Grueling revenge movie "The Revenant" emerged as the Oscar front-runner on Thursday in nominations that pit big-budget movies against small personal dramas and once again shut actors of color out of the industry's biggest honors.
Oscar nominees for Best Actor are shown in this combination of file photos (L to R) Bryan Cranston, Matt Damon, Michael Fassbender, Eddie Redmayne, and Leonardo DiCaprio.
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The hashtag #OscarsSoWhite was quickly revived on Twitter. It had emerged last year, when only white actors received nods.
Will Smith, who stars in football injury drama "Concussion," and Idris Elba from "Beasts of No Nation" were among the black actors who were not nominated this year. The black cast and director of hip hop biopic "Straight Outta Compton" were also left out of the race.
"In a year with an extraordinary number of great performances by black actors that were embraced by audiences and embraced by critics, for them all to get ignored is tragic,” said Reginald Hudlin, who will produce the Feb. 28 awards ceremony hosted by comedian Chris Rock.
"The Revenant," an ambitious pioneer-era saga, led with 12 nominations, including best picture, best actor for Leonardo DiCaprio and best director for Mexico's Alejandro Inarritu, who won the top Oscar last year for the dark showbiz comedy "Birdman."
"The Revenant" will compete with gritty action adventure "Mad Max: Fury Road" and space film "The Martian." All three boast budgets above $100 million.
The best picture nominees also include independent films "Room," "Spotlight" and "Brooklyn" as well as studio productions "The Big Short" and "Bridge of Spies," which had budgets in the $20 million to $40 million range.
Amid the excitement from nominees, others in Hollywood were nursing their wounds. "Straight Outta Compton" and "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" were left out of the best picture race, while Ridley Scott, director of best picture nominee "The Martian," did not make the grade in the director category.
20th Century Fox (FOXA.O) led the studios with a total of 30 nominations, including for "The Revenant," "The Martian" and "Joy," as well as its Fox Searchlight independent film arm's "Brooklyn" and "Youth." The tally also includes six nods for "Bridge of Spies," which it shared with Walt Disney Co (DIS.N).
FIRST OSCAR FOR DICAPRIO?
"The Revenant," about a fur trapper mauled by a bear and left for dead by his companions, brought nominations for DiCaprio, who has never won an Oscar, and supporting actor for Tom Hardy.
"We gave it our all on this film, and this appreciation from the Academy means a lot to me and my colleagues who made it possible," Inarritu said in a statement. "Champagne and Mezcal will run tonight!"
The Oscars, chosen by the 6,000 members of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, can have up to 10 best picture nominees, but voters selected just eight.
While diversity was lacking in the acting race, the films nominated reflect a variety of genres.
"Look at the range of movies we're discussing," film critic Leonard Maltin said. "A lesbian love story, a brutal story of survival and everything in between."
Previous Oscar winners Cate Blanchett and Jennifer Lawrence returned to the best actress race, which has no obvious front-runners. At 25, Lawrence, is the youngest four-time acting nominee.
This year, she was recognized for playing the Miracle Mop inventor in "Joy." Blanchett was nominated for lesbian romance "Carol", although the movie was overlooked for best picture.
The best actress field also includes rising star Brie Larson for "Room"; veteran Charlotte Rampling, who is hoping British drama "45 Years" will bring her first Oscar; and Saoirse Ronan for Irish immigrant tale "Brooklyn."
Sylvester Stallone, enjoying a new wave of popularity, scored a supporting actor nod for reprising his career-defining role as boxer Rocky Balboa in "Creed."
"I was not expecting it ... especially at this time in my life," the 69-year-old actor said in a statement.
Director Inarritu will face off with George Miller for "Mad Max"; Adam McKay for "The Big Short," about the 2007 U.S. financial collapse; Lenny Abrahamson for "Room"; and Tom McCarthy for "Spotlight," about the Boston Globe's probe into child abuse by Catholic priests.
Source: Reuters