Oscar nominations snubs and surprises, from Daniel Craig to Selena Gomez
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[January 24, 2025]
By LINDSEY BAHR
PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — In one of the more wide-open Oscar fields in
recent history, there were plenty of nominations surprises Thursday.
Not too long ago, it seemed that people like Angelina Jolie and Nicole
Kidman were destined for best actress nominations, while general
audience disinterest in the young Donald Trump movie “The Apprentice”
might have indicated its awards chances were dead on arrival.
But the members of the film academy had something different in mind.
Here are some of the biggest snubs and surprises from the 97th Oscar
nominations.
SURPRISE: Jeremy Strong and Sebastian Stan, “The Apprentice”
The young Trump movie “The Apprentice” has been one of the bigger awards
season question marks, especially after it failed to resonate with
moviegoers in theaters. And yet both Jeremy Strong, for his portrayal
for Trump lawyer Roy Cohn, and Sebastian Stan (who was also in the
conversation for “A Different Man” ), for playing the future two-time
president, made it in. Only Strong got nominated by the Screen Actors
Guild.
SNUB: Marianne Jean-Baptiste, “Hard Truths”
This will forever be one of the more confounding awards season
oversights. Marianne Jean-Baptiste delivered one of the all-time great
performances in Mike Leigh’s “Hard Truths,” as the perpetually aggrieved
and sharp-tongued London woman Pansy. The general thinking is that it
was either going to be Jean-Baptiste or Fernanda Torres, and Torres got
in for the equally beloved “I’m Still Here.”
SNUB: Pamela Anderson, “The Last Showgirl”
This is perhaps up for debate, but there was certainly a lot of goodwill
behind Anderson’s movie-star turn in Gia Coppola’s “The Last Showgirl,”
especially considering her SAG nomination. But like with Jennifer Lopez
and “Hustlers” a few years ago, it was not meant to be at the Oscars.
SURPRISE: James Mangold, “A Complete Unknown”
James Mangold has directed several awards darlings, including “Ford v
Ferrari” and “Walk the Line” but had consistently missed out on a best
director nomination, until this year with “A Complete Unknown.” It may
have come at the expense of Edward Berger, who missed out on a nod for
“Conclave” or Denis Villeneuve for “Dune: Part Two.”
SNUB: Daniel Craig, “Queer”
Daniel Craig gave one of his best performances as an American expat in
Mexico in the torrid May-December romance in “Queer,” but it hasn’t been
resonating with awards voters. The Oscar snub is the final piece in a
puzzle that just never came together.
SNUB: Angelina Jolie, “Maria”
If there ever were a shoo-in for a nomination and an Oscar, on paper at
least, it would be for Angelina Jolie playing opera legend Maria Callas.
Filmmaker Pablo Larraín had not missed yet in getting best actress
nominations for his famous, tragic women biopics, including Natalie
Portman for “Jackie” and Kristen Stewart for “Spencer.” But somehow
Jolie did not make the cut in the end.
SNUB: Nicole Kidman, “Babygirl”
“Babygirl” is not a cliche awards movie by a long stretch, but Nicole
Kidman’s performance as Romy, the buttoned-up, married CEO who begins a
dangerous affair with a young intern at her company was undeniable. But
a best actress win at the Venice Film Festival has never guaranteed
Oscar success.
SURPRISE: Felicity Jones, “The Brutalist”
Despite the wide love for “The Brutalist,” Felicity Jones has been
curiously absent from many nominations lists for her sharp portrayal of
Erzsébet Tóth. The cast did not even get recognized by SAG. But it just
goes to show that it’s never too late to sneak in for the big one
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This image released by A24 shows Daniel Craig in a scene from
"Queer." (Yannis Drakoulidis/A24 via AP)
SNUB: Danielle Deadwyler, “The Piano
Lesson”
A few years after Danielle Deadwyler was famously snubbed for
“Till,” she has another snub to add to her resume for Malcolm
Washington’s adaptation of “The Piano Lesson.” This latest campaign
might not have had as much steam behind it as “Till,” but at the
very least one would assume that it could have been a make good.
SURPRISE: Monica Barbaro, A Complete Unknown
Supporting actress was one of the more chaotic and unpredictable
categories this year, with so many deserving performers in the mix.
Monica Barbaro was one of those that was on the fringe of
possibilities for her turn as Joan Baez, singing and all, for “A
Complete Unknown.”
SNUB: Selena Gomez, “Emilia Pérez”
One who was not so lucky was Selena Gomez for “Emilia Pérez,”
perhaps because she was partially competing with her co-star, Zoë
Saldaña who simply had more momentum (and gave a moving speech at
the Golden Globes).
SNUB: Clarence Maclin, “Sing Sing”
The incarceration drama “Sing Sing” did get several significant
nominations including for Colman Domingo, adapted screenplay and
original song. But Clarence “Divine Eye” Maclin, who delivered a
revelatory performance based on his own experience, was not among
them. He is, however, credited with helping to write the story.
SNUB: Margaret Qualley, “The Substance”
Margaret Qualley seems to have been unfairly left out of much of the
awards conversation around “The Substance,” a movie that only works
with a great Sue. But the focus has been more on Demi Moore, overdue
for such recognition, and Coralie Fargeat — the only woman to score
a best director nomination.
SNUB: “Challengers” score
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross delivered one of their most popular
scores ever this year for “Challengers” and yet were left off in a
batch of nominees that included “The Brutalist,” “Conclave,” “Emilia
Pérez,” “Wicked” and “The Wild Robot.” It’s not even that they’re
consistently overlooked by the academy — they’ve already won twice,
for “Soul” and “The Social Network.”
SURPRISE: “Flow”
Everyone expected the Latvian cat movie “Flow” to get a best
animated feature nomination, especially after it won the Golden
Globe. But the big surprise is that it got a second for best
international feature — a first for Latvia. This is not a first for
an animated movie to get into the international category, though:
“Waltz with Bashir” and “Flee” had the honor before “Flow,” but
neither ended up winning.
SURPRISE: “Nickel Boys”
RaMell Ross’ “Nickel Boys” has had quite the rollercoaster awards
season journey, even though it’s widely considered one of the best
films of the year. The film academy thought so too, including it
among the 10 best picture nominees (alongside other relative
surprises like “I’m Still Here” and “Dune: Part Two”). Oddly,
though, it missed out on cinematography despite its inventive
first-person point of view.
SNUB: Denzel Washington, “Gladiator II”
Denzel Washington was not about to hit the campaigning trail for
“Gladiator II” but he was, at least at one point, thought to be a
sure thing for a supporting nomination. In his review, AP film
writer Jake Coyle wrote that Washington's “performance as the
Machiavellian power broker Macrinus is a delicious blur of robes and
grins — so compellingly over-the-top that he nearly reaches 1990s Al
Pacino standards.” But don’t cry for Washington: He’s notched an
incredible 10 Oscar nominations in his career, including one for
producing “Fences,” and two wins: supporting actor for “Glory” and
best actor for “Training Day.”
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