{"id":188134,"date":"2023-01-16T13:28:05","date_gmt":"2023-01-16T13:28:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/5-key-takeaways-brendan-fraser-rrr-the-hollywood-reporter\/"},"modified":"2023-01-16T13:28:05","modified_gmt":"2023-01-16T13:28:05","slug":"5-key-takeaways-brendan-fraser-rrr-the-hollywood-reporter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/5-key-takeaways-brendan-fraser-rrr-the-hollywood-reporter\/","title":{"rendered":"5 Key Takeaways \u2014 Brendan Fraser, RRR \u2013 The Hollywood Reporter"},"content":{"rendered":"
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\tHow much should Oscar-watchers read into the results of Sunday night’s 28th Critics Choice Awards?<\/p>\n

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\tOne school of thought says \u201cnot much.\u201d After all, the Critics Choice Awards are determined by the Critics Choice Association, an organization comprised of some 500 broadcast, radio and online critics and entertainment journalists based primarily in the United States \u2014 including, full disclosure, yours truly \u2014 whereas the Oscars are determined by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, an organization comprised of some 10,000 people based all around the world who actually work on movies. In order words, there is zero overlap.<\/p>\n

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\tAnother school, of thought, however, suggests that the choices of Critics Choice voters might still influence<\/em> Academy members, who are currently voting \u2014 and will continue to do so through Tuesday \u2014 to determine their Oscar nominees, and who have demonstrated a trend, particularly as the organization has grown larger and younger (meaning more voters are busy with their careers and don ‘t have time to watch as many movies as older voters), to rubber-stamp the choices of awards groups that precede them.<\/p>\n

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\there are my<\/em> five takeaways from the Critics Choice Awards.<\/p>\n

1) Brendan Fraser got the shot of adrenaline that he needed<\/h2>\n

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\tFor his transformative performance in The Whale<\/em>, Fraser got a lot of love at the fall film fests \u2014 but his film itself was poorly reviewed (it’s at 66 percent on Rotten Tomatoes) and, perhaps not coincidentally, his buzz had died down quite a bit by the end of the year. He was overlooked for the major critics awards and lost at the Gothams (to Till<\/em>‘s Danielle Deadwyler<\/strong>) and the Golden Globes (to Austin Butler<\/strong> for Elvis<\/em>). And after the Globes, many with whom I spoke felt like sentiment and momentum had shifted towards Butler.<\/p>\n

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\tBut Fraser prevailed on Sunday, and made the most of his moment in the spotlight. From the moment his name was emotionally called, he was visibly emotional (something that voters notice, since they like to vote for people who they think genuinely appreciate their support), and also on-message: He thanked Darren Arofnosky<\/strong> for bringing him back from \u201cthe wilderness,\u201d noted that \u201cit took me 32 years to get here\u201d and told people who are struggling that \u201cif you, too, can have the strength to just get to your feet and go to the light , good things will happen\u201d \u2014 all of which I see as an effort to remind people, as subtly as possible, that he has put in his time and, unlike some of his competitors, may never get another shot like this one.<\/p>\n

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\tOne thing to keep in mind: seven of the last 10 winners of the best actor Critics Choice Award went on to win the corresponding Oscar \u2014 but two of the three who did not were, like Fraser, sentimental choices of the critics (Michael Keaton<\/strong> for birdman<\/em> and Chadwick Boseman<\/strong> for Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom<\/em>) who then lost at the Oscars to non-sentimental choices (Eddie Redmayne<\/strong> for The Theory of Everything<\/em> and Anthony Hopkins<\/strong> for The Father<\/em>respectively).<\/p>\n

2) Everything Everywhere All at Once<\/em> was clearly the critics’ choice<\/h2>\n

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\tSome seven weeks after winning the best feature Gotham Award and less than 24 hours after collecting the best film Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award (the latter in a tie with tar<\/em>), Everything Everywhere All at Once<\/em> proved to be the clear favorite of the CCA. (It came in with a field-leading 14 noms, three more than any other movie, so this wasn’t exactly a shocker.)<\/p>\n

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\tThough its leading lady, Michelle Yeoh<\/strong>lost best actress to tar<\/em>‘s Cate Blanchett<\/strong>and the film itself lost best ensemble and best comedy to Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery<\/em>, it still bagged five wins, three more than any other movie. After being awarded best original screenplay, best editing and best supporting actor (Ke Huy Quan<\/strong>), it was a surprise winner for best director (Daniel Kwan<\/strong> and Daniel Scheinert<\/strong>aka \u201cDaniels\u201d), at which point it became all but certain that it would win best picture, too, which it did.<\/p>\n

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\tOnly five of the last 10 best picture Critics Choice Award winners have gone on to win the corresponding Oscar (boyhood<\/em>, LaLa Land<\/em>, Rome<\/em>, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood<\/em> and The Power of the Dog<\/em> all failed to repeat), and, consistent with those figures, I can see things going either way for Everything Everywhere<\/em> in the best picture Oscar race.<\/p>\n

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\tAs was the case with last year’s best picture Oscar winner CODA<\/em> (which, incidentally, lost the best picture Critics Choice Award to The Power of the Dog<\/em> ), there’s an underdog aspect to Everything Everywhere<\/em> (an indie that became an unlikely blockbuster) and the people who worked on it (who have faced adversity throughout their careers and yet still seem lovely) that makes it impossible to root against them.<\/p>\n

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\tUnlike CODA<\/em>however, Everything Everywhere<\/em> is a challenging and polarizing film, which could cause it problems on the preferential (ranked-choice) ballot that the Academy employs for the best picture Oscar. And the movie plays least<\/em> well with older people \u2014 they tend to get lost in the multiverse of it all \u2014 who still have a disproportionate presence in the Academy.<\/p>\n

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\tBut if the Academy does note<\/em> go for Everything Everywhere<\/em>, then what would it go for instead? I could see The Fabelmans<\/em> or Top Gun: Maverick<\/em> doing well on a preferential ballot \u2014 but the only other ceremony that employs a preferential ballot is the PGA Awards, meaning we won’t see if\/how a preferential ballot could impact their chances until Feb. 25.<\/p>\n

3) Quan and Bassett are looking locked<\/h2>\n

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\tWhen Troy Kotsur<\/strong>who won last year’s best supporting actor Critics Choice Award (and Oscar) for his performance in CODA<\/em>, came onstage Sunday night to present the best supporting actress Critics Choice Award, it offered a reminder of what a slam-dunk looks like. Indeed, Kotsur won virtually every honor for which he was eligible from the beginning through the end of last awards season.<\/p>\n

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\tTo my eye, the woman to whom he presented a Critics Choice Award, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever<\/em>‘s Angela Bassett<\/strong>and the man who took home the best supporting actor Critics Choice Award, Everything Everywhere<\/em>‘s Ke Huy Quan<\/strong>, look an awful lot like slam-dunks, too. Like Kotsur, they gave very strong performances, and they also have irresistible narratives not unlike his own: They’ve been around for a long time; they’ve experienced ups and downs and bullshit that they never should have had to endure; but they stuck it out and they’re still here, not only surviving, but thriving.<\/p>\n

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\tThat’s pretty hard to resist, and I have a hard time imagining anything or anyone derailing the Oscar trajectory of either.<\/p>\n

4) Globes winners tank at Critics Choice<\/h2>\n

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\tLess than a week after dominating at the Golden Globe Awards \u2014 another awards show for which journalists determine the winners \u2014 The Banshees of Inisherin<\/em> went 0 for 9 (plus its two male stars were both MIA due to COVID) and The Fabelmans<\/em> went 1 for 11 (winning only best young actor\/actress for Gabriel LaBelle<\/strong>) at the Critics Choice Awards.<\/p>\n

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\tAlso with disappointing Critics Choice showings: Babylon<\/em> went 1 for 9 (best production design), Elvis<\/em> went 1 for 7 (best hair\/makeup), Avatar: The Way of Water<\/em> went 1 for 6 (best visual effects) and Top Gun: Maverick<\/em> went 1 for 6 (best cinematography).<\/p>\n

5) Look out for RRR<\/em><\/h2>\n

\n\tRRR<\/em>the period piece-musical-action-thriller from India that has proven to be a giant phenomenon all around the world, took home an impressive two<\/em> Critics Choice prizes: best foreign-language film and best original song for \u201cNaatu Naatu,\u201d the same tune that was awarded the corresponding Golden Globe and was instrumental in netting the film the best music\/score LA Film Critics Association Award.<\/p>\n

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\tMake no mistake about it: RRR<\/em> work in serious<\/em> Oscar contention \u2014 not for best international feature (India really screwed the pooch by submitting another film instead), but certainly for best original song, and quite possibly for best picture (remember that there are a guaranteed 10 slots and that the Academy has never been a more international organization and best director (SS Rajamouli<\/strong> already won the best director New York Film Critics Circle Award).<\/p>\n

\n\tRRR<\/em> is being distributed in the US by Variance Films, the same company that was behind Drive My Car<\/em>, the Japanese film that wound up with picture, director and screenplay Oscar noms last year on top of a best international feature nom. And the same dogged publicist who handled that film’s awards campaign, Josh Haroutanian<\/strong>business handling RRR<\/em>‘s.<\/p>\n

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\tOn Saturday at the Ross House, a screening venue in Mount Olympus, I saw first-hand the enthusiasm that dozens of Academy members have for the film. like them, I braved horrendous rain just to be there, which I see as a testament to the buzz for the movie; unlike them, I was there not for the screening or a post-screening reception with Rajamouli and his cousin\/composer\/\u201cNaatu Naatu\u201d songwriter MM Keeravani<\/strong>but to record a podcast with Rajamouli that will post on Monday.<\/p>\n

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\tWhile my sound guy was setting up, I realized that the movie was approaching its \u201cNaatu Naatu\u201d showstopping sequence, so I asked Rajamouli if he would mind delaying the start of our conversation by a few minutes so that I could watch the audience’s reaction. He happily consented, so we snuck in to the back of the theater and, sure enough, people were visibly gobsmacked throughout the number, and broke into applause at its conclusion.<\/p>\n

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\tDoes this mean RRR<\/em> will be nominated not only for best original song, but also for best picture and best director, as it was at the Critics Choice Awards? Of course not. But, particularly because the movie cannot<\/em> be nominated for the best international feature Oscar, I wouldn’t be surprised if either or both of those nominations end up happening.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n