Pond (1981) and the champ, Judd Hirsch with 42 years between Ordinary People (1980) and The Fabelmans (2022). 

• With his eighth nomination for acting, Robert De Niro moves up a notch in the all time most nominated male actors list, defeating Dustin Hoffman (with whom he was previously tied) to find himself in a five-way tie with  a few deceased legends: Peter O'Toole, Marlon Brando, and Jack Lemmon. The only male actors with more acting nominations in the history of the Oscars are Al Pacino, Denzel Washington, Spencer Tracy, Paul Newman (9 each), Laurence Olivier (10), and Jack Nicholson (12).

• Colman Domingo is only the second out gay male actor to be nominated playing an out gay male character (the first was Sir Ian McKellen for Gods and Monsters, 1998) at the Oscars*. Meanwhile Sterling K Brown (American Fiction) joined a very long line of straight actors that have been nominated playing gay characters. *Some would argue that Jaye Davidson belongs here but nobody knew who he was or anything about him the season of The Crying Game.

• Lily Gladstone is the first Native American to score a nomination in any acting category. The previous indigenous acting nominees were all from outside the U.S. 

CRAFT CATEGORIES

• Siblings Billie Eilish and Finneas O'Connell won their second Oscars in the Best Original Song category (their first was for "No Time To Die" from No Time To Die) for Barbie's "What Was I Made For?". They're now the youngest and second youngest winner to have won two Oscars at ages 22 and 26, respectively. The previous record for youngest to win two Oscars was held by Luise Rainer who won two back-to-back Oscars in Best Actress for The Great Ziegfeld (1937) and The Good Earth (1938). She was 28 at the time. 

Godzilla Minus One is the first foreign-language film to win the Best Visual Effects Oscar. It's also the first time Japanese artists have been nominated for or won in this category. The only previous Asian winner of this category is Doug Chiang, a Taiwanese-American who won for Death Becomes Her (1992). 

The Zone of Interest is the first foreign film to win the Sound Oscar. 

• Documentary Feature winner 20 Days in Mariupol (2023) marks the first time a Ukrainian person or film has won any Oscar. The previous Ukrainian nominees were also both in this category: Winter on Fire (2015) and A House Made of Splinters (2022) 

• Hoyte van Hoytema (Oppenheimer) who is Dutch-Swedish (though he was born in Switzerland) is the first Dutch person to be nominated for or win Best Cinematography and the third Swede to win after Sven Nykvist (Cries and Whispers, Fanny and Alexander) and Linus Sandgren (La La Land).

• Japanese legend Hayao Miyazaki is the first non-American to win the Best Animated Feature category twice, first with Spirited Away (2002) and now with The Boy and the Heron (2023). He's also the only winner EVER of this category with a hand-drawn film. Oscar voters prefer computer-animated films (sigh). 

• Ben Proudfoot received his second Documentary Short win for The Last Repair Shop (his first was for The Queen of Basketball). One more win and he'll time with the all time leader Charles Guggenheim who won thrice (Robert Kennedy Remembered, The Johnston Flood, A Time for Justice between the 1960s and the 1990s) 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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