Hot topics close

Oscar nominations 2022: Netflix’s The Power of the Dog leads the pack

Oscar nominations 2022 Netflixs The Power of the Dog leads the pack
Jane Campion-directed movie gets 12 nods, with Dune, West Side Story and Belfast all in hot pursuit

The frontrunner for this year’s Oscars is Netflix’s Western psychodrama The Power of the Dog, a nominee in 12 categories including Best Picture. Among a field of big hitters announced today there is also recognition for sci-fi blockbuster Dune (10 nominations), Steven Spielberg’s West Side Story (seven) and Belfast, Kenneth Branagh’s coming-of-age story (seven).

The Academy would love the 2022 awards to be a comeback story. Last year, a low-key, Covid-affected ceremony saw a dramatic fall-off in TV ratings. The hope is that the return of a grand bash filled with star names and box-office successes will help draw back public attention.

Among the Best Picture contenders, The Power of the Dog reached most of its audience through streaming. Some rivals such as Dune have pulled significant crowds into cinemas, but West Side Story delivered a flat commercial performance despite enthusiastic reviews. Other nominees include Belfast; King Richard, biopic of Richard Williams, father and coach of Venus and Serena; Japanese breakout hit Drive My Car and another Netflix title, comedy cause célèbre Don’t Look Up.

Jane Campion, nominated as Best Director for The Power of the Dog, was previously shortlisted in 1994 for The Piano. A victory at next month’s ceremony would make this the first time a woman took the prize two years running (Chloé Zhao having won in 2021 for Nomadland), yet Campion remains the only woman nominated in a category of five.

In the acting categories, more recognition for The Power of the Dog finds Benedict Cumberbatch nominated for Best Actor alongside bookies’ favourite Will Smith, up for his performance in King Richard. The leading contender for Best Actress remains Nicole Kidman, cast as Lucille Ball in biopic Being the Ricardos. The Power of the Dog features too in both supporting categories, with nominations for Kodi Smit-McPhee, Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst.

Netflix will be hoping the 2022 Oscars make a good news story every bit as much as the Academy after last month’s dizzying fall in the price of its stock. Aside from Campion’s film, the streamer has four nominations for Don’t Look Up and a further two for Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical tick, tick . . . BOOM!. Apple’s filmmaking arm takes three nominations each for The Tragedy of Macbeth and the poignant comedy-drama CODA (nominated for Best Picture).

Among the old-school studios, Warner Bros may see partial vindication in the many nominations of Dune after facing anger from leading film-makers over its policy of releasing films in cinemas and on its HBO Max streaming platform simultaneously. As a big box-office hit, the movie’s prominence may also stem criticism that the Oscars now mostly reward films little seen by audiences.

For the Academy, there will be further relief if it avoids a repeat of the controversies around diversity that have beset the awards in recent years. The next step will be to try to restore TV audiences and a general sense of cultural heft. In that respect, some planning detail is still needed. As the Oscars announced their nominations, it was still unknown who — if anyone — will actually host the ceremony on March 27.

The nominees in the four main awards categories are as follows:

Best Picture

BelfastKenneth Branagh’s autobiographical tale of a Protestant family living through the Troubles in the late 1960s

© PA

CODASian Heder’s drama about a hearing teenager who is a child of deaf parents

© AP

Don’t Look UpAdam McKay’s satire about an impending global disaster

© NIKO TAVERNISE/NETFLIX

Drive My CarJapanese drama about a theatre director dealing with loss, regret and Uncle Vanya

© Landmark Media / Alamy 

DuneBig-budget adaptation of Frank Herbert’s sci-fi novel

© 2020 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

King RichardBiopic of Venus and Serena Williams’ father and coach starring Will Smith

Licorice PizzaSunny tale of first love in 1970s California by Paul Thomas Anderson

© 2021 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Nightmare AlleyGuillermo del Toro’s 1940s-set film noir about grisly sideshows and bad people

© Kerry Hayes

The Power of the DogJane Campion’s story of macho bravado and ambiguous sexuality in the Old West

© KIRSTY GRIFFIN/NETFLIX © 2021

West Side StorySteven Spielberg’s lavish and faithful adaptation of Sondheim’s musical

© Photo by Niko Tavernise
Best Director

Paul Thomas Anderson, Licorice Pizza

© Landmark Media/ Alamy

Kenneth Branagh, Belfast

© AP

Jane Campion, The Power of the Dog

© AP

Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Drive My Car

© Abaca Press / Alamy 

Steven Spielberg, West Side Story

© Everett Collection Inc / Alamy
Best Actor

Javier Bardem, Being the Ricardos

© Glen Wilson/ © 2021 Amazon Content Services LLC

Benedict Cumberbatch, The Power of the Dog

© COURTESY OF NETFLIX

Andrew Garfield, tick, tick . . . BOOM!

© MACALL POLAY/NETFLIX © 2021

Will Smith, King Richard

© AP

Denzel Washington, The Tragedy of Macbeth

© Alison Rosa
Best Actress

Jessica Chastain, The Eyes of Tammy Faye

© 2021 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved

Penélope Cruz, Parallel Mothers

Nicole Kidman, Being the Ricardos

© Glen Wilson/ © 2021 Amazon Content Services LLC

Olivia Colman, The Lost Daughter

© COURTESY OF NETFLIX

Kristen Stewart, Spencer

Similar news
News Archive
  • Mercury Prize
    Mercury Prize
    Mercury prize 2019: Dave wins for Psychodrama, plus all the action as it happened
    25 Jul 2024
    10
  • Yasmeen Nazir
    Yasmeen Nazir
    Shelley King: Corrie's Yasmeen is a cornered animal ahead of Geoff attack
    1 May 2020
    1
  • Sign language
    Sign language
    Four-year-old signs TV shows for his parents who are both ...
    24 Dec 2019
    3
  • Jack Bonham
    Jack Bonham
    Jack Bonham: Gillingham sign goalkeeper on two-year deal
    4 Jun 2019
    2
This week's most popular news